Atel Electronics RP-SR634 Bedienungsanleitung

#05135 RP-SR634
USER’S MANUAL

CE Mark Warning
This equipment complies with the requirements relating to electromagnetic compatibility,
EN55022 class B for ITE, the essential protection requirement of Council Directive
89/336/EEC on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to
electromagnetic compatibility.
FCC Certifications
This Equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital
device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide
reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This
equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and
used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio
communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a
particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television
reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is
encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is
connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two
conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must
accept any interference received; including interference that may cause undesired operation.
Company has an on-going policy of upgrading its products and it may be possible that
information in this document is not up-to-date. Please check with your local distributors
for the latest information. No part of this document can be copied or reproduced in any
form without written consent from the company.
Trademarks:
All trade names and trademarks are the properties of their respective companies.
Copyright © 2003,All Rights Reserved.
Document Version: 2.1

Table of Contents
WELCOME TO MULTI HOMING ................................................1
SETTING UPTHE HARDWARE....................................................2
NETWORKING WITH THE WIZARD .........................................3
UNDERSTANDINGTHE USER INTERFACE .............................4
BASIC CONFIGURATION..............................................................6
CONNECTION TYPE SET-UP ...............................................................8
CONFIGURING A STATIC IPADDRESS..................................................8
CONFIGURING A (DYNAMIC) DHCPACCOUNT .................................9
CONFIGURING MULTI HOMING TO USE AADSL PPPOE ACCOUNT..10
CONFIGURING MULTI HOMING TO USE A PPTP CONNECTION..............12
NAT CONFIGURATION.......................................................................12
DOMAIN NAME SERVICE (DNS)......................................................13
CONFIGURING THE DNS SERVICE ...................................................13
LOAD BALANCE..............................................................................14
ADVANCED NETWORKING TOOLS ...................................................15
MAC CLONING...............................................................................15
CLONING A MAC ADDRESS.............................................................15
DYNAMIC DNS...............................................................................16
DYNAMIC DNS CONFIGURATION....................................................17
LAN (LOCALAREA NETWORK) INTERFACE ...................................18
ROUTER SERVICES ..........................................................................20
SECURITY.......................................................................................21
DISABLING ICMP REPLIES..............................................................22
BLOCKING INDIVIDUAL (OR SERVICE PORT) OF IPADDRESSES ON THE
INTERNET........................................................................................23
MODIFYING AN IPADDRESS OR REMOVING AN POLICY FROM THE
INCOMING POLICY LIST...................................................................24
MAPPING INTERNAL PORTS TO THE OUTSIDE ..................................26

VIRTUAL SERVER ............................................................................27
PORT TRIGGERING...........................................................................28
URL BLOCKING..............................................................................30
INTRANET ......................................................................................31
ACTIVATING/DEACTIVATING THE DHCP SERVICE ...........................33
IPADDRESS POOLASSIGNMENT .....................................................33
AUTOMATIC MAC-IPASSOCIATION ................................................36
ADMINISTRATION .......................................................................37
CHANGING THE VALID USER AND PASSWORD...................................38
CONTROLLING WEB ACCESS CONFIGURATION BY IPADDRESS .......39
SELETE THE LANGUAGE MODE OF GUI............................................40
DISPLAY SYSTEM STATUS.................................................................42
SETUP SYSTEM TIME........................................................................42
RESTARTING YOUR SYSTEM.............................................................42
SET FACTORY DEFAULT ....................................................................43
UPDATE YOUR SYSTEM SOFTWARE...................................................43
PRESERVING YOUR SYSTEM CONFIGURATION ..................................43
LOADING YOUR SYSTEM CONFIGURATION........................................43
VIEW SYSTEM LOG...........................................................................44
APPENDIX A
SPECIFICATIONS & ACCESSORIES ........................................45
LEDS DEFINITION...........................................................................46
SYSTEM LED..............................................................................46
PORT LED...................................................................................46
PORTS’LED SUMMARY TABLE........................................................47
FACTORY SETTING BUTTON.............................................................47
KEY FEATURE .................................................................................48
APPENDIX B
SPECIFYING INTERNETADDRESSES..................................49
APPENDIX C
COMMON PORT NUMBERS.......................................................51

Welcome to
Multi Homing
The safest and most convenient way to
the Information Superhighway
W
elcome to Multi Homing! This powerful network tool will enable
you to securely connect multiple computers to the Internet through
a single DSL/Cable modem or T1/E1/ISDN CSU/DSU.
Through this simple comprehensive appliance, you can connect multiple
computers in your home or office using standard Ethernet networking.
Its highly configurable built-in network firewall provides you with the power to
choose specific services allowed through your network, while keeping all
malicious Internet attackers out. Multi Homing also provides super advanced
features like sophisticated bandwidth control.
The simple Web-based interface will help you configure your Multi Homing
with true point-and-click ease.
This document will provide you with the guidance needed to tailor-fit Multi
Homing to your own networking needs.
Thank you for choosing Multi Homing to be part of your networking solution.
1
Chapter
1

