Linksys SRW2008
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Manual
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(English)Linksys SRW2008 - Product Brochure, size: 267 KB |
Related manuals Linksys SRW2008P Product Brochure Linksys SRW2008MP Product Brochure |
Linksys SRW2008
User reviews and opinions
| JerMe |
12:35pm on Monday, August 23rd, 2010 ![]() |
| The cheapest and most efficient way of getting 8 PoE ports to my office. Can power 6 phones and a WLAN AP, and there is still a port left. | |
| derick54 |
3:13pm on Wednesday, August 18th, 2010 ![]() |
| Good switch, Small enough to mount on a board at a demark, but comes with Rack-Mount brackets for a ful size rack. When I first purchased this product, I had a few problems trying to use the PoE function. I had an 802.11n Liknsys Access Point. | |
Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.
Documents

in a rack should be such that the amount of air flow required for safe operation of the equipment is not compromised.
Mechanical Loading Mounting of the equipment in
the rack should be such that a hazardous condition is not achieved due to uneven mechanical loading.
Circuit Overloading Consideration should be given
to the connection of the equipment to the supply circuit and the effect that overloading of the circuits might have on overcurrent protection and supply wiring. Appropriate consideration of equipment nameplate ratings should be used when addressing this concern.
Reliable Earthing Reliable earthing of rack-mounted
Mounting in Rack
equipment should be maintained. Particular attention should be given to supply connections other than direct connections to the branch circuit (e.g. use of power strips). To rack-mount the Switch in any standard 19-inch rack, follow the instructions described below. 1. Place the Switch on a hard flat surface with the front panel facing you. 2. Attach a rackmount bracket to one side of the Switch with the supplied screws. Then attach the other bracket to the other side.
WARNING: Make sure you use the screws supplied with the mounting brackets. Using the wrong screws could damage the Switch and would invalidate your warranty.
Attaching the Brackets 8-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch with Webview 5
Print this page at 100% size, cut along the dotted line and place on the wall to drill precise spacing.
Wall-Mount Placement
When mounting the Switch on the wall, the Switch should be mounted horizontally. The front panel should face either up or down. The unit should not be positioned vertically when mounted. You will need two suitable screws to mount the Switch. Use the template above to plan your installation.
sturdy and make sure the location is within reach of the power outlet. 2. Drill two holes into the wall. Make sure the holes are 3.7 inches (94 mm) apart. You can print the template from this page. 3. Insert a screw into each hole, and leave 3 mm (0.12 in) of its head exposed. 4. Maneuver the Switch so the wall-mount slots line up with the two screws. 5. Place the wall-mount slots over the screws and slide the Switch down until the screws fit snugly into the wall-mount slots.
Proper Wall-Mount Orientation (Horizontal)
NOTE: Linksys is not responsible for damages
incurred by insecure wall-mounting hardware. 1. Determine where you want to mount the Switch. Ensure that the wall you use is smooth, flat, dry and
SSH Crypto Key Generation
On the SSH Crypto Key Generation screen, the SSH Public Key Algorithm can be toggled between RSA and DSA using the SPACE bar to toggle the option. The SSH Public Key Length cannot be modified. Select Edit and press the Enter key to make changes. When your changes are complete, press the Esc key to return to the Action menu. Select Save and press the Enter key to save your changes. To exit, select Quit and press the Enter key.
NOTE: The Username & Password Settings screen can also be used to set passwords for other users.
Security Settings
The Security Settings screen enables you to configure security settings on the Switch, as well as generate and display the certificate.
SSH Keys Fingerprints
On the SSH Keys Fingerprints screen, the RSA and DSA keys will be displayed if they have been generated. Select Refresh to update the screen if necessary. To exit, select Quit and press the Enter key.
SSL Certificate Generation
Use the Certificate Generation screen to specify a devicegenerated certificate. The following fields are specified: Public Key Length Specifies the SSL RSA key length. (Range: 512 - 2048)
Organization Name Specifies the organization name. (Range: 1 - 64) Locality or City Name Specifies the location or city name. (Range: 1 - 64) State or Province Name Specifies the state or province name. (Range: 1 - 64) Country Name Specifies the country name. (Range: 2 - 2) Validity Term Specifies number of days certification is valid. (Range: 30 - 3650)
User & Password Settings
From this screen, you can administer the user names and passwords of those accessing the Switch. Select Edit and press the Enter key to make changes. When your changes are complete, press the Esc key to return to the Action menu. Select Save and press the Enter key to save your changes. To exit, select Quit and press the Enter key.
