Routing - Black Box 37687 User Manual

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Routing

For dial-out routing, you must have the proper routing entry on all hosts in your local network
that will communicate with the remote site. In the case of a Unix system, you must make an
entry similar to the following (please check your Unix manual for the proper syntax of the
route command):
For a single host at the remote site:
route add <remote-ip-addr> <IOLAN-ip-addr> 2
For multiple hosts at the remote site:
route add net <remote-net-addr> <IOLAN-ip-addr> 2
The Terminal Server will dial into another piece of hardware, log into that hardware and start
a PPP session. Then the local Terminal Server will act as a router and forward all IP traffic
destined outside its local network. In other words, the Terminal Server will 'auto-dial' the
Internet and act as the router. In this example, the local network is: 206.131.227.0, the ISP's
network is: 206.189.134.0, the ISP's equipment that you are dialing into is another Terminal
Server (206.189.134.7) and the local Terminal Server is: 206.131.227.5. The Terminal Server
gateway entries look like this:
Terminal Server User Guide
Routing
Page 79
Chapter 6 Dialout modem ports setup

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