Installation and Reference for the BayStack 820 ISDN Router
10-28
206901-A
set ip private <IPaddr> <netmask>
Modifies the “private” address on the router’s LAN interface. The IP network
corresponding to the specified IP address becomes the private network.
Private addresses are not legal for use on the Internet and therefore, devices in this
network are no longer accessible from public devices on the Internet side. All
devices within this private network are represented by one single IP address: the
IP address received from an Internet Service Provider at connect time.
The BayStack 820 ISDN Router uses the IP address 192.168.168.168 and the
private network address is 192.168.168.0. Therefore, all private devices should
have IP addresses within the range of 192.168.168.1 to 192.168.168.254. Private
IP addresses can be any Class C address with the range 192.168.xxx.0, where xxx
is a number between 0 and 255.
Note that the router may also communicate with devices in a “public” IP network,
as defined in the command
set ip lan <IPaddr> <netmask>
on page
page 27
.
Example
BayStack> set ip private 192.168.168.168 255.255.255.0
set ip rip
<
interface_name> {disabled | passive | active} {rip1 | rip2}
Sets the IP RIP state to the specified mode. When you do not specify an interface
name, the command applies to the entire system. The default mode is Active.
Table 10-10
lists the available IP RIP modes.
Table 10-10.
IP RIP Modes
Mode
Description
disabled
IP RIP is disabled.
passive
The router receives RIP broadcast data from other routers, but does
not transmit RIP broadcast data.
active
The router receives RIP broadcast data from other routers, and
broadcasts the routing table and routing table updates as necessary.
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