Polycom 7000 User Manual

Page of 437
 
Local Cluster Configuration
Polycom, Inc. 
67
 
When you add a routing rule, it appears in the table below the input fields. Select a rule and click Delete 
selected route
 to delete it. Click Show raw routing configuration to display the operating system’s 
underlying routing configuration. 
See also: 
Time Settings
The following table describes the fields on the Time Settings page. These values are normally set in the 
USB Configuration Utility during system installation and rarely need to be changed. See the Getting Started 
Guide
Field 
Description
Host/Network 
The IP address of the destination network host or segment. 
Prefix length 
The CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing) prefix size value (the number of 
leading 1 bits in the routing prefix mask). This value, together with the 
Host/Network address, defines the subnet for this route. 
For IPv4, a prefix length of 24 is equivalent to specifying a dotted-quad subnet 
mask of 255.255.255.0. A prefix length of 16 is equivalent to specifying a 
subnet mask of 255.255.0.0. 
Interface 
In split network configuration, select the interface for this route. 
Via 
IP address of router for this route. Optional, and only needed for non-default 
routers. 
Caution: Time settings changes require a restart
Changing time settings requires a system restart and terminates all active conferences. 
You can’t change the system’s time settings while it’s integrated with a Polycom RealPresence 
Resource Manager system or part of a supercluster. The integration must first be terminated or the 
cluster removed from the supercluster. See 
 or 
We strongly recommend specifying NTP servers.
Field 
Description
System time zone 
Time zone in which the system is located. We strongly recommend selecting 
the time zone of a specific geographic location (such as America/Denver), not 
one of the generic GMT offsets (such as GMT+07 POSIX). 
If you really want to use a generic GMT offset (for instance, to prevent 
automatic daylight saving time adjustments), note that they use the 
Linux/Posix convention of specifying how many hours ahead of or behind 
local time GMT is. Thus, the generic equivalent of America/Denver 
(UTC-07:00) is GMT+07, not GMT-07.