IBM SC30-3681-08 Saw User Manual


 
a. The following prompts are displayed:
Ethernet encapsulation type? (ETHERNET_8022, ETHERNET_8023, ETHERNET_ii,
ETHERNET_SNAP): [ETHERNET_8023]
b. Enter the encapsulation type used by the IPX protocol on your Ethernet end
stations.
Ethernet_8022 Packet includes an 802.2 header.
Ethernet_8023 Uses an IEEE 802.3 packet format without the 802.2 header. This is
the default and the default for NetWare versions prior to 4.0.
Ethernet 802.3 does not conform to the IEEE 802 standards
because it does not include an 802.2 header. It may cause problems
with other nodes on the network.
Ethernet_II Uses Ethernet type 8137 as the packet format. This format is
required if you are using NetWare VMS on the Ethernet. This is the
default for NetWare Versions 4.0 and higher.
Ethernet_SNAP Uses the 802.2 format with a SNAP header. This encapsulation type
is meant to be compatible with token-ring SNAP encapsulation.
However, it violates IEEE standards and is not interoperable across
conformal bridges.
5. Assign an IPX network number to the associated directly connected network.
Every IPX interface must have a unique network number.
Configuring Interface 1 (WAN PPP)
Configure IPX on this interface? (Yes, No): [Yes]
Network Number (hex) (1-FFFFFFFD): [1] 2
Enable IPXWAN? (Yes, No): [No] yes
Configuring Interface 2 (WAN PPP)
Configure IPX on this interface? (Yes, No): [Yes]
Network Number (hex) (1-FFFFFFFD):[1] 3
Enable IPXWAN? (Yes, No): [No] yes
Host Number for Serial Lines: (000000000000) 1
Configure IPXWAN NodeID? (Yes, No): [Yes]
NodeID (hex) (1 - FFFFFFFD): [1] 4
If enabled, the IPXWAN protocol negotiates routing parameters to be used on
the PPP serial interface before IPX packet forwarding begins. IPXWAN is not
required to forward IPX packets on PPP serial interfaces. The IPXWAN Node ID
is a unique IPX network number that identifies the router, and is required if
IPXWAN is enabled on any network interfaces.
6. Host number is a unique 12-digit hexadecimal value assigned to an IPX router.
It is required because serial lines do not have hardware node addresses from
which to build a host number.
Appendix A. Quick Configuration Reference 667
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