IP Address Configuration
The IP Address Settings screen allows you to set the IP information for the Switch.
Show Certificate
Use the Show Certificate screen to display the internal certificate.
IP Address Configuration SSL Certificate
Disable Active Management Profile
Selecting this option will prompt you to confirm that you want to disable the Active Management Profile.
IP Address The IP Address of the Switch is displayed. (The default IP address is 192.168.1.254.) Verify that the address you enter is correct and does not conflict with another device on the network. Subnet Mask The subnet mask of the Switch is displayed. Default Gateway The IP address of your networks default gateway is displayed. Management VLAN The VLAN ID number is displayed. DHCP client The status of the DHCP client is displayed. If you want the Switch to be a DHCP client, then select ENABLE. If you want to assign an static IP address to the Switch, then enter the IP settings and select DISABLE. Select Edit to make changes. When your changes are complete, press the Esc key to return to the Action menu, and select Save to save your changes.
Setup > Summary
The Summary screen provides device and system information about the Switch.
Device Information
System Name Displays the name for the Switch, if one has been entered on the Setup > Network Settings tab. IP Address The IP address of the Switch is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab). Subnet Mask The Subnet Mask of the Switch is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab). DNS Servers The DNS Servers are displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab). Default Gateway The Default Gateway is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab).
Login Screen 8-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch with Webview 17
Address Mode Indicates whether the Switch is configured with a Static or Dynamic IP address (configurable from Setup - Network Settings tab). Base MAC Address This is the MAC address of the Switch.
Setup > Network Settings
Serial Number The serial number of the Switch is displayed. Model Name The model name of the Switch is displayed. Hardware version The current hardware version is displayed. Boot Version The current boot version is displayed. Firmware Version The current software version is displayed. System Location The system location is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab). System Contact The contact person for this Switch is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Network Settings tab). System Uptime This displays the amount of time that has elapsed since the Switch was last reset. Current Time The system time is displayed here (configurable from Setup > Time tab).
The Network Settings screen allows you to assign DHCP or static IP settings to interfaces and assign default gateways.
Identification
System Name This field allows you to assign a system name. System Location This field is used for entering a description of where the Switch is located, such as 3rd floor. System Contact Enter the administrative contact person in this field. System Object ID The system object identifier is displayed here. Base MAC Address This is the MAC address of the Switch.
PoE Information
Maximum Available Power Indicates the maximum amount of power the device can supply. System Operation Status Indicates whether the PoE function is on or off. Mainpower Consumption Displays how much power is currently used.
Management VLAN This drop-down allows you to select the Management VLAN. IP Address Mode This drop-down allows you to select Static or Dynamic IP address configuration. Host Name Enter the DHCP Host Name here. IP Address If using a static IP address, enter the IP address here. Subnet Mask Enter the subnet mask of the currently configured IP address. Default Gateway Enter the IP address of the Default Gateway.
Max Capability Indicates that the port speeds and
duplex mode settings can be accepted.
10 Half Indicates that the port is advertising a 10Mbps
Port Management > Link Aggregation
half duplex mode setting.
10 Full Indicates that the port is advertising a 10Mbps
full duplex mode setting.
100 Half Indicates that the port is advertising a
100Mbps half duplex mode setting.
100 Full Indicates that the port is advertising a
100Mbps full duplex mode setting.
1000 Indicates that the port is advertising a 1000Mbps
full duplex mode setting. Current Advertisement The port advertises its capabilities to its neighbor port to begin the negotiation process. This field displays the current advertisement settings. Neighbor Advertisement The neighbor port (the port to which the selected interface is connected) advertises its capabilities to the port to start the negotiation process. This field displays the neighbors current settings. Back Pressure The Back Pressure feature of the selected port can be enabled or disabled. Current Back Pressure Displays whether Back Pressure is enabled or disabled on the currently selected port. Flow Control The Flow Control feature of the selected port can be enabled or disabled. Current Flow Control Displays whether Flow Control is enabled or disabled on the currently selected port. MDI/MDIX Select the Auto setting if you want the port to automatically detect the cable type. Select MDI if the port is connected to an end station. Select MDIX if the port is connected to a hub or another switch. Current MDI/MDIX This is the current MDI/MDIX status of the port. PVE When a port is a Private VLAN Edge (PVE) port, it bypasses the Forwarding Database and forwards all unicast, multicast, and broadcast traffic to an uplink. Click the Save Settings button to save your changes.
