RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
Thanks - but that doesn't work if HARM doesn't work - which if I remember correctly it doesn't with the newest code on the ARC. -----Original Message----- From: Kalev Nurklik [mailto:kalev@oserv.online.ee] Sent: Friday, January 31, 2003 1:37 AM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
From TCM You can invoke HARM and configure the IP. It's in the TCM menu somewhere.
Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question From: "Joel - Fox Computers" <jfox@foxcomputers.com> To: <usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com> Send reply to: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=subscribe> <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=unsubscribe> Date sent: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 21:35:40 -0600
yep - no way to blow out the ARC without being there, unless you have a modem cabled to the console port.
I thought maybe I could blow it out and then use TCM to set an IP address on the ARC - the options are there, but don't seem to do anything.
Oh well - experiment failed.
-----Original Message----- From: matthew@the-spa.com [mailto:matthew@the-spa.com] Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2003 9:14 PM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
probably not the easiest option but i would have a pc there with pc anywhere and a serial cable connection between them.
matthew
---- Original Message ---- From: jfox@foxcomputers.com To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question Date: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 19:42:51 -0600
yes, but since the IP address is part of the config, I'm guessing that it will blow that out and I'll lose access to it. But what the heck - I'm going to give it a try.
-----Original Message----- From: Jim McCay [mailto:jmccay@adsnet.com] Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2003 7:06 PM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: Re: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
I'm new to the hiper arc's but won't the delete config command work?
jim
Joel - Fox Computers wrote:
For those of you familiar with the Hiper ARC's -
Is there any way you know of to completely erase the configuration from a telnet prompt? I want to do the equivelant of choosing option 13 from the bootup menu except I want to be able to do from Telnet - I want to be able to do a complete reconfig of a HiperARC remotely. Any suggestions?
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Yeah, that is correct. You can probably still use some SNMP trick on TCM to config ARC but finding exactly out the OIDs etc is probably harder than using remote console connection. As far as I know the TCM just intermediates the SNMP sets/gest to ARC somehow when You use the HARM through TCM. Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question From: "Joel - Fox Computers" <jfox@foxcomputers.com> To: <usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com> Send reply to: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=subscribe> <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=unsubscribe> Date sent: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 02:09:57 -0600
Thanks - but that doesn't work if HARM doesn't work - which if I remember correctly it doesn't with the newest code on the ARC.
-----Original Message----- From: Kalev Nurklik [mailto:kalev@oserv.online.ee] Sent: Friday, January 31, 2003 1:37 AM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
From TCM You can invoke HARM and configure the IP. It's in the TCM menu somewhere.
Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question From: "Joel - Fox Computers" <jfox@foxcomputers.com> To: <usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com> Send reply to: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=subscribe> <mailto:usr-tc-request@mailman.xmission.com?subject=unsubscribe> Date sent: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 21:35:40 -0600
yep - no way to blow out the ARC without being there, unless you have a modem cabled to the console port.
I thought maybe I could blow it out and then use TCM to set an IP address on the ARC - the options are there, but don't seem to do anything.
Oh well - experiment failed.
-----Original Message----- From: matthew@the-spa.com [mailto:matthew@the-spa.com] Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2003 9:14 PM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
probably not the easiest option but i would have a pc there with pc anywhere and a serial cable connection between them.
matthew
---- Original Message ---- From: jfox@foxcomputers.com To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: RE: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question Date: Thu, 30 Jan 2003 19:42:51 -0600
yes, but since the IP address is part of the config, I'm guessing that it will blow that out and I'll lose access to it. But what the heck - I'm going to give it a try.
-----Original Message----- From: Jim McCay [mailto:jmccay@adsnet.com] Sent: Thursday, January 30, 2003 7:06 PM To: usr-tc@mailman.xmission.com Subject: Re: [USR-TC] Hiper ARC Question
I'm new to the hiper arc's but won't the delete config command work?
jim
Joel - Fox Computers wrote:
For those of you familiar with the Hiper ARC's -
Is there any way you know of to completely erase the configuration from a telnet prompt? I want to do the equivelant of choosing option 13 from the bootup menu except I want to be able to do from Telnet - I want to be able to do a complete reconfig of a HiperARC remotely. Any suggestions?
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Hi, On Fri, Jan 31, 2003 at 10:16:55AM +0200, Kalev Nurklik wrote:
Yeah, that is correct. You can probably still use some SNMP trick on TCM to config ARC but finding exactly out the OIDs etc is probably harder than using remote console connection. As far as I know the TCM just intermediates the SNMP sets/gest to ARC somehow when You use the HARM through TCM.
