Preface |
Preface
|
Preface
|
Part 1 |
Part 1
|
Connecting to the Network
|
Chapter 1 |
1
|
Managing TCP/IP Services
|
1.1
|
Getting Started
|
1.1.1
|
Logical Names
|
1.1.2
|
Modifying Your Configuration
|
1.1.3
|
Saving Changes
|
1.1.4
|
Starting and Stopping the Software
|
1.1.5
|
Editing Configuration Files
|
1.2
|
Enabling PATHWORKS/Advanced Server and DECnet-over-TCP/IP Support
|
1.2.1
|
Starting and Stopping the PWIP Driver
|
1.3
|
Setting Up User Accounts and Proxy Identities
|
1.4
|
Configuring a TCP/IP Cluster
|
1.4.1
|
Setting Up an ARP-Based Cluster
|
1.5
|
Auxiliary Server
|
1.5.1
|
How the Auxiliary Server Works
|
1.5.1.1
|
Rejecting Client Requests
|
1.5.1.2
|
Configuring the Auxiliary Server
|
1.6
|
Enabling Services
|
1.6.1
|
Setting Up Event Logging
|
Chapter 2 |
2
|
Configuring Interfaces
|
2.1
|
Key Concepts
|
2.2
|
Configuring Network Controllers
|
2.3
|
Configuring Network Interfaces
|
2.3.1
|
Specifying the Interface
|
2.3.2
|
Specifying the Network Mask
|
2.3.3
|
Specifying Additional IP Addresses
|
Chapter 3 |
3
|
Configuring and Managing Serial Lines
|
3.1
|
Key Concepts
|
3.1.1
|
PPP and SLIP
|
3.1.2
|
Assigning an IP Address to Your PPP or SLIP Interface
|
3.1.3
|
Serial Line Internet Protocol
|
3.1.4
|
Point-to-Point Protocol
|
3.2
|
Setting Up a PPP Interface (Alpha Only)
|
3.2.1
|
Setting Up Your Host for PPP Connections
|
3.2.1.1
|
Installing the Terminal Driver
|
3.2.1.2
|
Configuring the Modem
|
3.2.1.3
|
Setting Up an Asynchronous Port
|
3.2.1.4
|
Configuring a PPP Interface
|
3.2.1.5
|
Enabling IP Forwarding (Dialup Provider Only)
|
3.2.1.6
|
Initiating a PPP Connection
|
3.2.2
|
Removing the PPP Configuration
|
3.3
|
Setting Up a SLIP Interface
|
3.3.1
|
Setting Up Hard-Wired SLIP Lines
|
3.3.2
|
Setting Up SLIP Dialup Lines
|
3.3.3
|
Setting Up Your Host as a SLIP Dialup Provider
|
3.3.4
|
Connecting a Host to the LAN
|
3.3.5
|
Setting Up a SLIP Gateway with Proxy ARP
|
3.3.6
|
Shutting Down SLIP
|
3.4
|
Solving Serial Line Problems
|
3.4.1
|
Solving PPP Problems
|
Chapter 4 |
4
|
Configuring and Managing Routing
|
4.1
|
Key Concepts
|
4.1.1
|
Static Routing
|
4.1.2
|
Dynamic Routing
|
4.1.2.1
|
Routing Daemon (ROUTED)
|
4.1.2.2
|
Gateway Routing Daemon (GATED)
|
4.2
|
Configuring Static Routes
|
4.2.1
|
Creating a Default Route
|
4.2.2
|
Manually Defining Static Routes
|
4.2.2.1
|
Examples
|
4.2.3
|
Displaying Manually Defined Routes
|
4.3
|
Enabling and Disabling Dynamic Routing
|
4.4
|
Configuring GATED
|
4.4.1
|
Datagram Reassembly Time
|
4.4.2
|
Enabling Forwarding
|
4.4.3
|
Extending Routing
|
4.4.4
|
Interface Routes
|
4.4.5
|
Manually Configuring a Hardware Address
|
Chapter 5 |
5
|
Configuring and Managing failSAFE IP
|
5.1
|
Key Concepts
|
5.2
|
Configuring failSAFE IP
|
5.2.1
|
Configuring failSAFE IP Manually
|
5.2.2
|
Modifying the failSAFE IP Configuration Parameters
|
5.2.3
|
Creating and Displaying Home Interfaces
|
5.3
|
Managing failSAFE IP
|
5.3.1
|
failSAFE IP Logical Names
|
5.3.2
|
Customizing failSAFE IP
|
5.3.3
|
Reestablishing Static and Dynamic Routing
|
5.3.4
|
Displaying the Status of Interfaces
|
5.3.5
|
Guidelines for Configuring failSAFE IP
|
5.3.5.1
|
Validating failSAFE IP
|
5.3.5.2
|
Configuring Failover Time
|
5.3.5.3
|
Avoiding Phantom Failures
|
5.3.5.4
|
Creating IP Addresses with Home Interfaces
|
5.3.5.5
|
Private Addresses Should Not Have Clusterwide Standby Interfaces
|