Displays the MAC address and the public IP settings
for the router.
Displays the MAC address and the private (local) IP
settings for the router.
Displays the wireless MAC address and your wireless
settings such as SSID and Channel.
Displays computers and devices that are connected
to the router via Ethernet and that are receiving an IP
address assigned by the router (DHCP).
Displays the Multicast Group IP Address.
General:
WAN:
LAN:
Wireless LAN:
LAN
Computers:
IGMP Multicast
Memberships:
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Section 3 - Configuration
Log
Log Options:
Apply Log
Settings:
Refresh:
Clear:
Email Now:
Save Log:
You can select the types of messages that you want
to display from the log.
Will filter the log results so that only the selected
options appear.
Updates the log details on the screen so it displays
any recent activity.
Clears all of the log contents.
This option will send a copy of the router log to
the e-mail address configured in the
Tools > Email
Settings
screen.
This option will save the router to a log file on your
computer.
The router automatically logs (records) events of possible interest in it’s internal memory. If there isn’t enough internal memory for all events, logs
of older events are deleted but logs of the latest events are retained. The Logs option allows you to view the router logs. You can define what types
of events you want to view and the level of the events to view. This router also has external Syslog Server support so you can send the log files to
a computer on your network that is running a Syslog utility.
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Section 3 - Configuration
Stats
The screen below displays the Traffic Statistics. Here you can view the amount of packets that pass through the DIR-601 on both the Internet and the LAN
ports. The traffic counter will reset if the device is rebooted.
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Section 3 - Configuration
Internet Sessions
The Internet Sessions page displays full details of active Internet sessions through your router. An Internet session is a conversation between a
program or application on a LAN-side computer and a program or application on a WAN-side computer
.
Local:
NAT:
Internet:
Protocol:
State:
Dir:
Priority:
The IP address and, where appropriate, port number
of the local application.
The port number of the LAN-side application as
viewed by the WAN-side application.
The IP address and, where appropriate, port number
of the application on the Internet.
The communications protocol used for the
conversation.
State for sessions that use the TCP protocol:
NO: None -- This entry is used as a placeholder for a future connection that may occur.
SS: SYN Sent -- One of the systems is attempting to start a connection.
EST: Established -- the connection is passing data.
FW: FIN Wait -- The client system has requested that the connection be stopped.
CW: Close Wait -- The server system has requested that the connection be stopped.
TW: Time Wait -- Waiting for a short time while a connection that was in FIN Wait is fully closed.
LA: Last ACK -- Waiting for a short time while a connection that was in Close Wait is fully closed.
CL: Closed -- The connection is no longer active but the session is being tracked in case there are any retransmitted packets still pending.
The direction of initiation of the conversation:
Out
- Initiated from LAN to WAN.
In
- Initiated from WAN to LAN.
The preference given to outbound packets of this conversation by the QoS Engine logic. Smaller numbers represent higher
priority.
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Section 3 - Configuration
Time Out:
The number of seconds of idle time until the router considers the session terminated. The initial value of Time Out depends on the
type and state of the connection.
300 seconds
- UDP connections.
240 seconds
- Reset or closed TCP connections. The connection does not close instantly so that lingering packets can pass or the connection can be