Troubleshooting 437
Communication Issues
zNon-critical Error Boot: When the IOLAN cycles through a boot and a non-critical error
occurs, such as a bad port, the LED will blink red briefly before displaying a solid green. You
should reboot the IOLAN while monitoring the Console port to view the error information.
zCritical Error Boot: When the IOLAN cycles through a boot and a critical error occurs, such as
corrupted firmware, the LED continues to blink red. View the diagnostic information displayed
on the terminal connected to the Console port for information on how to correct the problem.
zFatal Error Boot: When the IOLAN cycles through a boot and a fatal error occurs, the LED
stays a solid red).
Communication Issues
General communication checks and practices are as follows:
zAre your cables connected and correctly configured? If you are using EIA-232, see EIA-232
Cabling Diagrams to verify that your cables are correctly configured.
zCan you ping your host? If you can ping but packet loss is reported, ping another host/device on
the same network. This will tell you whether the problem is specific to the host/device or general
to the network.
zAfter entering or changing IP information for your IOLAN, reboot the IOLAN (does not apply
when using BOOTP or DHCP). Once the IOLAN has rebooted, other network devices should be
able to communicate with it (ping, telnet, etc.). Also, protocols such as ARP and proxy-ARP will
work properly.
zUse the show routes command (command line only) or view the Routes statistics. Is there a
route to the host?
zIf the WebManager or DeviceManager cannot communicate with the IOLAN, verify that the
Server Services HTTP and/or HTTPS are enabled for WebManager and DeviceManagerD is
enabled for DeviceManager. If you are using only HTTPS, the connection URL must start with
https://.
DeviceManager Problems
Error Message: 16 bit Windows Subsystem - C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\AUTOEXEC.NT. The
system file is not suitable for running MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows applications. Choose
'Close' to terminate the application.
The error message can be misleading, because it is displayed even if the AUTOEXEC.NT file is
actually missing.
To verify whether you have the file, type %windir%/system32/ in the address bar of an Explorer
window. If there is no AUTOEXEC.NT file proceed as follows:
1. Browse to %windir%/repair/ (usually C:\WINDOWS\repair).
2. Right-click and Copy the AUTOEXEC.NT file.
3. Browse to %windir%/system32/ (usually C:\WINDOWS\System32).
4. Right-click inside the window and Paste the file.
The error condition described here may also be the result of corruption of the AUTOEXEC.NT file, in
which case the above procedure may be helpful to restore a valid file.
If the above procedure does not fix the DeviceManager installation problem, see
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=324767 for the official Microsoft explanation.