Yeah, so perhaps the following will help: ( this are some lines of one of my config-scripts, if I omitted vital things, please give me a kick) To get the most important point: you communicate with the HARC via the NMC, i.e. snmpset <NMC-IP> <write-community>@<slot-of-harc * 1000> If used in a PERL-script: $WComm = "private\@15000"; # HARC in slot 15 ;-) the read/write-community of the NMC. $NetAddr = pack("C8", @SrvIP, @NetMask); that is an 8 byte OCTET-STRING with HARC-IP + netmask ( @RET) = snmpset( $HubIP, $WComm, "usrCfgNetIfName.2.105.112", 'string', "eth:1", "usrCfgNetAddress.2.105.112", 'string', $NetAddr, "usrCfgNetEncapType.2.105.112", 'int', 1, "usrCfgNetProtoType.2.105.112", 'int', 1, "usrCfgNetStatus.2.105.112", 'int', 3); the 2.105.112 means nothing more than: 2 byte for the chars "ip", the network name furthermore in CLI stated as for example: show ip network ip usrCfgNetIfName: "eth:1" is the interface-name usrCfgNetAddress: c above usrCfgNetEncapType: should be 1 for ethernet_ii usrCfgNetProtoType: 1 for ip(1) usrCfgNetStatus: enable(3), -- Set to this value to enable network All this var's should be packed into one packet. The following should be self-explanatory... ;-) @RET=snmpset($HubIP, $WComm, "usrIpNetRoutingRipV2.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetSendDefaultRoutePolicy.1", 'int', 0, "usrIpNetSendRoutesPolicy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetSendSubnetsOnlyPolicy.1", 'int', 0, "usrIpNetAcceptDefaultRoutePolicy.1", 'int', 0, "usrIpNetSilentPolicy.1", 'int', 0, "usrIpNetSplitHorizonPolicy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetPoisonReversePolicy.1", 'int', 0, "usrIpNetFlashUpdatePolicy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetSimpleAuthenPolicy.1", 'int', 0); of cause above mentioned combination configures RIPv2. @RET=snmpset($HubIP, $WComm, "usrIpNetSendRipV1CompatPolicy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetRcvRipV1Policy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetRcvRipV2Policy.1", 'int', 1, "usrIpNetBcastAddr.1", 'int', 1); and enables it. @RET=snmpset($HubIP, $WComm, "ipRouteNextHop.0.0.0.0", 'ipaddr', "$GwIP", "ipRouteMetric1.0.0.0.0", 'int', 1, "ipRouteMask.0.0.0.0", 'ipaddr', "0.0.0.0", "ipRouteIfIndex.0.0.0.0", 'int', 3, "ipRouteType.0.0.0.0", 'int', 4); This guy establishes the default route to the "$GwIP"-address. After that one should be able to connect via telnet and the default user adm all ending up in: ---- 8-< -------------------- srv1.psmk> sh ip netWORK ip SHOW IP NETWORK ip SETTINGS: Interface: eth:1 Network Address: 10.0.0.147/26 Frame Type: ETHERNET_II Status: ENABLED Reconfigure Needed: FALSE Mask: 255.255.255.192 Station: 10.0.0.147 Broadcast Algorithm: IETF Max Reassembly Size: 8192 WAN Type: N/A Remote IP Address: 0.0.0.0 IP Routing Protocols: RIPV2 IP Routing Metric: 1 RIP Interface Export Metric: 0 IP RIP Routing Policies: SEND_ROUTES SPLIT_HORIZON FLASH_UPDATE SEND_COMPAT RIPV1_RECEIVE RIPV2_RECEIVE IP RIP Authentication Key: ------------------------ srv1.psmk> sh ip rouTING IP ROUTER SETTINGS IP Router Administrative Status: ENABLED IP Static Remote Routes: ENABLED IP Router ID: 10.0.0.147 IP Autonomous System Number 1 IP Max Table Size: 11400 IP Max Metric Entries: 512 IP RIP ENABLED IP Number RIP Interfaces: 1 IP Number RIP Neighbors: 0 IP RIP Flags: METRICS ---- 8-< -------------------- Hope this helps, Oliver. -- Oliver.Francke@mediaWays.net fon. +49-5246-80-1389 mob. +49-171-5597734 I used to have a sig, but I've stopped smoking.
You're right. I sort of gotten used to the fact that TCM only talks to NMC so I didn't figure to point that the NMC is what gets the SNMP. :)
To get the most important point: you communicate with the HARC via the NMC, i.e. snmpset <NMC-IP> <write-community>@<slot-of-harc * 1000>
participants (3)
-
Joel - Fox Computers -
Kalev Nurklik -
Oliver Francke