Mike99 is not a troll, he helps a lot of people on here which you can denote that by his rank with is an "Associate" of Netonix as a reward for all his time spent helping people for free.
First thing I would do is upgrade to v1.4.8rc7 since all the bugs found in v1.4.7 are fixed in v1.4.8rc7.
"RC" with us does not mean Release Candidate like other manufactures and after this series of firmware changes we will no longer use "rc" in future firmware versions as it causes too many people confusion.
We have sold tens of thousands of these switches all over the world and VLANs are a common use so there is mostl likely no bug you are reporting here but rather you are not understanding what is going on with VLANs.
With the way you have your VLANs setup as below I have described how packets will be handled.
Ports 1 and 2 will accept 2 type of ingress packets:1) Untagged packets which will be directed to the switch UI/CLI only as defined in the Management VLAN (The one VLAN definition that is always at the top of the list)
Untagged packets entering ports 1 and 2 can NOT egress or exit ports 3,4,5,6.But untagged packets can ingress and egress between ports 1 and 2 freely.
You can renumber or rename the Management VLAN but it is always at the top of the list and the only VLAN matrix definition that has access to the switch UI/CLI2) Tagged packets with VLAN ID 202, any other VLAN ID tagged packet will be dropped or refused trying to ingress on ports 1 and 2
Ingress packets on ports 1 and 2 with VLAN ID tag of 202 will be available to exit ports 3,4,5,6 having their VLAN ID tag (encapsulation) stripped on egress of those ports and become a normal packet with no encapsulation.
Only normal untagged ingress packets on ports 3,4,5,6 will be accepted all others will be dropped or refused. Untagged ingress packets entering ports 3,4,5,6 can not get to the switch UI and can only egress on ports 1 and 2 as encapsulated VLAN packets with a VLAN ID tag of 202.
(the packets are encapsulated on exit of ports 1 and 2 with VLAN ID 202)So the only way to get to the switch UI would be through ports 1 and 2 as untagged packets, untagged packets entering ports 3,4,5,6 can NOT get to the switch UI/CLI.
Tagged packets with the VLAN ID of 202 ingress on ports 1 and 2 can only egress out ports 3,4,5,6 as untagged packets
I think what mike99 is saying is we did not write how the VLANs are handled as VLANs are defined by an IEEE standard known as 802.1Q which there are plenty of documents on the internet to explain how VLANs are handled. As a switch manufacturer it is our job to help people with understanding our switch UI and or fix any bugs and support our switch but not teach the use or implementation of VLANs.
So I have explained what your VLAN config will do but I have no idea what your devices attached to the ports are setup to do and what you goal is to achieve so beyond telling what you should expect how the packets will be handled in your current config I need more information on what is on each port and how they are configured and what you envision your VLAN config to do so that we may better suggest what you're doing wrong.
IEEE 802.1Q is defined here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.1QWe also support IEEE 802.1ad which is QinQ and is defined here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_802.1adWe also have a search box which you can search the forums for other people's questions and answers regarding VLANs: