Page 26 / 130 Scroll up to view Page 21 - 25
±µ
Safely removing the USB disk
IMPORTANT
:
Incorrect removal of the USB disk may cause data
corruption.
To safely remove the USB disk:
1. From the navigation panel, go to
General
>
Network Map
.
2. In the upper right corner, click
>
Eject USB disk
. When
the USB disk is ejected successfully, the USB status shows
Unmounted
.
Page 27 / 130
±¶
3.2
Creating a Guest Network
The Guest Network provides temporary visitors with Internet
connectivity via access to separate SSIDs or networks without
providing access to your private network.
NOTE:
RT-N66W supports up to six SSIDs (three 2.4GHz and three 5GHz
SSIDs).
To create a guest network:
1. From the navigation panel, go to
General
>
Guest Network
.
2. On the Guest Network screen, select 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz frequency
band for the guest network that you want to create.
3. Click
Enable
.
Page 28 / 130
±·
4. To configure additional options, click
Modify
.
5. Click
Yes
on the
Enable Guest Network
screen.
6. Assign a wireless name for your temporary network on the
Network Name (SSID)
field.
7. Select an
Authentication Method
.
8. Select an
Encryption
method.
9. Specify the
Access time
or choose
Limitless
.
10. Select
Disable
or
Enable
on the
Access Intranet
item.
11. When done, click
Apply
.
Page 29 / 130
±¸
3.3
Using the Traffic Manager
3.3.1 Managing QoS (Quality of Service) Bandwidth
Quality of Service (QoS) allows you to set the bandwidth priority
and manage network traffic.
To set up bandwidth priority:
1. From the navigation panel, go to
General
>
Traffic Manager
>
QoS
tab.
2. Click
ON
to enable QoS. Fill in the upload and download
bandwidth fields.
NOTE:
Get the bandwidth information from your ISP.
3. Click
Save
.
NOTE:
The User Specify Rule List is for advanced settings. If you want
to prioritize specific network applications and network services, select
User-defined QoS rules
or
User-defined Priority
from the drop-down
list on the upper-right corner.
Page 30 / 130
²0
4. On the
user-defined QoS rules
page, there are four default
online service types – web surf, HTTPS and file transfers.
Select your preferred service, fill in the
Source IP or MAC
,
Destination Port
,
Protocol
,
Transferred
and
Priority
, then
click
Apply
. The information will be configured in the QoS rules
screen.
NOTES
To fill in the source IP or MAC, you can:
a)
Enter a specific IP address, such as "192.168.122.1".
b)
Enter IP addresses within one subnet or within the same IP
pool, such as “192.168.123.*”, or “192.168.*.*”
c)
Enter all IP addresses as “*.*.*.*” or leave the field blank.
d)
The format for the MAC address is six groups of two
hexadecimal digits, separated by colons (:), in transmission
order (e.g. 12:34:56:aa:bc:ef)
For source or destination port range, you can either:
a)
Enter a specific port, such as “95”.
b)
Enter ports within a range, such as “103:315”, “>100”, or
“<65535”.
The
Transferred
column contains information about the upstream
and downstream traffic (outgoing and incoming network traffic) for
one section. In this column, you can set the network traffic limit (in
KB) for a specific service to generate specific priorities for the service
assigned to a specific port. For example, if two network clients, PC
1 and PC 2, are both accessing the Internet (set at port 80), but PC 1
exceeds the network traffic limit due to some downloading tasks, PC
1 will have a lower priority. If you do not want to set the traffic limit,
leave it blank.

Rate

3.5 / 5 based on 2 votes.

Bookmark Our Site

Press Ctrl + D to add this site to your favorites!

Share
Top