Modular dsl router, Creative solutions for the digital life, Technical specifications – Actiontec electronic Actiontec Qwest Modular DSL Router M1000 User Manual

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Creative Solutions for the Digital Life

Modular DSL Router

Technical Specifications

Descriptions

ITU G.992.1 (G.dmt), G.992.2 (G.Lite), G.994.1
(G.hs), G.992.3 (G.dmt.bis), G.992.4
(G.lite.bis), G.992.5 (ADSL2plus)

ANSI T1.413 Issue2

ATM User-Network Interface, Version 3.1,
Section 3.

- The full VPI range (0 – 4095) and VCI range

(1 – 65535) are supported.

- Adaptation Layers AAL5, AAL2 and AAL0

are supported.

- The traffic shaping function supports traffic

classes CBR, VBR (real time and non-real
time) and UBR (with PCR limiting).

ITU-T Recommendation I.610 B-ISDN
Operation and Maintenance Principles and
Operations.

- F5 segment and end-to-end loopback cells

IEEE 802.11g

IEEE 802.11b

IEEE 802.1x

WPA/WPA2

WEP 64/128 bit encryption

SSID Broadcast enable/disable

WPS

WMM

Multi SSID (4)

Auto Channel Selection

2 FXS ports for phone/fax connection

Modular/Stand-alone mode for Home/
On-the-Road use

Remote XML auto configuration

Remote auto firmware upgrade

Echo cancellation for clear calls

Major Codecs (G.711a/u-law, G.729A, G.729AB,
G.726, G.723.1)

Caller-ID Type I/Type II

Call hold, call waiting, call forwarding, call
transfer, 3-way conference

SIP/RTP packet TOS tagging

ISO/IEC 8802-3; ANSI/IEEE standard
802.3 part 3.

- IEEE 802.3x – Full Duplex capable
- IEEE 802.3u – Auto negotiation

RFC 1213 "Management Information Base for
Network management of TCP/IP-based internet:
MIB-II".

D-I-X, "The Ethernet - A Local Area Network:
Data Link Layer and Physical Layer Specifications".

Transparent MAC level bridge for Ethernet-like devices
in conformance with the IEEE802.1d specification.

ISO/IEC 10038:1993 (E), Std 802.1D.

RFC1213 "Management Information Base for Network
Management of TCP/IP-based internet: MIB-II".

RFC1493 “Definitions of Managed Objects for Bridges”.

RFC 791 “Internet Protocol”.

RFC 950 “Internet Standard Subnetting Procedure”.

RFC 1122 “Requirements for Internet hosts
– communication layers”.

RFC 1191 “Path MTU discovery”.

RFC 1213 “Management Information Base for
Network Management of TCP/IP-based Internet”.

RFC 894 “Standard for the transmission of IP
datagrams over Ethernet networks”.

RFC 826 “Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol:
Or converting network protocol addresses to 48.bit
Ethernet address for transmission on Ethernet hardware”.

RFC 792 “Internet Control Message Protocol”.

RFC 768 “User Datagram Protocol”.

RFC 793 “Transmission Control Protocol”.

Support Static Route

Support unnumbered mode

RFC 1058 “Routing Information Protocol”.

RFC 1723 “RIP Version 2 - Carrying Additional
Information”.

RFC 2453 “RIP Version 2”.

RFC 1812 “Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers”.

RFC 1191 “Path MTU discovery”.

RFC 2131 “Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol”.

RFC 2132 “DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor
Extensions”.

RFC 2131 “Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol”.

RFC 2132 “DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor
Extensions”.

The DHCP client supports the following
minimal subset of options described in RFC2132:

- Requested IP Address (requested by default;

is mandatory)

- Parameter Request list (subnet-mask only)
- IP Address Lease time (dhcp-lease-time)
- Client-identifier (dhcp-client-identifier)
- Default route (routers)
- DNS Proxy Server

Features

ADSL

ATM

OAM

Wireless

Module

VoIP Module

Ethernet

Bridge

IP

ARP

ICMP

UDP

TCP

IP Router

RIP

DHCP Server

DHCP Client

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