Firewall
Stateful inspection firewall: Incoming/Outgoing Traffic inspection based on connection information
Packet filter: Check based on the header information of an IP packet (IP or MAC source/destination addresses; source/destination ports, DiffServ attribute); remote- site dependant, direction dependant, bandwidth dependant
Extended port forwarding: Network Address Translation (NAT) based on protocol and WAN address, i.e. to make internal webservers accessible from WAN
N:N IP address mapping: N:N IP address mapping for translation of IP addresses or entire networks
Tagging: The firewall marks packets with routing tags, e.g. for policy-based routing
Actions: Forward, drop, reject, block sender address, close destination port, disconnect
Notification: Via e-mail, SYSLOG or SNMP trap
Quality of Service
Traffic shaping: Dynamic bandwidth management with IP traffic shaping
Bandwidth reservation: Dynamic reservation of minimum and maximum bandwidths, totally or connection bases, separate settings for send and receive directions
DiffServ/TOS: Priority queuing of packets based on DiffServ/TOS fields
Packet- size control: Automatic packet- size control by fragmentation or Path Maximum Transmission Unit (PMTU) adjustment.
Layer 2/Layer 3 tagging: Automatic or fixed translation of layer- 2 priority information (802.11p-marked Ethernet frames) to layer- 3 DiffServ attributes in routing mode. Translation from layer 3 to layer 2 with automatic recognition of 802.1p- support in the destination device.
Security
Intrusion Prevention: Monitoring and blocking of login attempts and port scans
IP spoofing: Source IP address check on all interfaces: only IP addresses belonging to the defined IP networks are allowed
Access control lists: Filtering of IP or MAC addresses and preset protocols for configuration access
Denial of Service protection: Protection from fragmentation errors and SYN flooding
General: Detailed settings for handling reassembly, PING, stealth mode and AUTH port
URL blocker: Filtering of unwanted URLs based on DNS hitlists and wildcard filters
Password protection: Password-protected configuration access can be set for each interface
Alerts: Alerts via e-mail, SNMP-Traps and SYSLOG
Authentication mechanisms: EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, PEAP, MSCHAP, MXCHAPv2 as EAP authentication mechanisms, PAP, CHAP and MS-CHAP as PPP authentication mechanisms
WLAN protocol filters: Limitation of the allowed transfer protocols, source and target addresses on the WLAN interface
Adjustable reset button: Adjustable reset button for "ignore", "boot- only" and "reset- or-boot
IP redirect: Fixed redirection of any packet received over the WLAN interface to a dedicated target address
High availability / redundancy
VRRP: VRRP (Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol) for backup in case of failure of a device or remote station. Enables passive standby groups or reciprocal backup between multiple active devices including load balancing and user definable backup priorities
FirmSafe: For completely safe software upgrades thanks to two stored firmware versions, incl. test mode for firmware updates
Analog/GSM modem backup: Optional operation of an analog or GSM modem at the serial interface
Line monitoring: Line monitoring with LCP echo monitoring, up to 4 addresses for end- to-end monitoring with ICMP polling.
WLAN
Frequency band 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz (EU compliance): 2400 -2483.5 MHz (ISM) or 5150 -5750 MHz or 5725-5825 MHz (UK only)
Antenna Gain: 2.3 dBi in 2.4 GHz, 4.8 dBi in 5 GHz
Data rates 802.11b/g: 54 Mbps to IEEE 802.11g (fallback to 48, 36 , 24, 18, 12, 9, 6 Mbps, Automatic Rate Selection) compatible to IEEE 802.11b (11, 5.5, 2, 1 Mbps, Automatic Rate Selection), 802.11 b/g compatibility mode or pure g or pure b
Data rates 802.11a: 54 Mbps (fallback to 48, 36 , 24, 18, 12, 9, 6 Mbps, Automatic Rate Selection), fully compatible with TPC (adjustable power output) and DFS 2 (automatic channel selection, radar detection) according to ETSI regulations. From LCOS Version 7.30 onwards, the official ETSI Version 1.3.1 (Guideline 301 893) is supported. With DFS 2/ ETSI Version 1.3.1 different thresholds are used for radar detection as compared to the current DFS.
Data rates 802.11n: 300 Mbps according to IEEE 802.11n Draft 2.0 with MSC15 (Fallback to 6,5 Mbps with MSC0)
Range 802.11a/b/g *: Up to 150 m (up to 30 m in buildings) *
Range 802.11n: Up to 250 m @ 6.5 Mbps (up to 20 m @ 300 Mbps indoor)*
Maximum transmission power 2.4 GHz: 802.11b: +19 dBm @ 1 and 2 Mbps, +19 dBm @ 5.5 and 11 Mbps; Output power at antenna connector 802.11g: +18 dBm @ 6 to 36 Mbps, +17 dBm @ 48 Mbps, +16 dBm @ 54 Mbps; 802.11n: +19 dBm @ 6,5/13 Mbps (MCS0/8, 20 MHz), +10 dBm @ 65/130 Mbps (MCS7/15, 20 MHz), +17 dBm @ 15/30 Mbps (MCS0/8, 40 MHz), +10 dBm @ 150/300 Mbps (MCS7/15, 40 MHz)
Maximum transmission power 5 GHz: Output power at antenna connector 802.11a/h: +18 dBm @ 6 to 24 Mbps, +17 dBm @ 36 Mbps, +16 dBm @ 48 Mbps, +15 dBm @ 54 Mbps; 802.11n: +18 dBm @ 6,5/13 Mbps (MCS0/8, 20 MHz), +10 dBm @ 65/130 Mbps (MCS7/15, 20 MHz), +17 dBm @ 15/30 Mbps (MCS0/8, 40 MHz), +10 dBm @ 150/300 Mbps (MCS7/15, 40 MHz)
Minimum transmission power: Transmission power reduction in software in 1 dB steps to min. 0.5 dBm
Receiver sensitivity 2.4 GHz: 802.11b: -91 dBm @ 11 MBit/s, -96 dBm @ 1 MBit/s; '802.11g: - 96 dBm @ 6 MBit/s, -83 dBm @ 54 MBit/s; 802.11n: -96 dBm @ 6,5 Mbps (MCS0, 20 MHz), - 79 dBm @ 65 Mbps (MCS7, 20 MHz); -95 dBm @ 13 Mbps (MCS8, 20 MHz), -75 dBm @ 130 Mbps (MCS15, 20 MHz); -90 dBm @ 15 Mbps (MCS0, 40 MHz), -75 dBm @ 150 Mbps (MCS7, 40 MHz); -90 dBm @ 30 Mbps (MCS8,
40 MHz), -71 dBm @ 300 Mbps (MCS15, 40 MHz)
Receiver sensitivity 5 GHz :802.11a/h: -95 dBm @ 6 MBit/s, -82 dBm @ 54 MBit/s; 802.11n: -95 dBm @ 6,5 Mbps (MCS0, 20 MHz), -77 dBm @ 65 Mbps (MCS7, 20 MHz); -94 dBm @ 13 Mbps (MCS8, 20 MHz), -74 dBm @ 130 Mbps (MCS15, 20 MHz); -91 dBm @ 15 Mbps (MCS0, 40 MHz), - 74 dBm @ 150 Mbps (MCS7, 40 MHz); - 91 dBm @ 30 Mbps (MCS8, 40 MHz), -70 dBm @ 300 Mbps (MCS15, 40 MHz)
Radio channels 2.4 GHz: Up to 13 channels, max. 3 non-overlapping (2.4 GHz band)
Radio channels 5 GHz: Up to 19 non-overlapping channels (5 GHz band) with automatic dynamic channel selection (DFS 2)
Roaming: Seamless handover between radio cells, IAPP support, IEEE 802.11d support
802.11i fast roaming: Pre-authentication and PMK caching for fast roaming
Fast client roaming: With background scanning, moving LANCOM "client mode" access points pre-authenticate to alternative access points which offer a better signal before Roaming
VLAN: VLAN ID definable per interface, WLAN SSID, point- to-point connection and routing context (4094 IDs)
Dynamic VLAN assignment: Dynamic VLAN assignment for target user groups based on MAC addresses, BSSID or SSID by means of external RADIUS server.
