APC NBRK0450 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 152
88
NetBotz Appliance User’s Guide
The following controls and fields are displayed in the Edit Network Interface window:
Field
Description
Enable Interface
Select to enable this network interface.
Configure automatically via DHCP  Configure the network interface to use a DHCP server on the network 
to obtain its IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address.
Configure using these settings 
Manually specify the IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address for 
the network interface.
IP address
The IP address manually assigned to the network interface. 
Subnet mask
The manually-assigned subnet mask to be used by the network 
interface. 
Gateway
The manually-assigned IP address of the gateway used by the network 
interface. 
Hostname
The host name assigned to the appliance. If you change the hostname 
value and are using a DHCP server for IP configuration, the appliance 
uses the new hostname until the next time it renews its IP address 
license and requests that the DHCP server use the hostname you 
entered as the appliance hostname.
NAT proxy 
The name or IP address used by a network address translation (NAT) 
Proxy server in your network to let users connect to the appliance from 
outside the firewall. This address is included in e-mail alert 
notifications generated by the appliance instead of the IP address used 
to identify the appliance within the firewall. Recipients outside the 
firewall can click on the link in the e-mail and connect to the appliance. 
N
OTE
: A NAT Proxy Name is needed only if your appliances are 
behind a NAT Proxy firewall. If you are not using a NAT Proxy, leave 
this field blank.
Speed and duplex
Force the network interface to use specific speed and duplex settings, or 
configure the interface to auto-negotiate these settings. 
MTU
The Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU), the largest physical packet 
size, measured in bytes, that a network can transmit. Messages larger 
than the MTU are divided into smaller packets before being sent. Every 
network has a different MTU set by the network administrator. Ideally, 
the MTU should be the same as the smallest MTU of all the networks 
between your machine and the final destination of a message. Messages 
larger than one of the intervening MTUs are broken up or fragmented, 
which slows transmission speeds.