Using The Device To Log In To A Telnet Server - HP 6125XLG Configuration Manual

Blade switch fundamentals configuration guide
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Step
9.
Set the idle timeout.
10.
Specify a command to
be automatically
executed when users
log in to the user
interfaces.

Using the device to log in to a Telnet server

You can use the device as a Telnet client to log in to a Telnet server. If the server is located in a different
subnet than the device, make sure the two devices have routes to reach each other.
Figure 11 Telnetting from the device to a Telnet server
To use the device to log in to a Telnet server:
Step
1.
Enter system view.
2.
(Optional.) Specify the
source IPv4 address or
source interface for
outgoing Telnet packets.
3.
Exit to user view.
4.
Use the device to log in to
a Telnet server.
Command
idle-timeout minutes
[ seconds ]
auto-execute command
command
Command
system-view
telnet client source { interface
interface-type interface-number | ip
ip-address }
quit
Log in to an IPv4 Telnet server:
telnet remote-host [ service-port ]
[ vpn-instance vpn-instance-name ]
[ source { interface interface-type
interface-number | ip ip-address } ]
Log in to an IPv6 Telnet server:
telnet ipv6 remote-host [ -i
interface-type interface-number ]
[ port-number ] [ vpn-instance
vpn-instance-name ]
30
Remarks
By default, the idle timeout is 10 minutes for all
user interfaces.
If there is no interaction between the device and
the user within the idle timeout, the system
automatically terminates the user connection on
the user interface.
If you set the idle timeout to 0, the session will not
be aged out.
By default, no automatically executed command
is specified.
Remarks
N/A
By default, no source IPv4
address or source interface is
specified, and the primary IPv4
address of the outbound
interface is used as the source
address for outgoing Telnet
packets.
N/A
Use either command.

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