LAG This indicates if the port is part of a LAG. Description Description for this LAG. Admin Status The admin status of the LAG. Up indicates that the LAG is available. Down indicates that administrator has taken the port offline. When modifying the option, be sure to click the Save Settings option. Type The type of LAG is displayed here. Link Status The link status is displayed here. Speed The connection speed is displayed here. Duplex The connection duplex is displayed here. Flow Control This is the flow control status of the LAG. It is active when the port uses Full Duplex Mode. LAG Mode Displays the LAG status, On, Off, or Not Present. Detail button The Detail button opens up the Link Aggregation Detail screen.
VLAN Table
The VLAN Table displays a list of all configured VLANs. The VLAN ID, VLAN Name, and status of the VLAN are displayed here. To remove a VLAN, click the Remove button.
VLAN Management > Port Settings
VLAN Management > Create VLAN
The Create VLAN screen provides information and global parameters for configuring and working with VLANs.
The VLAN Port Settings screen provides parameters for managing ports that are part of a VLAN. The port default VLAN ID (PVID) is configured on the VLAN Port Settings screen. All untagged packets arriving to the device are tagged by the ports PVID. Port The port number included in the VLAN:
Mode Indicates the port mode. Possible values are: General The port belongs to VLANs, and each VLAN
is user-defined as tagged or untagged (full 802.1Q mode).
Access The port belongs to a single untagged VLAN.
Single VLAN
VLAN ID (2-4094) Indicates the ID number of the VLAN being configured. Up to 256 VLANs can be created. This field is used to add VLANs one at a time. To add the defined VLAN ID number, press the Add button. VLAN Name Displays the user-defined VLAN name.
When a port is in Access mode, the packet types which are accepted on the port (packet type) cannot be designated. It is also not possible to enable/disable ingress filtering on an access port.
Trunk The port belongs to VLANs in which all ports are
tagged (except for an optional single native VLAN). Acceptable Frame Type Packet type accepted on the port. Possible values are:
Admit Tag Only Indicates that only tagged packets
VLAN Range
VLAN Range. Indicates a range of VLANs being configured. To add the defined range of VLAN ID numbers, press the Add Range button.
are accepted on the port.
Admit All Indicates that both tagged and untagged
packets are accepted on the port.
PVID Assigns a VLAN ID to untagged packets. The possible values are 2 to 4094. VLAN 4095 is defined as per standard and industry practice as the discard VLAN. Packets classified to the Discard VLAN are dropped. Ingress Filtering Enables or disables Ingress filtering on the port. Ingress filtering discards packets which do not include an ingress port. LAG Indicates the LAG to which the VLAN is defined.
Tagged Defines the interface as a tagged member of a VLAN. All packets forwarded by the interface are tagged. The packets contain VLAN information. Untagged Packets forwarded by the interface are untagged. Forbidden Forbidden ports are not included in the VLAN. Exclude Excludes the interface from the VLAN. However, the interface can be added to the VLAN through GVRP.
VLAN Management > Ports to VLAN
The Ports to VLAN screen contains fields for configuring ports to a VLAN. The port default VLAN ID (PVID) is configured on the Create VLAN screen. All untagged packets arriving to the device are tagged by the ports PVID.
VLAN Management > VLAN to Ports
The VLAN to Ports screen contains fields for configuring VLANs to a ports.
Interface Displays the interface number. Mode Indicates the port to VLAN mode. The possible field values are: General Indicates the port belongs to VLANs, and each VLAN is user-defined as tagged or untagged (full 802.1Q mode). Access Indicates the port belongs to a single untagged VLAN. When a port is in Access mode, the packet types which are accepted on the port cannot be designated. Ingress filtering cannot be enabled/disabled on an access port. Trunk Indicates the port belongs to VLANs in which all ports are tagged, except for one port that can be untagged. Join VLAN Defines the VLANs to which the interface is joined. VLANs Displays the PVID tag.
The Ports to VLAN screen contains a Port Table for VLAN parameters for each ports. Ports are assigned VLAN membership by selecting and configuring the presented configuration options. VLAN The VLAN number. Access Indicates the port belongs to a single untagged VLAN. When a port is in Access mode, the packet types which are accepted on the port cannot be designated. Ingress filtering cannot be enabled/disabled on an access port. Trunk Indicates the port belongs to VLANs in which all ports are tagged, except for one port that can be untagged. General Indicates the port belongs to VLANs, and each VLAN is user-defined as tagged or untagged (full 802.1Q mode).
LAG Indicates if the port is a member of a LAG. If it is a member of a LAG, it cannot be configured to a VLAN. The LAG to which it belongs can be configured to a VLAN. enabled.
