Prosoft Radiolinx
Prosoft Radiolinx
802.11a, b, g, n
Industrial Hotspots
802.11abg, RLX2-IHW
802.11abgn, Fast, RLX2-IHNF
802.11g, High Power, RLX2-IHG
802.11a, High Power, RLX2-IHA
802.11abgn, Weatherproof IP66/67, RLX2-IHNF-W/WC
USER MANUAL
Your Feedback Please
We always want you to feel that you made the right decision to use our products. If you have suggestions, comments,
compliments or complaints about our products, documentation, or support, please write or call us.
How to Contact Us
ProSoft Technology
5201 Truxtun Ave., 3rd Floor
Bakersfield, CA 93309
+1 (661) 716-5100
+1 (661) 716-5101 (Fax)
www.prosoft-technology.com
[email protected]
® ® ® ® ®
ProSoft Technology , ProLinx , inRAx , ProTalk , and RadioLinx are Registered Trademarks of ProSoft Technology, Inc.
All other brand or product names are or may be trademarks of, and are used to identify products and services of, their
respective owners.
In an effort to conserve paper, ProSoft Technology no longer includes printed manuals with our product shipments. User
Manuals, Datasheets, Sample Ladder Files, and Configuration Files are provided on the enclosed DVD, and are available at
no charge from our web site: http://www.prosoft-technology.com
Content Disclaimer
This documentation is not intended as a substitute for and is not to be used for determining suitability or reliability of
these products for specific user applications. It is the duty of any such user or integrator to perform the appropriate and
complete risk analysis, evaluation and testing of the products with respect to the relevant specific application or use
thereof. Neither ProSoft Technology nor any of its affiliates or subsidiaries shall be responsible or liable for misuse of the
information contained herein. Information in this document including illustrations, specifications and dimensions may
contain technical inaccuracies or typographical errors. ProSoft Technology makes no warranty or representation as to its
accuracy and assumes no liability for and reserves the right to correct such inaccuracies or errors at any time without
notice. If you have any suggestions for improvements or amendments or have found errors in this publication, please
notify us.
No part of this document may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
photocopying, without express written permission of ProSoft Technology. All pertinent state, regional, and local safety
regulations must be observed when installing and using this product. For reasons of safety and to help ensure compliance
with documented system data, only the manufacturer should perform repairs to components. When devices are used for
applications with technical safety requirements, the relevant instructions must be followed. Failure to use ProSoft
Technology software or approved software with our hardware products may result in injury, harm, or improper operating
results. Failure to observe this information can result in injury or equipment damage.
WARNING – EXPLOSION HAZARD – DO NOT REPLACE ANTENNAS UNLESS POWER HAS BEEN SWITCHED OFF OR THE
AREA IS KNOWN TO BE NON-HAZARDOUS.
"THIS DEVICE USES AN INTERNAL COMPACT FLASH RADIO MODULE AS THE PRIMARY RADIO
COMPONENT. THE COMPACT FLASH RADIO MODULE DOES NOT HAVE AN FCC ID LABEL. THE
COMPACT FLASH RADIO MODULE HAS NO USER SERVICEABLE PARTS."
"THIS DEVICE COMPLIES WITH 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."
“THIS DEVICE IS CONFIGURED FOR OPERATION IN THE USA DURING MANUFACTURING. THESE
CONFIGURATION CONTROLS ARE NOT PRESENT IN THE SOFTWARE WITH WHICH THE UNIT IS
SHIPPED; THEREFORE THE END USER CANNOT CHANGE THE MAX POWER SETTINGS OR THE
COUNTRY/REGION. THE MODELS SOLD & SHIPPED WITHIN THE U.S. ARE IDENTIFIED WITHIN THE
MODEL NUMBER WITH –A AS PART OF THE IDENTIFIER.”
"TO REDUCE POTENTIAL RADIO INTERFERENCE TO OTHER USERS, THE ANTENNA TYPE AND ITS GAIN
SHOULD BE CHOSEN SUCH THAT THE EQUIVALENT ISOTROPICALLY RADIATED POWER (EIRP) IS NOT
MORE THAN THAT REQUIRED FOR SUCCESSFUL COMMUNICATION."
"THE INSTALLER OF THIS RADIO EQUIPMENT MUST INSURE THAT THE ANTENNA IS LOCATED OR
POINTED SUCH THAT IT DOES NOT EMIT RF FIELD IN EXCESS OF HEALTH CANADA LIMITS FOR THE
GENERAL POPULATION; CONSULT SAFETY CODE 6, OBTAINABLE FROM HEALTH CANADA."
RLX2-IHNF, RLX2-IHA, RLX2-IHG, RLX2-IHW
1. This equipment is Suitable For Use in Class I, Division2, Groups A, B, C, D or Non-Hazardous
Location Only.
3. WARNING – EXPLOSION HAZARD – Do not disconnect equipment unless power has been
removed or the area is known to be non-hazardous.
4. The unit is to be connected only to PoE networks without routing to the outside plant.
5. WARNING – EXPLOSION HAZARD – The SIM Card/Personality Module connection is for initial
setup and maintenance only. Do not use, connect, or disconnect unless area is known to be
non-hazardous. Connection or disconnection in an explosive atmosphere could result in
explosion.
RLX2-IHNF-W
1. WARNING – EXPLOSION HAZARD – DO NOT USE IN CID2 HAZARDOUS LOCATIONS.
3. This unit is to be connected only to PoE networks without routing to an outside plant.
6. Unit does not comply to the cable assy requirements of ISA 12.12.01 but does comply with
the ATEX standards IEC60079-0 & IEC60079-15. In ATEX environments, do not
connect/disconnect unless area is known to be non-hazardous.
RLX2-IHNF-WC
Recommended Antennas
ProSoft offers a variety of Antennas and Cables for use with your RadioLinx device. The following is
a sample of available antennas.
For a complete list and description, please visit our website: http://www.prosoft-
technology.com/Products/Industrial-Wireless - Antennas and Accessories.
A2406NJ-OCD 6dBi Omni N jack heavy duty collinear with mounting hardware 2.4GHz
A2406S3-DP 6dBi Panel RP-SMA MIMO antenna with 3 foot pigtail 2.4GHz
A2408NJ-DP 8 dBi Directional patch panel N jack with mounting hardware 2.4GHz
A2409NJ-OCD 9 dBi Omni N jack heavy duty collinear with mounting hardware 2.4GHz
A2413NJ-DP 13 dBi Directional patch panel N jack with mounting hardware 2.4GHz
A2416NJ-DS 16 dBi Directional 120 degree sector N jack with mounting hardware 2.4GHz
A5003S-OBH 3dBi Omni RP-SMA bulkhead mount with 5' LMR195 pigtail 5GHz
A5007S3-DP 7dBi Panel RP-SMA MIMO antenna with 3 foot pigtail 5GHz
A2503S3-O 3/4dBi Omni RP-SMA MIMO antenna with 3 foot pigtail 2.4/5GHz
A2503S6-O 3/4dBi Omni RP-SMA Dual MIMO antenna with 3 foot pigtail 2.4/5GHz
A2506NJ3-O 6dBi Omni N-Jack Single MIMO antenna with 3 foot pigtail 2.4/5GHz
An adapter may be needed for some of the listed antennas to operate with certain radios
If a specific application requires proximity of less than 20 cm, the application must be approved through the FCC for
compliance to part 2.1093.
Contents
YOUR FEEDBACK PLEASE .......................................................................................................................................... 2
HOW TO CONTACT US ............................................................................................................................................ 2
CONTENT DISCLAIMER............................................................................................................................................. 2
IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................ 3
Industry Canada Requirements: .................................................................................................................... 3
RLX2-IHNF, RLX2-IHA, RLX2-IHG, RLX2-IHW.................................................................................................. 4
RLX2-IHNF-W................................................................................................................................................. 4
RLX2-IHNF-WC .............................................................................................................................................. 4
Recommended Antennas .............................................................................................................................. 5
Antenna Spacing Requirements for User Safety ........................................................................................................ 6
DIAGNOSTICS .......................................................................................................................................................60
CHECK THE ETHERNET CABLE ...................................................................................................................................61
LED DISPLAY........................................................................................................................................................62
RETRIEVE THE DEFAULT PASSWORD ..........................................................................................................................63
RLX2-IHNF-W and RLX2-IHNF-WC Reset ......................................................................................................63
Resetting All Other Radios ...........................................................................................................................64
TROUBLESHOOT IH BROWSER ERROR MESSAGES .........................................................................................................65
TROUBLESHOOT MISSING RADIOS ............................................................................................................................65
IMPROVE SIGNAL QUALITY ......................................................................................................................................66
READ-ONLY FIELDS................................................................................................................................................68
CONFIGURATION HELP ...........................................................................................................................................68
RADIO STATUS......................................................................................................................................................72
Available Parents .........................................................................................................................................73
Address Table ...............................................................................................................................................75
Port Status ...................................................................................................................................................76
RADIO NETWORK SETTINGS ....................................................................................................................................78
Parent Link Settings .....................................................................................................................................82
Prioritized Parent Selection ...................................................................................................................................... 85
IGMP Settings ..............................................................................................................................................88
VLAN Settings...............................................................................................................................................88
QoS Settings .................................................................................................................................................90
Rapid Spanning Tree Functionality ..............................................................................................................92
Spanning Tree Settings ................................................................................................................................95
Advanced Settings........................................................................................................................................97
Roam Control .............................................................................................................................................102
SECURITY SETTINGS .............................................................................................................................................105
Encryption Type .........................................................................................................................................108
WPA Phrase ...............................................................................................................................................108
Enterprise Mode Settings ...........................................................................................................................109
Certificate Management ............................................................................................................................110
Configuring the RLX2 Repeaters with Certificates .................................................................................................. 111
WEP Key .....................................................................................................................................................112
MAC Filter ..................................................................................................................................................114
Hide Network SSID .....................................................................................................................................114
RADIO ACCESS SETTINGS ......................................................................................................................................115
SNMP Agent Settings .................................................................................................................................117
Serial Settings ............................................................................................................................................118
Change Password .......................................................................................................................................121
APPLY CHANGES .................................................................................................................................................122
CANCEL CHANGES ...............................................................................................................................................122
FACTORY DEFAULTS .............................................................................................................................................122
RLX2-IHNF DFS SUPPORT.................................................................................................................................. 123
Master Radio Operations .......................................................................................................................... 123
DFS Auto Select ......................................................................................................................................... 124
REFERENCE.................................................................................................................................................. 157
ANTENNAS.........................................................................................................................................................181
Control Drawing .........................................................................................................................................182
Antenna Pattern ........................................................................................................................................183
Antenna Gain .............................................................................................................................................184
Antenna Polarity ........................................................................................................................................184
Whip Antennas ..........................................................................................................................................185
Collinear Array Antennas ...........................................................................................................................185
Yagi Array Antenna ....................................................................................................................................186
Parabolic Reflector Antennas.....................................................................................................................186
RLX2 Approved Antennas ...........................................................................................................................187
Approved Antennas in Europe/CE .......................................................................................................................... 188
Approved Antennas in Mexico ............................................................................................................................... 189
Approved Antennas with Power Amp .................................................................................................................... 189
Antenna Location, Spacing, and Mounting ............................................................................................... 190
START HERE
For most applications, the installation and configuration steps described in the following
topics will work without additional programming. ProSoft Technology strongly
recommends the completion of the steps in this chapter before developing a custom
application.
Except for different operating frequencies and output power levels, these radios all
operate in a similar fashion. Different models operating on common frequencies can
communicate with each other. Furthermore, most RLX2 series radios (except RLX2-IHNF)
can communicate with ProSoft Technology’s legacy RLXIB series of radios. Details on the
specific differences between the RLX2 and RLXIB series products can be found in the
Compatibility with ProSoft RLXIB Series Radios section on page 159.
General Features
The RadioLinx® 802.11 Industrial Hotspots™ are high-speed wireless Ethernet radios,
with Power over Ethernet (PoE) and Serial Encapsulation. All radios operate at speeds
up to 54 Mbps, and the RLX2-IHNF operates at speeds up to 300 Mbps. Designed for
industrial installations, the RLX2 series offer many features including hazardous location
certifications, IGMP Snooping, OFDM for noise immunity, repeater mode to extend
range, QoS, VLANs, RADIUS Server, automatic parent selection for self-healing, OPC
server diagnostics, extended temperature, high vibration/shock and DIN-rail mounting.
LED Indicators
All radios have LED indicators on the front panel that indicate the status of the radio
while booting up and during operation. The LED states are summarized in the following
table:
Antenna Ports
Each RLX2 series radio has active antenna connectors on the top as shown below:
RLX2-IHA
RLX2-IHG
These radios have a single active antenna port:
RLX2-IHNF
RLX2-IHNF-W-A (FCC)
RLX2-IHNF-W-E (ETSI)
These two radios represent the weatherproof versions for the RLX2-IHNF. Three
antennas perform the same functions as those on the RLX2-IHNF.
RLX2-IHNF-WC
RLX2-IHW
This radio uses the right-side antenna port for transmit and receive. An optional
receive-only antenna can be attached to the left-side antenna port to improve
performance in some applications.
Package Contents
Standard Content RLX2-IHNF-W
The following components are included with Weatherproof RLX2 radio products:
Qty. Part Name Part Number Part Description
®
1 RLX2 Series Radio RLX2-IHNF-W RadioLinx RLX2 802.11 Industrial Hotspot
Weatherproof
1 ProSoft Solutions DVD DVD-001 Contains sample programs, utilities, firmware
®
images, and documentation for RadioLinx
products.
1 U-mounting bracket Pole mounting bracket
RLX2-IHNF-W Cables
The following cables are for outdoor locations (sold separately).
Part Name Part Number Part Description
Locking Clip CUL-M12-LOCKCLIP
7 foot (2m), CULRJ45-M12-007 7 foot Network PoE cable
M12 to RJ45,
Network
Cable/ PoE
or
33 foot (10m), CULRJ45-M12-033 33 foot Network PoE cable
M12 to RJ45,
Network
Cable/PoE
33 foot (10m), CULPWR-M12-033 33 foot Power Cable
M12 to
unterminated
leads, Power
Cable CUPLWR-M12-010 10 foot Power Cable
or
10 foot (3m),
M12 to
unterminated
leads, Power
Cable
1 Oval Clip & Seal Cap Oval clip and seal cap for conduit connections
Personality Module
The RLX2 series of industrial hotspots include a feature for quickly moving the
configuration from an installed radio to a replacement using a provided MicroSD card.
This feature reduces the time to replacement of a damaged radio. Consideration of how
to use this feature in advance of installation is necessary to take advantage of this
feature.
Note: The RLX2-IHNF-W and WC do not have a Personality Module.
Important: Before installing, please verify all listed product items are present. If any of these
components are missing, please contact ProSoft Technology Support for replacements.
System Requirements
The RLX2-IHx browser is designed for Microsoft Windows XP, 2000, and 2003. Minimum
hardware requirements are:
Pentium® II 450 MHz minimum. Pentium III 733 MHz (or better) recommended
Supported operating systems:
o Microsoft Windows XP Professional 32-bit with Service Pack 3
o Microsoft Windows 7 Professional 32- or 64-bit, with Service Pack 1
o Microsoft Windows 8 Release Preview 32- or 64-bit.
