Cayman Systems 2E-H-W Handbuch "Erste Schritte - Seite 3
Blättern Sie online oder laden Sie pdf Handbuch "Erste Schritte für Netzwerk-Router Cayman Systems 2E-H-W herunter. Cayman Systems 2E-H-W 4 Seiten. Netopia 2e-h-w: install guide
Configuring Your
Cayman 2E-H-W11
To configure the Cayman 2E-H-W11, you need a computer on the same TCP/IP network as
the Cayman 2E-H-W11. Perform Steps 1 and 2 of "Configuring Your Computer" on page 3
for information on how to configure your computer to use an IP address on the
192.168.1.0 network.
1.
Determine whether your Internet Service Provider (ISP) has supplied you with
a Configuration Worksheet identifying the settings you are to use when
configuring your Cayman 2E-H-W11.
•
If you received a Configuration Worksheet, refer to it when configuring your
Cayman 2E-H-W11.
•
If you did not receive a Configuration Worksheet, your Cayman 2E-H-W11 has
already been configured, and no action on your part is needed. You can skip this
section or perform the steps to review your Cayman 2E-H-W11 configuration.
2.
Identify the wireless network ID for your Cayman 2E-H-W11.
The default wireless network ID consists of the words "Cayman-2E" and the serial
number of the gateway. You will need to configure your laptops and other devices
with this wireless ID if you want them to connect to the Cayman 2E-H-W11 over a
wireless network link.
3.
Run a Web browser application, such as Netscape Navigator or Microsoft
Internet Explorer, from the computer on the same network as the
Cayman 2E–H-W.
Refer to page 3 for information on how to configure your computer.
4.
Open a session to your Cayman 2E–H-W11.
Enter http://cayman-2e or http://192.168.1.254 in the Location text box. The browser
displays the Cayman 2E-H-W11 QuickStart window.
If your Configuration Worksheet tells you to use an IP address other than
192.168.1.254 to log in, enter http://< ip-address >.
5.
Transfer the contents of each field on the Configuration Worksheet to the
corresponding field in the QuickStart window.
6.
If you changed any of the fields in the QuickStart window, click the Save
button to save the modified Cayman 2E-H-W11 configuration.
7.
When you see the Cayman 2E-H-W11 Home page, click the Restart Cayman-2E
button to restart your Cayman 2E-H-W11 with its new configuration settings.
4
Introduction
Your Cayman 2E-H-W11 connects the personal computers, printers, and other network
devices in a workgroup to a remote network or the Internet. Your Cayman 2E-H-W11
functions include the following:
•
A wireless bridge that interoperates with 802.11b wireless networking devices,
including wireless networking cards from Cisco, Lucent, Apple, and 3Com.
•
An integrated eight-port Ethernet hub on the Cayman 2E-H-W11 front panel that
lets you add or move workgroup network connections quickly and easily.
•
An auto-configuring Internet router that incorporates Cayman's Swift-IP™
technology.
Cayman 2E-H-W11 features include the following:
•
Full-featured wide area network bridge supports wide range of non-TCP/IP
protocols.
•
Web-based browser configuration makes configuration and management easy from
anywhere on your network. Command-line configuration lets you monitor the
Cayman 2E-H-W11 through a Telnet or VT100 connection.
•
Network Address Translation (NAT) lets your workgroup network share one IP
address when communicating with other hosts on your corporate network or the
Internet.
•
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) client functionality lets a DHCP
server on your wide area network configure the IP address and other network settings
for the WAN interface on your Cayman 2E-H-W11 automatically.
•
DCHP server functionality lets the Cayman 2E-H-W11 automatically configure the
IP addresses and other network settings for computers on your local area network.
•
IP pinholes let you provide web services, mail services, or FTP services from your
local area network without compromising network security.
•
Enhanced security features, including restrictions on administrative access to the
router over its WAN port, broadcast filtering to prevent denial-of-service attacks, and
rejection of packets with "spoofed" IP addresses.
•
Bandwidth shaping lets carriers and service providers regulate the flow of traffic
through the WAN port in 64kbps increments.
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