05-2806A01, Rev. H
iNET Series Reference Manual
61
NOTE:
In the discussion that follows,
COM1
and
COM2
will be treated
alike unless noted.
Com1 Port
–Dual Purpose Capability
The COM1 port is used as a local console connection point and to pass
serial data with an external device. Setting the
COM1
port status to
Enable
prevents access to the Management System (MS) through this port.
However, the MS can still be accessed via the LAN port using Telnet or
a web browser.
To restore the COM1 port to support Management System services,
connect a terminal to the port, select the proper baud rate (19,200 is
default), and enter an escape sequence (
+++
) to reset it to the console
mode.
TCP vs. UDP
Both types of IP services are used by the transceiver embedded serial
device server—TCP and UDP. TCP provides a connection-oriented link
with end-to-end acknowledgment of data, but with some added over-
head. UDP provides a connectionless best-effort delivery service with
no acknowledgment.
Most polled protocols will be best served by UDP service as the protocol
itself has built-in error recovery mechanisms. UDP provides the needed
multidrop operation by means of multicast addressing.
On the other hand, TCP services are best suited for applications that do
not have a recovery mechanism (error-correction) and must have the
guaranteed delivery that TCP provides despite the extra overhead. The
IP-to-Serial example shows how to do this. (See
“
IP-to-Serial Applica-
tion Example” on Page 72.)
Serial Encapsulation
Transparent encapsulation, or IP tunneling, provides a mechanism to
encapsulate serial data into an IP envelope. Basically, all the bytes
received through the serial port are put into the data portion of a TCP or
UDP packet (TCP or UDP are user configurable options). In the same
manner, all data bytes received in a TCP or UDP packet are output
through the serial port.
When data is received by the radio through the serial port it is buffered
until the packet is received completely. There are two events that signal
an end-of-packet to the radio: a period of time since the last byte was
received, or a number of bytes that exceed the buffer size. Both of these
triggers are user configurable.
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