Netgear FSM726v2 FSM726v2 Setup Manual - Page 71

Traffic Management CoS: Class of Service CoS, also referred to as Quality of Service

Page 71 highlights

700 Series Software Manual v2.1 • Advanced Tools: You can upgrade the software of the switch or save/load the switch configuration file to/from a TFTP server. • Traffic Management (CoS): Class of Service (CoS), also referred to as Quality of Service (QoS), is a way of managing traffic in a network, by treating different types of traffic with different levels of service priority. Higher priority traffic gets faster treatment during times of switch congestion. Priority can be based on VLAN tags, ports, or Differentiated Service Code Points (DSCP). Broadcast Control: You can configure the threshold for the maximum broadcast packets per port. • VLANs: A Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) is a means to electronically separate ports on the same switch from a single broadcast domain into separate broadcast domains. By using VLAN, you can group by logical function instead of physical location. There are 64 VLAN supported on this switch. • Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) ensures that only one path at a time is active between any two network nodes. There are maybe more than two physical path between any two nodes for redundant paths; STP ensures only one physical path is active and the others are blocked. STP will prevent an inadvertent loop in a network, which can disable your network due to a "Broadcast storm", the result of a broadcast message traveling through the loop again and again. • MAC: MAC address table. This menu allows you to set the aging time, as well as entering static MAC addresses to the switch. • Multimedia Support (IGMP): The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is an Internet protocol that provides a way for network devices to report multicast group membership to adjacent routers. • SNMP: You can manage the switch SNMP from a SNMP network management station. You can define SNMP communities and assign access rights to each SNMP community. The SNMP Host Table page allows you to add and remove access rights that have been granted to community groups from specified hosts. While enabled, the system generates an SNMP trap upon a host authentication failure. Web-Based Management Interface 5-21

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700 Series Software Manual v2.1
Web-Based Management Interface
5-21
Advanced Tools: You can upgrade the software of the switch or save/load the switch
configuration file to/from a TFTP server.
Traffic Management (CoS): Class of Service (CoS), also referred to as Quality of Service
(QoS), is a way of managing traffic in a network, by treating different types of traffic with
different levels of service priority. Higher priority traffic gets faster treatment during times of
switch congestion. Priority can be based on VLAN tags, ports, or Differentiated Service Code
Points (DSCP).
Broadcast Control: You can configure the threshold for the maximum broadcast packets per
port.
VLANs: A Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) is a means to electronically separate ports on
the same switch from a single broadcast domain into separate broadcast domains. By using
VLAN, you can group by logical function instead of physical location. There are 64 VLAN
supported on this switch.
Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) ensures that only one path at a time is active between any two
network nodes. There are maybe more than two physical path between any two nodes for
redundant paths; STP ensures only one physical path is active and the others are blocked. STP
will prevent an inadvertent loop in a network, which can disable your network due to a
“Broadcast storm”, the result of a broadcast message traveling through the loop again and
again.
MAC: MAC address table.
This menu allows you to set the aging time, as well as entering
static MAC addresses to the switch.
Multimedia Support (IGMP): The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is an Internet
protocol that provides a way for network devices to report multicast group membership to
adjacent routers.
SNMP: You can manage the switch SNMP from a SNMP network management station. You
can define SNMP communities and assign access rights to each SNMP community. The
SNMP Host Table page allows you to add and remove access rights that have been granted to
community groups from specified hosts. While enabled, the system generates an SNMP trap
upon a host authentication failure.