Setting up the
Hardware
Network cabling made easy.
Multi Homing is a turnkey solution to connect your home or office to
the Internet through a high speed or 'always on' connection. The
following easy steps will get you hooked up and ready to go onto
the Internet.
1. Behind the Multi Homing unit, locate 6 Ethernet network ports (RJ-45).
These look like standard phone jacks, but wider.
2. Connect the wide area network (WAN) uplink port to the equipment
provided by your Internet service provider (ISP) (e.g. Cable/DSL modem
or T1/E1/ISDN CSU/DSU)
3. Connect the local area network (LAN) port to your office network hub or
switch
4. Set up a computer on your LAN1to obtain a dynamic IP address (please
refer to your operating system manual or reference guide for details)
5. Obtain an IP address from Multi Homing
6. Start up a Internet browser on your configuration computer and point it to
http://192.168.1.1. You should see the graphical user interface (GUI)
screen.
Congratulations! You have completed the hardware configuration requirements
for Multi Homing. Incidentally, you can now add to your title "Network
Administrator"
1This computer will be referred to as the "configuration computer" or "Administrator computer" in other parts of this document
2
Chapter
2

Networking with
the Wizard
Using the Multi Homing Networking
Wizard is the fastest way to get started!
Multi Homing comes with a web-based wizard that breezes you
through configuration. The wizard presents you with each necessary
configuration step and each possible option. Upon completion of a
wizard-based set up, Multi Homing will be ready for use. When set to factory
defaults, the wizard starts up automatically -- It can also be invoked by clicking
on the Configuration Wizard button on the home tab. At the end of the initial
configuration, the appliance will ask the user for a username and password. This
is a standard authentication mechanism used to ensure that subsequent
configuration changes are done by the proper individuals. Do not give the
username/password to people who are not authorized to change your network
configuration.
3
Chapter
3

Understanding
the User Interface
Navigation Rules
Multi Homing has a web-based graphical user interface (GUI) that can
be accessed using a standard HTML (HTTP v1.0) compliant
browser. Once the LAN is properly connected a network
administrator can connect to it through the URL http://192.168.1.1
The GUI has two main navigational components: Tabs and Menus.
Each Tab represents a major group of functions that a user can configure and
are located on the top part of the screen.
The Home tab presents version information as well as a brief feature list. The
Networking tab includes all the essential configuration items required to get a
LAN up and running.
The Security tab provides configuration items that control firewall behavior.
By default, Multi Homing comes configured to lock out unsolicited network
connections. To allow specific services to be allowed through Multi Homing,
some modifications under this tab is required.
4
Chapter
4
Menu
Items
Navigation
Tabs
User
Dialog
Area

The Intranet tab accommodates changes that are LAN specific. Under this tab,
a network administrator can specify rules for the assignment of IP addresses as
well as manipulate tools that improve local area network performance and
resource availability, such as the transparent proxy cache.
The Administration Tab provides control, monitoring and troubleshooting
tools.
The Help Tab provides additional context sensitive information.
Menus are located at the left side of the screen provides additional navigation
for tab components.
5
After each session involving configuration modifications, the changes should be
saved and the system should be restarted to activate the changes.

Basic
Configuration
First things first
T
his chapter covers the use of all the configuration items under the
Networking Tab. Once configured, you should be able to securely
access the Internet through your Multi Homing.
Wide Area Network (WAN1)
The Internet is made up of wide area networks (WAN) and local area networks
(LAN). Each local area network connects to the Internet through a wide area
network.
The Multi Homing is the gateway used by your LAN to connect to your WAN.
Your WAN is provided by your Internet service provider (ISP) using a WAN
medium (Cable/DSL modem or T1/E1/ISDN CSU/DSU).
You will need information provided by your ISP to complete this step.
Depending on your WAN medium, your ISP may provide you with either a
static or dynamic (DHCP/BootP) connection. This information should be
included in the package that came from your ISP. Generally, if your ISP has
provided you with a fixed IP address, you have a static IP address. If your ISP
has provided a username and password, you have a PPPoE2link. If your ISP
provided neither an IP address or username/password pair, you most likely
2Point to Point Protocol over Ethernet (PPPoE) is a common authentication/billing mechanism used by ISPs.
6
Chapter
5
Dieses Handbuch passt für folgende Modelle
1
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Beliebte Tor Handbücher anderer Marken

LST
LST M500RFE-AS Bedienungsanleitung

Kinnex
Kinnex Media Gateway Bedienungsanleitung

2N Telekomunikace
2N Telekomunikace 2N StarGate Bedienungsanleitung

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Superlink SC-WBGW256 Bedienungsanleitung

ZyXEL Communications
ZyXEL Communications ZYWALL2 ET 2WE Bedienungsanleitung

Telsey
Telsey CPVA 500 - SIP Bedienungsanleitung











