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Chapter 25 Tools
P-2612HW Series User’s Guide
417
More commands (found in GUI-based FTP clients) are listed in this chapter.
Refer to
to read about configurations that disallow
TFTP and FTP over WAN.
TFTP File Upload
The device also supports the uploading of firmware files using TFTP (Trivial File
Transfer Protocol) over LAN. Although TFTP should work over WAN as well, it is not
recommended.
To use TFTP, your computer must have both telnet and TFTP clients. To transfer
the firmware and the configuration file, follow the procedure shown next.
1
Use telnet from your computer to connect to the device and log in. Because TFTP
does not have any security checks, the device records the IP address of the telnet
client and accepts TFTP requests only from this address.
2
Enter the command “sys stdio 0” to disable the management idle timeout, so the
TFTP transfer will not be interrupted. Enter “command sys stdio 5” to restore the
five-minute management idle timeout (default) when the file transfer is complete.
3
Launch the TFTP client on your computer and connect to the device. Set the
transfer mode to binary before starting data transfer.
4
Use the TFTP client (see the example below) to transfer files between the device
and the computer. The file name for the firmware is “ras”.
Note that the telnet connection must be active and the device in CI mode before
and during the TFTP transfer. For details on TFTP commands (see following
example), please consult the documentation of your TFTP client program. For
UNIX, use “get” to transfer from the device to the computer, “put” the other way
around, and “binary” to set binary transfer mode.
TFTP Upload Command Example
The following is an example TFTP command:
tftp [-i] host put firmware.bin ras
Where “i” specifies binary image transfer mode (use this mode when transferring
binary files), “host” is the device’s IP address, “put” transfers the file source on
the computer (firmware.bin – name of the firmware on the computer) to the file
destination on the remote host (ras - name of the firmware on the device).
Commands that you may see in GUI-based TFTP clients are listed earlier in this
chapter.
Summary of Contents for P-2612HW-F1 -
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings P 2612HW Series User s Guide 8...
Page 10: ...Contents Overview P 2612HW Series User s Guide 10...
Page 22: ...Table of Contents P 2612HW Series User s Guide 22...
Page 24: ...24...
Page 56: ...Chapter 3 Wizards P 2612HW Series User s Guide 56...
Page 88: ...88...
Page 120: ...Chapter 6 WAN Setup P 2612HW Series User s Guide 120...
Page 136: ...Chapter 7 LAN Setup P 2612HW Series User s Guide 136...
Page 168: ...Chapter 8 Wireless LAN P 2612HW Series User s Guide 168...
Page 184: ...Chapter 9 Network Address Translation NAT P 2612HW Series User s Guide 184...
Page 250: ...Chapter 12 Firewall P 2612HW Series User s Guide 250...
Page 290: ...Chapter 14 VPN P 2612HW Series User s Guide 290...
Page 320: ...Chapter 15 Certificates P 2612HW Series User s Guide 320...
Page 324: ...Chapter 16 Static Route P 2612HW Series User s Guide 324...
Page 356: ...Chapter 19 Dynamic DNS Setup P 2612HW Series User s Guide 356...
Page 382: ...Chapter 21 Universal Plug and Play UPnP P 2612HW Series User s Guide 382...
Page 384: ...384...
Page 406: ...Chapter 23 Logs P 2612HW Series User s Guide 406...
Page 458: ...458...
Page 494: ...Appendix B Pop up Windows JavaScripts and Java Permissions P 2612HW Series User s Guide 494...
Page 530: ...Appendix D Wireless LANs P 2612HW Series User s Guide 530...