DMD20/20LBST Universal Satellite Modem
User Interfaces
MN-DMD20-20LBST Revision 14
4–39
SERVER IP ADDR
{XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX} Hexidecimal Address
{ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd} Decimal Address
The IP Address of the Boot Server and the address of the SNMP
Trap Server when SNMP is active. If a server is used and there
is no local router, this address must be consistent with the
modem address. If a router has been specified, the address is
presumed to be reachable via the router. Broadcast and loop
back addresses will not be allowed. These are addresses with
all subnet bits set to 0’s or 1’s.
ROUTER IP ADDR
{XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX} Hexidecimal Address
{ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd} Decimal Address
The IP Address of the Local Network Router. If a router is
present on the local network, this address must be consistent
with the IP Mask and the subnet of the modem. If no router is
present, then the address should be set to a foreign address.
This address is expressed in hexadecimal format.
Broadcast and loop back addresses will not be allowed. These
are addresses with all subnet bits set to 0’s or 1’s.
To change the display for the IP ADDRESS MASK, MODEM IP ADDRESS,
SERVER IP ADDRESS, AND ROUTER IP ADDRESS, press all four arrow keys
simultaneously.
MODEM EADDR
{001065010000}
Displays the Ethernet address of the device. Set at the factory
and is a unique identifier for the Ethernet physical interface.
ETHER RATE
{10 MBPS/HD}
The data rate for the local Ethernet Interface.
10 Mbps/HD – for 10 Base-T in either half-duplex or full duplex.
SNMP (menu)
A description of OID organization is provided in the MIB portion
of this manual (Appendix C).
SNMP VERSION
{V1 & V2, V3}
This selection controls the SNMP Version that will be used in
messaging between the equipment and its host.
When V1 & V2 is used, RD COMMUNITY and RDWR
COMMUNITY are used to determine the authorization of an
incoming message.
When V3 is used, three contexts are supported:
public
,
mib2
,
and
dev
. Context, Authentication and Privacy are a portion of
each SNMPV3 message.
The
public
context will only allow the user to see the sysoid of
the unit. This is the most restricted access possible and only
allows the unit to be identified by a host SNMP Station.
The
mib2
context allows a user with appropriate authentication
to access the mib2 OIDs and the SNMP OIDs. These are of
interest primarily to network operators not controlling the satellite
link.
IMPORTANT