2-13
Hardware Installation Guide for the Cisco 4451-X Integrated Services Router
OL-27644-01
Chapter 2 Preparing for Router Installation
Network Cabling Specifications
The Cisco Windows USB Console Driver allows plugging and unplugging the USB cable from the
console port without affecting Windows HyperTerminal operations. No special drivers are needed for
Mac OS X or Linux.
Only one console port can be active at a time. When a cable is plugged into the USB console port, the
RJ-45 port becomes inactive. Conversely, when the USB cable is removed from the USB port, the RJ-45
port becomes active.
Baud rates for the USB console port are 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 19200, 38400, 57600, and 115200 bps.
Note
4-pin mini USB Type-B connectors are easily confused with 5-pin mini USB Type-B connectors.
Only the 5-pin mini USB Type-B is supported.
USB Console OS Compatibility
•
Windows 2000, Window XP 32 bit, Windows Vista 32 bit
•
Mac OS X version 10.5.4
•
Redhat / Fedora Core 10 with kernel 2.6.27.5-117
•
Ubuntu 8.10 with kernel 2.6.27-11
•
Debian 5.0 with kernel 2.6
•
Suse 11.1 with kernel 2.6.27.7-9
Auxiliary Port Connections
The router has an EIA/TIA-232 asynchronous serial auxiliary port (RJ-45) that supports flow control.
Depending on the cable and the adapter used, this port appears as a DTE or DCE device at the end of the
cable.
For connection to a modem, your must use an RJ-45-to-DB-25 adapter cable. This cable is orderable
separately along with a DB-9-to-DB-25 adapter.
For detailed information about connecting devices to the auxiliary port, see the
“Connecting to a Console
Terminal or Modem” section on page 3-14
.
For cable and port pinouts, see the
Cisco Modular Access Router Cable Specifications
document at
Cisco.com.