Other Microsoft Windows operating system versions may work but have not
been tested by ProSoft and are not officially supported.
128 Mbytes of RAM minimum, 256 Mbytes or more of RAM recommended
100 MB available hard drive space
256-color VGA graphics adapter, 800 x 600 minimum resolution (True Color 1024 x
768 resolution or better recommended)
At least one 100BASET or 1000BASET network interface. A second interface is often
useful to setup a small private network for initial configuration and testing.
In addition, these items may be needed:
A DVD-ROM drive, if installing the RadioLinx IH Browser from optical media.
An RS-232 port on the PC or a USB-to-serial convertor cable, to use serial
encapsulation features or to access system debugging information.
An internet connection may be useful to download updated product information
from the ProSoft Technology website at http://www.ProSoft-Technology.com.
Installation from DVD
1. Insert the ProSoft Solutions DVD in the DVD drive. On most computers, a menu
screen will open automatically. If a menu does not appear within a few seconds,
follow these steps:
7. Type the product name into the search box and click Search. Here is an example
of searching for the RLX2-IHNF:
8. Click on the Product Name. The screen displays the contents for this module.
10. Follow the instructions on the installation wizard to install the program with its
default location and settings.
11. When the installation finishes, a prompt to restart the computer may appear if
certain files were in use during installation. The updated files will be installed
during the restart process.
This section describes how to setup RLX2 radios in a minimal configuration before
deploying them in the permanent installation. It will help verify the radios are
operational along with getting familiar with basic configuration procedures.
Note that the procedures described in this section assume the radios are in their default
configurations as shipped by ProSoft. If that is not the case, reset the radios to factory
defaults before attempting these procedures.
In any given network, there must be one radio acting as a Master, and the other radios
will be configured as Repeaters or Clients. Generally there is only one Master radio per
network.
Because most wireless networks consist of one Master radio and multiple Repeaters, all
RLX2 radios are shipped from ProSoft pre-configured as Repeaters. Hence our first task
is to configure one radio as the network Master.
IMPORTANT: If a ProSoft Power adapter RL-PS007-2 (supplied with the RLX-IHBTK Bench Test
Kit) is not present, see instructions on wiring the power connector in this manual.
IMPORTANT: The only RLX2 radios that do not have any channels in common with each other are
the RLX2-IHA and RLX2-IHG. The RLX2-IHW and RLX2-IHNF radios can communicate with each
other and with the RLX2-IHA and RLX2-IHG radios.
If all the radios are present on the workbench, antennas may not be needed for this
configuration exercise. Radios without antennas may have sufficient signal strength to
link over short distances, without radiating or receiving unnecessary RF energy in the
surrounding environment. However, connecting an antenna to the master radio is
recommended. The connections needed are on the bottom of the radio.
Note: The RLX2-IHNF-W Weatherproof radio uses M12 connectors for Ethernet and
Power. You can order these cables directly from ProSoft.
2. Connect the power cable with an M12 connector to the specified port shown.
Note: The RLX2-IHNF-W radio can be powered over Ethernet (POE) with an
approved injector available from ProSoft. In this case, the Power connector would
not be used.
If PoE is used, please cap the Power Connector with the supplied M12 Waterproof
Cap before installation.
3. Connect the Ethernet cable through the PoE injector (if using PoE) and then into the
network switch.
Note: Most off-the-shelf PoE Injectors work with this unit except for the 802.3at/
PoE+ Injectors.
Note: The M12 PoE cable is not included with the radio but can be ordered through
ProSoft.
Note: Recommend conduit is Thomas & Betts® PMA Series, Cat. No. CYLT-23B.
4. Place the Oval Clip into the opening in the Connector until it snaps into place. This
secures the conduit to the connector.
Note: In the event that you have to remove the conduit, simply remove the Oval Clip
using a screwdriver to pry it out. The conduit can now be removed from the Connector.
The wire with the RJ45 connector is your Ethernet connection and supports Power over
Ethernet (PoE). If you are not using PoE, the other wire set is used to power the
module.
Note: If you are using PoE to provide power to the module, the additional power cables
should be terminated inside the junction box during installation to prevent the wire
assembly from shorting out.
WARNING: Do not connect or disconnect the PoE connection when energized.
Antennas are to be installed in accordance with Control Drawing 06/2514. See the
Antenna section in this manual.
1. Attach an Ethernet cable to the designated master RLX2 radio. Make sure this
network connection is on the same subnet as the PC running the IH Browser
configuration software.
Note: The Ethernet DATA LED should come on when data is sent or received from the radio. The
Ethernet SPEED LED indicates the speed of the Ethernet connection. The SPEED LED is off for
10 Base T, on for 100 Base T, and blinks about once every two seconds for 1000 Base T links.
Power-Up the Radios
1. Power up the radio. There is no On/Off Switch. Power is applied when the power
cord connection is made to the RLX2 radio.
The power LED should illuminate with an amber color, then go out for a few seconds
during initialization, then finally come back on green. This process will take 10 to 15
seconds. Once the power LED is green, the radio has booted and is operational.
Other LEDs may become active as well.
2. Take note of the MAC address of the RLX2 radio. This is printed on a label attached
to the front of the radio. The MAC address should be something like 00-0D-8D-XX-
YY-ZZ (e.g. 00-0D-8D-F0-5C-8E.) This number uniquely identifies the radio on the
network.
3. Run the IH Browser configuration software.
If the display is different than above, use the IH Browser toolbar controls to clear and
refresh the display:
The Unused IP’s: box contains a number of IP addresses that are currently available on
the network. Select one of them and click OK. (In this example,192.168.1.250 is used)
IMPORTANT: Be sure to click OK or the selected IP address will not be assigned to the radio.
7. The Access Point utility warns you of the temporary selection.
8. Click OK.
9. Open a web browser on the PC, and enter the IP address that was just assigned to
the radio (e.g. http://192.168.1.250). A login screen opens:
The default password is “password”. Enter that in the text box and click Login.
10. The radio’s main webpage opens: (Some fields may be different depending on the
specific radio model).
11. Select the Master radio button and select Channel 1 (2412 MHz) as shown in the
following example.
13. Click the Apply Changes button and the Radio reboots.
Upon successful reboot, the RLX2 radio is shown as a Master in the IH Browser window:
Note that the Repeater radio above (whose MAC address ends in BF in the above
example) has linked to the Master (whose MAC address ends in BE) and there is a
signal strength indication of –85 dBm.
3. Attach an Ethernet cable, and assign a unique IP address to the Repeater. In this
example, the Repeater is assigned an IP address of 192.168.1.251:
Repeater Client
Client mode radios are not often necessary in Industrial network applications. If the
need for a Client RLX2 radio in the system is not needed, this example configuration can
be skipped.
The most straightforward way to test a Client mode radio configuration is with a second
PC connected as the downstream network device from a Client radio. We will assume
such a setup in the following example, and will connect to the Master radio we
configured previously.
1. Connect the client radio to the same network as the configuration PC running the IH
browser. Assign it an IP address as described above. Open the configuration
webpage and change the radio to Client mode as shown:
Click Apply Changes. When the radio reboots, the IH Browser will display:
2. Power off the Client radio and disconnect the Ethernet cable from the configuration
PC.
3. Connect the Ethernet cable to an Ethernet port on another PC, and power up the
Client radio. (The radio must be powered up after attaching the Ethernet cable to
the new PC so the radio will register the MAC address of the PCs network interface.)
Ensure the IP address of the Ethernet interface on the PC is on the same subnet as
the network of the Client Radio. For this example, set the IP address of the PC
interface to 192.168.1.100. Here is an example of doing so in Windows 7:
4. Open a command prompt on the client PC, and try to ping the IP address of the Master
radio. It should respond as seen below:
and install it in the new radio. On power up of the new RLX2 Industrial Hotspot, all
configuration settings from the radio being replaced are automatically used.
Note: The RLX2-IHNF-W or WC radios do not have a Personality Module and must be
configured using the steps described in this manual.
Consider drawing up the network plans on paper. As part of the drawing, assign a
logical name to each radio. These names can be assigned in the Radio Configuration
/ Diagnostic Utility.
As part of the planning, a site survey may be helpful. You can hire ProSoft
Technology or a surveyor to perform a survey, or you can conduct the survey on
your own.
Protect radios from direct exposure to weather, and provide an adequate, stable
power source. Make sure the plan complies with the radio’s power requirements
and cable specifications.
Important: Radios and antennas must be located at least 8 inches (20 cm) away from personnel.
Installation Questions
The following questions will help in getting familiar with the system.
Master ID:
Repeater ID:
Client ID:
Locations:
ProSoft Wireless Designer can also compute a Bill Of Materials (BOM) for a complete
radio installation, including antennas, cables, connectors and other required materials:
It is included on the DVD with the RLX2 radio, or it can be downloaded from the ProSoft
website. ProSoft Wireless Designer provides a variety of views containing an accurate
description of each site in a wireless network, including:
Visual diagram of site layout
Location (latitude/longitude, based on GPS coordinates)
Radio type, frequency range, and country-specific channel and power requirements
Length, type and estimated signal loss for cables
Required accessories, including lightning protection, cable adaptors and antennas
Complete parts list
ProSoft technical personnel use ProSoft Wireless Designer when conducting site audits
for customers, and then provide customers with a complete list of components and a
detailed description for each site and link. Customers can use this information to
understand and visualize their network, and provide necessary information for technical
support and maintenance.
Functional Specifications:
Contains a database of all currently available RadioLinx radios, antennas, cables,
connectors and accessories
Exports Parts List, Site and Link Details, and Wizard settings into a variety of
common file formats, for import into applications such as spreadsheets, databases
and word processors
Checks wireless link feasibility based on path length and recommended accessories
Predicts signal strength based on distance, local regulations and hardware choices
Fully documents the ProSoft Wireless network plan
2 When using the downloaded application from the ProSoft website, it is packaged as
a zip archive. Double-click the zip archive to extract the installation file INSTALLER.MSI,
double-click it to start the installation.
Important: If the radios are close enough to each other that their received signal strength is
greater than -40dBm, performance may be degraded. Disconnect antennas from radios during
bench testing, or move the radios further apart from each other.
Tip: To make it easier to physically identify the radios, apply a label to each radio indicating the
radio name and IP address.
After each radio is configured using the IH Browser and the web configuration form, you
can install the radios and test their performance. Install the radios in their proposed
permanent locations, then temporarily place each radio’s antenna near its proposed
mounting location. The temporary placement of the antenna can be by hand.
However, with this testing method, one person must hold the antenna while another
monitors the radio’s signal strength.
To see how a radio is linked in the network, make sure that the radio is connected to a
PC, and select Topology View from the View menu in the IH Browser.
The Topology view shows a diagram of the network’s wireless connections. Use this
view to see whether all the radios are linked, and approve of the way the radios are
linked.
A radio that is not linked to a parent will show as a circle outlined by a flashing dashed
red line. It may be near the bottom of the window. Scroll down to view all available
radios. To change how radios link to the network, see Parent Link settings (page 82).
Refer to Improve Signal Quality (page 66) for more information on overcoming poor
connectivity.
Connecting Antennas
Each radio must have an antenna connected to the Main antenna port on the RLX2
radio; without an antenna for each radio, the network will not function if the radios are
more than a few meters apart. You should always connect the number of antennas on
Port A, PortA-PortC, or PortA-PortB-PortC, as indicated in the #antennas control. The
network will not function without all antennas installed.
All antennas for radios that communicate directly with each other should be mounted
so they have the same antenna polarity. Antennas with N-jack connectors cab be
mounted directly to the radio using an N-plug to N-plug adapter. Screw the antenna
onto the antenna port connector until it is snug.
For remote placement of antennas, an extension cable with N-plugs can be used.
Because the antenna cable attenuates the RF signal, use an antenna cable length that is
no longer than necessary to ensure optimum performance
Important: If the radio is to be used in a hazardous location, the radio must be mounted in an
enclosure approved for hazardous locations. The radio requires a separate cable connection to the
SMA connector that leads to an internal antenna.
Increase the radio's transmission power, cable the radio to the Configuration PC,
and reconfigure it
Select a new location for the Remote radio and/or its antenna
Decrease the length of antenna cable
Determine and resolve sources of "electrical" noise which may be interfering with
the radio transmission
Add a repeater between the radios that are not communicating, or reconfigure an
existing radio as a repeater if line of sight is available
Signal Strength graph: This setting graphically shows the radio’s signal strength. The
graph will show the word Master if a master radio is selected. The graph will show
the word Scanning if the radio is scanning to find another radio to which to connect.
If the radio is not connected to a network and not currently scanning, the graph will
show the words Not Connected.
Update every: To update the diagnostic readings on a particular interval, specify the
interval (in seconds) in this field. The default is 15 second updates.
Read-only fields that appear with the diagnostic settings.
You can perform the following troubleshooting routines:
Diagnostics
The Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility (Web configuration form for the radio)
provides information that can help troubleshoot problems with the radio.
Use the program’s diagnostic and signal strength settings at the top of the Radio
Settings window to make sure the network is working properly.
Signal Strength graph: This setting graphically shows the radio’s signal strength.
The graph will show the word Master if a master radio is selected.
The graph will show the word Scanning if the radio is scanning to find another radio
to which to connect.
If the radio is not connected to a network and not currently scanning, the graph will
show the words Not Connected.
If the radio is configured as a Repeater and has linked to a Master, the Signal
Strength graph will show a color-coded signal quality indication.
Update every: To update the diagnostic readings according to a particular time interval,
specify the interval (in seconds) in this field. After entering the new value, press Enter to
save the new value. Press Tab or click elsewhere to use the new value temporarily.
The following configuration forms in the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility provide
information about current radio operation:
Address table (page 75)
Port status (page 76)
Available Parents
Read-only fields (page 72)
The following topics describe troubleshooting routines:
Check the Ethernet cable (page 61)
Retrieve the default password (page 63)
Troubleshoot IH Browser error messages (page 65)
Troubleshoot missing radios in the IH Browser (page 65)
For more troubleshooting information, visit the ProSoft Technology website at
www.prosoft-technology.com.
Note: The RLX2 radio auto-detects the Ethernet connection type, and does not require a crossover
cable for direct connection to a PC.
LED Display
The RLX2 radio front panel includes a set of LEDs that indicate the radio’s status:
LED Description
POWER While booting up
When fully operational
This bi-color LED comes up amber when power is first applied. After power is applied,
this LED will go out completely for about four seconds while internal hardware is
initialized. After initialization, the power LED comes on green, indicating the radio is
fully operational.
RF TRANSMIT While transmitting data over the wireless interface
RF RECEIVE While receiving data over the wireless interface
SERIAL When serial data is received
ETHERNET When Ethernet data is being transferred over the wireless interface
Note that the state of the front-panel ETHERNET LED may not necessarily correspond to
the state of the DATA LED on the Ethernet connector. The DATA LED indicates any
traffic over the wired link, while the ETHERNET LED indicates network data that will be
sent (or has been received from) the wireless link.
For example if the radio is pinged over the wired link, the DATA LED will blink but the
ETHERNET LED will not (because the ping packet was not transmitted over the air)
NET Blinks if SD card with new configuration inserted
LED Description
Signal Strength Blinks if SD card inserted with new configuration
Once the power cable and Ethernet cable are connected to the radio, the Power/Status
LED should illuminate green. The SPEED LED should indicate a valid wired link. The RF
Transmit and RF Receive LEDs should start to blink occasionally.
