Chapter 5 Device Network Settings
Vantage CNM User’s Guide
98
Primary/ Secondary
Phone Number
Type the first (primary) phone number from the ISP for this remote node. If the
primary phone number is busy or does not answer, your device dials the
secondary phone number if available. Some areas require dialing the pound
sign # before the phone number for local calls. Include a # symbol at the
beginning of the phone numbers as required.
AT Command Initial
String
Type the AT command string to initialize the WAN device. Consult the manual
of your WAN device connected to your dial backup port for specific AT
commands.
Advanced Modem
Setup
Click the
Edit
button to display the
Advanced Modem Setup
screen and edit
the details of your dial backup setup.
TCP/IP Options
Enable SUA
Network Address Translation (NAT) allows the translation of an Internet
protocol address used within one network to a different IP address known
within another network.
SUA (Single User Account) is a subset of NAT that supports two types of
mapping: Many-to-One and Server. When you select this option the device will
use Address Mapping Set 255 in the SMT.
Enable RIP
Select this check box to turn on RIP (Routing Information Protocol), which
allows a router to exchange routing information with other routers.
RIP Direction
RIP (Routing Information Protocol) allows a router to exchange routing
information with other routers. The
RIP Direction
field controls the sending
and receiving of RIP packets.
Choose
Both
,
In Only
or
Out Only
.
When set to
Both
or
Out Only
, the device will broadcast its routing table
periodically.
When set to
Both
or
In Only
, the device will incorporate RIP information that it
receives.
RIP Version
The
RIP Version
field controls the format and the broadcasting method of the
RIP packets that the device sends (it recognizes both formats when receiving).
Choose
RIP-1
,
RIP-2B
or
RIP-2M
.
RIP-1
is universally supported; but
RIP-2
carries more information. RIP-1 is
probably adequate for most networks, unless you have an unusual network
topology. Both
RIP-2B
and
RIP-2M
sends the routing data in RIP-2 format; the
difference being that RIP-2B uses subnet broadcasting while RIP-2M uses
multicasting. Multicasting can reduce the load on non-router machines since
they generally do not listen to the RIP multicast address and so will not receive
the RIP packets. However, if one router uses multicasting, then all routers on
your network must use multicasting, also.
Enable Multicast
Version
Select this check box to turn on IGMP (Internet Group Multicast Protocol).
IGMP is a network-layer protocol used to establish membership in a Multicast
group - it is not used to carry user data.
Multicast Version
Select
IGMP-v1
or
IGMP-v2
. IGMP version 2 (RFC 2236) is an improvement
over version 1 (RFC 1112) but IGMP version 1 is still in wide use. If you would
like to read more detailed information about inter operability between IGMP
version 2 and version 1, please see
sections 4
and
5
of
RFC 2236
.
PPP Options
PPP Encapsulation
Select
CISCO PPP
from the drop-down list box if your backup WAN device
uses
Cisco PPP
encapsulation; otherwise select
Standard PPP
.
Enable Compression
Select this check box to enable stac compression.
Connection
Table 29
Device Operation > Device Configuration > Network > WAN Backup > Advanced
(Prestige) (continued)
LABEL
DESCRIPTION
Summary of Contents for Centralized Network Management Vantage CNM
Page 2: ......
Page 24: ...Vantage CNM User s Guide 24...
Page 30: ...Vantage CNM User s Guide 30...
Page 33: ...33 PART I Introduction Introducing Vantage CNM 31 GUI Introduction 35...
Page 34: ...34...
Page 52: ...52...
Page 58: ...Chapter 4 Device General Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 58...
Page 108: ...Chapter 5 Device Network Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 108...
Page 184: ...Chapter 6 Device Security Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 184...
Page 207: ...Chapter 7 Device Advanced Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 207...
Page 208: ...Chapter 7 Device Advanced Settings Vantage CNM User s Guide 208...
Page 210: ...Chapter 8 Device Log Vantage CNM User s Guide 210...
Page 234: ...Chapter 9 Device Configuration Management Vantage CNM User s Guide 234...
Page 248: ...248...
Page 264: ...Chapter 14 VPN Monitor Vantage CNM User s Guide 264...
Page 265: ...265 PART IV Monitor Device Status Monitor 267 Device HA Status Monitor 269 Device Alarm 271...
Page 266: ...266...
Page 276: ...Chapter 17 Device Alarm Vantage CNM User s Guide 276...
Page 277: ...277 PART V Log Report Device Operation Report 279 CNM Logs 291 VRPT 293...
Page 278: ...278...
Page 296: ...Chapter 20 VRPT Vantage CNM User s Guide 296...
Page 298: ...298...
Page 312: ...Chapter 21 CNM System Setting Vantage CNM User s Guide 312...
Page 318: ...Chapter 24 Vantage CNM Software Upgrade Vantage CNM User s Guide 318...
Page 322: ...Chapter 26 About Vantage CNM Vantage CNM User s Guide 322...
Page 323: ...323 PART VII Account Management Group 325 Account 329...
Page 324: ...324...
Page 328: ...Chapter 27 Group Vantage CNM User s Guide 328...
Page 332: ...Chapter 28 Account Vantage CNM User s Guide 332...
Page 333: ...333 PART VIII Troubleshooting Troubleshooting 335...
Page 334: ...334...
Page 338: ...Chapter 29 Troubleshooting Vantage CNM User s Guide 338...
Page 340: ...340...
Page 378: ...Appendix E IP Address Assignment Conflicts Vantage CNM User s Guide 378...
Page 382: ...Appendix F Common Services Vantage CNM User s Guide 382...
Page 416: ...Appendix H Open Software Announcements Vantage CNM User s Guide 416...
Page 424: ...Appendix J Customer Support Vantage CNM User s Guide 424...
Page 428: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 428...
Page 429: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 429...
Page 430: ...Index Vantage CNM User s Guide 430...