Networking
Configuring LAN Settings
Cisco RV132W ADSL2+ Wireless-N and RV134W VDSL2 Wireless-AC VPN Router Administration Guide 51
3
 
STEP  4 In the Failover Check Interval field, enter the frequency (in seconds) with which the 
device must attempt to detect the physical connection or presence of traffic on 
the mobile network link. If the link is idle, the device attempts to ping a destination 
at this interval. If there is no reply to the ping packet, the device assumes the link is 
down and retries the Ethernet WAN interface. 
STEP  5 In the Recovery Check Interval field, enter the frequency (in seconds) with which 
the device must attempt to detect the physical connection or presence of traffic 
on the Ethernet WAN link. If the link is idle, the device attempts to ping a 
destination at the interval. If there is a reply to the ping packet, the device assumes 
the link is up and attempts to disable the mobile network link and enable the 
Ethernet WAN link.
STEP  6 Click Switch back to Ethernet immediately when Ethernet is available or click 
Switch back to Ethernet in a specific time range and enter the start and end time 
for the range.
STEP  7 In the Connection Validation Site field, choose the site from which to perform 
failover validation. Use the next hop gateway (by default the device pings the 
default gateway) or choose a custom site and enter the site IPv4 or IPv6 address.
STEP  8 Click Save to save your settings.
The WAN Interface table shows the status of the Ethernet WAN and mobile 
network link to the Internet. Click the Status hyper link to view the port detail. 
LAN Configuration
The default DHCP and TCP/IP settings work for most applications. If you want 
another PC on your network to be the DHCP server, or if you want to configure 
manually the network settings of all of your devices, disable DHCP. 
Also, instead of using a DNS server that maps Internet domain names (for example, 
www.cisco.com) to IP addresses, you can use a Windows Internet Naming Service 
(WINS) server. A WINS server is the equivalent of a DNS server but uses the 
NetBIOS protocol to resolve hostnames. The device includes the IP address of the 
WINS server in the DHCP configuration the device sends to DHCP clients.