Q-in-Q tagging: Support of layered 802.1q VLANs
Multi-SSID: Simultaneous use of up to 8 independent WLAN networks per WLAN interface
Security: IEEE 802.11i / WPA2 with passphrase or 802.1x and hardware-accelerated AES, closed network, WEP64, WEP128, WEP152, user authentication, 802.1x /EAP
RADIUS server: Integrated RADIUS server for MAC address list management
EAP server: Integrated EAP server for authentication of 802.1x clients via EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, PEAP, MSCHAP or MSCHAPv2
Quality of Service: Prioritization according to Wireless Multimedia Extensions (WME, subset of IEEE 802.11e)
Bandwidth limitation: Each WLAN client (MAC address) can be assigned maximum transmit and receive rates and to an individual VLAN ID
Background scanning: Detection of rogue AP's and the channel information for all WLAN channels during normal AP operation. The Background Scan Time Interval defines the time slots in which an AP or Router searches for a foreign WLAN network in its vicinity. The time interval can be specified in either milliseconds, seconds, minutes, hours or days.
Client detection: Rogue WLAN client detection based on probe requests
802.1x supplicant: Authentication of an access point in WLAN client mode at another access point via 802.1X (EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS and PEAP)
Note: * The effective distance and transmission rate that can be achieved are depending of the site RF conditions.
802.11n Draft 2.0 Features
MIMO: MIMO technology is a technique which uses multiple transmitters to deliver multiple data streams via different spatial channels. LANCOM uses a 3 x 3 MIMO Configuration where 2 data streams are spread over 3 transmitters. Depending on the existing RFconditions the throughput is doubled with MIMO technology
40 MHz Channels: Two adjacent 20 MHz channels are combined to create a single 40 MHz channel. Depending on the existing RF Conditions channel bonding doubles the throughput
MAC Aggregation and Block Acknowledgement: MAC Aggregation increase the 802.11 MAC efficiency by combining MAC data frames and sending it out with a single header. The receiver acknowledges the combined MAC frame with a Block Acknowledgement. Depending on existing RF conditions, this
technique improves throughput by upto 20%
Short Guard Interval: The guard interval is the time between OFDM symbols in the air. 802.11n gives the option for a shorter 400 nsec guard interval compared to the legacy 800 nsec guard interval. Under ideal RF conditions this increases the throughput by upto 10%
WLAN operating modes
WLAN access point : Infrastructure mode (autonomous operation or managed by LANCOM WLAN Controller)
WLAN bridge: Point- to- multipoint connection of up to 7 Ethernet LANs (mixed operation optional), broken link detection, blind mode, up to
32 VLANs simultaneously for WLAN connections.
When configuring Pt- to- Pt links, pre- configured names can be used as an alternative to MAC Adresses for creating a link.
WLAN router Use of the LAN connector for simultaneous DSL over LAN, IP router, NAT/Reverse NAT (IP masquerading) DHCP server, DHCP
client, DHCP relay server, DNS server, PPPoE client (incl.Multi-PPPoE), PPTP client and server, NetBIOS proxy, DynDNS client,
NTP, port mapping, policy-based routing based on routing tags, tagging based on firewall rules, dynamic routing with RIPv2,
VRRP, spanning-tree protocol to support redundant routes in Ethernet networks
WLAN client Transparent WLAN client mode for wireless Ethernet extensions, e.g. connecting PCs or printers by Ethernet; up to 64 MAC addresses
Routing functions
Router: IP and NetBIOS/IP multi-protocol router
Advanced Routing and Forwarding: Separate processing of 8 contexts due to virtualization of the routers. Mapping to VLANs and complete independent management and configuration of IP networks in the device, i.e. individual settings for DHCP, DNS, Firewalling, QoS, Routing etc.
