How Your Switch Obtains Ip Information; How Automatic Ip Configuration Works - 3Com 3C17205-US - Corp SUPERSTACK 3 SWITCH 4400 24PORT Implementation Manual

Implementation guide
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100
C
10: U
HAPTER
SING
How Your Switch
Obtains IP
Information
How Automatic IP
Configuration
Works
A
IP C
UTOMATIC
ONFIGURATION
Your Switch has two ways to obtain its IP address information:
Automatic IP Configuration (default) — the Switch attempts to
configure itself by communicating with address allocation servers on
the network or by selecting from a pool of addresses. These servers
use industry standard methods to allocate the Switch IP configuration:
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)
Auto-IP — this feature generates a random IP address within the
range 169.254.1.0 to 169.254.254.255 and compares it to
addresses already used in the local broadcast domain.
Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP)
For ease of use, you do not have to choose between these three
automatic configuration methods. The Switch tries each method in a
specified order.
Manual IP Configuration — you can manually input the IP
information (IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway).
If you select an option for no IP configuration the Switch will not be
accessible from a remote management workstation on the LAN. In
addition, the Switch will not be able to respond to SNMP requests.
When your Switch is powered up for the first time the IP configuration
setting is set to automatic — this is the default setting.
If your Switch has been powered up before, whichever of the three
options for IP configuration (manual, automatic, none) was last
configured is activated when the Switch powers up again.
You can switch to manual IP configuration at any time using a serial port
connection to set up the IP information. For more information see the
Getting Started Guide that accompanies your Switch.

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