Editing The Ttyd Configuration File; Modifying System Configuration File Inittab; Modifying Route Configuration File; Running And Terminating Ttyd On The Unix Server - 3Com MSR 50 Series Configuration Manual

3com msr 30-16: software guide
Hide thumbs Also See for MSR 50 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

790
C
52: FEP I
HAPTER
NSTALLATION AND
Modifying System
Configuration File
inittab
Editing the ttyd
Configuration File
Modifying Route
Configuration File
Running and
Terminating ttyd on the
Unix Server
C
ONFIGURATION
4 Reboot the system.
# reboot
The number of supported pseudo terminals is now 176.
Modifying the maximum number of files a process can open
By default, each SUN OS process can open up to 64 files. If a Unix server is to be
connected with a number of terminals (usually more than 50), change the value to
400. To do so, edit file /etc/system to add the following line:
set rlim_fd_cur = 400
After modification, you must reboot the server to bring your configuration into
effect. You do not need to change other system kernel parameters.
Follow these steps to modify the system configuration file inittab:
1 Check whether a pseudo terminal has been configured in the inittab configuration
file.
Take the device ttyp50 as an example. Edit the file /etc/inittab and check whether
this file contains the following line:
T1:234:respawn:/etc/getty ttyp50
If the line is absent, add it. In the sample line, T1 is the identifier of the line. Each
line in the file inittab must have a unique identifier consisting of no more than two
characters. In system configuration file inittab, the third column of a line is
"respawn" for an active terminal and off for a dumb terminal.
2 Bring the configuration into effect after the addition.
# init q
Refer to
"Editing the ttyd Configuration File" on page
The terminal access router is usually connected to the Unix server through WANs
and therefore located on an IP segment different from that of the Unix server, in
which case you must configure a route on the Unix server.
The following example shows how to do so:
# route add -net 10.110.96.0 63.1.1.250
Running ttyd
Refer to
"Running ttyd" on page 778
Terminating ttyd
Refer to
"Terminating ttyd" on page
775.
779.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents

Troubleshooting

loading

Table of Contents