HTTP: HTTP and HTTPS server for configuration by web interface
DNS: DNS client, DNS server, DNS relay, DNS proxy and dynamic DNS client
DHCP: DHCP client, DHCP relay and DHCP server with autodetection
NetBIOS: NetBIOS/IP proxy
NTP: NTP client and SNTP server, automatic adjustment for daylight- saving time
Policy-based routing: Policy- based routing based on routing tags. Based on firewall rules, certain data types are marked for specific routing, e.g. to particular remote sites or lines.
Dynamic routing: Dynamic routing with RIPv2. Learning and propagating routes; separate settings for LAN and WAN. Extended RIPv2 including HopCount, Poisoned Reverse, Triggered Update for LAN (acc. to RFC 2453) and WAN (acc. to RFC 2091) as well as filter options for propagation of routes
Rapid Spanning Tree: 802.1d Spanning Tree and 802.1w Rapid Spanning Tree support for dynamic path selection with redundant layer 2 connections
LAN protocols
IP: ARP, proxy ARP, BOOTP, DHCP, DNS, HTTP, HTTPS, IP, ICMP, NTP/SNTP, NetBIOS, PPPoE (server), RADIUS, RIP- 1, RIP-2, RTP, SIP, SNMP, TCP, TFTP, UDP, VRRP
WAN protocols
Ethernet: PPPoE, Multi-PPPoE, ML-PPP, PPTP (PAC or PNS) and plain Ethernet (with or without DHCP), RIP- 1, RIP-2, VLAN
Interfaces
LAN: 10/100/1000 Base-TX, autosensing, auto node hub, PoE compliant with IEEE 802.3af
DSL over LAN (DSLoL): The LAN port can (even parallel to LAN mode) be used as a WAN port for connecting external DSL modems (PPPoE) or external routers.
External antenna connectors Three reverse SMA connectors for external LANCOM AirLancer Extender antennas or for antennas from other vendors. Please comply with your country regulatory requirements when setting up an antenna system. For information about calculating the correct antenna setup, please refer to www.lancom-systems.com.
Serial interface: Serial configuration interface / COM port (8 pin Mini-DIN): 9,600 - 115,000 baud, suitable for optional connection of analogue/GPRS modems
Management
LANconfig: Configuration program for Microsoft Windows, incl. convenient Setup Wizards. Optional group configuration, simultaneous remote configuration and management of multiple devices over IP connection (HTTPS, HTTP, TFTP). Configuration program preferences per project or user or global
LANmonitor Monitoring application for Microsoft Windows for (remote) surveillance and logging of the status of LANCOM devices and connections, incl. PING diagnosis and TRACE with filters and save to file
WLANmonitor: Monitoring application for Microsoft Windows for the visualization and monitoring of LANCOM WLAN installations, incl. Rogue AP and Rogue Client visualization
Webconfig: Integrated web server for the configuration of LANCOM devices via Internet browsers with HTTPS or HTTP
Access rights: Individual access and function rights for up to 16 administrators
User administration: RADIUS user administration for dial- in access (PPP/PPTP). Support for RADSEC (Secure RADIUS) providing secure communication
with RADIUS servers
Remote maintenance: Remote configuration with Telnet/SSL, SSH (with password or public key), browser (HTTP/HTTPS), TFTP or SNMP, firmware upload via HTTP/HTTPS or TFTP. A remote configuration for devices behind der LANCOM can be accomplished (after authentication) via tunneling of arbitrary TCP-based protocols, e.g. for HTTP(S) remote maintenance of VoIP phones or printers of the LAN
Security : Access rights (read/Write) over WAN or (W)LAN can be set up separately (Telnet/SSL, SSH, SNMP, HTTPS/HTTP), access control list
Scripting: Scripting function for batch-programming of all command- line parameters and for transferring (partial) configurations, irrespective of software versions and device types, incl. test mode for parameter changes
SNMP: SNMP management via SNMP V2, private MIB exportable by WEBconfig, MIB II
Timed control: Scheduled control of parameters and actions with CRON service
TFTP: TFTP client and server with variable file names (name, MAC/IP address, serial number)
Diagnosis: Extensive LOG and TRACE options, PING and TRACEROUTE for checking connections, LANmonitor status display, internal logging buffer for SYSLOG and firewall events
LANCOM WLAN Controller: Supported by all LANCOM WLAN Controller (separate optional hardware equipment for installation, optimization, operating and monitoring of WLAN networks)
Statistics
Statistics: Extensive Ethernet, IP and DNS statistics; SYSLOG error counter
Accounting: Connection time, online time, transfer volumes per station. Snapshot function for regular read-out of values at the end of a billing period.