Port Indicates the port number on which GVRP is LAG Indicates the LAG number on which GVRP is
Join VLAN Detail
The Join VLAN Detail screen allows you to select the VLAN for the port selected and determine whether it is tagged or untagged. It will be displayed with a T if it is tagged and with a U if it is untagged.
Statistics > RMON History
The RMON History screen contains information about samples of data taken from ports. For example, the samples may include interface definitions or polling periods.
The RMON History screen is divided into RMON History and Log Table. Source Interface Displays the interface from which the history samples were taken. The possible field values are:
Port Specifies the port from which the RMON
information was taken.
LAG Specifies the port from which the RMON
information was taken. Sampling Interval Indicates (in seconds) the time that samplings are taken from the ports. The field range is 13600. The default is 1800 seconds (equal to 30 minutes). Max No. of Samples to Keep Indicates the number of samples to save. Owner Displays the RMON station or user that requested the RMON information. The field range is 0-20 characters. The Add to List button adds the configured RMON sampling to the Log Table at the bottom of the screen.
Log Table
Sampling Requested Displays the number of samples to be saved. The field range is 1-65535. The default value is 50.
Current Number of Samples Displays the current number of samples taken.
RMON History
CRC Align Errors Displays the number of CRC and Align errors that have occurred on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Undersize Packets Displays the number of undersized packets (less than 64 octets) received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Oversize Packets Displays the number of oversized packets (over 1518 octets) received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Fragments Displays the number of fragments (packets with less than 64 octets, excluding framing bits, but including FCS octets) received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Jabbers Displays the total number of received packets that were longer than 1518 octets. This number excludes frame bits, but includes FCS octets that had either a bad Frame Check Sequence (FCS) with an integral number of octets (FCS Error) or a bad FCS with a non-integral octet (Alignment Error) number. The field range to detect jabbers is between 20 ms and 150 ms. Collisions Displays the number of collisions received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Utilization Displays the percentage of the interface utilized.
Statistics > History Table
The RMON History screen contains interface specific statistical network samplings. Each table entry represents all counter values compiled during a single sample. History Entry No Displays the history table entry number. Owner Displays the RMON station or user that requested the RMON information. The field range is 0-20 characters. Sample No Indicates the sample number from which the statistics were taken. Drop Events Displays the number of dropped events that have occurred on the interface since the device was last refreshed. Received Bytes (Octets) Displays the number of octets received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. This number includes bad packets and FCS octets, but excludes framing bits. Received Packets Displays the number of packets received on the interface since the device was last refreshed, including bad packets, Multicast and Broadcast packets. Broadcast Packets Displays the number of good Broadcast packets received on the interface since the device was last refreshed. This number does not include Multicast packets. Multicast Packets Displays the number of good Multicast packets received on the interface since the device was last refreshed.
source and shuts down the port. The port remains shut down until reactivated, or until the device is reset. Enable Trap Enables traps when a packet is received on a locked port.
Number of Violations Indicates the number of packets that arrived on the interface in single-host mode, from a host whose MAC address is not the supplicant MAC address.
The ingress interface Packet content A combination of these attributes
Security > Storm Control
Port Displays the port number for which storm control is enabled.
Providing various mechanisms for determining the allocation of network resources to different handling classes, including:
The assignment of network traffic to a particular
hardware queue
The assignment of internal resources Traffic shaping
The terms Class of Service (CoS) and QoS are used in the following context: CoS provides varying Layer 2 traffic services. CoS refers to classification of traffic to traffic-classes, which are handled as an aggregate whole, with no per-flow settings. CoS is usually related to the 802.1p service that classifies flows according to their Layer 2 priority, as set in the VLAN header. QoS refers to Layer 2 traffic and above. QoS handles perflow settings, even within a single traffic class.
QoS > CoS Settings
Broadcast Control Indicates whether broadcast packet types are forwarded on the specific interface. Mode Specifies the Broadcast mode currently enabled on the device. The possible field values are:
Unknown Unicast, Multicast & Broadcast Counts
Unicast, Multicast, and Broadcast traffic.
Multicast
& Broadcast Counts Multicast traffic together.
Broadcast
Broadcast Only Counts only Broadcast traffic.
Rate Threshold The maximum rate (packets per second) at which unknown packets are forwarded. The default value is 3500. The range is 70 -100000.
Network traffic is usually unpredictable, and the only basic assurance that can be offered is best effort traffic delivery. To overcome this challenge, Quality of Service (QoS) is applied throughout the network. This ensures that network traffic is prioritized according to specified criteria, and that specific traffic receives preferential treatment. QoS in the network optimizes network performance and entails two basic facilities: Classifying incoming traffic into handling classes, based on an attribute, including:
the default value.
