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Advanced Settings
96
N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR4300
6to4 Tunnel
In the IPv6 screen, when you select 6to4 Tunnel from the drop-down list, the following screen
displays.
The following fields are included in this screen:
Remote 6to4 Relay Router
. The remote relay router to which your router creates the 6to4
tunnel. If your ISP provides the address of its own relay router, you can put it here. You can
also leave the setting as Auto and the router uses any remote relay router that is available.
The 6to4 tunnel connection needs the IPv4 Internet connection to be working first.
The other settings are the same as for Auto Detect mode. See
IPv6 LAN Setup
and
IPv6
Filtering
on page
94.
Pass Through
In this mode, the router works as a Layer 2 Ethernet switch with 2 ports (LAN and WAN
Ethernet ports) for IPv6 packets. The router does not process any IPv6 header packets.
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Advanced Settings
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N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR4300
Fixed
In the IPv6 screen, when you select Fixed from the drop-down list, the following screen
displays.
The following fields are included in this screen:
IPv6 Fixed WAN Setup
IPv6 Address/Prefix Length
. The IPv6 address and prefix length of the router’s WAN
interface.
Default IPv6 Gateway
. The IPv6 address of the default IPv6 gateway, which is supposed to
be on the router’s WAN interface.
Primary
and
Secondary DNS Server
. The DNS servers that resolve IPv6 domain name
records for you. If these fields are not specified, the router uses the DNS server configured
for the IPv4 Internet connection on the Internet Settings screen. (See
Internet Setup
on
page
21.)
IP Address Assignment
. You can select how you want to assign IPv6 addresses to the
devices on your home network (the LAN). You can use either DHCP Server or Auto Config to
assign IPv6 address. Using DHCP Server might pass more information to LAN devices, but
some IPv6 systems might not support the DHCv6 client function. Auto Config is used by
default.
IPb6 Fixed LAN Setup
IPv6 Address/Prefix Length
. The IPv6 address and prefix length of the router’s LAN
interface.
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Advanced Settings
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N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR4300
DHCP
In the IPv6 screen, when you select DHCP from the drop-down list, the following screen
displays.
The following fields are included in this screen:
User Class
. Most people do not need to fill in this field, but if your ISP has given you a
specific host name, enter it here.
Domain Name
. This is not needed for Internet connections. You can type the domain name
of your ISP. For example, if your ISP’s mail server is mail.xxx.yyy.zzz, you would type
xxx.yyy.zzz
as the domain name. If your ISP provided a domain name, type it in this field.
(For example, Earthlink Cable might require a host name of
home
, and Comcast sometimes
supplies a domain name.)
This is the domain name for the IPv6 connection. Do not enter the domain name for the IPv4
connection here.
The other settings are the same as for Auto Detect mode. See
IPv6 LAN Setup
and
IPv6
Filtering
on page
94.
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Advanced Settings
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N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR4300
PPPoE
In the IPv6 screen, when you select PPPoE from the drop-down list, the following screen
displays.
The following fields are included in this screen:
Login
. This is usually the name that you use in your email address. For example, if your main
mail account is [email protected], then you would put JerAB in this field.
Some ISPs (like Mindspring, Earthlink, and T-DSL) require that you use your full email
address when you log in. If your ISP requires your full email address, type it in this field.
Password
. Type the password that you use to log in to your ISP.
Service Name
. If your ISP provided a service name, enter it here. Otherwise, you can leave
this field blank.
Connection Mode
. This specifies when the router should establish the PPPoE connection.
Currently the connection mode is
always on
to provide a steady IPv6 connection. The router
never disconnects the connection, and in case the connection is broken (such as if the
modem is turned off), the router establishes the connection right after the PPPoE connection
is available.
The other settings are the same as Auto Detect mode. See
IPv6 LAN Setup
and
IPv6
Filtering
on page
94.
Page 100 / 115
Advanced Settings
100
N750 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit Router WNDR4300
Traffic Meter
Traffic metering allows you to monitor the volume of Internet traffic passing through your
router’s Internet port, set limits for traffic volume, and get a live update of traffic usage.
To monitor Internet traffic:
1.
Click
Advanced > Advanced Setup > Traffic Meter
to display the following screen.
Scroll to view
more settings
2.
To enable the traffic meter, select the
Enable Traffic Meter
check box.
3.
If you would like to record and restrict the volume of Internet traffic, select the
Traffic
volume control
by
radio button. You can select one of the following options for controlling
the traffic volume:
No Limit
. No restriction is applied when the traffic limit is reached.
Download only
. The restriction is applied to incoming traffic only.
Both Directions
. The restriction is applied to both incoming and outgoing traffic.
4.
You can limit the amount of data traffic allowed per month by specifying how many Mbytes
per month are allowed or by specifying how many hours of traffic are allowed.
5.
Set the traffic counter to begin at a specific time and date.
6.
Set up traffic control to issue a warning message before the monthly limit of Mbytes or hours
is reached. You can select one of the following to occur when the limit is attained:
The Internet LED flashes green or amber.
The Internet connection is disconnected and disabled.
7.
Set up Internet traffic statistics to monitor the data traffic.
8.
Click the
Traffic Status
button for an update on Internet traffic status on your router.
9.
Click
Apply
to save your settings.

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