For Repeater or Client mode radios, all three Signal Strength LEDs will blink just after the
radio links to the Master’s signal but before it has been fully authenticated. Normally
this lasts only a few seconds. If it lasts longer or never turns solid it usually means the
encryption keys are not correct.
3. While holding down the button, apply power to the radio and continue to hold the
button down for 30 seconds.
The radio will be reset to its default settings including the password. You can now log in
using the default password “password”.
3 Insert the end of a paperclip or similar device into the hole to press the reset
button.
4 While holding the reset button in with a paperclip, attach power to the radio, and
continue to hold down the reset button for 30 seconds.
5 The radio will be reset to its default settings, including the password. The user
should now be able to log in using the default password, which is password.
This error occurs when the IH Browser attempts to scan for radios and no valid network
connection exists on the PC, wired or wireless.
To correct this error, Confirm the PC has at least one active network (LAN) connection.
It could be a wired Ethernet connection or a wireless 802.11 connection.
Confirm the network connection has a valid IP address. The network connection might
need to have a static IP address assigned to it. Check the IP address of the network
connection to determine that one has been assigned.
Second, disable any software firewall running on the PC (This is most common in
Windows XP and newer). Open the NETWORK CONNECTIONS folder in the Windows
Control Panel, then open the LOCAL AREA CONNECTION PROPERTIES window and verify
that the check box under INTERNET CONNECTION FIREWALL is not checked.
If the preceding approaches do not help, the PC running the IH Browser and the
radios are probably not connected to the same local network. Verify the
connections.
In topological view, any unlinked radios may be at the bottom of the window. Scroll
down to see all radios. If the radios still cannot be seen in the IH Browser, call
technical support.
1 In the RadioLinx Industrial Hotspot Browser, select the radio to configure from the
list view or topography view, and then click the right mouse button to open a
shortcut menu.
2 On the shortcut menu, choose Connect. The Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility
will open in the web browser.
or,
Double-click the selected radio to launch the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic
Utility.
Also, the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility can be opened directly from the web
browser.
Important: The desktop computer, laptop, or PDA must be connected to the same network as the
RadioLinx Industrial Hotspot radio.
Read-Only Fields
Some of the fields on the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility form are read-only,
meaning that the content of the field is provided for information only, and cannot be
directly modified.
Also note that depending on how the radio is configured, some fields and buttons may
be unavailable because they do not affect the configuration you have selected. Review
the topics in this section for more information on when and how to use each
configuration option.
Configuration Help
Help is available for each item in the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility.
To view a brief help message about any field on the screen, move the cursor over
the field (which turns blue), or use the [Tab] key, and refer to the text that appears
at the bottom of the screen.
To view more help about the selected field, click the field name. This action opens a
help page in a new browser window.
To view the complete online documentation for the RLX2 radio, click the
button. This action opens the online documentation in a new browser window. Use
the Contents, Index and Search tabs in the left frame to navigate the help system.
Radio Status
The general radio status fields appear at the top of the Radio Configuration window.
Note: Different versions of the RLX2 Radios support different functionality. There may be more or
fewer options on this page, depending on the version of the radio.
Use the settings in the Radio Status panel to view the current settings for this radio.
Field Description
Radio Name The user assigned name of the radio.
Radio MAC MAC address of the selected radio. The MAC ID is also printed on the side of
the radio.
Radio Type The Model Number of this radio –Examples: RLX2-IHA, RLX2-IHG, RLX2-IHNF,
or RLX2-IHW.
Firmware Version of firmware currently installed. All radios on the network must have
the same firmware versions installed to guarantee proper operations. For
more information on firmware versions, refer to Update firmware (page 132).
Update every Value in seconds controls how often the web configuration form
automatically refreshes. To change the value temporarily, enter the new value
and press the [Tab] key. To change the value permanently, enter the new
value and press the [Enter] key.
Up Time The length of time the radio has operated since the last system power-up or
last system reset.
Link Time The length of time that the radio has been continuously connected to parent
radio.
Signal Strength Strength of the signal from the Parent radio.
Parent MAC MAC address of the parent radio to which the selected radio is linked.
Field Description
Branch Length Number of RF links from the radio to the master radio.
# Radios Linked Number of other radios that are linked to this radio.
Current Channel Channel upon which the radio is currently operating. For a Master, this would
match the channel set below. For a Repeater, this would be the channel its
Parent is on.
When the Link Mode indicates that the unit is in 40 MHz mode, this field
indicates the main channel number first followed by the extension channel’s
number.
Link Mode The 802.11 Mode with which the radio is currently operating. For a Master,
this would be the highest mode supported. For a Repeater, this would be the
highest common mode supported by the settings of the Repeater and Parent,
and the capability of the radio channel.
Available Parents Click this button to view the list of Access Points and Bridges (Parents) from
which this radio can detect beacons. This button is only available when the
radio type is Repeater.
Address Table Click this button to view a list of MAC addresses for devices entered in the
radio’s address table.
Port Status Click this button to view the spanning tree status of each bridge port (RF ports
and the RJ45 Ethernet port).
Available Parents
Note: The Available Parents form is not available when the radio type is Master.
Field Description
Only Show Same SSID Select (check) this box to restrict the list of available parents to those with
the same SSID as the radio you are configuring.
Refresh Click this button to re-scan the network and update the devices in the list.
Mac ID A unique hexadecimal number that identifies any Ethernet device.
SSID Network Name (Service Set Identifier).
Channel The radio channel on which the device is transmitting. The channel list
indicates the channel number as well as the frequency (2.4 GHz or 5 GHz
bands).
This list contains both 802.11 devices that are part of the same SSID as the RLX2 itself
(for example, "Minerals") as well as devices that belong to different SSIDs (for example,
"Network1" and "ProSoftInternal"). This list is updated continuously and can be used for
many purposes.
The IH radio updates this list with each 802.11 packet that is received, whether from a
radio of the same network or one that belongs to another SSID. It can also see radios
from other vendors.
Once per second the IH radio evaluates the link it has to its parent to determine if this
link is the best parent to use. A cost is calculated for each entry and can be seen in the
column labeled "Cost" in the preceding table. The cost calculation is based not only on
the strongest signal, but on several other factors to provide optimum network
communication.
Address Table
The Address Table shows the port through which each MAC address is connected, along
with the age in seconds since the radio last saw a packet from this MAC address.
Field Description
Radio MAC The MAC address of the selected radio. The MAC ID is also printed on the side
of the radio.
Show Addresses for the Dropdown list to filter the address list. Options are:
Following Devices Out Ethernet Port
Directly Linked Radios/Clients
Devices beyond Direct RF Links
When the table is filtered to show only Directly linked radios/clients, an
additional RSSI column is listed, showing the Received Signal Strength from
each radio or client linked to the radio.
Number of Rows to Display Use this field to choose hwo many MAC addresses to display on this page.
Use the Next and Prev buttons to scroll through the available MAC addresses.
Index Position in the list. Each page shows up to 10 devices. Use the Next and
Previous buttons to move up and down through the table.
MAC Address The MAC address for the device.
Connection The connection type
Age (s) The length of time (in seconds) since the radio last saw a packet from this
MAC address
Top Click the Top button to see the top of the table. The radio will display
updated data in the table entries.
Field Description
Next / Prev If the table has more MAC addresses than it can display in the window, use
the Next and Prev buttons to move up and down through the table.
Refresh Click Refresh to update the table.
Port Status
When you click on the Port Status button, you can see information about all of the
active ports on the radio. Above the table, you can see information about the current
Spanning Tree including the MAC address of the “root” device, and the timing
parameters that are set for the current Spanning Tree. Each radio can have up to 34
active ports – one Ethernet cable, one parent RF link, and up to 32 child RF links.
The primary reason for creating a Spanning Tree to that is allows you to create fully
redundant paths. If any single radio in a redundant path loses its connection, another
path still exists, and the connection will be updated and communication restored.
Field Description
Spanning Tree Protocol: The Spanning Tree Protocol level for the wireless port (Rapid STP or STP).
Wireless Ports
Ethernet Port The Spanning Tree Protocol level for the Ethernet port (Rapid STP or STP).
Edge Port Displays Active or Inactive based on the setting of Ethernet Edge Port in the
Spanning Tree configuration dialog.
Spanning Tree Root: MAC The MAC ID of the root device in the spanning tree.
Priority Spanning Tree device with the lowest-priority value is elected the root of the
tree
Max Age The length of time a port can stay enabled without any new spanning
updates.
Hello Time The length of time between the transmission of spanning update packets.
Forward Delay The length of time a port must listen for spanning information before being
activated.
# Position in the list. Each page shows up to 10 ports. Use the Next and Previous
buttons to move up and down through the table.
Connection This field indicates what the port represents: Ethernet, a parent radio, or a
child radio.
State The current Spanning Tree state of the port. Possible states are Blocking,
Learning, Listening, and Forwarding. Forwarding packets can be transferred.
Designation The Spanning Tree designation for the branch off the port. Possible
designations are Root (ports going to the root), Designated (ports going to a
branch), or Normal.
Path Cost The cumulative cost of all wired and wireless links from the port to the
Spanning Tree root.
Designated Bridge The Next bridge toward the Spanning Tree root for this port.
Top Click the Top button to see the top of the table.
Next / Prev If the table has more ports than it can display in the window, use the Next and
Prev buttons to move up and down through the table.
Refresh Click Refresh to update the table.
The following illustration shows the RadioLinx Industrial Hotspot Browser (page 123)
application provided with the radios. Notice it shows the radio named Hematite_4F,
linked to Amethyst_BD. This link is shown with a red dotted line. Also visible is the level
of redundancy in their network. Each of the blue lines represents an alternate parent.
From this view, it is easily shown how much redundancy exists in their network.
To display the redundant paths, select the toolbar button denoting two "parents." To
view the redundancy on a per-radio basis, select the single "parent" button, and then
click on the radio to view its available redundancies.
Note: Different versions of the RLX2 Radios support different functionality. The may be more or
fewer options on this page, depending on the version of the radio.
Use the settings in the Radio Network Settings panel to configure the radios in the
network. For more information on using these settings, see Configuring the radios (page
54).
Field Description
Radio Name Assign a unique name to each radio.
Network SSID Assign a Network name (SSID) of up to 32 characters. The radio uses this
name in all network references. All radios in a network must have the same
SSID. SSID names are case-sensitive.
Field Description
802.11 Mode This control is only present on the RLX2-IHNF model. It allows the unit to be
RLX2-IHNF configured to operate in 802.11 a/g mode or to operate in 802.11n mode
(default). In addition, it allows configuration of whether the unit will allow
use of 40 MHz wide channels for Child clients.
Note: The Parent radio link of a Repeater automatically uses a mode that is
compatible with the Parent settings. For example, an RLX2-IHNF may connect
to an RLX2-IHW master which only operates in 802.11a/g mode, and still use
802.11n mode for any Child Repeaters.
802.11a/g
The radio acts as an 802.11a radio on the 5 GHz band, and an 802.11g radio
on the 2.4 GHz band. Data rates will be limited to the 802.11 a/g rates (54
mbps maximum). 802.11n operational features will be disabled. It is not
necessary to select this mode for RLX2-IHNF radios to link to other RLX2 or
RLXIB series radios; they will link their best possible speeds regardless of
mode. This mode is not commonly used. It is mainly used to allow 802.11
a/b/g client devices that cannot link to 802.11n devices to work. One example
of such a device is the ProSoft 1734-AENTR wireless I/O client.
802.11n
Default operational mode of the RLX2-IHNF radio. All 802.11n features are
operational, and 20 MHz wide channels are used.
802.11.n wide
Utilizes adjacent pairs of 20 MHz-wide channels as a single 40 MHz-wide
channel. This allows the fastest data throughput to other 802.11n devices.
Only 802.11n devices can utilize this mode, but all RLX2 radios will link at their
best speed regardless of mode.
Channels in the 5 GHz band are 20 MHz apart, so 802.11n wide mode occupies
only two channels in that band. However, channels in the 2.4 GHz band are
spaced only five MHz apart, so 802.11n wide mode in the 2.4 GHz band
occupies eight adjacent channels! Since there are at most 13 channels in the
2.4 GHz band, and only three channels do not overlap others, it is not
recommended to enable wide mode on 2.4 GHz band channels.
Master Click this button to configure a radio as a Master. The Master is the root radio
in a network. You must have at least one Master radio per network. For
redundancy, you can assign more than one Master to a network. For
information, see Redundancy.
Field Description
Channel List (Master Radio) The Channel List indicates the channel number, the band (2.4 GHz or 5 GHz) as
well as the frequency in MHz.
When the 802.11 Mode is set to ‘802.11n wide’, each entry shows the main
channel number first followed by the extension channel number if the
particular channel supports 40 MHz.
The main 20 MHz channel is used whenever sending frames at an 802.11 a/g
data rate (e.g., Beacons at 6 Mbits/s. The main and extension channels are
used together for 802.11n data rate transmissions. Note that the frequency
indicated when in 802.11n wide mode is the center of the 40 MHz channel
pair.
Important: The RadioLinx RLX2 radio is not supplied with an antenna. When
choosing an antenna for use with the RLX2 radio, you must choose one that
supports the frequency range set in the configuration for the radio.
Repeater Click this button to configure a radio as a repeater. The repeater mode is the
normal radio mode for the network, while the master mode is more of a
special setting to establish the network channel and define the root of the
network tree. Repeater radios help extend the range of a network and help
create the signal "bridges" that allow networked radios to communicate. All
RLX2 radios are capable of repeating.
Parent Link settings Click this button to specify how a repeater radio connects to the network. For
information, see Parent Link settings.
Client This is a special mode that allows you to connect an Ethernet device to any
802.11 a, b or g access point. This mode is used in the special event of
connecting a device to another brand access point. For information on setting
up a client, see Configuring clients.
Auto / Specify Only choose "specify" if device does not send out any unsolicited Ethernet
packets. Try Auto first.
Client MAC The MAC ID of the device connected to the radio, only if the device does not
advertise its MAC address.
IGMP Click this button to open the IGMP Settings form. Use this form to enable
(default) or disable IGMP, and to configure how the RLX2 radio will behave
when IGMP is enabled.
VLAN Opens the VLAN Settings form. The Ethernet ports for the Master and its
associated Repeaters can be thought of as a distributed smart switch. The
Transporting of tagged frames to the appropriate remote Ethernet port is
automatic and does not require any settings. See VLAN Settings in this
section.
QoS Opens the QoS Settings form. Prioritization of frames using QoS is always
enabled in the RLX2 for packets received already marked with a priority value.
This page allows you to set the default priority for frames received without
any priority markings. See QoS Settings in this section.
Spanning Tree Opens the Spanning Tree Settings form.
Advanced Config Opens the Advanced Settings form.
Roam Control Opens the Roam Control Settings
Field Description
Parent MAC MAC Address of the radio’s Parent node. In the example above, the Repeater
is not linked to a Master radio so the Parent MAC is shown as all zeroes.
Parent Selection Method
Automatically Choose Best The Automatic Parent Selection algorithm uses a calculation to create a
“cost” metric for each possible parent radio that it detects.
In the calculation the radio includes,
RSSI - Stronger signals receive a lower cost.
