Netgear GSM7212P GSM5212P/GSM7212P/GSM7212F/GSM7224P User Manual - Page 105

Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration, MAC Address, VLAN ID, DELETE, Switching, Advanced, Group Name

Page 105 highlights

Web Management User Guide 1. MAC Address - Valid MAC Address which is to be bound to a VLAN ID. This field is configurable only when a MAC Based VLAN is created. 2. Use VLAN ID to specify a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4093. 3. Click ADD to add an entry of MAC Address to VLAN mapping. 4. Click DELETE to delete and entry of MAC Address to VLAN mapping. Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration You can use a protocol based VLAN to define filtering criteria for untagged packets. By default, if you do not configure any port- (IEEE 802.1Q) or protocol based VLANs, untagged packets will be assigned to VLAN 1. You can override this behavior by defining either port-based VLANs or protocol based VLANs, or both. Tagged packets are always handled according to the IEEE 802.1Q standard, and are not included in protocol based VLANs. If you assign a port to a protocol based VLAN for a specific protocol, untagged frames received on that port for that protocol will be assigned the protocol based VLAN ID. Untagged frames received on the port for other protocols will be assigned the Port VLAN ID - either the default PVID (1) or a PVID you have specifically assigned to the port using the Port VLAN Configuration screen. You define a protocol based VLAN by creating a group. Each group has a one-to-one relationship with a VLAN ID, can include one to three protocol definitions, and can include multiple ports. When you create a group you will choose a name and a Group ID will be assigned automatically. To display the Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration page, click Switching VLAN  Advanced  Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration. 1. Use Group Name to assign a name to a new group. You may enter up to 16 characters. 2. Use Protocol(s) to select the protocols you want to be associated with the group. There are three configurable protocols: IP, IPX, ARP. • IP - IP is a network layer protocol that provides a connectionless service for the delivery of data. • ARP - Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is a low-level protocol that dynamically maps network layer addresses to physical medium access control (MAC) addresses • IPX - The Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX) is a connectionless datagram Network-layer protocol that forwards data over a network. 105

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105
Web Management User Guide
1.
MAC Address
- Valid MAC Address which is to be bound to a VLAN ID. This field is
configurable only when a MAC Based VLAN is created.
2.
Use
VLAN ID
to specify a VLAN ID in the range of 1 to 4093.
3.
Click
ADD
to add an entry of MAC Address to VLAN mapping.
4.
Click
DELETE
to delete and entry of MAC Address to VLAN mapping.
Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration
You can use a protocol based VLAN to define filtering criteria for untagged packets. By
default, if you do not configure any port- (IEEE 802.1Q) or protocol based VLANs, untagged
packets will be assigned to VLAN 1. You can override this behavior by defining either
port-based VLANs or protocol based VLANs, or both. Tagged packets are always handled
according to the IEEE 802.1Q standard, and are not included in protocol based VLANs.
If you assign a port to a protocol based VLAN for a specific protocol, untagged frames
received on that port for that protocol will be assigned the protocol based VLAN ID. Untagged
frames received on the port for other protocols will be assigned the Port VLAN ID - either the
default PVID (1) or a PVID you have specifically assigned to the port using the Port VLAN
Configuration screen.
You define a protocol based VLAN by creating a group. Each group has a one-to-one
relationship with a VLAN ID, can include one to three protocol definitions, and can include
multiple ports. When you create a group you will choose a name and a Group ID will be
assigned automatically.
To display the Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration page, click
Switching
VLAN
Advanced
Protocol Based VLAN Group Configuration
.
1.
Use
Group Name
to assign a name to a new group. You may enter up to 16 characters.
2.
Use
Protocol(s)
to select the protocols you want to be associated with the group. There are
three configurable protocols: IP, IPX, ARP.
IP
- IP is a network layer protocol that provides a connectionless service for the
delivery of data.
ARP
- Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is a low-level protocol that dynamically
maps network layer addresses to physical medium access control (MAC) addresses
IPX
- The Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX) is a connectionless datagram
Network-layer protocol that forwards data over a network.