Rapid STP Enables Rapid STP on the device. Multiple STP Enables Multiple STP on the device.
BPDU Handling Determines how BPDU packets are managed when STP is disabled on the port/ device. BPDUs are used to transmit spanning tree information. The possible field values are:
Spanning Tree > STP Port Settings
Forwarding Indicates that the port is in Forwarding
mode. The port can forward traffic and learn new MAC addresses. Speed Indicates the speed at which the port is operating. Path Cost Indicates the port contribution to the root path cost. The path cost is adjusted to a higher or lower value, and is used to forward traffic when a path being rerouted. Default Path Cost When selected the default path cost is implemented. Priority Priority value of the port. The priority value influences the port choice when a bridge has two ports connected in a loop. The priority value is between 0 -240. The priority value is provided in increments of 16. Designated Bridge ID Indicates the bridge priority and the MAC Address of the designated bridge. Designated Port ID Indicates the selected ports priority and interface. Designated Cost Indicates the cost of the port participating in the STP topology. Ports with a lower cost are less likely to be blocked if STP detects loops. Forward Transitions Indicates the number of times the port has changed from the Blocking state to Forwarding state.
Network administrators can assign STP settings to specific interfaces using the STP Interface Settings screen. The STP Interface Settings screen contains the following fields: Interface Indicates the port or LAG on which STP is enabled. STP Indicates if STP is enabled on the port. Port Fast Indicates if Fast Link is enabled on the port. If Fast Link mode is enabled for a port, the Port State is automatically placed in the Forwarding state when the port link is up. Fast Link optimizes the STP protocol convergence. STP convergence can take 30-60 seconds in large networks. Port State Displays the current STP state of a port. If enabled, the port state determines what forwarding action is taken on traffic. Possible port states are:
Excluded Restricts sending OID traps or informs. Included Sends OID traps or informs.
Community String Identifies the community string of the trap manager. Notification Version Determines the trap type. The possible field values are:
SNMP V1 Indicates SNMP Version 1 traps are sent. SNMP V2 Indicates SNMP Version 2 traps are sent.
SNMPv3 Enables SNMPv3 as the Notification Recipient. Either SNMPv1,2 or SNMPv3 can be enabled at any one time, but not both at the same time. If SNMPv3is enabled, the User Name and Security Level fields are enabled for configuration: User Name Defines the user to whom SNMP notifications are sent. Security Level Defines the means by which the packet is authenticated. The possible field values are:
No Authentication Indicates the packet is neither
authenticated nor encrypted.
Authentication Indicates
packet
authenticated.
Privacy Indicates the packet is both authenticated
and encrypted.
8-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch with Webview 50
UDP Port Displays the UDP port used to send notifications. The default is 162. Filter Name Indicates if the SNMP filter for which the SNMP Notification filter is defined. Timeout Indicates the amount of time (seconds) the device waits before resending informs. The default is 15 seconds. Retries Indicates the amount of times the device resends an inform request. The default is 3 seconds. The Add to List button adds the Notification Recipient configuration to the relevant table at the bottom of the screen.
Password Specifies the new password. The password is not displayed. As it entered an * corresponding to each character is displayed in the field. (Range: 1-159 characters) Confirm Password Confirms the new password. The password entered into this field must be exactly the same as the password entered in the Password field. The Add to List button adds the user configuration to the Local Users Table.
Admin > Static Address
Admin > User Authentication
The User Authentication screen is used to modify user passwords.
A static address can be assigned to a specific interface on this switch. Static addresses are bound to the assigned interface and cannot be moved. When a static address is seen on another interface, the address will be ignored and will not be written to the address table. Interface Displays the interface to which the entry refers:
Port The specific port number to which the forwarding
Authentication Type Defines the user authentication methods. Combinations of all the authentication methods can be selected. The possible field values are:
Local Authenticates the user at the device level.
database parameters refer.
LAG The specific LAG number to which the forwarding
The device checks the user name and password for authentication.