Hop Count - Fewer hops from the Master radio is given preference and
therefore a lower cost
Choose this setting to allow the radio to determine the best parent to select.
Field Description
Parent Branch Length RLX2 radio will choose its parent strictly by the number of repeaters between
it and the Master radio. If a Branch Length of 1 is chosen, the RLX2 radio will
link only to the Master radio. If a Branch Length of 2 is chosen, the RLX2 radio
will link only to another RLX2 radio that is linked to the Master radio, and so
on. If multiple candidates are available at a particular hop count, the RLX2
chooses the Parent that has the smallest cost.
Preferred Parent RLX2 radio will select its parent from a list of possible parents specified by the
user. When this option is selected, a list of up to eight MAC Address entry
fields become visible. The user enters one or more MAC Addresses of the
Radios that the RLX2 must choose from.
Best in List
When Best in List is selected the radio will select its parent using the
"Automatic Parent Selection" algorithm, but it will limit the selection to
the list of radios in the list. Therefore, the radio in the list with the
lowest cost according to the algorithm will be chosen as its parent.
Field Description
Rate to Parent The default setting is Auto which allows the radio to select the best rate to
use to the parent radio, and adapt over time. Specify a fixed rate rather than
auto for example if the link to the parent has a low signal strength in which
case fixing a lower rate can improve performance.
The actual rate used between this radio and its parent is the lower value of
this setting and the Max Data Rate setting in the parent (see Max Data Rate).
So use these two controls in conjunction if desired to tailor the rate of each
parent link.
Note: When configuring an RLX2-IHNF, this control is only enabled if the
802.11 Mode control on the main page is set to 802.11a/g mode.
Allow Children This parameter controls whether the RLX2 Repeater will act as a Parent to
other RLX2 Repeaters. Selecting ‘No’ will disguise the RLX2’s SSID thus
preventing other 803.11 devices from finding it. Fast Roam applications take
advantage of this where it is not desirable to have anything connect to an
RLX2 that is itself, moving and roaming.
Roaming Parameters
Roaming In typical Fast Roam applications a Repeater is installed on a mobile
pallet or platform and a set of Master units forms a backbone
infrastructure network, through which the Repeater must roam. To
obtain Fast Roam times, Spanning Tree must be disabled and SSID's
not hidden on the Master. The Repeater should be configured to not
allow child Repeaters and to use a Signal Strength Threshold set high
enough such that RSSI is used to determine the link cost to a parent.
After a selection is saved and return to the Radio Network Settings panel, notice the
selection is indicated under the Parent Link button.
The Automatic Parent Selection algorithm uses a calculation to create a cost for each
possible parent radio that it detects. Once per second, the RLX2 radio evaluates the link
it has to its parent to determine if this link is the best parent to use. A cost is calculated
for each entry and can be seen in the column labeled “Cost” in the Available Parent web
screen. The cost calculation is based not only on the strongest signal, but on several
other factors including Number of Hops to provide optimum network communication.
With Parent Branch Length, the radio will choose its parent strictly by the number of
repeaters between it and the Master radio. If Branch Length of 1 is chosen, the radio will
link only to the Master radio. If Branch Length of 2 is chosen, the radio will link only to
an RLX2 radio that is linked to the Master radio, and so on.
With Preferred Parent, the radio will select its parent from a list of user-specified
parents. Up to eight radios can be defined.
Best in List
The radio will select its parent using the "Automatic Parent Selection" algorithm
described above but it will limit the selection to the radios in the list. The radio in
the list with the lowest cost according to the algorithm will be chosen as its parent.
Follow List Priority
The radio will select its parent from the list giving preference to the first entry,
followed by the second entry, and so on.
IGMP Settings
RLX2 radios support IGMP v1 and v2. The default operation of the RLX2 radios is to have
IGMP functionality enabled, although the user can disable IGMP entirely. Additionally,
the user can specify settings associated with IGMP filtering and snooping. Unknown
multicast addresses can be sent to all ports (flood) or to none (filtered) by changing the
IGMP Multicast Filtering option. The user can specify whether the radio will generate
IGMP queries, and configure the query interval time.
By RFC specification, only one device on a network should generate IGMP queries. As
such, RLX2 radios will only send a query if another device has not sent a query within its
Query Interval setting, even if Query Generation is enabled.
Field Description
IGMP Multicast Filtering Disabling filtering will cause the radio flood multicast packets to all ports.
Default Propagation Action Determines how to handle multicast addresses that are not in the radio’s
address table.
IGMP Query Generation Enables or disables query generation from this radio.
IGMP Query Interval Number of seconds between queries (if not pre-empted by a query from
another device).
Multicast State Count Number of queries generated before a device is removed from the multicast
group on this radio if no response is received.
Save Saves the changes and updates the radio configuration.
Cancel Discards the changes without updating the radio configuration.
VLAN Settings
RLX2 radios support port based VLANs. Each RLX2 can be considered to have 3 different
ports or interfaces; the Ethernet interface, the local applications stack of the RLX2 itself,
and the 802.11 BSS created by each RLX2 allowing client devices to associate. The VLAN
settings for the Ethernet interface are settable on all RLX2 radios. The VLAN settings for
the Local and SSID ports are only settable on the Master and pushed down to each
Repeater associated below the Master. This allows the VLAN settings for an RLX2
bridged network rooted at a Master to have common settings for these two ports,
which ensures for example, that if the Local interface is set to a management VLAN, the
all Repeaters below the Master will all be accessible by a Management PC.
The Ethernet ports for the Master and its associated Repeaters can be thought of as a
smart switch. Transporting of tagged frames to the appropriate remote Ethernet port is
automatic and does not require any settings.
Field Description
VLAN Enable This control enables or disables the VLAN function of the RLX2. If disabled,
the RLX2 still bridges received Ethernet packets that are VLAN tagged but
does not act on the VLAN ID of the frame or add or remove any VLAN tags.
When this function is enabled, packets received by the RLX2 on an interface
that are not VLAN tagged are assigned to the VLAN as set by the PVID
parameter of the respective interface.
Field Description
PVID Each interface (Ethernet, SSID, Local/Mgmt) has a PVID setting representing
the VLAN ID to assign to non-tagged ingress frames from that interface. The
Local/Mgmt interface also supports a control that when checked, will allow
the Mgmt interface to be accessible from all VLANs and interfaces.
VLAN Table The VLAN Table allows each of the interfaces to be made a member of a
particular VLAN ID and set whether frames sent from the Ethernet interface
should be tagged or untagged for a particular VLAN. Up to 10 different VLAN
IDs can be configured.
The following VLAN table parameters are supported:
VLAN ID – The ID of the VLAN to be assigned to the RLX2’s
interfaces. Valid VLAN Ids range from 1 to 4096. Note that VLAN
IDs 1956 and 1957 are reserved and cannot be used.
Ethernet Member – When checked, this indicates that the Ethernet
interface of the RLX2 is a member of the VLAN indicated by the
row’s VLAN ID.
Ethernet Egress Action – Frames belonging to the row’s VLAN ID
are sent out the Ethernet port either tagged or untagged as set by
this control.
SSID Member – When checked, this indicates that the SSID (BSS) of
the RLX2 is a member of the VLAN indicated by the row’s VLAN ID.
Local/App Member – When checked, this indicates that the
Local/App interface of the RLX2 is a member of the VLAN indicated
by the row’s VLAN ID.
QoS Settings
Prioritization of frames using QoS is always enabled in the RLX2 for packets received
already marked with a priority value. The QoS Settings Page allows you to set the
Default Priority for frames received without any priority markings. In addition, you can
map a priority value to packets received without priority according to a set of match
criteria.
Field Description
Default Priority Defaults to 0 (no priority). This control sets the priority value to be assigned
to packets received on the Ethernet interface that are not marked with a
priority value.
QoS Map Enable This control enables or disables the priority mapping function of the RLX2.
When enabled, the priority mapping table becomes editable.
Field Description
QoS Map Table Each row of the table corresponds to one match filter allowing up to 8
distinct filters to identify and assign a priority value to received Ethernet
packets. Each filter has several parameters that can be enabled by clicking on
its checkbox. When multiple parameters are enabled, all must match before
the Priority value is assigned to a packet.
BPDUs are sent out the port at a rate called the "Hello Time". The accepted standard
value for this is 2 seconds. If a radio (or any other RSTP device) does not get a BPDU for
2 Hello Times, it assumes the RSTP device that had been there is no longer available. It
can then open an alternate path if one is available. This process is much like the STP
process. If other devices on the network are not operating in rapid spanning tree mode,
the radio will revert to normal spanning tree operation on a per-port basis.
RSTP provides a performance enhancement over STP operation. By comparison, the
radio using the STP algorithm would revert its port to the listening state, and then to the
learning state, before returning to the forwarding state. Each of these states takes at
least 15 seconds, during which the STP devices are listening for BPDUs to re-negotiate
the network topology. The advantage of using the RSTP functionality is that is uses
Field Description
Enable Spanning Tree Spanning Tree is enabled when this box is checked. Without spanning tree,
redundant connections might exist if multiple radio links are created in
parallel with each other. Redundant connections are blocked only if spanning
tree is enabled. Additionally, spanning tree is used to flush the Ethernet
switch table when the network topology changes as described in the section
on Automatic Parent Selection.
All RLX2 models support Rapid Spanning Tree (RSTP), and will default to this
mode when enabled.
The recommended setting for spanning tree is “Enabled”.
Ethernet Edge Port Because RSTP is an active protocol, it depends on communication between
RSTP devices. If no RSTP device is connected to the radio’s Ethernet port, the
handshake cannot take place. In this case RSTP reverts to STP. This means
that the Ethernet port will be forced to adhere to the timer based transition
protocol of STP.
Therefore on network transitions and power up, communications will not be
allowed over the Ethernet port for 30 to 45 seconds. This setting is an
indication that no redundant connections exist out this port and
communication can immediately be allowed. If for some reason a BPDU is
received on this port, the RSTP protocol will negotiate properly and handle
any possible redundant paths.
The recommended setting for Ethernet Edge Port is "Enabled".
Field Description
Bridge Times Configures the timing intervals to use.
Priority Determines who should be the root of the RSTP. The RSTP device with the
lowest priority becomes the root. The accepted standard value for this is
32768. If wired switches exist in the network that support RSTP, they should
always be allowed to be the root.
Set this value to 32769 to prevent the radio from being the root over a wired
switch. Use this setting when a radio is configured to be a Master.
Set this value to 32770 when the radio is configured to be a Repeater. In this
way, if only RLX2 radios exist in the network, the Master radio will become
the root.
Hello Time Rate at which BPDUs are sent out. The industry standard is 2 seconds.
Max Age Measures the age of the received protocol information recorded for a port
and ensures this information is discarded when its age limit exceeds the
value to the maximum age parameter recorded by the switch. The timeout
value for this timer is the maximum age parameter of the switches.
Forward Delay Monitors the time spent by a port in the learning and listening states. The
timeout value is the forward delay parameter of the switches.
Path Costs RSTP and STP algorithms use a cost to determine which connections should
be used. The "spanning tree" is formed by determining the least cost paths
from any RSTP device back to the root.
Wireless Gives preference to a wired connection, set the Wireless cost to 200.
Ethernet Gives preference to a wired Ethernet connection, set the Ethernet cost to
100.
Multiple master radios can be defined on the same network. If one master radio goes
down, any radios linked to it can switch over to the other master, so the networked
radios remain connected and transmitting. In order to be redundant, the two masters
should typically be on the same segment—in other words, they should be wired
together into the same switch. These two masters can be assigned different channels to
increase network bandwidth, but they must be assigned the same SSID.
Also, because all radios are repeaters, each radio can be configured to reach a master
radio via multiple repeater paths. If a repeater goes down, the linked radios can use a
different path to get back to a master radio.
Advanced Settings
Field Description
Max Data Rate
RLX2-IHA
RLX2-IHG
RLX2-IHW
Normally, the Max Data Rate should be set to the maximum value. The
above example shows this setting MCS15. The default maximum is 54
MBits/s. However, under poor operating conditions, reliability may improve
if the Max Data Rate is reduced.
Field Description
Max Data Rate
RLX2-IHNF
The maximum data rate for the RLX2-IHNF radio is specified in terms of a
Modulation and Coding Scheme (MCS) index value. This specification is
unique to IEEE 802.11n devices. The actual maximum data rate depends on
several factors as shown in the following table:
Only MCS rates from 0 through 7 are available with one antenna, which is
the default configuration. To select MCS rates of 8 and above, configure the
Active Antennas to be A,C or A,B,C. (See Active Antennas below.)
The maximum throughput also depends on the 802.11n Mode as configured
in the Radio Network Settings section of the main webpage. See section 0.
Throughput in 802.11n wide mode is approximately twice that of 802.11n
ProSoft Technology, Inc. mode. Page 99 of 212
The radio will automatically select the Guard Interval (GI) based on
June 15, 2015
RLX2 Industrial Hotspot Series
Field Description
current operating conditions. The system attempts to use a 400 microsecond
Guard Interval, but will fall back to an 800 microsecond Guard Interval if
excessive data corruption is detected. The radio will periodically attempt to
resume using a 400 microsecond Guard Interval as conditions improve. A 400
microsecond Guard Interval results in about 11% more throughput than
using a 800 microsecond guard interval. The user has no control of the Guard
Interval.
As seen in the table above, absolutely best throughput requires 802.11n
wide mode, more than one antenna, and a RF environment capable of
supporting a 400 microsecond Guard Interval.
Max Basic Rate In addition to the Data Rate setting which controls generic data traffic, the
Basic Rate setting adjusts the rate at which control packets such as Beacons
and ACKs are sent at as well as packets that need to go to the whole network
such as Broadcasts. Because these packets are intended for the whole
network, the Max Basic Rate setting of the Master is advertised to each of
the radios in the network through Beacons. Each radio, other than the
Master, then inherits the Max Basic Rate setting of the Master. Therefore
the setting only needs to be made in the Master radio. The setting in each of
the other radios is disregarded.
Interop Optimization This control allows for ease of configuration for the following controls, for
two specific interoperability scenarios.
RLX2 Bridging optimizes Immediate Broadcasts, Block General Probes and
rd
Range for operation when peer devices are primarily other RLX2s. 3 -Party
Clients optimizes these controls for peer devices such as laptops, tablets,
phones or any other WiFi devices that perform regular power saving are
expecting to connect to this RLX2. If this setting is not used, these client
devices may have difficulty in finding the network SSID, and their
communication may be erratic due to broadcasts not being transmitted
when expected. RLX2 Bridging will still function, although the RLX2 will be
responding to all scanning client devices which may introduce some jitter to
data being transferred.
Immediate Broadcasting Forward multicast traffic immediately, rather than waiting for specific time
intervals.
Block General Probe Do not respond to general probe requests that are not specific to the radio's
Requests SSID.
Range Allows the radios to account for round trip delays. The Range settings should
be the same in all radios in the network and should be at least large enough
to account for the length of any links. However, increasing the Range beyond
what is necessary can cause a slight decrease in throughput. The default
Long range is 25km, which is valid for all operating modes of all radios.
Reducing the range setting for systems at closer range may improve
throughput.
TX Power Attenuation Sets the output power of the radio.
