Wins Primary And Secondary Nms Configuration; Configuring Local Address Servers - Juniper JUNOSE SOFTWARE FOR E SERIES 11.3.X - BROADBAND ACCESS CONFIGURATION GUIDE 2010-10-12 Configuration Manual

Software for e series broadband services routers broadband access configuration guide
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JunosE 11.3.x Broadband Access Configuration Guide
aaa wins primary
aaa wins secondary

Configuring Local Address Servers

52

WINS Primary and Secondary NMS Configuration

To configure the WINS primary and secondary name server addresses:
Specify the IP address of the WINS primary name server.
1.
host1(config)#aaa wins primary 192.168.10.05
Specify the IP address of the WINS secondary name server.
2.
host1(config)#aaa wins secondary 192.168.10.40
NOTE: The router uses name server addresses exclusively for PPP clients
and not for domain name server resolution.
Use to specify the IP address of the WINS primary name server.
Example
host1(config)#aaa wins primary 192.168.10.05
Use the no version to set the corresponding address to 0.0.0.0.
See aaa wins
Use to specify the IP address of the WINS secondary name server.
Example
host1(config)#aaa wins secondary 192.168.10.40
Use the no version to set the corresponding address to 0.0.0.0.
See aaa wins
The local address server allocates IP addresses from a pool of addresses stored locally
on the router. You can optionally configure shared local address pools to obtain addresses
from a DHCP local address pool that is in the same virtual router. Addresses are provided
automatically to client sessions requiring an IP address from a virtual router that is
configured to use a local address pool.
A local address server is defined in the context of a virtual router. You create a local
address server when you configure the first local pool. Local address servers exist as long
as the virtual router exists or until you remove them by deleting all configured pools.
Figure 1 on page 53 illustrates the local address pool hierarchy. Multiple local address
server instances, one per virtual router. can exist. Each local address server can have one
or more local address pools. Each pool can contain a number of IP addresses that are
available for allocation and used by clients, such as PPP sessions.
Copyright © 2010, Juniper Networks, Inc.

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