Configuring Internet Connectivity

The Device view > Network section > Internet page shows how the appliance connects to the Internet.

On this page you can:

  • Add new IPv6 and IPv4 connections and edit, delete, or disable existing connections.

    Note - Only one IPv6 connection can exist at a time.

  • Configure a single Internet connection or multiple connections in High Availability or Load Sharing configurations. When multiple Internet connections are defined, the page shows them in a table.

  • Monitor the servers and Internet connections (see Monitoring).

We recommend you contact your local Internet Service Provider (ISP) to understand how to configure your specific Internet connection.

Note - ADSL/VDSL settings are relevant only for devices that have a DSL port. In 1570 / 1590 appliances, you can also configure a DSL connection over the DMZ port (see To configure an Internet connection over the DMZ port:).

Getting Started

  1. Connect with WebUI on the Quantum Spark Appliance at this address:

    https://<IP Address>:4434

  2. Go to Device view > Network section > Internet page.

  3. Configure an Internet connection.

    1. Click New or Add an IPv4 Internet connection.

      The New Internet Connection window opens.

    2. Configure the required setting on the Configuration tab:

    3. Configure the required settings on the Connection Monitoring tab:

    4. Configure the required settings on the Advanced tab:

  4. Click Save.

Watch the video

IPv4 Connection Types

IPv4 connection types

Select the connection type:

  • DHCP - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) automatically issues IP addresses within a specified range to devices on a network. The device retains the assigned address for a specified administrator-defined period. This does not apply to the ADSL/VDSL interface.

  • Static IP - A fixed (non-dynamic) IP address.

  • PPPoE - A network protocol to encapsulate Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) frames inside Ethernet frames. It is used mainly in DSL systems. PPPoE can run directly over the ADSL/VDSL interface as well as the DMZ interface with the SFP port. It can also run over WAN or DMZ interfaces that are typically connected to an external DSL modem. You must enter the IP address, the subnet mask, default gateway and DNS Server Settings.

  • IPoE - dynamic IP (DSL only) - The Internet IP of the appliance is imported through DHCP.

  • IPoE - static IP (DSL) - The Internet IP of the appliance is determined statically. You must enter the IP address, the subnet mask, default gateway and DNS Server Settings.

  • PPTP - The Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) uses a control channel over TCP and a GRE tunnel operating to encapsulate PPP packets.

  • L2TP - Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) is a tunneling protocol. It does not provide any encryption or confidentiality but relies on an encryption protocol that it passes within the tunnel to provide privacy.

  • Bridge - Connects multiple network segments at the data link layer (Layer 2).

  • Bridge DHCP - The bridge is configured as a DHCP client and the DHCP settings (including IP and subnet) are removed.

  • Cellular - This is for appliances with an internal LTEClosed Long Term Evolution - a standard for wireless broadband communication for mobile devices and data terminals, based on the GSM/EDGE and UMTS/HSPA technologies. It increases the capacity and speed using a different radio interface together with core network improvements. modem. Both SIM cards are used for the internet connection with a failover between them. The cellular connection can be over IPv4 or IPv6 and is configured the same way in both.

  • Cellular Modem - Connect to the Internet with a cellular modem to the ISP through a 3G or 4G network. For this option, select the USB/Serial option in the Interface name.

    Notes:

    • Only one cellular modem is supported.

    • Only customers with an approved RFE will be supported with the external modem specified in the RFE.

IPv6 Connection Types

IPv6 connection types

Important - The device can have only a single IPv6 Internet connection.

  • Static IPv6 - A fixed (non-dynamic) IP address.

  • Obtain automatically (DHCPv6/SLAAC) - In both Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) and Stateless Address Auto Configuration (SLAAC) the user does not set the IP as this is handled by the router/DHCP server. DHCPv6 issues a full IP address. SLAAC issues an IP address prefix, and the gateway completes the rest of the address according to discovery protocols.

  • PPPoE (IPv6 only) - A network protocol to encapsulate Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) frames inside Ethernet frames. It is used mainly with DSL services where individual users connect to the DSL modem over Ethernet and Metro Ethernet networks.

  • PPPoE (IPv4/IPv6) - Same as PPPoE ( IPv6 only), but the user must first configure a type IPv4 PPPoE internet connection on the same interface. Use this option when the ISP provides both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses through the same PPPoE connection. This prevents the need to define the same dialer connection details more than once.

  • IPv6 Bridge - A Layer 2 bridge between internal and external networks, containing both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (or just IPv6) to make the gateway reachable through the bridge in a dual stack/pure IPv6 network.

    Supported as static WAN IP and DHCP.

To configure an Internet connection over the DMZ port:

  1. On the Configuring Internet Connectivity page, click New to create a new Internet connection.

    The New Internet Connection window opens in the Configuration tab.

  2. For Interface, select DMZ.

    • For a DSL over DMZ Connection, select SFP-DSL.

    • For a non-DSL connection, select RJ45/SFP-Fiber.

  3. Click Save.

IPv6 configuration

Other configuration types

Cellular Connections

Monitoring

Note - This section applies to both IPv4 and IPv6 connections.

On the Internet Connectivity page, click Connection monitoring...