RADIUS Authenticates the user at the RADIUS server. TACACS+ Authenticates the user at the TACACS+
RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service) A protocol that uses an authentication server to control network access. RJ-45 (Registered Jack-45) An Ethernet connector that holds up to eight wires. RMON (Remote Monitoring) Provides network information to be collected from a single workstation. Router A networking device that connects multiple networks together. RSTP (Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol) Detects and uses network topologies that allow a faster convergence of the spanning tree, without creating forwarding loops. Server Any computer whose function in a network is to provide user access to files, printing, communications, and other services. SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) The standard email protocol on the Internet. SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) A widely used network monitoring and control protocol. SSH Secure Shell. A utility that uses strong authentication and secure communications to log in to another computer over a network. SSL (Secure Socket Layer) Encryption technology for the Internet used to provide secure transactions, such as the transmission of credit card numbers for e-commerce. Static IP Address A fixed address assigned to a computer or device that is connected to a network. STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) Prevents loops in network traffic. The Spanning Tree Protocol (STP) provides tree topography for any arrangement of bridges. STP provides one path between end stations on a network, eliminating loops. Subnet (Sub-network) Subnets are portions of a network that share a common address component. In TCP/IP networks, devices that share a prefix are part of the same subnet. For example, all devices with a prefix of 157.100.100.100 are part of the same subnet. Subnet Mask An address code that determines the size of the network. Switch Filters and forwards packets between LAN segments. Switches support any packet protocol type. TACACS+ (Terminal Access Controller Access Control System Plus) Proprietary Cisco enhancement to Terminal Access Controller Access Control System (TACACS). Provides additional support for authentication, authorization, and accounting.
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) A network protocol for transmitting data that requires acknowledgement from the recipient of data sent. TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) A set of instructions PCs use to communicate over a network. Telnet A user command and TCP/IP protocol used for accessing remote PCs. TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol) A version of the TCP/IP FTP protocol that has no directory or password capability. Throughput The amount of data moved successfully from one node to another in a given time period. Trunking Link Aggregation. Optimizes port usage by linking a group of ports together to form a single trunk (aggregated groups). TX Rate Transmission Rate. UDP (User Data Protocol) Communication protocol that transmits packets but does not guarantee their delivery. Upgrade To replace existing software or firmware with a newer version. Upload To transmit a file over a network. URL (Uniform Resource Locator) The address of a file located on the Internet. VLAN (Virtual Local Area Networks) Logical subgroups that constitute a Local Area Network (LAN). This is done in software rather than defining a hardware solution. WAN (Wide Area Network) Networks that cover a large geographical area. Wildcard Mask Specifies which IP address bits are used, and which bits are ignored. A wild card mask of 255.255.255.255 indicates that no bit is important. A wildcard of 0.0.0.0 indicates that all the bits are important. For example, if the destination IP address is 149.36.184.198 and the wildcard mask is 255.36.184.00, the first two bits of the IP address are used, while the last two bits are ignored.
Technical Support
This limited warranty is neither a service nor a support contract. Information about Linksys current technical support offerings and policies (including any fees for support services) can be found at: www.linksys.com/support. This limited warranty is governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in which the Product was purchased by you. Please direct all inquiries to: Linksys, P.O. Box 18558, Irvine, CA 92623.
FCC Statement
This equipment has been tested and complies with the specifications for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense. WARNING: You are cautioned that changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void your authority to operate the equipment.
Regulatory Information
Industry Canada Statement
This Class A digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: 1. This device may not cause interference and 2. This device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device.
Avis dIndustrie Canada
Cet appareil numrique de la classe A est conforme la norme NMB-003 dIndustrie Canada. Le fonctionnement est soumis aux conditions suivantes : 1. Ce priphrique ne doit pas causer dinterfrences; 2. Ce priphrique doit accepter toutes les interfrences reues, y compris celles qui risquent dentraner un fonctionnement indsirable.
Safety Notices
Caution: To reduce the risk of fire, use only No.26 AWG
or larger telecommunication line cord.
Do not use this product near water, for example, in a
wet basement or near a swimming pool.
Avoid using this product during an electrical storm.
There may be a remote risk of electric shock from lightning. WARNING: This product contains lead, known to the State of California to cause cancer, and birth defects or other reproductive harm. Wash hands after handling.
User Information for Consumer Products Covered by EU Directive 2002/96/EC on Waste Electric and Electronic Equipment (WEEE)
This document contains important information for users with regards to the proper disposal and recycling of Linksys products. Consumers are required to comply with this notice for all electronic products bearing the following symbol:
Cetina (Czech) - Informace o ochran ivotnho prosted pro zkaznky v zemch Evropsk unie
Evropsk smrnice 2002/96/ES zakazuje, aby zazen oznaen tmto symbolem na produktu anebo na obalu bylo likvidovno s netdnm komunlnm odpadem. Tento symbol udv, e dan produkt mus bt likvidovn oddlen od bnho komunlnho odpadu. Odpovdte za likvidaci tohoto produktu a dalch elektrickch a elektronickch zazen prostednictvm urench sbrnch mst stanovench vldou nebo mstnmi ady. Sprvn likvidace a recyklace pomh pedchzet potencilnm negativnm dopadm na ivotn prosted a lidsk zdrav. Podrobnj informace o likvidaci starho vybaven si laskav vydejte od mstnch ad, podniku zabvajcho se likvidac komunlnch odpad nebo obchodu, kde jste produkt zakoupili.