Export: Accounting information exportable via LANmonitor and SYSLOG
Hardware
Power supply: 12 V DC, external power adapter (230 V)
Power supply: Via Power over Ethernet, compliant with IEEE 802.3af
Environment :Temperature range 0–35°C; humidity 0–95%; non-condensing
Housing: Robust synthetic housing, rear connectors, ready for wall mounting, Kensington lock; 210 x 45 x 140 mm (W x H x D)
Power consumption (max): approx. 9.5 Watts
Declarations of conformity
CE: EN 301 489-1, EN 301 489-17, EN 60950
2.4 GHz WLAN: ETS 300 328
5 GHz WLAN: EN 301 893 version 1.3.1 (incl. DFS 2)
Medical: Medical conformity with EN 60601-1-2
Notifications: Certifications notified in Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Austria, Switzerland, UK, Italy, Spain, France, Portugal, Czech Republic, Denmark, Malta
Package content
Manual: Printed User Manual (DE, EN) and Quick Installation Guide (DE/EN/FR/ES/IT/PT/NL)
CD: CD with firmware, management software (LANconfig, LANmonitor, WLANmonitor) and documentation
Cable: Serial configuration cable, 1.5m
Cable: 1 Ethernet cable, 3m
Antennas: Three 3 dBi dipole dualband antennas
Power supply unit: 12 V DC, external power adapter (230 V)
Support
Warranty: 3 years Support via Hotline and Internet KnowledgeBase
Software updates: Regular free updates (LCOS operating system and management tools) via Internet
Options
Service: LANCOM Service Option (24h advance replacement within Germany, 4 year warranty, not for PoE Power Injector), item no.61401
Public Spot: LANCOM Public Spot Option (authentication and accounting software for hotspots).
Expanded in LCOS 7.5x to include the Voucher Wizard. The Wizard allows easy set- up of guest accounts and the vouchers can e printed over any standard Printer on the network. Works without external RADIUS and Accounting Servers. Item no. 60642.
Accessories
LANCOM WLC-4006: LANCOM WLAN Controller for central management of 6 or 12 LANCOM access points and WLAN routers, item no. 61367
LANCOM WLC-4025: LANCOM WLAN Controller for central management of 25, 50 or 100 LANCOM access points and WLAN routers, item no. 61550
External antenna* AirLancer Extender O-D80g: 2.4 GHz "dual linear" polarisation diversity outdoor sector antenna, item no. 61221
External antenna* AirLancer Extender O-D60a: 5 GHz "dual linear" polarisation diversity outdoor sector antenna, item no. 61222
External antenna* AirLancer Extender O-D9a: 5 GHz "dual linear" polarisation diversity outdoor antenna, item no. 61224
Surge arrestor (antenna cable) AirLancer Extender SA-5L: surge arrestor (2.4 and 5 GHz), item no. 61553
Surge arrestor (LAN cable) AirLancer Extender SA-LAN: surge arrestor (LAN cable), item no. 61213
Power over Ethernet Injector: LANCOM PoE Power Injector, item no. 61502
Power over Ethernet Switch: LANCOM ES-1108P, 8 port switch with 4 PoE ports, item no. 61450
*) Note The Polarization Diversity Antennas require 2 cables and surge arrestorsItem numbers
LANCOM L-310agn Wireless 61520
Item numbers
LANCOM L-310agn Wireless 61520
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