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Chapter 5
Defining Connectivity Components
Defining Link Stations
• If you are configuring a primary switched outgoing
link station, and you do not know the poll address of
the remote secondary with which you wish to
communicate, you can specify a poll address of
0xFF
on the primary. This value enables the node to
accept responses from a secondary, regardless of the
poll address it has configured.
0xFF
is not a valid
address for a nonprimary link or a link that is not
switched outgoing.
• If you are using a multi-drop configuration, all the
secondary link stations that communicate with the
same primary must have different poll addresses.
The poll addresses at both ends of the link must match.
Contact your SNA network planner if you do not know
the address configured at the remote system.
On a VTAM host, the poll address is configured as the
ADDR= parameter in the VTAM PU definition.
On an AS/400 system, the poll address is the STNADR
parameter of the Line Description.
Line encoding
The line encoding used on your SDLC line. In the U.S.,
this is usually
NRZ
. In Europe, this is usually
NRZI
. If
you set this incorrectly, you will find that the frames
being received are all discarded and do not appear in
any trace.
On a switched outgoing port, the line encoding can be
set independently for each link station. For other types
of ports, the line encoding setting is taken from the
port, so this field does not apply.
Dial string
An ASCII string to be sent to your modem in order to
make it initiate the outgoing call. The dial string is
required for a switched outgoing port. Refer to the
documentation for your modem for more details. (Some
modems do not support dial strings; in such cases, this
field does not appear.)
For switched incoming ports, the dial string is
configured on the port. For leased ports, this field does
not apply.
Summary of Contents for HP-UX SNAplus2
Page 4: ...4 ...
Page 14: ...14 Contents ...
Page 22: ...22 ...
Page 23: ...23 1 SNA Terms and Concepts ...
Page 65: ...65 2 Introduction to SNAplus2 ...
Page 107: ...107 3 Administering SNAplus2 ...
Page 132: ...132 Chapter3 Administering SNAplus2 Using the Command Line Administration Program ...
Page 133: ...133 4 Basic Configuration Tasks ...
Page 142: ...142 Chapter4 Basic Configuration Tasks Configuring Logging ...
Page 143: ...143 5 Defining Connectivity Components ...
Page 167: ...167 6 Configuring Dependent LUs ...
Page 174: ...174 Chapter6 Configuring Dependent LUs Defining LU Pools ...
Page 175: ...175 7 Configuring APPC Communication ...
Page 208: ...208 Chapter7 Configuring APPC Communication Configuring APPC Security ...
Page 209: ...209 8 Configuring User Applications ...
Page 222: ...222 Chapter8 Configuring User Applications Configuring RJE Workstations ...
Page 223: ...223 9 Configuring Passthrough Services ...
Page 235: ...235 10 Managing SNAplus2 from NetView ...
Page 248: ...248 Chapter10 Managing SNAplus2 from NetView Using UCF ...
Page 249: ...249 11 Managing SNAplus2 Clients ...
Page 300: ...300 Chapter11 Managing SNAplus2 Clients Managing HP UX Clients ...
Page 301: ...301 A Configuration Planning Worksheets ...
Page 337: ...337 B APPN Network Management Using the Simple Network Management Protocol ...
Page 343: ...343 C Configuring an Invokable TP Using snaptpinstall ...
Page 353: ...353 D Using SNAplus2 in a High Availability Environment ...