48
–
SMTP Server
and
SMTP Port
: Enter respectively the
name and port of the server in charge of routing the
emails issued by the receiver.
The SMTP server you need to use depends on the
network the receiver is connected to. In most cases, it
is the one of your Internet Service Provider.
“25” is the well known port number for
communications using the SMTP protocol.
–
Username
and
Password
: Give identification
information allowing you to send emails to the
specified SMTP server.
–
Sender Email Address
: Email address of the CORS
station from which emails will originate. It is a good
idea to keep the default email address (no-
[email protected]), as it suggests that no
response should be sent back to this address.
–
Notification Email Address
: Recipient email address,
typically the email address of the CORS station
administrator or of any person in charge of monitoring
and maintaining the station. There can only be one
recipient.
–
Verbose Level
: This field is used to control which of the
possible alarms or warnings are allowed to trigger
notification emails.
“Full email notification” will let all the alarms and
warnings trigger emails (no filtering).
“Standard email notification” will only let the warnings
and highest-priority alarms trigger emails (selective
filtering).
“No email notification” will prevent the receiver from
issuing any emails, regardless of the nature of the
possible alarms and warnings.
•
Click on the
Configure
button to save all your settings. An
email is then sent automatically to check that the email
notification process is now working.
Activating the
Embedded FTP
Server & Creating
New Users
•
Click on
Advanced Setup
and then on the
Embedded FTP
Server
submenu. Enter the following parameters:
– Enable the
Activation
check box to activate the
embedded FTP server.
–
FTP Port
: Keep the default option (21) as it is the usual
port number used for most FTP applications.