Field Description
Active Antennas This control is only available on the RLX2-IHNF radios. The default is set to A,
RLX2-IHNF B, C (for a three connector MIMO antenna). The other options are A Only
(for one antenna) and A, C (for two antennas). Note that if two antennas are
used, they must be attached to the ANT A and ANT C antenna connectors
MIMO antennas generally will have three connections so all three antenna
ports must be activated. In general, operation with three antenna ports will
give best performance. When more than one antenna port is active, the
radio will monitor the signal appearing at all antenna ports and dynamically
select the port(s) with the best signal. However, there are situations where
performance may improve if fewer antenna ports are active. If radios are
very close together (typically a few feet), all three antenna ports will receive
essentially identical signal strengths and the radio may continuously change
antenna ports, resulting in degraded performance.
SD Auto Write Enable Enables the unit to write a copy of its Configuration to the SD Card whenever
new settings are saved from any pages of the unit's web interface. Previous
Configuration files are renamed with a unique file name which allows
auditing of changes made to the unit's settings.
Field Description
SD Auto Clone Enable Enables the unit's Clone function. On power up if an SD Card is present that
has a Configuration file different from the unit's current Configuration the
unit will adopt the settings from the SD Card. If the Configuration matches or
there is no Configuration file on the SD Card then no action is taken. On
inserting an SD Card into a running unit, if the Configuration file found on the
SD Card will result in the unit's settings being changed on Powerup or Reset,
a warning is indicated by flashing the Signal Strength, MOD and NET LEDs.
NOTE: Do not enable Auto Write if you do not want the active Configuration
file on the SD Card to be replaced when the unit adopts and saves the SD
Card's current Configuration file.
Write SD Card Immediately writes a copy of the unit's Configuration file to the SD Card,
independent of the Auto Write check box setting. Note that the
configuration files are in a binary format so sensitive data (e.g. passwords,
encryption keys) cannot be easily read from the files.
Roam Control
In roaming applications, a mobile platform equipped with an RLX2 Repeater roams from
one Master’s coverage area to another. By default, an RLX2 Repeater roams
autonomously by calculating the cost for each roam candidate based only on RSSI and
hop count. The lowest cost determines when a better Parent candidate is present.
There are several limitations when the RLX2s are operating in autonomous roam mode
that can be overcome by using Parent Assisted Roaming.
Given that the current RLX2 only has one radio module, all Masters, by
necessity, have to be on the same Channel to allow the roaming Repeater to
detect them.
Field Description
None When checked, this control negates all others so that no
roam parameters are advertised to Child Repeaters.
Next Parent When checked, this enables advertising of a specific unit as
the Parent or Child Repeater should associated to next. A
select-edit box is present that is automatically populated with
all the RLX2 units with the same SSID that are on the same
Ethernet network as a unit.
Each entry is represented by the Name of the RLX2, so it is
important that each RLX2 be given a unique name. If the
desired next Parent has not been detected because it is not
currently powered up or attached to the network, it will not
appear in the list. In this case, its MAC Address can be
manually entered into the edit box. Once saved, this MAC
Address appears in the select box until that unit is detected
on the Ethernet at which point it will switch to displaying the
unit’s name.
When an advertised Next Parent is on the same channel as
the current unit, then the Child Repeater will roam to the
Next Parent when the Next Parent’s cost is lower than its
current parent’s. When the advertised Next Parent is on a
different channel, then the Roam Threshold is used to make
the roam decision.
Roam Threshold When checked, this enables advertising of the Roam
Threshold that a Child Repeater should use. This Roam
Threshold overrides the Child Repeaters equivalent setting
but only while the Child Repeater is associated to this unit. If
the Parent is not advertising a Roam Threshold, then the
Child Repeater will revert to using its own value configured in
the Parent Link Settings dialog box.
This setting is critical when a Next Parent is also being
advertised and that parent is configured to be on a different
channel than this unit. The Child Repeater uses this threshold
to determine when to switch to the Next Parent’s channel an
associate with it. The installer must ensure that at a point
Security Settings
The Security Controls shown in the center panel will vary depending on the values of the
following controls”
Security Mode
802.11 Mode
Master or Repeater/Client
As each of the Mode controls are changed on the web page, the set of controls in the
Security panel will automatically change to selections applicable to the selected mode.
Note: The controls will change to allow you to fully configure the Security Settings
before Applying the Changes.
Note: Newer firmware versions of the RLX2 Radios may support additional functionality.
Therefore, you may see more or fewer options on this page, depending on the version
of firmware included the radio you purchased.
Field Description
Security Mode This unit supports both “Personal” and “Enterprise” security modes as well
as Legacy WEB encryption modes for interoperability with legacy devices.
The following security mode settings are supported:
Encryption Type
The preferred encryption type is WPA or WPA2 (WiFi Protected Access) using AES. You
should only select TKIP for use with an older client radio that does not support AES or
WEP (wired equivalency protocol). For compatibility with clients that do not support
WPA, you can select TKIP+WEP128 as the encryption type. Then older clients can
connect to the RLX2 using the WEP setting, but all other links will use the more secure
WPA encryption.
Important: If the RLX2 model supports 802.11n rates and they are enabled, then all
‘TKIP only’ and TKIP/WEP options are disabled. If a client radio only supports TKIP, then
use the AES & TKIP option. If the client radio only supports WEP, then switch the 802.11
Mode control to ‘802.11 a/g and then select the appropriate WEB setting in this control.
Important: If TKIP+WEP128 is selected, some clients using WPA might not be able to
connect unless you use a WEP key other than number 1, due to limitations in these
clients. In such cases, you should set a WEP key other than key 1 and set this same key
for all clients that are using WEP. See WEP key.
When the WEP Security mode is selected, you can then select WEP128 or WEP64 as the
encryption type but none of these settings are recommended.
WEP is the original security protocol used by 802.11 networks but should only be used if
interoperability with a legacy device is essential. Tools are available that allow an
attacker to break the WEP keys simply by sniffing an active WEP network for a few
minutes. WPA offers vastly better protection against attacks, for several reasons. WPA
distances the encryption key from the actual data by performing several algorithms to
create a ‘Session’ key before encrypting any data, and it performs dynamic key
management by changing keys frequently.
Note: If an RLC2 is set to use TKIP+WEP128, it will connect to other radios set to WPA
only or WPA+WEP, but it will not communicate with radios set to WEP only. Likewise, an
RLX2 in client mode with TKIP+WEP128 selected will not connect to an access point with
WEP only selected.
WPA Phrase
To use WPA encryption on packets sent between the radios, enter a WPA pass phrase of
between eight and 63 normal keyboard characters. This phrase automatically generates
an encryption key of 128 hexadecimal characters. This field is only available if you select
one of the ‘Personal’ security modes. The default WPA-AES Phrase is 'passphrase'.
Field Description
IP Address The IP address of the RADIUS server with which the Network Administrator
has register this RLX2.
UDP Port The UDP port number the RADIUS server is using to listen to Radius frames
from this RLX2. The default port number used for the Radius protocol is
1812.
Secret The passphrase that was used when this RLX2 was registered to the RADIUS
server. This is used to validate that the Radius frames received on either end
are legitimate.
When in Repeater or Client mode, the RLX2 Supplicant communicates via its Parent
RLX2 with a RADIUS server. Several different authentication protocols are available and
can be set using the following parameters.
Field Description
EAP Method The EAP Method, sometimes referred to as the ‘outer protocol’ defines the
mechanism used to create a secure tunnel between the Supplicant and
RADIUS server during the first phase of the Authentication sequence. The
following EAP methods are supported:
Field Description
Authentication Method: The Authentication Method, sometimes referred to as the ‘inner protocol’
defines the mechanism used to authenticate the Supplicant of the RLX2 with
the RADIUS server. The following authentication methods are supported:
Certificate Management
When using Enterprise-level security, some EAP methods require the use of X.509
certificates. The Certificate Management web page allows the uploading of certificate
files to the RLX2.
There are two certificate types; a certificate from a ‘Certification Authority’ used to
authenticate the RADIUS server to the RLX2 supplicant, and device or client certificate
created by the RADIUS server for the RLX2. The RLX2 is able to hold one of each
certificate type.
If PEAP authentication is used, you’ll need a CA Certificate (to authenticate the RADIUS
server) and a username and password.
If EAP-TLS is used, you’ll need a CA Certificate, a Client Certificate and Private Key
(contained in a single p12 file) to authenticate the client. The p12 file is encrypted and
requires a password.
The IT person will provide you with the appropriate files that you’ll need to load to the
RLX2 Repeater.
The following controls are used for uploading a certificate:
Field Description
Certificate Type Select the type of certificate that you will be uploading. It is important that
this is set correctly as the RLX2 does not distinguish between them in any
other way.
Certificate Passphrase If the certificate is encrypted, enter the passphrase that was used to create it
on the RADIUS server.
File Location Browse to locate the certificate file on the local PC that is to be uploaded.
WEP Key
A key is a set of hexadecimal (hex) or ASCII characters used to encrypt data. This field is
only available when using WEP encryption type. Be sure to record the WEP encryption
key to retrieve if needed.
To create a 64-bit WEP key, enter five normal text characters in the WEP key field, which
converts the characters automatically to 10 hex digits. Alternatively, enter 10 hex digits
(0 to 9, a to f, A to F) directly in the WEP key field.
To create a 128-bit key, enter 13 normal text characters, which convert to 26 hex digits,
or enter 26 hex digits (0 to 9, a to f, A to F) directly.
Note: Clients often support more than one WEP key. Packets received can be decrypted using any
one of the keys if programmed, but packets are always transmitted with the "default" WEP key
number. If a transmit key number is set on the RLX2 radio, make sure all other radios and clients
have this key programmed. To set keys other than key 1 on some clients using Windows,
Advanced settings may be used.
Programming more than one key on the RLX2 radio requires setting the key number to
the key, entering the key, and saving the changes. Repeat these steps for each key to
program, saving after each one. Finally, change to the desired transmit key number if
necessary and save again (If "****" remains in the key field, the previously programmed
key will not be changed when changes are applied)
MAC Filter
Field Description
Add MAC Enter the MAC address to add.
Delete Deletes the selected MAC address from the list.
Address List of MAC addresses configured.
Top Displays the top of the list.
Next / Prev Navigates up and down through the address list.
Upload File To assign the same list of MAC addresses to several radios conveniently,
open a text editor such as Notepad.exe. Enter addresses in hexadecimal
format, one MAC address per line, including periods. When finished, save
the document. In the MAC Filter window, click Browse to select the text file,
click Upload File to upload the list of MAC addresses.
Browse Navigates to a prepared text file of MAC addresses on the appropriate drive
and folder, and click the Upload File button.
Save Saves the changes and updates the radio configuration.
Cancel Discards the changes without updating the radio configuration.
Field Description
Obtain IP address - DHCP Allows the radio to obtain its IP address from a DHCP server.
Use the following IP address Specifies a Static IP address to the radio. Enter the IP address information in
the following fields.
IP Address Use an IP address that will not interfere with any other devices on the
network. Request a block of IP addresses to use from the Network
Administrator.
Field Description
Subnet Mask Subnet Mask provided by the Network Administrator.
Default Gateway Default Gateway address provided by the Network Administrator.
Primary DNS Primary DNS address provided by the Network Administrator.
Secondary DNS Secondary DNS address provided by the Network Administrator.
SNMP button Opens the SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) Agent settings
form. Use this form to configure access to radio network settings through an
SNMP agent.
Login Password button Configures the Login Password for the radio. The default password is
"password". Change this password and keep a record of it in a safe place, to
protect the radio from being reconfigured by unauthorized users.
SNMP is a network management protocol that is often used with TCP/IP and Ethernet.
As an alternative to using the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility, changing radio
settings and viewing diagnostics can be done in an SNMP manager application.
Field Description
Enable Enables the following SNMP Agent settings.
Allow Any Manager Allows any user to change the radio settings from any computer using SNMP.
Allow IP Restricts access to an SNMP manager with a particular IP address. Enter the
IP address in the Allow IP field.
Community String Enter a "community string" (essentially a password) that a manager must use
to access the radio’s SNMP agent.
Permission Select the permission level to assign to this radio.
Read only An SNMP Agent can view but cannot modify radio settings.
Read/Write An SNMP Agent can view and modify radio settings.
Save Saves the changes and updates the radio configuration.
Cancel Discards the changes without updating the radio configuration.
The RLX2 SNMP agent supports SNMP protocol version 1.4 and 2 MIBs:
Serial Settings
This configuration page opens when the Serial Port Settings button is clicked on the
Radio Configuration form.
Use this page to configure the way serial data packets are encapsulated and transmitted
over an Ethernet network.
Field Description
Serial Encapsulation Mode None: No serial data encapsulation.
UDP: In UDP mode, programs on networked computers can be used to send
short messages or Datagrams. Once enabled, the serial port is used to
transmit and receive packets.
NOTE: In UDP mode if a multicast group address is entered in this field then
packets are sent to that address.
TCP Server: In TCP Server mode, only connections from this address will be
accepted. Once the session is established, the serial port is enabled to
transmit and receive packets.
NOTE: To accept connections from any IP address the field should be set to
0.0.0.0.
TCP Client: In TCP Client mode, a TCP connection will be established with this
address.
When the session is established, the serial port is enabled to transmit and
receive packets.
Single IP Address IP Address or URL of the radio that should receive encapsulated serial
protocol packets.
Range of IP Addresses Up to 4 IP Address ranges for radios that should receive encapsulated serial
protocol packets.
Remote Port Number Remote UDP port number to use for encapsulated serial data transmission.
Local Port Number Local UDP port number to use for encapsulated serial data transmission.
Delineation Method None: All data received between packet delineation events is sent to the
remote node in a single network frame.
Time Gap: The minimum time gap between characters that is to be
interpreted as a delineator for a packet. Configure this value in the EOL Time
Gap field.
Character: The particular character sequence in the stream of characters
that indicates the delineator for the packet. Configure this value in the EOL
Delineator field.
EOL Delineator Available when the selected Delineation Method is Character. Choose the
type of delineator to use from the dropdown list:
Available delineation types are:
Type Decimal Hex Description
Use Text Any string of characters
CR 13 0D Carriage Return
ESC 27 1B Escape
LF 10 0A Line Feed (New Line / nl)
Null 00 00 Null
Spacebar 32 20 Space
Tab 09 09 Horizontal Tab
Field Description
EOL Time Gap Available when the selected Delineation Method is Time Gap; This value
configures the length of time in milliseconds that must elapse after a
character is received (from the local attached device) before that character
marks the end of a packet.
NOTE: the smallest value this field can be set to will be limited by the device
and is platform dependent.
Packet Rate (milliseconds) Sets the minimum time gap that will be interpreted as an inter-packet space.
When detected the characters received up to that point will constitute a
single packet and will be sent to the remote node. Units: microseconds.
Values: 1,000 to 500,000.
Baud Rate Baud rate on the radio must match the baud rate on the connected serial
device.
Data Bits Number of data bits (5, 6, 7 or 8). The data bits on the radio must match the
data bits on the connected serial device.
Parity Parity (None, Even, Odd, 1 or 0). The parity on the radio must match the
parity on the connected serial device.
Flow Control Flow control (handshaking) mode (None or Hardware). The handshaking
mode on the radio must match the handshaking mode on the connected
serial device.
Stop Bits Stop bits (1 or 2). The stop bits on the radio must match the stop bits on the
connected serial device.
