Cisco Model 6109 6 MHz Off-Air Reference (NTSC) 安装指南
Chapter 1 Overview
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The configuration file can also be used to preset data values. This feature is typically
used for devices that do not support SNMP query. This feature is also used to preset
the service group ID assignments for QAMs that do support SNMP. After the two
mandatory components in the entry, you can append as many "name=value" fields
as needed. An entry may consist of as many lines as needed, as long as each line
ends with the continuation character sequence. The last line of the entry must end
with a normal new line character. A line is continued using the C language
convention of continuing a line with a "\" and then a new line character.
used for devices that do not support SNMP query. This feature is also used to preset
the service group ID assignments for QAMs that do support SNMP. After the two
mandatory components in the entry, you can append as many "name=value" fields
as needed. An entry may consist of as many lines as needed, as long as each line
ends with the continuation character sequence. The last line of the entry must end
with a normal new line character. A line is continued using the C language
convention of continuing a line with a "\" and then a new line character.
Table-based QAMs are typically supported as generic device types, and thus do not
support direct SNMP query of configuration settings. For these QAMs, the
configuration is typically entered in a device configuration file. Note that this is not
mandatory, and that this data can also be entered directly via the web interface.
support direct SNMP query of configuration settings. For these QAMs, the
configuration is typically entered in a device configuration file. Note that this is not
mandatory, and that this data can also be entered directly via the web interface.
The following is a sample device configuration file that creates two table-based
QAMs that do not support SNMP query. (The indents in the example are used to
improve readability, and are not required.)
QAMs that do not support SNMP query. (The indents in the example are used to
improve readability, and are not required.)
TableQam qam001 \
DataIpAddress=1.2.3.4\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.1=300\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.2=301\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.3=302\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.4=303\
ChannelTable.TSID.1.1=8000,ChannelTable.Frequency=900\
ChannelTable.ModulationFormat.1.1=QAM-256\
ChannelTable.TSID.1.2=8001,ChannelTable.Frequency=906\
ChannelTable.ModulationFormat.1.1=QAM-256
TableQam qam002 \
DataIpAddress=1.2.3.5\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.1=300\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.2=301\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.3=302\
PortTable.ServiceGroupId.4=303\
ChannelTable.TSID.1.1=8010,ChannelTable.Frequency=930\
ChannelTable.ModulationFormat.1.1=QAM-256\
ChannelTable.TSID.1.2=8011,ChannelTable.Frequency=936\
ChannelTable.ModulationFormat.1.1=QAM-256
Loading a Device Configuration File
The Platform - ConfigManager - Configuration page is used to load a device
configuration file. A file containing device definitions (typically QAMs) can be input
to define the set of devices for the application. Entering a file name into the
LoadConfigFileName field and clicking Commit Changes causes the file to be input
and the network resource information to be applied to the configuration.
configuration file. A file containing device definitions (typically QAMs) can be input
to define the set of devices for the application. Entering a file name into the
LoadConfigFileName field and clicking Commit Changes causes the file to be input
and the network resource information to be applied to the configuration.