Logging In Through Telnet (Not Supported In Fips Mode) - HP 6125XLG Configuration Manual

Blade switch fundamentals configuration guide
Table of Contents

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Step
6.
Specify the number of
data bits for each
character.
7.
Define a shortcut key
for starting a terminal
session.
8.
Define a shortcut key
for terminating tasks.
9.
Configure the flow
control mode.
10.
Specify the terminal
display type.
11.
Set the maximum
number of lines to be
displayed on a screen.
12.
Set the size of the
command history
buffer.
13.
Set the session idle
timeout.
Logging in through Telnet (not supported in FIPS
mode)
You can Telnet to the device to remotely manage the device, or use the device as a Telnet client to Telnet
to other devices to manage them.
Command
databits { 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 }
activation-key character
escape-key { character | default }
flow-control { hardware | none |
software }
terminal type { ansi | vt100 }
screen-length screen-length
history-command max-size value
idle-timeout minutes [ seconds ]
25
Remarks
The default is 8.
The setting depends on the character
coding type. For example, you can set it
to 7 if standard ASCII characters are to
be sent, and set it to 8 if extended ASCII
characters are to be sent.
By default, pressing Enter starts the
terminal session.
By default, pressing Ctrl+C terminates a
task.
By default, the flow control mode is none.
The switch supports only the none flow
control mode.
By default, the terminal display type is
ANSI.
The device supports two terminal display
types: ANSI and VT100. HP
recommends that you set the display type
to VT100 on both the device and the
configuration terminal. If either side uses
the ANSI type, a display problem such as
cursor positioning error might occur
when a command line has more than 80
characters.
By default, a screen displays 24 lines at
most.
A value of 0 disables pausing between
screens of output.
By default, the buffer saves 10 history
commands at most.
The default is 10 minutes.
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.

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