![](https://pdfstore-manualsonline.prod.a.ki/pdfasset/5/5d/55d634ef-766e-45e8-9cd3-9005f5d4dcec/55d634ef-766e-45e8-9cd3-9005f5d4dcec-bg114.png)
GS2210 Series User’s Guide
276
CHAPTER 33
Static Route
33.1 Static Route Overview
This chapter shows you how to configure static routes.
The Switch uses IP for communication with management computers, for example using HTTP,
Telnet, SSH, or SNMP. Use IP static routes to have the Switch respond to remote management
stations that are not reachable through the default gateway. The Switch can also use static routes
to send data to a server or device that is not reachable through the default gateway, for example
when sending SNMP traps or using ping to test IP connectivity.
This figure shows a Telnet session coming in from network N1. The Switch sends reply traffic to
default gateway R1 which routes it back to the manager’s computer. The Switch needs a static
route to tell it to use router R2 to send traffic to an SNMP trap server on network N2.
Figure 196 Static Routing Overview
33.1.1 What You Can Do
•Use the Static Routing screen (Section 33.2 on page 277) to check if IPv4 static route is
activated.
•Use the IPv4 Static Route screen (Section 33.3 on page 277) to activate/deactivate this static
route.