Save Saves the changes and updates the radio configuration.
Cancel Discards the changes without updating the radio configuration.
Change Password
Field Description
Old Enter the current password in this field. The default password is "password"
(lower case, no quotes). This entry must exactly match the current password,
otherwise the change will be rejected.
New Enter the new password in this field. Passwords are case sensitive.
Repeat Confirm the new password in this field. This entry must exactly match the
password entered in the "New" field, otherwise the change will be rejected.
Save Saves the changes and updates the radio configuration.
Cancel Discards the changes without updating the radio configuration.
Any alphanumeric value between one and 31 characters can be entered. The password
is case-sensitive.
If the password cannot be found, changes the radio settings cannot be done. To revert
back to the default password, see the Troubleshooting section.
Apply Changes
Click the Apply Changes button to save the changes after editing radio configuration in
order for those changes to take effect. When changes are applied, the radio will shut
down and restart using the new settings.
Cancel Changes
Click Cancel Changes to discard any settings made during this session.
Note: This button only applies to changes made in the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic window.
Changes made to individual configuration forms (for example, Spanning Tree, Parent Link, and
SNMP Agent settings) take effect when the Save button is clicked on each of those forms.
Factory Defaults
Click the Factory Defaults button to reset the radio to the default settings.
If a Master radio detects radar, it issues a channel change announcement to all Clients
and Repeaters in the network. Then it moves to a new channel within the Channel Move
Time. (Typically, this move time is 500 milliseconds or less.) If the selected channel was
not previously checked for the presence of radar, the Master radio must do so for the
Channel Availability Check Time before it can begin to transmit. If the newly-selected
channel is not a DFS channel, or if the channel was previously monitored for radar since
the radio was powered on, transmissions can begin immediately.
During the Channel Availability Check Time, a radio blinks all three amber Signal
Strength LEDS approximately once per second. If radar is detected on the new channel
during the Channel Availability Check Time, the Master selects another channel and
begins the process again.
A Repeater detecting radar, in addition to stopping data transmission, notifies its Parent
of the presence of radar. Each unit receiving a radar notification from a child treats it
the same as if it had detected radar itself and acts accordingly. Thus radar notifications
always reach the Master and a channel change is affected.
After a Master successfully selects a DFS channel, radios in Repeater mode will connect
to the Master and scan for RADAR for an additional 60 seconds (Channel Availability
Check Time). If a chain of Repeaters ultimately connects to a Master using a DFS
channel, the time to connect is 60 seconds for each Repeater in the chain as DFS
channels are initially scanned for RADAR transmissions.
With this selection the radio randomly selects a DFS channel for operation. The actual
channel in operation is always shown in the Current Channel display:
The preceding illustration shows the List View. Refer to Topology view (page 145) to see
alternate views.
To clear all the radios from the list, click the Erase button in the tool bar or select Clear
from the File menu. Refreshing the list is done by clicking Scan.
If there is trouble viewing radios in the IH Browser, see Troubleshoot missing radios
(page 65).
Connect (page 130): Log in to the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility to configure a
radio or check diagnostics.
Assign IP (page 54, page 131): Assign a temporary IP address to a radio.
Update Firmware (page 132): Update the version of firmware the radio uses.
Start Ping Session (page 132): Sends a ping command to an address
Wireless Clients (page 134): View a list of client radios
Ethernet Nodes (page 135): View a list of wired Ethernet nodes connected to the
network
Scan List (page 136): View a list of all the radios detected on the network (including
those from other vendors)
Port Table (page 137): Lists of all the active ports on the radio
Event Log (page 138): Shows a history of the radio
Properties (page 139): View the selected radio’s properties.
In addition, there are more options in the File menu.
Print either a list of the radios' properties or a topology view.
File Menu
The following commands are available on the File menu:
Scan Setup
The Scan Setup command allows the configuration of settings that govern how the IH
Browser scans for radios. In the top field of the Scan Setup dialog box, adjust how often
the IH Browser program automatically scans for radios. Enter a value in seconds.
In the New address/range fields, the program scan type can be adjusted for radios. By
default, the program sends a broadcast message to all the radios at the same time,
looking for a response. Broadcasts are limited to a local network, and will not be passed
through a router.
If there is a router between the PC running the IH Browser and the radio to be scanned,
the IP address of the radio or a range of addresses can be added to the scan list. At each
interval determined by the scan rate, each IP address is individually queried.
Scan
The IH Browser automatically scans for all active radios on the network at a regular
interval, use the Scan command in the File menu to look for active radios at any time.
Clear
Clears (deletes) all entries from the IH Browser window.
Import
Imports an XML file created by the Export command in the IH Browser.
Export
Creates and saves an XML file containing the current configuration and status of all
radios discovered by the IH Browser. Use this command under the direction of ProSoft
Technical Services, for troubleshooting purposes.
Freeze
Temporarily stops the display from updating. This command is useful for studying
network topology and performance without the distraction of radios and other devices
appearing and disappearing from the screen.
Print
Prints the contents of the IH Browser window. Depending on the view selected, the
radio properties or a topology view can be printed.
Print Preview
Displays a preview of the contents of the IH Browser window. Use this to adjust the
placement of elements so that they do not span page boundaries.
Print Setup
Displays the standard Window Print Setup dialog box.
Exit
Closes the IH Browser.
Operations Menu
The following commands are available on the Operations Menu:
Connect
To connect to the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility and change radio settings,
double-click the radio listing in the IH Browser after it has been assigned an IP address
(either manually or with DHCP). Alternatively, the Connect option in the AP Operations
menu can be selected. Enter the password to log in to the radio.
Assign IP
If the radio is connected to a network with a DHCP server, the radio may already have
an IP address assigned to it. If no address appears, double-click the radio listing in the IH
Browser or select Assign IP in the AP Operations menu. In the next window, click OK to
accept the temporary IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway. If necessary, a
particular IP address can be entered (see Radio Access settings (page 115)). After an IP
address is assigned, configuring the radios can be done in the Radio Configuration /
Diagnostic Utility (page 66).
Update Firmware
"Firmware" is the program that runs in the RadioLinx® 802.11abg Industrial Hotspot that
allows it to communicate and exchange data between devices, using the radio as a
network connection. Different versions of the firmware communicate with other radios
in different ways, and provide different levels of functionality.
In order for the RadioLinx Industrial Hotspot radio to communicate with other RLX2
devices, all radios on the network must use the same firmware version.
To change the firmware version of the radio:
Ping Device
A Ping Session allows traffic to run over the radio network between any two computers
running the IH Browser. With it the user can monitor their network over time.
To start the ping session, enable "Show Ping Stations" on the View menu, and then
highlight one of the other computers visible in the IH Browser. The session then starts
automatically and the Ping Results dialog box opens.
This dialog box displays statistics on the minimum, maximum and average latency
between two points on the network.
Dialogs Menu
The Dialogs menu contains the following commands:
Ethernet Nodes
This dialog box opens when the Ethernet Nodes option is selected from the AP Dialogs
menu. Use this dialog box to see information about Ethernet devices attached to the
radios. The following illustration shows a list of Ethernet devices (by IP address and MAC
ID) attached to the Ethernet port of Tourmaline_14. In addition to the IP and MAC ID it
gives an age for each entry, which is the amount of time since a packet has been heard
from that device.
Scan List
This dialog box opens when Scan List is selected in the AP Dialogs menu.
The scan list is a list of all the radios that this particular radio "hears" on this channel (via
beacons) even if it is not linked to it (different SSID or encryption). This list shows the
same information as the Available Parents list in the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic
Utility.
List entries marked with a "*" indicate the entry is an alternate path, which can also be
seen if the ‘parents' button is selected in the menu bar (blue lines will link the radio to
its alternate parents).
Port Table
This dialog box opens when Port Table is selected from the AP Dialogs menu.
The port table is a list of all the active ports on the radio. This list shows the same
information as the Port status (page 76) list in the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic
Utility. Each radio can have up to 34 active ports—one Ethernet cable, one parent RF
link, and up to 32 child RF links.
All 4 Dialogs
This menu entry simply opens all four “list” dialogs (Scan, Port, Ethernet node, and
Client.) The dialogs open on top of each other. Drag the windows to view them
completely.
Close All
This entry closes all “list” dialogs that are currently open.
Event Log
The event log allows the extraction of a log from the selected radio. The log shows a
history of the radio. The event log can be saved to a file for troubleshooting purposes.
Event Filter
The Event Filter dialog box allows the inclusion or exclusion of specific event types from
the event log.
Properties
This dialog box opens when a radio is selected the Properties option is selected from the
AP Dialogs menu.
View Menu
The View menu contains the following commands:
Toolbar
The Tool Bar near the top of the IH Browser window contains buttons to access
frequently used commands. Hold the mouse button over each button to view a brief
"Tool Tip" explaining the button’s use.
Status Bar
The Status Bar at the bottom of the IH Browser displays additional information about
the currently selected menu command or tool bar button. On the right side of the Status
Bar, the status of the Caps Lock and Num Lock keys on the computer keyboard can be
seen. Use the corner of the status bar to drag and resize the IH Browser window.
List View
List View shows a list of all the connected radios in a grid, arranged similarly to data in a
spreadsheet. Resize the window or scroll across to see all of the available columns. Click
between column headers and drag to the left or right to resize columns. Click on column
headers and drag to the left or right to re-order columns.
Tip: Use the Reset Columns command to restore the column size and order to their default values.
The default columns and their left-to-right display order are:
Name
MAC
IP
SSID
Security
Channel/Width
Signal (dBm)
Parent
RSTP
There are many columns of data that can be displayed. Columns can be hidden as
needed. Use Select Columns from the View Menu to choose the columns of data to
display.
Utility
Displayed for other instances of IH Browsers running on
tother systems on the same network.
Local Interface
A network interface detected on the host computer running
this instance of the IH Browser.
Master
A radio on the network in Master mode.
Ethernet Client
A radio on the network in Client mode.
Repeater
A radio in the network in Repeater mode.
Image This is the version of the firmware image that the radio
is currently running. It can be primary or secondary.
Each radio has two copies of operating firmware
installed, and the radio will automatically transition from
one to the other if one of them becomes corrupted.
Compression Firmware images in the radio can be either compressed or
uncompressed.
Ethernet The Ethernet status is Attached for a radio connected to a
wired Ethernet network, otherwise Detached.
Channel/Width The operating channel and channel width. The width value
will always be 20MHz except on 802.11n devices where it
can be 20MHz or 40MHz. Example: 48, 20 for channel 48
with a 20 MHz channel width.
Security This indicates the encryption setting for the radio. Valid
setting are WPA/WPA2-AES; WPA/WPA2-TKIP;
WPA/WPA2-AES&TKIP; WPA-TKIP+WEP128;
WEP128; WEP64; and none.
Misses This is the number of times the IH Browser has
unsuccessfully attempted to contact the device. Ideally this
number should always be zero.
RSTP This is the setting for RSTP in the radio. Allowed states are
Enabled, Disabled, and STP. The STP state is a legacy “non-
rapid” Spanning Tree option. All radios on a network must
have the same RSTP state to link properly.
Link Time The link time of the device, for example 24d,13h,10m, 32s.
TX Rate This is the current effective data rate of the device. This may
be slower than the configured nominal rate because of
retries or other environmental factors. For 802.11a/b/g
devices, the data rate is expressed in kilobits or megabits per
second (e.g. 54Mb/s.) For 802.11n devices, the data is
expressed in MCS rates from 0 to 31 (e.g. MCS16.)
Temperature The internal temperature of the radio as measured on the
circuit board in degrees Celsius. Note that internal
measured temperature may in some cases exceed ambient
temperature rating.
Retries(%) This value is the percentage of packets transmitted
more than once during the last five-second interval.
Uptime The amount of time the device has been running since the
last power cycle or reset. For example 1d,4h,13m,25s.
Product The type of RLX2 radio. The values can be RLX2-IHA, RLX2-
IHG, RLX2-IHFN, or RLX2-IHW.
Image Ver This is the name the image file loaded into the radio. It
matches the Firmware label displayed on the main radio
webpage. For example, RLX2_v0016_M.
P State
Topology View
To see how radios are connected together in the network, select Topology View from
the View menu. The Topology view shows a diagram of the network’s wireless
connections. If a radio does not appear in the view, it is not connected to the network.
To change the way a radio is linked to the network, connect to it and make changes
through its Web page. For information on these settings, see Parent Link settings (page
82).
In the topology view, double-click a radio to log in to the Radio Configuration /
Diagnostic Utility and change the radio’s settings. To view a radio’s properties, right-click
on a radio representation in the topology view and then select Properties from the
resulting menu.
Refer to Topology View key (page 145) for an explanation of the symbols that appear in
this view.
Alternate parents.
Zoom In
Use the ZOOM IN command in Topology View to enlarge the size of the items in the IH
Browser window.
Zoom Out
Use the ZOOM OUT command in Topology View to reduce the size of the items in the IH-
Browser window.
Zoom to Fit
Use the ZOOM TO FIT command in Topology View to change the size of the items so that
the entire network fits within the IH Browser window.
Print Area
Use the Print Area command to show the border around the area of the IH Browser
window. To print, use the Print command on the File menu.
Reset Columns
Use the Reset Columns command to restore the column size and order to their default
values. A prompt will appear to confirm this action.
Select Columns
Use the Select Columns command to display the data fields shown in List View.
Help Menu
The Help menu contains the following commands:
Help Topics
Most of the information needed to help use the IH Browser is provided in an online help
system. It is available whenever the application is running.
To view the online help, start the IH Browser, open the Help menu, and choose Help
Topics.
Use this command to view version information about the IH Browser. This information
may be needed when contacting ProSoft Technical Services.
PLC, Drive, and HMI communicate on VLAN 1 and with the Control Network
(same subnet)
Mobile worker communicates to the SCADA network only (VLAN 2). The laptop
communicates to Internet/Business Network only (VLAN 3)
REFERENCE
Product Overview
The RLX2 radio is an industrial high-speed Ethernet radio. Use it in place of Ethernet
cables to save money, extend range, and make connections that may not otherwise be
feasible. The radio operates as a wireless Ethernet switch. Any data that can be sent
over a wired network can also be sent over the radio.
The RLX2 radio series is certified for unlicensed operation in the United States, Canada
and Europe at 2.4 and 5 GHz. With approved high-gain antennas, the radios can achieve
distances of over 5 miles line-of-sight between them. Multiple repeaters can be used to
extend this range to far greater distances.
A highly reliable wireless network can be developed by creating redundant (page 95)
wireless paths. Multiple master (page 78) radios can be installed without any special
programming or control. Repeater (page 78) radios can connect to any master at any
time; if one master goes down, the repeater connects to another. Likewise, if a repeater
goes down, any repeater that was connected to it can reconnect to a different repeater,
keeping the network intact. Create large, self-healing tree-like networks can be done in
this fashion. Fully redundant paths are possible because the Spanning Tree (page 95)
protocol in the radios disables and enables paths as necessary to avoid Ethernet loops,
which would otherwise halt communications.
In addition to acting as a switch, every master or repeater radio in an RLX2 wireless
network can simultaneously act as an 802.11 a, b or g access point. This allows 802.11
WiFi clients to connect and roam between radios for monitoring of the wireless network
or general network access. The RLX2 has a special client mode (page 54) that allows
connection of any Ethernet device to any existing 802.11 a, b or g access point,
regardless of the brand (An example of an 802.11 client is a laptop with a WLAN card).
