Netgear MS510TXPP User Manual - Page 342
X, Color Blind
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Smart Managed Pro Switches MS510TX and MS510TXPP For more information about this page, see Configure a DiffServ Policy on page 209. 6. Click the Add button. The policy is added. 7. Click the Policy1 hyperlink to view the Policy Class Configuration page for this policy. 8. Configure the Policy attributes as follows: • Assign Queue. 3 • Policy Attribute. Simple Policy • Color Mode. Color Blind • Committed Rate. 1000000 Kbps • Committed Burst Size. 128 KB • Confirm Action. Send • Violate Action. Drop For more information about this page, see Configure a DiffServ Policy on page 209. 9. On the Service Configuration page, select the check box next to interfaces 7 and 8 to attach the policy to these interfaces, and then click the Apply button. (See Configure DiffServ Service Interfaces on page 214.) All UDP packet flows destined to the 192.12.2.0 network with an IP source address from the 192.12.1.0 network that include a Layer 4 Source port of 4567 and Destination port of 4568 from this switch on ports 7 and 8 are assigned to hardware queue 3. On this network, traffic from streaming applications uses UDP port 4567 as the source and 4568 as the destination. This real-time traffic is time sensitive, so it is assigned to a high-priority hardware queue. By default, data traffic uses hardware queue 0, which is designated as a best-effort queue. Also the confirmed action on this flow is to send the packets with a committed rate of 1000000 Kbps and burst size of 128 KB. Packets that violate the committed rate and burst size are dropped. 802.1X Local area networks (LANs) are often deployed in environments that permit unauthorized devices to be physically attached to the LAN infrastructure, or permit unauthorized users to attempt to access the LAN through equipment already attached. In such environments you might want to restrict access to the services offered by the LAN to those users and devices that are permitted to use those services. Port-based network access control makes use of the physical characteristics of LAN infrastructures to provide a means of authenticating and authorizing devices attached to a LAN port with point-to-point connection characteristics. If the authentication and authorization process fails, access control prevents access to that port. In this context, a port is a single Configuration Examples 342 User Manual
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