ZyXEL Communications P-202H Plus v2 User Manual

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P-202H Plus v2 Quick Start Guide
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If you select Don't Care, then all data calls are routed to the P-202H Plus v2 itself. Analog calls, however, are 
routed to either A/B adapter 1 or 2, or simply ignored, depending on the Analog Call Routing field. If 
Incoming Phone Number Matching is Don't Care and Analog Call Routing is either A/B Adapter 1A/B 
Adapter 2
 or Both, then the P-202H Plus v2 uses Global Analog Call to decide how to handle global calls.  If 
you set Global Analog Call to Accept, then global calls are routed to the port according to the Analog Call 
Routing
 setting; if you set Global Analog Call to Ignore, then the P-202H Plus v2 ignores all global calls.  If 
Analog Call Routing is Ignore to begin with, then all analog calls, including global calls, are ignored.
Click Next to continue. 
The second wizard screen helps you 
set up your P-202H Plus v2 for Internet 
access.
In the Service Name field, enter your 
ISP's name. Enter the Primary and the 
Secondary Phone numbers to connect 
to the ISP. Next, enter the user name and 
password exactly as your ISP assigned 
them.
Select Obtain an IP Address 
Automatically
 if you have a dynamic IP 
address; otherwise select Static IP 
Address 
and type your ISP assigned IP 
address in the text box below.
Choose the type of Network Address 
Translation (NAT) you need. Select Full 
Feature
 if you have multiple public WAN 
IP addresses for your P-202H Plus v2. 
Select SUA Only if you have just one 
public WAN IP address for your P-202H 
Plus v2. Select None to disable NAT.
Note: When you select Full Feature you 
must configure at least one 
address mapping set. For more 
information about NAT and the choices listed refer to your User's Guide.
In the Transfer Type drop-down list box, choose the type of connection between the router and this remote 
node. Select 64K, or Leased.  If you selected 64K, select the way you use the PPP Multilink protocol. You 
can either select not to (Off) or always (Always) to bundle multiple links in a single connection to boost the 
effective throughput between two nodes. Otherwise, select BOD (Bandwidth on Demand) to add or subtract 
links dynamically according to traffic demand. 
In the Max Idle Timeout field, enter the amount of time (in seconds) after which you want the connection to 
timeout if the line remains consistently idle.
Click Next.