Press the space bar to page down through the listed information. If you don't know
the drive type, just pick one of the above commands and enter it. If you don't have
that type of drive, nothing will be returned.
Windows — From the desktop, double-click on My Computer.
2e Ethernet cards — You must know the quarantine (deployment) method you are going to
use when setting up your network, as each method has the following specific Ethernet card
requirements:
Single-server installation — When the MS and ES are installed on the same server, you
need two Ethernet cards.
Multiple-server installation — When the MS and ES are installed on multiple servers,
you need one Ethernet card on the MS, and the following number of Ethernet cards for
each ES:
Inline — You need two Ethernet cards on each ES
DHCP — You need two Ethernet cards on each ES
802.1x — You need one Ethernet card on each ES
Linux – To list Ethernet card information to the screen on a Linux computer, enter
the following at the command line:
ifconfig
Windows – To list Ethernet card information to a DOS (cmd) window on a Windows
computer, enter the following at the command line:
ipconfig
2f CDROM drive — This drive can be a read-only drive and is used for first-time
installation.
NOTE: For more information about deployment options, see
on page
9.
IMPORTANT: Make sure that your Ethernet cards are 10/100/1000 (Intel) server-class NICs.
Inferior class network cards do not work at all, or work intermittently. You can get the best results
from the Intel PRO-series NICs.
Information Required During Installation
You will be asked for the following information during the installation process (use the
"Installation and Configuration Check List," on page 55
Static IP address — The IP address for each server you will use (both MS and ESs). For
example: 10.0.16.180. You must have a static (always the same) (not dynamic—can be
different every time) IP address to use for each server.
Netmask (Network mask) — A number that tells how much of the IP address is reserved for
the network (255) and how much is reserved for the host (0). This must be defined when
servers create subnetworks as part of the installation process. For example: 255.255.0.0.
Default gateway IP address — The IP address of your Internet connection—the IP address of
the network endpoint that knows how to route packets outside of your local network. For
example 10.0.16.1.
Chapter 1, "Deployment Flexibility,"
for easy reference):
Installing Novell ZENworks Network Access Control
Appendix A,
35
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