Note: Wi-Fi is a trademark of the Wi-Fi Alliance, used to describe the underlying technology of
wireless local area networks (WLAN) based on the IEEE 802.11 specifications.
A high level of security is inherent with AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) encryption.
TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol) is also available. If necessary, adding WEP128 or
WEP64 (Wired Equivalent Protocol) encryption in addition to AES or TKIP for clients that
do not support AES can be done. A simple Media Access Control (MAC) filter table
restricts the radios or clients that can link to a selected radio according to the MAC IDs
entered in the table.
The radio is designed for industrial applications with a metal enclosure, DIN-rail
mounting, and shock and vibration tested to IEC 60068.
The RLX2 radio series is easy to use. Use the Radio Configuration / Diagnostic Utility,
which runs in a web browser, to configure the radio. Also, an SNMP manager can be
used for configuration. The radio comes with a Windows-based utility called IH Browser.
It finds all the radios on the network and lists information about them. A topology view
in the IH Browser shows how the wireless network is linked together at any point in
time. Firmware updates can be done at anytime from anywhere on the network. This
includes over the wireless link or over the Internet.
ProSoft Technology radios can easily be installed into new or existing systems. The
software and manuals can be downloaded from the DVD or ProSoft Technology’s web
site at www.prosoft-technology.com.
The RLX2 series radios will acquire additional functionality as new firmware features are
added. These new features will not be ported to the RLXIB radios, but the RLX2 radios will
continue to work with RLXIB radios using their existing functionality.
The RLX2-IHNF is an 802.11n device that does not have an RLXIB series equivalent. It cannot
function as a repeater to ProSoft’s RLXIB-IHxN series radio products. Specific differences by
product are noted in the following table. Specifications that have not changed between the
RLXIB and RLX2 series products are not listed.
Weight 1.1 lbs 1.1 lbs 1.1 lbs 1.1 lbs 1.06 lbs 1.06 lbs 1.1 lbs (499g)
(499g) (499g) (499g) (499g) (479g) (479g)
Fast Roaming
microSD card
Onboard
temperature sensor
Use RLXIB
Firmware Image
Dimensional Drawings
FCC ETSI
1 2412
2 2417
3 2422
4 2427
5 2432
6 2437
7 2442
8 2447
9 2452
10 2457
11 2462
12 2467
13 2472
36 5180
40 5200
44 5220
48 5240
52 (DFS) 5260
56 (DFS) 5280
60 (DFS) 5300
64 (DFS) 5320
149 5745
153 5765
157 5785
161 5805
165 5825
30 1000 6 36 4
27 500 9 36 4
24 250 12 36 4
21 125 15 36 4
18 63 18 36 4
15 32 21 36 4
12 16 24 36 4
30 1000 6 36 4.0
29 800 9 38 6.3
28 630 12 30 10.0
27 500 15 42 16.0
26 400 18 44 25.0
25 316 21 46 39.8
24 250 24 48 63.0
23 200 27 50 100.0
22 160 30 52 158.0
The FCC states that for every 1 dBi power reduction in the radio’s transmitter output,
the antenna gain may be increased by 3 dB.
dBm mW dBm mW
dBm mW dBm mW
165
Radio Hardware
Radio Power Requirements (RLX2-IHNF-W)
These cables are available for purchase from ProSoft Technology:
Description ProSoft Part Number
Power Cable, 3m (7 ft), M12 to un- CULPWR-M12-010
terminated leads
Power Cable, 10m (33 ft), M12 to un- CULPWR-M12-033
terminated leads
The RLX2-IHNF-W and WC radios accept PoE configuration. However, the RLX2-IHNF
radio is equipped with a power M12 port (IEC 61076-2-101). The RLX2-IHNF-WC
Ethernet and PoE cable protrudes from the module. There is no M12 port.
Contact Assignment of the M12 Socket
BK (Black) and BU (Blue) wires are tied together and connect to “+”.
BN (Brown) and WH (White) wires are tied together and connected to “-“.
The Power Connector (ProSoft part number 002-0116) is shown on the left in the photo
above. Note the + and – polarity markings. The wire installation tool (ProSoft part
number 357-0061) shown on the right is helpful for installing wires into the spring-
loaded contacts inside power connector.
To use the installation tool, insert it into the connector as shown:
Press down on the installation tool to use it as a level which will open the connector’s
contacts to insert a wire. A properly-wired power connector is shown:
The RLX2 radios accept power from 802.3af Mode B or passive Power over Ethernet
sources supplying 48VDC, with an average power draw of less than 8 watts. ProSoft
offers the following passive PoE injectors for use with the RLX2 radios:
POE-48I-AC Power over Ethernet Injector, AC input
The radio shall be installed by trained personnel only, as outlined in the installation
instructions provided with each radio.
The equipment shall be installed by a qualified installer/electrician. The
installer/electrician is responsible for obtaining a secured ground connection between
the lug terminal on the surge protector to a verified common ground point using a
minimum 6 AWG gauge wire. This must be done when attaching power lines to the
radio during installation.
A solid ground connection should be verified using a meter prior to applying power to
the radio. Failing to secure a proper ground could result in serious injury or death as a
result of a lightning strike.
Using Power over Ethernet (PoE) to power remote devices has several advantages
including:
"Carrier Class" Power Over Ethernet System.
Power can be supplied over long distances, up to 300 feet.
This PoE cable contains an M12 (IP65, IP67) connector on one end that attaches to the
radio. The other end contains an RJ45 connector for a network connection or power
injector.
Pin Assignments
M12 socket, 8-pos, A-coded, female
Circuit Diagram
Straight-Though Cable
RJ-45 Pin RJ-45 Pin
1 Rx+ 1 Tx+
2 Rx- 2 Tx-
3 Tx+ 3 Rx+
6 Tx- 6 Rx-
Crossover Cable
RJ-45 Pin RJ-45 Pin
1 Rx+ 3 Tx+
2 Rx- 6 Tx-
3 Tx+ 1 Rx+
6 Tx- 2 Rx-
Physical
Enclosure Extruded aluminum with DIN and panel mount
Size 14.8 x 11.8 x 3.8 cm (H x W x D)
5.82 x 4.64 x 1.48 in (H x W x D)
Shock IEC 60068 2-6 (20g, 3-Axis)
Vibration IEC 60068 2-27 (5g, 10Hz to 150Hz)
Ethernet Ports One 10/100/1000 Base-T connector, shielded RJ45
Antenna Port (1) RP-SMA connector
Weight 1.1 lbs (499g)
Environmental
Operating Temperature -40°C to +75°C (-40°F to +167°F)
Wireless Approvals
Visit www.prosoft-technology.com for current wireless approval information.
Physical
Enclosure Extruded aluminum with DIN and panel mount
Environmental
Operating Temperature -40°C to +75°C (-40°F to +167°F)
Wireless Approvals
Visit www.prosoft-technology.com for current wireless approval information.
Physical
Enclosure Extruded aluminum with DIN and panel mount
Size 14.8 x 11.8 x 3.8 cm (H x W x D)
5.82 x 4.64 x 1.48 in (H x W x D)
Vibration IEC 60068 2-6 (20g, 3-Axis)
Shock IEC 60068 2-27 (5g, 10 Hz to 150 Hz)
Ethernet Ports One 10/100/1000 Base-T connector, shielded RJ45
Antenna Ports (2) RP-SMA connectors
Weight 1.06 lbs (479g)
Environmental
Operating Temperature -40°C to +75°C (-40°F to +167°F)
Humidity Up to 100% RH, with no condensation
ANTENNA CONFIGURATION
Antennas
Connecting antennas to the radio, see Connecting Antennas
Consider important electrical characteristics when selecting antennas:
Antenna pattern
Antenna gain
Antenna polarity
Antenna location, spacing, and mounting
Control Drawing
Antenna Pattern
Information between two wireless devices is transferred via electromagnetic energy
radiated by one antenna and received by another. The radiated power of most antennas
is not uniform in all directions and has varying intensities. The radiated power in various
directions is called the pattern of the antenna. Each antenna should be mounted so that
its direction of strongest radiation intensity points toward the other antenna or
antennas with which it will exchange signals.
Complete antenna patterns are three-dimensional, although often only a two-
dimensional slice of the pattern is shown when all the antennas of interest are located
in roughly the same horizontal plane, along the ground rather than above or below one
another.
A slice taken in a horizontal plane through the center (or looking down on the pattern) is
called the azimuth pattern. A view from the side reveals a vertical plane slice called the
elevation pattern.
Antenna Gain
Antenna gain is a measure of how strongly an antenna radiates in its direction of
maximum radiation intensity compared to how strong the radiation would be if the
same power were applied to an antenna that radiated all of its power equally in all
directions. Using the antenna pattern, the gain is the distance to the furthest point on
the pattern from the origin. For an omnidirectional pattern, the gain is 1, or equivalently
0 dB. The higher the antenna gain is, the narrower the beamwidth, and vice versa.
The amount of power received by the receiving antenna is proportional to the
transmitter power multiplied by the transmit antenna gain, multiplied by the receiving
antenna gain. Therefore, the antenna gains and transmitting power can be traded off.
For example, doubling one antenna gain has the same effect as doubling the
transmitting power. Doubling both antenna gains has the same effect as quadrupling
the transmitting power.
Antenna Polarity
Antenna polarization refers to the direction in which the electromagnetic field lines
point as energy radiates away from the antenna. In general, the polarization is elliptical.
The simplest and most common form of this elliptical polarization is a straight line, or
linear polarization. Of the transmitted power that reaches the receiving antenna, only
the portion that has the same polarization as the receiving antenna polarization is
actually received. For example, if the transmitting antenna polarization is pointed in the
vertical direction (vertical polarization, for short), and the receiving antenna also has
vertical polarization, the maximum amount of power possible will be received. On the
other hand, if the transmit antenna has vertical polarization and the receiving antenna
has horizontal polarization, no power should be received. If the two antennas have
linear polarizations oriented at 45° to each other, half of the possible maximum power
will be received.
Whip Antennas
Use a 1/2 wave straight whip or 1/2 wave articulating whip (2 dBi) antenna with RLX2
radios. These antennas are the most common type in use today. Such antennas are
approximately 5 inches long, and are likely to be connected to a client radio (connected
directly to the radio enclosure). These antennas do not require a ground plane.
Articulating antennas and non-articulating antennas work in the same way. An
articulating antenna bends at the connection.
equal narrower beamwidth. The antenna gain also depends on the number of
elements/length, where more elements produce higher gain. Typical gain is 5 to 10 dBi.
The antenna polarity is linear, or parallel to the length of the antenna.
Refer to the Antenna Types overview section for other types of approved antennas
(page 187).
The antenna pattern is a beam pointed away from the concave side of the dish.
Beamwidth and antenna gain vary with the size of the reflector and the antenna
construction. Typical gain values are 15 to 30 dBi.
The antenna polarity depends on the feed antenna polarization.
Note: In France, the user is responsible for ensuring that the selected frequency channels comply
with French regulatory standards. At the time of this printing, only channels 10 through 13 can be
used in France.
Note: In Mexico, the user is responsible for ensuring that the selected frequency channels comply
with Mexican regulatory standards. At the time of this printing, only channels 9 through 11 can be
used outdoors (1 through 8 cannot); however, channels 1 through 11 can all be used indoors.
Note: For technical support calls within the United States, an emergency after-hours answering
system allows 24-hour/7-days-a-week pager access to one of our qualified Technical and/or
Application Support Engineers.
Warranty Information
For complete details regarding ProSoft Technology’s TERMS & CONDITIONS OF SALE,
WARRANTY, SUPPORT, SERVICE AND RETURN MATERIAL AUTHORIZATION
INSTRUCTIONS please see the documents on the Product DVD or go to www.prosoft-
technology.com/warranty
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Symbols & Numeric
802.11
A group of wireless specifications developed by the IEEE. It details a wireless interface
between devices to manage packet traffic.
802.11a
Operates in the 5 GHz frequency range with a maximum 54 Mbit/sec signaling rate.
802.11b
Operates in the 2.4 GHz Industrial, Scientific, and Measurement (ISM) band. Provides
signaling rates of up to 11 Mbit/sec and is the most commonly used frequency.
802.11g
Similar to 802.11b but supports signaling rates of up to 54 Mbit/sec. Operates in the
heavily used 2.4 GHz ISM band but uses a different radio technology to boost
throughput.
802.11i
Sometimes Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA 2). WPA 2 supports the 128-bit and above
advanced encryption Standard, along with 802.1x authentication and key management
features.
802.11n
Designed to raise effective WLAN throughput to more than 100 Mbit/sec.
Access Point
A generic term for an 802.11 radio that "attaches" other 802.11 radios (clients) to a
wired network. Some APs can also bridge to one another.
Ad hoc Mode
Wireless network framework in which devices can communicate directly with one
another without using an AP or a connection to a regular network. RLX2 radio products
do not support Ad hoc mode.
AES
Advanced Encryption Standard. New standard for encryption adopted by the U.S.
government for secure communications.
Amplifier
A device connected to an antenna used to increase the signal strength and amplify weak
incoming signals.
Antenna
A device connected to a wireless transceiver that concentrates transmitted and received
radio waves to increase signal strength and thus the effective range of a wireless
network.
ASCII
American Standard Code for Information Interchange. A communication mode in which
each eight-bit byte in a message contains one ASCII character code. ASCII characters (or
hexadecimal characters) are sometimes used as a key to encrypt data and ensure its
secure transmission.
Association
Process whereby two 802.11 radios establish communications with each other.
Requirements for communication include common SSID (network names) and
encryption settings.
Authenticate
The process of confirming the identity of someone connecting to a network.
Authentication Server
A back-end database server that confirms the identity of a supplicant to an
authenticator in an 802.1x-authenticated network.
B
Band
Another term for spectrum used to indicate a particular set of frequencies. Wireless
networking protocols work in either the 2.4 GHz or the 5 GHz bands.
Bandwidth
(See Throughput)
Base Station
See Wireless Gateway
Baud Rate
The speed of communication between devices on the network. All devices must
communicate at the same rate.
bps
Bits per Second. A measure of data transmission speed across a network or
communications channel; bps is the number of bits that can be sent or received per
second.
C
CACT
CACT is an acronym for Channel Availability Check Time, a parameter used in DFS
channel selection. During DFS when a radio changes channels, it must listen for the
CACT on the new channel before beginning operations. For most channels the CACT is
60 seconds.
Channel
One portion of the available radio spectrum that all devices on a wireless network use to
communicate. Changing the channel on the access point/router can help reduce
interference.
Client, Software
A client is a software program, or the device on which that program runs, that makes
requests for information from a software program, or the device on which that program
runs, in a client-server relationship.
A Client on an Ethernet network is equivalent to a Master on a serial network.
Configuration PC
A Computer that contains the configuration tools for the RLX2 radio series.
D
dBi
Decibels referenced to an "ideal" isotropic radiator in free space; frequently used to
express antenna gain
dBm
Decibels referenced to one milliwatt (mW); an "absolute" unit used to measure signal
power (transmit power output or received signal strength)
DCE
Data communications equipment. A modem, for example.
