Bay Networks 6300 Supplement Manual page 402

Supplement to the remote annex administrator’s guide for unix
Hide thumbs Also See for 6300:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Chapter 1
Network Administration
Remote Annex 6300 Supplement to the Remote Annex Administrator's Guide for UNIX
B-36
Other element descriptions for the fourth entry in the above sample are
the following:
Entry Element.
Description
0
Packets in
0
Packets out
72
Bytes in
2978
Bytes out
Events are written continuously to the ACP log file. To prevent this file
from overwhelming the file system on the hosts, and still obtain the record
information for generating reports, move and compress the file at regular
intervals. The size of your network, the number of RA 6300s, and the
amount of activity generated at each RA 6300 determines the frequency
for moving and compressing the file.
Events written while using ARA or the dial-back security feature have
their own messages:
bad access code
Users entered an unidentified access code for the defined
username – the login was terminated.
call-back
Users logged in with a known username and access code – the
RA 6300 calls back a pre-defined phone number (this log can be
generated by any of the features that perform a call-back,
including dial-back security and ARA); possible status values
are request, ok, no answer, or no device.
Book B

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents