Draft – Nokia M10 User Manual

Page 57

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Nokia M10 User’s Manual

DRAFT

E

Copyright Nokia Telecommunications Oy

NTC C33539002SE_A0

5-8

Entering router settings

1. Enter the name of your M10 in the System Name field.

Each M10 is assigned a name as a part of its factory initialisation.
The default name is M10. A device name can be 1-16 characters
long and cannot include spaces or special characters. The name
can be later used to access the M10 through a telnet connection or a
Web page from the Ethernet interface.

2. Enter the IP address of your M10.

Local address is the IP address of your M10’s Ethernet interface.

3. Enter the subnet mask.

Subnet mask is used to identify the network portion of an IP
address. The subnet mask specifies which bits of the 32-bit binary
IP address represent network information. Most sites should use
255.255.255.0 for their subnet mask.

4. Enter the broadcast address.

Broadcast address is used to send messages to all computers on
your network. Most sites should use xxx.yyy.zzz.255 as their
broadcast address, where xxx.yyy.zzz is the network portion of the
IP address.

5. Enter RIP settings for the Ethernet interface.

Rip-send and Rip-receive radio buttons are used to enable
dynamic routing using Routing Information Protocol (RIP). RIP
and RIP version 2 can be used. RIP-send with V1-compat option
enables the sending of RIPv2 packets using multicast. RIP-receive
with V1-compat option accepts both RIPv1 and RIPv2 packets.

6. Enable/disable routing between ATM VCCs (Routing Policy).

IP forwarding and dynamic route distribution between ATM VCC
routing can be disabled when multiple VCCs are used.

7. Enable/disable default gateway.

The default gateway is the host to which your M10 will send a
packet when it does not know how to reach the packet’s
destination host.

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