Dansk (Danish) - Miljinformation for kunder i EU
EU-direktiv 2002/96/EF krver, at udstyr der brer dette symbol p produktet og/eller emballagen ikke m bortskaffes som usorteret kommunalt affald. Symbolet betyder, at dette produkt skal bortskaffes adskilt fra det almindelige husholdningsaffald. Det er dit ansvar at bortskaffe dette og andet elektrisk og elektronisk udstyr via bestemte indsamlingssteder udpeget af staten eller de lokale myndigheder. Korrekt bortskaffelse og genvinding vil hjlpe med til at undg mulige skader for miljet og menneskers sundhed. Kontakt venligst de lokale myndigheder, renovationstjenesten eller den butik, hvor du har kbt produktet, angende mere detaljeret information om bortskaffelse af dit gamle udstyr.
English - Environmental Information for Customers in the European Union
European Directive 2002/96/EC requires that the equipment bearing this symbol on the product and/or its packaging must not be disposed of with unsorted municipal waste. The symbol indicates that this product should be disposed of separately from regular household waste streams. It is your responsibility to dispose of this and other electric and electronic equipment via designated collection facilities appointed by the government or local authorities. Correct disposal and recycling will help prevent potential negative consequences to the environment and human health. For more detailed information about the disposal of your old equipment, please contact your local authorities, waste disposal service, or the shop where you purchased the product.

Secure, reliable, intelligent, managed gigabit switching for your growing business
The Linksys SRW2008 WebView fully managed switch brings gigabit speeds to your users, while adding a whole new level of intelligence and security to network. The eight 10/100/1000 Mbps ports enable you take advantage of the Gigabit Ethernet interfaces shipping on the current generation of servers, workstations and storage devices, in addition to supporting existing 10/100 Mbps clients. The optional miniGBIC ports allow you to expand network as your business grows. For security, the SRW2008 incorporates IEEE 802.1 VLANs, IEEE 802.1X port authentication and MAC-based filtering. Along with that, the switch has Access Control Lists (ACL), which provide more granular security settings, but also improved QoS control through IEEE 802.1p, Diffserv or ToS prioritization schemes. The enhanced QoS capability, combined with the SRW2008s advanced traffic management features ensures clear and reliable voice and video communications. Having this additional functionality is not useful if it cannot be implemented. Linksys WebView provides an intuitive, secure management interface enabling you to better utilize the comprehensive feature-set of the SRW2008, resulting in a better optimized, more secure network.
SRW2008
Supports 8 10/100/1000 ports with 2 shared miniGBIC slots
Included Access Control Lists (ACL) for granular security and QoS configuration
Features a 16 Gbps, non-blocking switch core
Fully manageable through the WebView web interface or console port
PRODUCT DATA
8-Port 10/100/1000 Managed Gigabit Switch
Model: SRW2008
BUSINESS SERIES
Features
8 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet ports 2 miniGBIC slots for fiber and copper Gigabit Ethernet expansion 16 Gbps, non-blocking, store-and-forward switching capacity Simplified QoS management using 802.1p, Diffserv or ToS traffic prioritization specifications Access Control Lists (ACL) for granular security and QoS implementation WebView management enables configuration and monitoring from a standard web browser Secure remote management of the switch via SSH and SSL encryption 802.1Q based VLANs enable segmentation of networks for improved performance and security Private VLAN Edge for simplified network isolation for guests connections or autonomous networks Automatic configuration of VLANs across multiple switches through GVRP/GARP User/Network port level security via 802.1X authentication and MAC-based filtering Increased the bandwidth and added link redundancy with Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP)
Specifications
