Raritan Computer Home Security System 用户手册

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Chapter 16: Diagnostic Console 
 
276
 
 
ƒ  Even if DHCP is being used to determine the IP configuration for 
an interface, you must provide a properly formatted IP address 
and Netmask. 
6.  In the Adapter Speed, select a line speed. The other values of 10, 
100, and 1000 Mbps are on a scrollable list (where only one value is 
visible at any given time) and the arrow keys are used to navigate to 
them. Press the Space bar to select the option displayed. For 1 GB 
line speeds, select AUTO. 
7.  If you did not select AUTO for Adapter Speed, click Adapter Duplex 
and use the arrow keys to select a duplex mode (FULL or HALF) 
from the list, if applicable. While a duplex mode can be selected at 
any time, it only has meaning and takes effect when Adapter Speed 
is not AUTO. 
8.  Repeat these steps for the second network interface if you selected 
IP Isolation Mode. 
9.  Click Save. CC-SG will restart, logging out all CC-SG GUI users and 
terminating their sessions. A Warning screen will appear, informing 
you of the impending network reconfiguration and associated CC-SG 
GUI user impact. Select <YES> to proceed. 
System progress can be monitored in a Diagnostic Console Status 
Screen. On the KVM port, another terminal session can be selected 
by pressing Alt+F2 and logging in as status. Return to the original 
terminal session by pressing Alt+F1. There are six available terminal 
sessions on F1 through F6. 
 
Ping an IP Address 
Use ping to check that the connection between CC-SG computer and a 
particular IP address is working correctly. 
Note: Some sites explicitly block ping requests. Verify that the target and 
intervening network allow pings if a ping is unsuccessful. 
1.  Choose Operation > Network Interfaces > Ping. 
2.  Enter the IP address or hostname (if DNS is appropriately configured 
on the CC-SG) of the target you want to check in the Ping Target 
field. 
3. Select: 
Optional.  
 
Option 
Description 
Show other received ICMP 
packets 
Verbose output, which lists other received 
ICMP packets in addition to 
ECHO_RESPONSE packets. Rarely seen. 
No DNS Resolution 
Does not resolve addresses to host names.