Using Hyperterminal For Telnet Remote Control Operation; Figure 7-2. Telnet Interface Example - Hyperterminal - Comtech EF Data MN/LBC4000.IOM Installation And Operation Manual

L-band up/down converter system
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LBC-4000 L-Band Up/Down Converter System
MN/LBC4000.IOM
Ethernet Interface Operation
Revision 5
The Telnet interface requires user login at the Administrator level and
Read/Write level. Once logged into the Telnet interface as the Administrator, you
have access to the optional serial-based Remote Control Interface. Figure 7-1
shows an example of the login process for remote control operation.
7.3.1 Using HyperTerminal for Telnet Remote Control
Operation
Figure 7-2. Telnet Interface Example – HyperTerminal
There is a disadvantage when using Windows Command line as a Telnet client
with the optional Remote Control protocol. For the messages coming from the
Telnet Server, Command line cannot translate a carriage return command (\r) to
a carriage return + line feed command (\r\n). Therefore, any multi-line Target-
to-Controller response (e.g., the response to the FRW? query) shows as one line,
with the latter lines overwriting the previous lines.
To see the full response messages, you can use the HyperTerminal terminal
emulation program configured as a Telnet client. Figure 7-2 shows an example of
the login process when using HyperTerminal as the Telnet interface.
7–5

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