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© Copyright 2013 TRENDnet. All Rights Reserved.
TRENDnet User’s Guide
TEW-731BR
48
Configure your router log
Status > Log Setting
You may want send your router log to your e-mail address or to an external log server
(also known as Sysco server) so you can check it periodically while away from home. You
may also want to only see specific categories of logging.
Send router logs to your e-mail address
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Status
and click on
Log Setting
.
3. Review the e-mail log settings.
SMTP Authentication
– Set this option to
Enabled
if your e-mail service
requires authentication. If not, leave this setting to
Disabled
.
Note:
If you are unsure of this setting check with your e-mail service provider if
authentication is required.
SMTP Account
– Enter your account user name for your e-mail service.
SMTP Password
– Enter your password for your e-mail service.
SMTP Server
– Enter the IP address (e.g.
10.10.10.10
) or domain name (e.g.
mail.trendnet.com
) of your e-mail server.
SMTP Server Port
– Enter the port used by your e-mail service. (e.g.
Default
SMTP Server Port: 25
)
From Email Address
– Enter a sender e-mail address. (e.g.
)
Note:
This does not need to be real e-mail address, only used for identification
purposes when checking your e-mail.
To Email Address
– Enter your e-mail address.
Email Log Now
– Click this option to send an e-mail with the current router log
using your email settings.
Email Logs
– Select when you want the router log to be e-mailed.
o
When log is full
– The router log will be e-mailed to your e-mail
address when router internal log is full.
o
Click the drop-down list and configure to e-mail logs according to a set
schedule. Once on a specific day of the week or once every day.
4. To save changes, click
Apply
.
Send router logs to an external log server
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
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© Copyright 2013 TRENDnet. All Rights Reserved.
TRENDnet User’s Guide
TEW-731BR
49
2. Click on
Status
and click on
Log Setting
.
3. Next to
Syslog Server
, enter the IP address of the external log server to send router
logging.
4. To save changes, click
Apply
.
Set the types or categories to include in logging
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Status
and click on
Log Setting
.
3. Next to
Log Type
, check the types or categories to include in logging.
4. To save changes, click
Apply
.
View your router packet statistics
Status > Statistics
You may want to check your router packet statistics for informational purposes only.
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Status
and click on
Statistic
.
3. The table displays the amount of packets sent and received on your router’s wired
LAN, wireless, and WAN (Internet).
View wireless devices connected to your router
Status > Wireless
You may want to check the wireless devices connected to your router.
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Status
and click on
Wireless
.
3. The table displays the amount time each wireless device has been connected and the
MAC address of each wireless device.
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© Copyright 2013 TRENDnet. All Rights Reserved.
TRENDnet User’s Guide
TEW-731BR
50
Capture packets using the router management page
Management > Capture Packets
You may want to use the router management page to capture data packets for further
troubleshooting and analysis. Packet captures allow you to see what type of data and
information is inside each packet. You will need a packet capture software application to
be able to open and view the packet capture files downloaded from the router.
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Management
and click on
Capture Packets
.
3. Click on the
Network Interface
drop-down list and select which interface you would
like to capture data packets,
LAN
or
WAN
.
4. Review the options for capturing packets.
Start
– Starts the packet capture.
Stop
- Stops the packet capture
Download
– Download the packet capture file.
(
.pcap file)
Enable SNMP on your router
Management > SNMP
SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) is a network management protocol used
to monitor (read) and/or manage (write) multiple network devices on a network. This
preconfigured external SNMP server.
1. Log into your router management page (see “Access your router management page”
on
page 27
).
2. Click on
Management
and click on
SNMP
.
3. Review the options for SNMP.
SNMP
– Select
Enabled
to enable SNMP.
System Location
– Enter the location. (optional)
System Contact
– Enter the contact. (optional)
Community
– Enter the community to match the settings with the external
SNMP server.
Trap Receiver 1-3
– Enter the IP address of the external SNMP trap receiver.
You can enter up to three receivers. (e.g.
192.168.10.250
)
4. To save changes, click
Apply
.
Page 54 / 62
© Copyright 2013 TRENDnet. All Rights Reserved.