Decibel (dB)
A measure of the ratio between two signal levels; used to express gain (or loss) in a
system.
Default Gateway
The IP address of a network router where data is sent if the destination IP address is
outside the local subnet. The gateway is the device that routes the traffic from the local
area network to other networks such as the Internet.
DFS
DFS stands for Dynamic Frequency Selection, a requirement for operation on certain
frequencies in the 5 GHz band in many countries. When a radio operates on a DFS
frequency, it must sense the presence of radar and automatically change to another
channel if radar is detected.
DHCP
The dynamic host configuration protocol is an Internet protocol, similar to BootP, for
automating the configuration of computers that use TCP/IP. DHCP can be used to
automatically assign IP addresses, to deliver IP stack configuration parameters, such as
the subnet mask and default router, and to provide other configuration information,
such as the addresses for printer, time, and news servers.
Directional Antenna
Transmits and receives radio waves off the front of the antenna.
Diversity Antenna
An antenna system that uses multiple antennas to reduce interference and maximize
reception and transmission quality.
DTE
Data Terminal Equipment, for example, a computer or terminal.
Dual Band
A device that is capable of operating in two frequencies. On a wireless network, dual-
band devices are capable of operating in both the 2.4 GHz (802.11b/g) and 5 GHz
(802.11a) bands.
E
EAP
Extensible Authentication Protocol. A protocol that provides an authentication
framework for both wireless and wired Ethernet enterprise networks.
EIRP
Equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) is the amount of power that would have
to be emitted by an isotropic antenna (that evenly distributes power in all directions and
is a theoretical construct) to produce the peak power density observed in the direction
of maximum antenna gain.
Encryption
Method of scrambling data so that only the intended viewers can decipher and
understand it.
ESD
Electrostatic Discharge. Can cause internal circuit damage to the coprocessor.
ESSID
Extended Service Set Identifier. A name used to identify a wireless network.
F
Firmware
Firmware is the embedded software code that that runs in the module to direct module
function (similar to the BIOS in a personal computer). This is distinguished from the
Setup/Diagnostic Application software that is installed on the Configuration PC.
Frequency Hopping
A radio that rapidly changes its operating frequency several times per second following
a pre-determined sequence of frequencies. The transmitting and receiving radios are
programmed to follow the same frequency hopping sequence.
Fresnel Zone
An elliptical area on either side of the straight line of sight that must also be clear for a
long-range wireless network to work.
Full-Duplex
A communications circuit or system designed to simultaneously transmit and receive
two different streams of data. Telephones are an example of a full-duplex
communication system. Both parties on a telephone conversation can talk and listen at
the same time. If both talk at the same time, their two signals are not corrupted.
G
Gain
The amount by which an antenna concentrates signal strength in a wireless network.
Gateway
In wireless terms, a gateway is an access point with additional software capabilities such
as providing NAT and DHCP.
Guard Interval (GI)
An interval of time between data packet transmissions. The guard interval time for
802.11a/b/g systems is fixed at 800 microseconds. 802.11n devices can also use a 400
microsecond guard interval, falling back to 800 microseconds if excessive data
corruption is detected.
H
Half-Duplex
A communications circuit or system designed to transmit and receive data, but not both
simultaneously. CB or walkie-talkie radios are an example of a half-duplex
communication system. Either parties on a radio conversation may talk or listen; but
both cannot talk at the same time without corrupting each other's signal. If one
operator is "talking", the other must be "listening" to have successful communication.
Hz
Hertz. The international unit for measuring frequency equivalent to the older unit of
cycles per second. One megahertz (MHz) is one million hertz. One gigahertz (GHz) is one
billion hertz. The standard US electrical power frequency is 60 Hz. 802.11a devices
operate in the 5 GHz band; 802.11b and g devices operate in the 2.4 GHz band.
I
IEEE
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. IEEE is a professional organization
with members in over 175 countries and is an authority in technical areas such as
computer engineering and telecommunications. IEEE developed the 802.11
specifications.
IP Address
A 32-bit identification number for each node on an Internet Protocol network. These
addresses are represented as four sets of 8-bit numbers (numbers from 0 to 255),
separated by periods ("dots").
Networks using the TCP/IP Protocol route messages based on the IP address of the
destination. Each number can be 0 to 255. For example, 192.168.0.100 could be an IP
address. Each node on the network must have a unique IP address.
K
Key
A set of information (often 40 to as much as 256 bits) that is used as a seed to an
encryption algorithm to encrypt (scramble) data. Ideally, the key must also be known by
the receiver to decrypt the data.
L
LAN
A system of connecting PCs and other devices within the same physical proximity for
sharing resources such as internet connections, printers, files, and drives. When Wi-Fi is
used to connect the devices, the system is known as a wireless LAN or WLAN.
LED
Light-emitting diode.
Link point
The graphical point next to a radio icon that represents the connection point for RF
communications between radios. An RF connection between two radios is called an RF
Link and is represented as a graphical black line between the radio’s link points.
M
MAC ID
Media Access Control address. Every 802.11 device has its own MAC address. This is a
unique identifier used to provide security for wireless networks. When a network uses a
MAC table, only the 802.11 radios that have had their MAC addresses added to the
network’s MAC table are able to get on the network.
Master device
Device that is connected to the Master radio.
Mbps
Megabits per second, or millions of bits per second. A measure of bandwidth.
Megahertz
A measure of electromagnetic wave frequency equal to one million hertz. Often
abbreviated as MHz and used to specify the radio frequency used by wireless devices.
MIC
Message Integrity Check. One of the elements added to the TKIP standard. A "signature"
is added by each radio on each packet it transmits. The signature is based on the data in
the packet, a 64-bit value (key) and the MAC address of the sender. The MIC allows the
receiving radio to verify (check) that the data is not forged.
MIMO
Multiple Input Multiple Output refers to using multiple antennas in a Wi-Fi device to
improve performance and throughput. MIMO technology takes advantage of a
characteristic called multipath, which occurs when a radio transmission starts out at
Point A and the reflects off or passes through surfaces or objects before arriving, via
multiple paths, at Point B. MIMO technology uses multiple antennas to collect and
organize signals arriving via these paths.
Modbus
The Modbus protocol provides the internal standard that the MODICON® controllers use
for parsing messages. During communications on a Modbus network, the protocol
determines how each controller will know its device address, recognize a message
addressed to it, determine the kind of action to be taken, and extract any data or other
information contained in the message. If a reply is required, the controller will construct
the reply message and send it using Modbus protocol.
Modem
Stands for MODulator-DEModulator, a device that converts digital signals to analog
signals and vice-versa. Analog signals can be transmitted over communications links
such as telephone lines.
N
Network
A series of stations or nodes connected by some type of communication medium. A
network may consist of a single link or multiple links.
Node
An address or software location on the network.
Non-Occupancy Period
The time during which a radio cannot return to a frequency where radar was detected.
This time is typically 30 minutes. Typically a radio will not return to a channel where
radar was previously detected unless absolutely necessary.
P
Panel Antenna
An antenna type that radiates in only a specific direction. Panel antennas are commonly
used for point-to-point situations. Sometimes called Patch antennas.
Parabolic Antenna
An antenna type that radiates a very narrow beam in a specific direction. Parabolic
antennas offer the highest gain for long-range point-to-point situations.
Peer-to-Peer Network
Each radio in a Peer-to-Peer network has the ability to receive data from - and transmit
data to - any other radio in the network.
acknowledges the data. Each remote radio sends pending data to the master radio that
receives and acknowledges data sent from each remote. In this configuration, there are
multiple remote radios referenced to a single master radio.
Point-to-Multipoint
A wireless network in which one point (the access point) serves multiple other points
around it. Indoor wireless networks are all point-to-multipoint, and long-range wireless
networks that serve multiple clients usually employ either a single omnidirectional
antenna or multiple sector antennas.
Point-to-Point Network
A network consisting of a single Master radio and a single Remote radio. All data from
the Master is received and acknowledged by one Remote. All data from the single
Remote is received and acknowledged by the Master radio.
Poll
A method of electronic communication.
Power Supply
Device that supplies electrical power to the I/O chassis containing the processor,
coprocessor, or other modules.
Protocol
The language or packaging of information that is transmitted between nodes on a
network.
Q
QoS
Quality of Service. Required to support wireless multimedia applications and advanced
traffic management. QoS enables Wi-Fi access points to prioritize traffic and optimize
the way shared network resources are allocated among different applications.
Range
The distance covered by a wireless network radio device. Depending on the
environment and the type of antenna used, Wi-Fi signals can have a range of up to a
mile.
Remote device
Devices connected remote radios
Repeater
A Repeater is a device used to extend the range of a Wi-Fi signal. Placed at the edge of
signal reception, a repeater simply receives and re-transmits the signal.
Repeater, Radio Mode
A RLX2 radio in Repeater mode can only connect to other ProSoft radios, but any
number of Ethernet network devices can be attached to it. See also Client, Radio Mode.
RS-232
Recommended Standard 232; the standard for serial binary signals between DTE and
DCE devices.
throughput than ASCII mode for the same baud rate; each message is transmitted in a
continuous stream (See also ASCII, above).
S
Sector Antenna
An antenna type that radiates in only a specific direction. Multiple sector antennas are
commonly used in point-to-multipoint situations.
Signal Diversity
A process by which two small dipole antennas are used to send and receive, combining
their results for better effect.
Signal Loss
The amount of signal strength that’s lost in antenna cable, connectors, and free space.
Signal loss is measured in decibels. Also referred to as gain loss.
Signal Strength
The strength of the radio waves in a wireless network.
Simplex
A communications circuit or system designed to either transmit data or receive data,
but not both. Broadcast television is an example of simplex communication system. A
television station sends a TV signal but cannot receive responses back from the
television sets to which it is transmitting. The TV sets can receive the signal from the TV
station but cannot transmit back to the station.
Site Survey
A comprehensive facility study performed by network managers to ensure that planned
service levels will be met when a new wireless LAN, or additional WLAN segments to an
existing network are deployed. Site surveys are usually performed by a radio frequency
engineer and used by systems integrators to identify the optimum placement of access
points to ensure that planned levels of service are met. Site surveys are sometimes
conducted following the deployment to ensure that the WLAN is achieving the
necessary level of coverage. Site surveys can also be used to detect rogue access points.
Spectrum
A range of electromagnetic frequencies.
Spread Spectrum
A form of wireless communication in which a signal’s frequency is deliberately varied.
This increases bandwidth and lessens the chances of interruption or interception of the
transmitted signal.
SSI
Service Set Identifier is a sequence of characters unique to a specific network or
network segment that’s used by the network and all attached devices to identify
themselves and allow devices to connect to the correct network when one or more than
one independent network is operating in nearby areas.
Subnet Mask
A mask used to determine what subnet an IP address belongs to. An IP address has two
components: the network address, and the host (node or device) address. For example,
consider the IP address 150.215.017.009. Assuming this is part of a Class B network
(with a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0), the first two numbers (150.215) represent the
Class B network address, and the second two numbers (017.009) identify a particular
host on this network.
T
TKIP
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol. The wireless security encryption mechanism in Wi-Fi
Protected Access. TKIP uses a key hierarchy and key management methodology that
removes the predictability that intruders relied upon to exploit the WEP key. In
increases the size of the key from 40 to 128 bits and replaces WEP’s single static key
with keys that are dynamically generated and distributed by an authentication server,
providing some 500 trillion possible keys that can be used on a given data packet. If also
includes a Message Integrity Check (MIC), designed to prevent the attacker from
capturing data packets, altering them, and resending them. By greatly expanding the
size of keys, the number of keys in use, and by creating an integrity checking
mechanism, TKIP magnifies the complexity and difficulty involved in decoding data on a
Wi-Fi network. TKIP greatly increases the strength and complexity of wireless
encryption, making it far more difficult (if not impossible) for a would-be intruder to
break into a Wi-Fi network.
U
UART
Universal Asynchronous Receiver/Transmitter
W
WAP
Wireless Application Protocol. A set of standards to enable wireless devices to access
internet services, such as the World Wide Web and email.
WDS
Wireless Distribution System. Enables access points to communicate with one another
in order to extend the range of a wireless networks. Used in 802.11g based access
points.
WEP
Wired-Equivalent Privacy protocol was specified in the IEEE 802.11 standard to provide
a WLAN with a minimal level of security and privacy comparable to a typical wired LAN,
using data encryption.
Wi-Fi
A certification mark managed by a trade group called the Wi-Fi Alliance. Wi-Fi
certification encompasses numerous standards including 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g,
WPA, and more. Equipment must pass compatibility testing to receive the Wi-Fi mark.
Wi-Fi CERTIFIED™
The certification standard designating IEEE 802.11-based wireless local area network
(WLAN) products that have passed interoperability testing requirements developed and
governed by the Wi-Fi alliance.
application) that are familiar to most consumers to configure a network and enable
security.
Wireless Gateway
Term used to differentiate between an access point and a more-capable device that can
share an internet connection, serve DHCP, and bridge between wired and wireless
networks.
Wireless Network
Devices connected to a network using a centralized wireless access point.
WLAN
Wireless Local Area Network. A type of local area network in which data is sent and
received via high-frequency radio waves rather than cables or wires.
WPA
Wi-Fi Protected Access is a data encryption specification for 802.11 wireless networks
that replaces the weaker WEP. It improves on WEP by using dynamic keys, Extensible
Authentication Protocol to secure network access, and an encryption method called
Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) to secure data transmissions.
WPA2
An enhanced version of WPA. It is the official 802.11i standard. It uses Advanced
Encryption Standard instead of TKIP. AES supports 128-bit, 192-bit, and 256-bit
encryption keys.
Y
Yagi Antenna
An antenna type that radiates in only a specific direction. Yagi antennas are used in
point-to-point situations.
F M
Factory Defaults • 120 MAC filter • 105, 112
FCC Emission Regulations • 163 MAC ID • 199
File Menu • 125 Master Channel-Frequency Table • 161
Firmware • 196 Master device • 199
Freeze • 125, 126 Mbps • 199
Frequency Hopping • 196 Megahertz • 199
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum • 196 MIC • 199
Fresnel Zone • 197 MIMO • 199
Full-Duplex • 197 Modbus • 200
Modem • 200
G
N
Gain • 197
Gateway • 197 Network • 200
Guard Interval (GI) • 197 Node • 200
Non-Occupancy Period • 200
H Null Modem Cable • 200
Half-Duplex • 197
O
Help Menu • 148
Help Topics • 149 Operations Menu • 127
Hide Network SSID • 105, 112
How to Contact Us • 2 P
Hz • 197
Package Contents • 19
Panel Antenna • 200
U
UART • 205
Update Firmware • 69, 124, 127, 130
V
View Menu • 138
W
WAP • 205
WDS • 205
WEP • 205
WEP key • 105, 110
Whip antennas • 183
Wi-Fi • 205
Wi-Fi CERTIFIED™ • 205
Wi-Fi Interoperability Certificate • 205
Wi-Fi Protected Setup • 206
Wireless Clients • 124, 132
Wireless Gateway • 206
Wireless Network • 206
WLAN • 206
WPA • 206
WPA phrase • 105, 106
WPA2 • 206
Y
Yagi Antenna • 206
Yagi Array Antenna • 184
Your Feedback Please • 2
Z
Zoom In • 138, 145
Zoom Out • 138, 145
Zoom to Fit • 138, 146