Page 71 / 119 Scroll up to view Page 66 - 70
Ubee Interactive
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide
March 2014
67
8.4
Using the Local Log Option
The
Local Log
option displays Access Control event log reporting.
Steps
To view the access control local log:
1.
Click the
Access Control
link from the top of the screen.
2. Click
Local Log
from the left side of the screen. The
Local Log
fields are explained
following this screen example.
Label
Description
Last Occurrence
Displays the time when the last event occurred.
Action
Displays what is done by access control, including dropping or
permitting access requests.
Target
Displays the destination IP address of a certain access
request.
User
Displays the user who triggered this event log.
Source
Displays the source IP address of this event.
Clear Log
To empty the displayed log entries, click Clear Log.
Page 72 / 119
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide
March 2014
68
9
Understanding the Wireless Menu
Use the Wireless menu to configure a wireless network.
Topics
See the following topics:
Using the Wireless Radio Option on page 68
Using the Primary Network Option on page 71
Using the Advanced Option on page 76
Using the Access Control Option on page 78
Using the Wi-Fi Multimedia Option on page 80
Using the Bridging Option on page 82
Deploying and Troubleshooting the Wireless Network on page 83
Steps
To access the wireless menu:
1.
Access the Web interface. Refer to
Accessing the Web User Interface Locally on page
18
.
2. Click
Wireless
from the main menu.
9.1
Using the Wireless Radio Option
The
Radio
option is used to configure the wireless radio, including channel number, and
bandwidth control.
Steps
To configure wireless operations:
1.
Click
Wireless
from the main menu.
2. The
Radio
screen is displayed. Field descriptions are listed below the screen
example.
Page 73 / 119
Ubee Interactive
Using the Wireless Radio Option
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide
March 2014
69
Label
Description
Wireless Interfaces
Displays the wireless name (SSID) for the DVW326 or uses
the default. Refer to
Understanding Default Values and Logins
on page 9
for more information on the SSID.
Wireless
Displays the wireless radio’s status, Enabled or Disabled.
Country
Defines the country where this device is located. Set by
default to Q1.
Output Power
Output power setup can be one of the following 4 options:
25%, 50%, 75%, or 100%.
802.11 Band
Displays the 802.11 band (2.4GHz).
802.11 n-mode
Sets the wireless networking standard.
By default it is set to Auto for 802.11n mode. This is the
preferred mode, as it has a significant increase in the
maximum raw OSI physical layer data rate from 54 Mbit/s to a
maximum of 600 Mbit/s with the use of four spatial streams
when at a channel width of 40 MHz.
One spacial stream at 20 MHz wide channel enables
72.2Mbps maximum data rate in 802.11n mode.
802.11 N Support Required
Defines whether 802.11n support is required (on) or not (off).
On forces the DVW326 to 802.11n mode and clients must
support 802.11n.
Page 74 / 119
Ubee Interactive
Using the Wireless Radio Option
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide
March 2014
70
9.1.1
Scanning for Wireless Access Points (APs)
You can search for wireless access points and display the results in a new window.
Steps
To search for wireless access points:
1.
Click
Scan Wireless APs
at the bottom of the Wireless Radio screen. Results are
displayed in a new window.
2. Click
Refresh
to update the results. Field descriptions are provided below.
Bandwidth
Sets the bandwidth to 20Mhz or 40Mhz. For 40 MHz, set the
sideband to lower or upper 20Mhz. 40 MHz channels double
the channel width. This allows doubling the PHY data rate
over a single 20 MHz channel.
Sideband for Control Channel
(40MHz only)
Only when using 40MHz Bandwidth should you choose the
Lower or Upper 20MHz.
Control Channel
Set to Auto by default, the Control Channel selects a specific
channel to deploy the wireless network. This allows you to set
the operating frequency/channel depending on your particular
region. Channel selection can have an impact on wireless
networking performance. For more information, refer to
Selecting a Wireless Channel on page 87
Regulatory Mode
Defines whether Regulatory Mode is set to off, 802.11d, or
802.11h.
TPC Mitigation (dB)
Defines the transmitter power control (TPC) mitigation setting
as 0 (off), 2,3, or 4.
OBSS Coexistence
Enables or disables overlapping BSS coexistence.
STBC Tx
Sets the space-time block codes (STBCs) for the transmitting
antenna.
Apply
Saves all screen changes when clicked.
Restore Wireless Defaults
Restores the factory default settings for wireless
configurations when clicked.
Scan Wireless APs
Scans for other wireless access points and displays channel,
encryption, SSID, RSSI levels, and other information. See the
section below for more information.
Label
Description
Page 75 / 119
Ubee Interactive
Using the Primary Network Option
Ubee DVW326 Advanced Wireless Voice Gateway Subscriber User Guide
March 2014
71
9.2
Using the Primary Network Option
Use the
Primary Network
option to configure a variety of wireless security settings.
Steps
To configure wireless security options:
1.
Click
Wireless
from the main menu.
2. Click
Primary Network
from the left side menu.
Field descriptions are listed below the
screen example.
Wireless default values are discussed in
Understanding Default Values and Logins on
page 9
.
Label
Description
Network Name
Displays the name of the wireless network (SSID) broadcast
by the access point.
Security Mode
Displays the encryption method used.
Mode
Displays the mode of the wireless access point: Possible
modes are:
Master – Communicates with associated wireless cards
that are in managed mode. Appears as a normal access
point with an SSID and channel. Network
communications, such as authentication, conflict, and
duplicate packets are managed by the wireless card.
Managed – Communicates with an associated master,
not directly with another managed AP. Wireless cards
connect to the master network and change their channel
to match. The master must accept the credentials of the
managed network for it to be associated.
Ad-hoc – Communicates directly with another wireless
network. Network cards must be in range and use the
same name and channel.
Monitor – Communicates in observation mode and does
not transmit. Can be used for troubleshooting wireless
links or checking bandwidth usage in the area.
PHY Mode
Displays the physical transceivers (PHY) layer method used.
RSSI
Displays the received signal strength (RSSI) of the wireless
access points in range of the device. Lower negative numbers
(for example, -1 to -65) indicate the access point is closer.
Greater negative numbers (for example, -66 to -95) indicate
the access point is farther away.
Channel
Displays the channel on which the wireless cable modem is
operating.
BSSID
Displays the MAC address for the nearby wireless access
points.

Rate

4 / 5 based on 1 vote.

Bookmark Our Site

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

Share
Top