Flow, Port number, Table 5-3. interface mode options – Lantronix UDS100 User Manual

Page 27: Table 5-4. common interface mode settings, Table 5-5. flow control options

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UDS10/UDS100 User Guide

Configuring the UDS Using Telnet or the Serial Port

27

The following table displays available I/F Mode options:

Table 5-3. Interface Mode Options

I/F Mode Option Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

RS-232C

0 0

RS-422/485

0 1

RS-485 2-wire

1 1

7 Bit

1 0

8 Bit

1 1

No Parity

0 0

Even Parity

1 1

Odd Parity

0 1

1 Stop bit

0 1

2 Stop bit

1 1

The following table demonstrates how to build some common Interface Mode
settings:

Table 5-4. Common Interface Mode Settings

Common I/F Mode Setting

Binary

Hex

RS-232C, 8-bit, No Parity, 1 stop bit

0100 1100 4C

RS-232C, 7-bit, Even Parity, 1 stop bit

0111 1000 78

RS-485 2-Wire, 8-bit, No Parity, 1 stop bit 0100 1111 4F
RS-422, 8-bit, Odd Parity, 1 stop bit

0101 1101 5D

Flow

Flow control sets the local handshake method for stopping serial input/output. Use
the following table to select flow control options:

Table 5-5. Flow Control Options

Flow Control Option

Hex

No flow control

00

XON/XOFF flow control

01

Hardware handshake with RTS/CTS lines 02
XON/XOFF pass characters to host

05

Port Number

Every TCP connection and every UDP datagram has a destination IP address and a
port number. A port number is similar to an extension on a PBX system. For
example, a Telnet application commonly uses port number 23. Port number 9999 is
reserved for access to the unit's Setup Mode.

The Port Number setting represents the source port number in TCP connections. It is
the number that identifies the channel for remote initiating connections. For example,
to send data to channel 1, send TCP/UDP packets to this assigned port number.

The default setting for port 1 is 10001. The range is 1-65535, except for the following
reserved port numbers:

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