Avaya Using Bay Command Console Software Uživatelský manuál Strana 30

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Using the Bay Command Console
1-10 115976-A Rev. A
Attributes and Values (for IP on an ethernet interface):
group {ethernet/2/1}
state enabled
sub-protocols {arp/1.2.3.4/1 rip/1.2.3.4}
address 1.2.3.4
mask 255.0.0.0
assocaddr 0.0.0.0
cost 1
broadcast 0.0.0.0
mtu-discovery off
mask-reply off
all-subnet-broadcast off
address-resolution arp
proxy off
aging cacheoff
udp-checksum on
tr-end-station off
redirects on
cache-size 128
arp-mode client
arp-server-address 0x
arp-server-reg-interval clientdefault
Using Abbreviations and Acronyms
Words that represent objects, attributes, and certain attribute values for command
input or output are
Industry-accepted words or standard abbreviations and acronyms
Standard Bay Networks abbreviations and acronyms
For command input, the BCC interface allows you to shorten existing object and
attribute names; for example,
e or eth= ethernet. This is the “minimum to
distinguish” feature of the BCC interface.
Example:
Two objects, fddi and ftp exist at the root level of the BCC configuration tree. So that
the BCC knows which of these objects you want to configure, you must minimally
enter either
fd or ft at the bcc> prompt.
For command output, the BCC allows somewhat greater flexibility in the use of
abbreviations and acronyms, and allows the use of uppercase characters.
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