Bay Networks 6300 Supplement Manual page 107

Supplement to the remote annex administrator’s guide for unix
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Book A
Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator's Guide for UNIX
The following example shows a user accessing this RA 6300 via
a telnet command and choosing the modems rotary:
telnet 123.456.789.1
Trying 123.456.789.1...
Connected to 123.456.789.1.
Escape character is '^]'.
<cr>
Rotaries Defined:
modems:
ta_service:
cli
Enter Annex port name or number: modems
Attached to port asy1
If the RA 6300 in the previous example had 24 internal modems
instead of 32, the modems rotary would be displayed as asy1-24;
if there were only four internal modems, asy1–4 would be
displayed. Rotaries for ta (V.120) calls always display as ta1–
32, since there are 32 virtual ta ports.
On an RA 6300, telnet commands can include TCP port
numbers as described in Chapter 4 of the Remote Annex
Administrator's Guide for UNIX, with one restriction. To telnet
to an RA 6300 directly (without being prompted for a rotary or
the CLI), you issue the telnet command as follows:
telnet 123.456.789.1 5000
This takes you directly to the CLI on the RA 6300. You cannot
specify any other TCP port numbers in the 5000 range. This is
unlike other Remote Annexes, on which specifying the TCP port
number 5006, for example, would connect you to port 6.
Chapter 4
The Port Server and Rotaries
asy1-32
ta1-32
-
A-79

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