Network Addressing

Using BOOTP

Time To Live: The number of IP routers a packet is allowed to cross before the packet is discarded. The default value is 32. Increase this value if the hub is managed from a network management station that is more than 32 routers away. The maximum allowable value is 255.

Use the IP Configuration command in the ASCII console or CiscoView to specify IP addresses.

Using BOOTP

BOOTP (Bootstrap Protocol) is used to download network configuration data from a server (the BOOTP server) to the hub. The configuration data the hub retrieves from the BOOTP server is:

the IP address for the hub

the subnet mask for the subnet on which the hub is installed

the default router

If you have configured the hub’s IP parameters on a BOOTP server, you do not need to use the IPConfig command in the ASCII console. As shipped from the factory, the hub is configured to use BOOTP to retrieve the IP configura- tion information.

The BOOTP Process

When the hub is powered on, it broadcasts BOOTP requests that contain the hub’s MAC address. The BOOTP server receives the request and searches its BOOTP table file for an entry that matches the hub’s MAC address. If a match is found, the configuration data in the associated file entry is returned to the hub as a BOOTP reply. For most UNIX systems, the BOOTP table is contained in the /etc/bootptab file. The example below applies to the BOOTP table for UNIX systems.

Network Addressing

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HP J3188A manual Using Bootp, Bootp Process