sys admin>>CONNECTIONS |
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Terminal Connection List |
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01 | KEVIN | 01 | SERVER | ( Monitor mode ) |
02 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
03 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
04 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
05 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
06 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
07 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
08 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
09 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
10 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
11 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
12 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
13 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
14 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
15 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
16 |
| 00 |
| ( Channel present ) |
17 | <not installed> |
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sys admin>>
The above example shows that user KEVIN is logged in on terminal port 01, is connected to device port 01 (which is named "Server" in the ConsoleServer 3200), and is in monitor mode. The list will display the user ID of any
When used with the /MONITOR command line qualifier, the CONNECTIONS command updates the connection list on screen every time a user logs in or out or changes login level (i.e., goes into direct mode), rather than simply displaying the list once as occurs when the CONNECTIONS command is used alone. (See section 6.8, Sys Admin Session Management Commands).
The CONNECTIONS command will also tell the sys admin which terminal ports are present (in the list, they are referred to as "channels"). If the port is not functioning (i.e., the card is not present or there is a fault with the individual port), the port will be listed as "<not installed>". It will also list Telnet Active for an active Telnet session.
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