AirLive AP60 User Manual

Page 95

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12. Wireless Network Glossary

79

AirLive AP60 User’s Manual

IGMP Snooping
Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is a Layer 3 protocol to report IP multicast

memberships to neighboring multicast switches and routers. IGMP snooping is a feature

that allows an Ethernet switch to "listen in" on the IGMP conversation between hosts and
routers. A switch support IGMP snooping has the possibility to avoid multicast traffic being

treated as broadcast traffic; therefore, reducing the overall traffic on the network.


Infrastructure Mode
A wireless network that is built around one or more access points to provide wireless clients

access to wired LAN / Internet service. The opposite of Infrastructure mode is Adhoc

mode.


IP address
IP (Internet Protocol) is a layer-3 network protocol that is the basis of all Internet

communication. An IP address is 32-bit number that identifies each sender or receiver of

information that is sent across the Internet. An IP address has two parts: an identifier of a
particular network on the Internet and an identifier of the particular device (which can be a

server or a workstation) within that network. The new IPv6 specification supports 128-bit

IP address format.


IPsec
IP Security. A set of protocols developed by the IETF to support secure exchange of

packets at the IP layer. IPsec has been deployed widely to implement Virtual Private
Networks (VPNs). IPsec supports two encryption modes: Transport and Tunnel.

Transport mode encrypts only the data of each packet, but leaves the header untouched.

The more secure Tunnel mode encrypts both the header and the payload. On the receiving

side, an IPSec-compliant device decrypts each packet.

LACP (802.3ad) Trunking
The 802.3ad Link Aggregation standard defines how to combine the several Ethernet ports

into one high-bandwidth port to increase the transmission speed. It is also known as port
trunking. Both devices must set the trunking feature to work.


MAC
Media Access Control. MAC address provides layer-2 identification for Networking Devices.
Each Ethernet device has its own unique address. The first 6 digits are unique for each

manufacturer. When a network device have MAC access control feature, only the devices

with the approved MAC address can connect with the network.

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