Model Ports Cabling Type LEDs Switching Capacity Forwarding Rate MAC table size Number of VLANs VLAN HOL Blocking Web User Interface SNMP SNMP MIBs RMON Firmware Upgrade Port Mirroring Other Management IEEE 802.1X Access Control SRWRJ-45 connectors for 10BASE-T/100BASE-TX/1000Base-T with 2 Gigabit combo ports shared between miniGBIC ports and ports 7 and 8 Console port Auto MDI/MDI-X Autonegotiate/Manual setting UTP CAT 5 or better for 10BASE-T/100BASE-TX, UTP CAT 5e or better for 1000BASE-T Link/Act, Gigabit speed, System 16 Gbps, non-blocking 11.9 Mpps wire-speed performance 8K 256 active VLANs (VLAN ID range is 4096) Port-based and 802.1Q Tag-based VLANs Management VLAN Head of line blocking prevention Built-in Web UI for easy browser-based configuration (HTTP/HTTPS) SNMP version 1,2c,3 with support for traps RFC1213 MIB-2, RFC2863 Interface MIB, RFC2665 Ether-like MIB, RFC1493 Bridge MIB, RFC2674 Extended Bridge MIB (P-bridge, Q-bridge), RFC2819 RMON MIB (groups 1,2,3,9 only), RFC2737 Entity MIB, RFC 2618 RADIUS Client MIB RFC 1215 Traps Embedded Remote Monitoring (RMON) software agent supports four RMON groups (history, statistics, alarms, and events) for enhanced traffic management, monitoring, and analysis Web browser upgrade (HTTP) and TFTP Traffic on a port can be mirrored to another port for analysis with a network analyzer or RMON probe Traceroute Secure Socket Layer (SSL) Secure Shell (SSH) RADIUS Port mirroring TFTP upgrade SSL security for Web UI DHCP client BootP SNTP Xmodem upgrade Cable diagnostics PING Telnet client (SSH secure support) 802.1X - RADIUS Authentication. MD5 Encryption ACLs - Drop or rate limit based on: Source and destination MAC-based Source and destination IP address Protocol TOS/DSCP Port VLAN Ethertype
Performance
Layer 2
Management
Security
Enhanced rate limiting capabilities and storm control, including multicast, broadcast and flood control Port mirroring for non-invasive monitoring of switch traffic Jumbo frame support (10KB) SNMP v1, v2c, v3 and RMON support Fully rack-mountable using the included rack-mounting hardware
Availability
Link Aggregation Storm Control Spanning Tree IGMP Snooping Priority levels Scheduling Class of Service Rate Limiting Standards Link Aggregation using IEEE 802.3ad LACP Up to 8 ports in up to 8 groups Broadcast, Multicast and Unknown Unicast IEEE 802.1D Spanning Tree, IEEE 802.1w Rapid Spanning Tree, IEEE 802.1s Multiple Spanning Tree IGMP (v1/v2) snooping limits bandwidth-intensive video traffic to only the requestors. Supports 256 multicast groups 4 Hardware queues Priority Queuing and Weighted Round Robin (WRR) Port-based 802.1p VLAN priority based IPv4/v6 IP precedence/TOS/DSCP based TCP/UDP port-based Diffserv Classification and remarking ACLs Ingress policer Egress rate control 802.3 10BASE-T Ethernet, 802.3u 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet, 802.3ab 1000BASE-T Gigabit Ethernet, 802.3z Gigabit Ethernet, 802.3x Flow Control, 802.3 ad LACP, 802.1d STP, 802.1Q/p VLAN, 802.1w Rapid STP, 802.1s Multiple STP, 802.1X Port Access Authentication 11" x 1.75" x 6.69" (279 x 45 x 170 mm) 2.20 lb (1 kg) External AC power adapter FCC Part15 Class A, CE Class A, UL, cUL, CE mark, CB 32 to 104F (0 to 40C) -4 to 158F (-20 to 70C) 10 to 90% 10 to 95%
Environmental
Dimensions WxHxD Unit Weight Power Certification Operating Temperature Storage Temperature Operating Humidity Storage Humidity
Linksys A Division of Cisco Systems, Inc. 121 Theory Irvine, CA 92617 USA
E-mail: sales@linksys.com support@linksys.com Web: http://www.linksys.com Linksys products are available in more than 50 countries, supported by 12 Linksys Regional Offices throughout the world. For a complete list of local Linksys Sales and Technical Support contacts, visit our Worldwide Web Site at www.linksys.com.
Package Contents
SRW2008 with 8 10/100/1000BASE-T plus Two Shared MiniGBIC Ports AC Power Adapter and Cord Rack Mounting Kit CD with User Guide in PDF format Registration Card Console Cable
Minimum Requirements
Web-Based Utility: Web Browser - Microsoft Internet Explorer (Version 5.5 or Above) Cat5 Ethernet Network Cables Operating System: Windows 2000, XP or Above
Warranty
5 Years
Check the product package and contents for specific features supported. Specifications are subject to change without notice. Linksys is a registered trademark or trademark of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and certain other countries. Copyright 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Other brands and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders.
6111310A-RR
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