Alcatel-Lucent 6850-48 参照ガイド

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OmniSwitch CLI Reference Guide
September 2009
page 38-1
38   IPX Commands
The Internet Packet Exchange (IPX) protocol, developed by Novell for NetWare, is a protocol used to 
route packets through IPX networks. IPX specifies a connectionless datagram similar to the IP packet of 
TCP/IP networks. An IPX network address consists of two parts: a network number and a node number. 
The IPX network number is assigned by the network administrator. The node number is the Media Access 
Control (MAC) address for a network interface in the end node.
IPX exchanges information using its own Routing Information Protocol (RIP), which sends updates every 
60 seconds. NetWare also supports a Service Advertising Protocol (SAP) to allow network resources, 
including file and print servers, to advertise their network addresses and the services they provide. The 
user can also define a specific route. These routes, called static routes, have higher priority than routes 
learned through RIP.
IPX supports multiple encapsulation types for Ethernet:. 802.3 Raw, 802.3, Ethernet v2, and SNAP. 
MIB information for the IPX commands is as follows:
Filename:
AlcatelIND1IPX.mib
Module:
alaIPXMIB
A summary of the available commands is listed here: