Cabletron Systems STHI Manual De Usuario

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STHI Overview
 
Page 1-6
 
Improved Protection from Beaconing
 
1
 
By utilizing multiple Ring Out TCU ports, users can provide enhanced 
reliability for existing networks which use passive MAUs because Ring 
Out TCU ports allow for the separate attachment of each MAU. Rather 
than daisy-chaining MAUs together as a single entity and risking their 
collective isolation in case of beaconing, the user can now attach each 
MAU individually, reducing the number of MAU ports that are at risk; 
ABRP is able to bypass individual Ring Out-to-MAU connections on an 
individual basis, leaving other workgroups unaffected. See Figure 1-2.
 
The Ring Out TCU configuration does not provide for the 
MAU’s redundant connection to the ring. To achieve dual 
attachment to a MAU, use the Ring In and Ring Out TPIM 
ports.
 
1.2.7
Flash Downloads
 
New and updated firmware may be downloaded into the STHI hub’s 
Flash EPROMs. This process may be executed by Cabletron’s Remote 
LANVIEW/Windows, version 3.0 or later, or by any device using BOOTP 
or TFTP protocols. Refer to Section 5.9.11, 
 
 
for download instructions.
 
1.2.8
IP Address Discovery
 
The STHI supports IP Address Discovery. Through a BootP server (a 
network device that holds a user-defined list of MAC addresses and 
corresponding IP addresses), network managers may attribute an IP 
address to any known MAC address. When the STHI is powered up 
without an IP address and IP Address Discovery is enabled, it issues 
BootP requests at user-set intervals, essentially asking “does anybody 
know my name?” If the BootP server recognizes the MAC address, it tells 
the STHI what IP address has been attributed to it. If no BootP sever 
responds after 500 request cycles, the STHI automatically boots from its 
own FLASH memory and remains without an IP address until a user 
provides one through the Local Management interface.
Each STHI has on its backplate a sticker which indicates its MAC address. 
NOTE