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And here’s a sample of a keyboard switching session for a cascaded system, with an accompanying explanation
for each step:
1. Type in “<CM>8C[Enter]” to select channel C on unit 8.
2. Type in “<CM>H[Enter]” to select channel H on the local unit (the unit that the console is attached to).
3. Type in “<CM>76K[Enter]” to select channel K on unit 76.
4. Typing in “<CM>112E[Esc]” gets you out of Command Mode without any channel switch or other
instruction being executed. Channel K on unit 76 remains selected as the active channel.
8.3 Multiuser Operation
If your ServSwitch Multi system only has a single console, you can skip this section and go on to Section 8.4. But
if users will be on the system simultaneously at multiple consoles, you need to be aware of how the ServSwitch
Multi handles multiuser access. When users are accessing different computers or expansion channels, they can
do so independently. When users try to access the same computer or expansion channel, they must share.
At any given time, users attached to the ServSwitch Multi system may independently select and operate as
many as (but not more than) eight different computers attached to the same ServSwitch Multi SB, or four
different computers attached to the same Base Unit or EXP, or two different computers attached to the same
MX. This is because there are only eight independent data pathways through each SB, only four independent
pathways through each Base Unit or EXP, and only two independent pathways through each MX; once all these
are carrying keyboard and mouse input from users to computers, no more independent connections can be
established.
Imagine a single Base Unit with computers attached to channels A through F. Through a single console
attached to this Base Unit, a user could have full access to any of these computers any time he or she wanted.
But say there are four users working with this Base Unit, one on the local console (user 1), the others on
channels K, L, and M (users 2, 3, and 4). These users all want independent access to one of the six computers,
so they each must select a different one: let’s say user 1 chooses computer A, 2 chooses B, 3 chooses C, and
4 chooses E. In this situation, the only computers that any of these users can select and still remain
independent are computers D and F.
Now let’s say that user 2 wants to use computer A. User 2 can switch to computer A, but until user 1 finishes
working with it, user 2 will only be able to see its video output, not send keyboard or mouse input. This is called
“shared access.” User 2 can’t have independent access to computer A until user 1 stops sending keyboard and
mouse data for the duration of computer A’s inactivity timeout (either one second or ten seconds; see
Section 4.2.2). Once this timeout expires, user 2 can begin typing or pointing and clicking at any time and the
ServSwitch Multi will immediately start passing that data through to computer A. At that point user 1 becomes
the “sharing” user, seeing computer A’s video but having no keyboard or mouse control until user2 is finished.
Any user can share access to any computer with any other user in the system. There is no system limitation on
the number of users that can share access at the same time. All of the users in your ServSwitch Multi system can
share access to a set of your computers simultaneously—but only two, four, or eight users will be able to be
actively working at any given moment.