51
TRENDnet User’s Guide
TEW-731BR
Router Management Page Structure
Main
LAN & DHCP Server
o
Static DHCP Reservation
WAN
o
Clone MAC Address
Password
Time
Dynamic DNS
IPv6
Wireless
Basic
Security
Advanced
Wi-Fi Protected Setup
Status
Device Information
Log
Log Setting
o
Email Log
o
Syslog
o
Log Type
Statistic
Wireless
Routing
Static
Dynamic
Routing Table
Access
Filter
o
MAC Filters
o
Domain/URL Blocking
o
Protocol/IP Filters
Virtual Server
Special AP
DMZ
Firewall Rule
Management
SNMP
Remote Management
Capture Packets
Routing
Static
Dynamic
Routing Table
Tools
Restart
Settings
o
Save Configuration Settings
o
Restore Configuration Settings
o
Reset to Factory Default
Firmware
Upgrade Firmware
Ping Test
Wizard
Setup Wizard
Page 55 / 62
© Copyright 2013 TRENDnet. All Rights Reserved.
TRENDnet User’s Guide
TEW-731BR
52
Technical Specifications
Hardware
Standards
IEEE 802.3 (10BASE-T), IEEE 802.3u (100BASE-TX), IEEE
802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.3az
WAN
1 x 10/100 Mbps Auto-MDIX port (internet)
LAN
4 x 10/100 Mbps Auto-MDIX ports
WPS Button
Enables Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) function (Hold for 3
seconds)
Power Switch
On / Off power switch
Connection Type
Dynamic IP, Static (fixed) IP, PPPoE, PPTP, L2TP, IPv6 6rd
(IPv6 rapid deployment) DHCPv4, manual and automatic
configuration
Supported Web Browsers
Internet Explorer 6.0 or above, Firefox 2.0 or above,
Chrome, Opera, Safari
Internet Access Control
MAC Address Filter, Domain / URL Filter, Protocol / IP
Filter, Virtual Server, DMZ host, UPnP, PPTP / L2TP / IPsec
VPN pass through
Management/
Monitoring
Local / remote configuration, upgrade firmware, backup /
restore configuration via Web browser, Internal System
Log, Syslog, E-Mail Logging, SNMPv1/v2c, Ping Test Tool,
Dynamic DNS
Routing
Static and Dynamic RIPv1/2
LED Indicators
Power, Status, LAN1~LAN4, WAN, WLAN
Power
Input: 100~240V AC, 50~60Hz
Output: 5V DC, 1A
Power Consumption
3.0 watts (max)
Dimension (L x W x H)
158 x 109 x 34 mm (6.2 x 4.3 x 1.3 in)
Weight
210 g (7.4oz)
Temperature
Operation: 0
°
~ 40
°
C (32
°
F~ 104
°
F); Storage: -10
°
~ 70
°
C
(14
°
F~158
°
F)
Humidity
Max 90% (non-condensing)
Certifications
CE, FCC
Wireless
Frequency
2.412~2.484 GHz band
Antenna
2 x 2 dBi fixed dipole antennas
Modulation
802.11b: CCK (11 and 5.5 Mbps), DQPSK (2 Mbps), DBPSK
(1 Mbps)
802.11g: OFDM with BPSK, QPSK and 16/64-QAM
802.11n:
BPSK, QPSK, 16QAM, 64QAM with OFDM
Media Access Protocol
CSMA/CA with ACK
Data Rate
802.11b: Up to 11 Mbps
802.11g: Up to 54 Mbps
802.11n: Up to 300 Mbps
Security
64/128-bit WEP (HEX/ASCII), WPA / WPA2-RADIUS, WPA /
WPA2-PSK
Output Power
802.11b: 15 dBm (typical) @ 11 Mbps
802.11g: 15 dBm (typical) @ 54 M bps
802.11n: 13 dBm (typical) @ 300Mbps
Receiving Sensitivity
802.11b: -85 dBm (typical) @ 11 Mbps
802.11g: -68 dBm (typical) @ 54 Mbps
802.11n: -62 dBm (typical) @ 300 Mbps
Channels
1~ 11 (FCC), 1~13 (ETSI)
*Maximum wireless signal rates are referenced from IEEE 802.11 theoretical specifications. Actual
data throughput and coverage will vary depending on interference, network traffic, building
materials and other conditions.

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