3com WX3000 Manual De Usuario

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TFTP Configuration 
Introduction to TFTP 
Compared with FTP, TFTP (trivial file transfer protocol) features simple interactive access interface and 
no authentication control. Therefore, TFTP is applicable in the networks where client-server interactions 
are relatively simple. TFTP is implemented based on UDP. It transfers data through UDP port 69. Basic 
TFTP operations are described in RFC 1986. 
TFTP transmission is initiated by clients, as described in the following: 
To download a file, a client sends Read Request packets to the TFTP server, then receives data 
from the TFTP server, and sends acknowledgement packets to the TFTP server. 
To upload a file, a client sends Write Request packets to the TFTP server, then sends data to the 
TFTP server, and receives acknowledgement packets from the TFTP server. 
The device can act as a TFTP client only.  
When you download a file that is larger than the free space of the device’s flash memory:  
If the TFTP server supports file size negotiation, file size negotiation will be initiated between the 
device and the server and the file download operation will be aborted if the free space of the 
device’s flash memory is found to be insufficient.  
If the TFTP server does not support file size negotiation, the device will receive data from the 
server until the flash memory is full. If there is more data to be downloaded, the device will prompt 
that the space is insufficient and delete the data partially downloaded. File download fails.  
TFTP-based file transmission can be performed in the following modes: 
Binary mode for program file transfer. 
ASCII mode for text file transfer. 
 
 
Before performing TFTP-related configurations, you need to configure IP addresses for the TFTP client 
and the TFTP server, and make sure a route exists between the two. 
 
TFTP Configuration 
Complete the following tasks to configure TFTP: 
Task 
Remarks 
— 
Optional