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GT-400 Terminal User’s Guide
Troubleshooting Guide: Telnet
Shutting down the terminal via telnet
If you would rather shutdown the terminal as opposed to rebooting it, the command is
shutdown
.
Shutting down the application via telnet
When you shutdown the terminal with the poweroff argument, you are telling the terminal to completely
power down completely. However, if you run that same script, but give it the nop argument, you are
telling the terminal to shutdown only the application, but leave Linux running. For our purposes,
keeping Linux running is really only useful if you want to start the application in verbose mode, which
we'll cover in the next section.
The command is
closeapp
.
This will shutdown the application and return you to the Linux shell prompt.
Starting the application in verbose mode
After you've run the shutdown script with the nop argument, you can start the application again. If you
start it in verbose mode, you'll see a lot of messages during the start-up that should help you diagnose
what is going on.
When you're ready to take the terminal live again, you should reboot it. Avoid leaving a
terminal on your live site running in verbose mode, because will put unnecessary strain on
your terminal.
The command is
vstartapp
.
Accessing a Demo Terminal Through Telnet
These instructions ONLY apply to a terminal that has never been connected to a network.
1
Using a cross-over cable, connect a computer to the terminal.
2
Access the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) settings for your computer.
See the documentation for your operating system for more information, or contact your system
administrator for help.
3
Set the IP address to 192.168.1.112.
Your computer will not communicate with a network after changing this setting.You will need to
write down your computer's TCP/IP settings and change them back when you are finished
working with the terminal if you need to connect to a network.
4
Open a telnet session to 192.168.1.110, or the IP address of your terminal, using a telnet client of
your choice (a command prompt will not work properly).
If the terminal has never been on a network, the IP address will be 192.168.1.110. If the
terminal has been on a network, the IP address may be different. If you cannot determine your
terminal's IP address, see “Returning the Terminal to Factory Settings” on page 101 to reset
your terminal.
5
At the
accord1 Login:
prompt, type
root
. At the
password:
prompt, type
1520rsi
.
You are now accessing the root directory of the terminal.
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