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Nortel BayStack 400-S manuals

BayStack 400-S first page preview

BayStack 400-S

Brand: Nortel | Category: Network Hardware
Table of contents
BayStack 400-S first page preview

BayStack 400-S

Brand: Nortel | Category: Network Hardware
Table of contents
  1. restricted rights legend
  2. Table Of Contents
  3. Table Of Contents
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Preface
  6. Related publications
  7. Acronyms
  8. Introduction
  9. How Instant Internet can function in your network
  10. IPX networks
  11. Understanding the installation environment
  12. Understanding DHCP servers
  13. Understanding gateways and DNS proxies
  14. Understanding how Instant Internet works with an existing IP address server
  15. Understanding the workstation environment
  16. IPX workstations
  17. Installing the Instant Internet software
  18. Installation flowchart
  19. Configuring the Instant Internet unit
  20. Configuring Instant Internet for common connection environments
  21. Configuring Instant Internet for a dial-up or ISDN connection
  22. Configuring Instant Internet for a leased-line connection
  23. Configuring Instant Internet for an Ethernet or 1-Meg modem connection
  24. Finishing the connection configuration
  25. Installing the software
  26. Automatically configuring workstations during installation
  27. Installing the Instant Internet workstation software on each workstation
  28. Installing the Instant Internet workstation software from the network
  29. Installing the Instant Internet workstation software from the CD
  30. Chapter 4 Documentation, third-party applications, and what to do next
  31. Using third-party applications
  32. Installing third party software from the CD
  33. Installing third-party applications on a workstation from the network
  34. Uninstalling the Instant Internet software
  35. Network support
  36. Preparing an IPX network
  37. BootP or DHCP server
  38. the gateway and DNS proxy
  39. Preparing a network with no TCP/IP and no BootP or DHCP server
  40. Preparing a TCP/IP network with static IP addresses (no BootP or DHCP server)
  41. Workstation support
  42. Installing TCP/IP on a workstation
  43. Installing TCP/IP on a Windows 98 workstation
  44. Installing TCP/IP on a Windows 2000 workstation
  45. Configuring TCP/IP settings
  46. Instant Internet unit or your existing DHCP server
  47. Identifying IP workstations
  48. Using older versions of the Instant Internet workstation software
  49. Troubleshooting and error messages
  50. Common ISDN cause codes
  51. Testing the connection to the Internet
  52. Index
BayStack 400-S first page preview

BayStack 400-S

Brand: Nortel | Category: Switch
Table of contents
  1. restricted rights legend
  2. Table Of Contents
  3. Table Of Contents
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Table Of Contents
  6. Table Of Contents
  7. Table Of Contents
  8. Table Of Contents
  9. Table Of Contents
  10. Table Of Contents
  11. Table Of Contents
  12. Table Of Contents
  13. Preface
  14. text conventions
  15. related publications
  16. Introduction
  17. ipx networks
  18. Services Instant Internet provides
  19. Deciding what to do next
  20. User access administration
  21. Starting Admin
  22. Default user and everyone group
  23. Restoring the everyone group
  24. Setting the domain
  25. Setting user name order
  26. Migrating your database to use unique users and groups by server
  27. Users and Groups
  28. Setting the context for NDS
  29. Setting the NetWare preferred server
  30. Creating and removing users and groups
  31. Creating a user
  32. Creating a group
  33. Adding a user to a group
  34. Deleting users and groups
  35. Deleting a group
  36. Copying user and group Internet access settings
  37. Viewing effective user access
  38. Defining user and group access
  39. Disabling user or group access
  40. Ignoring group settings option
  41. Configuring Internet access
  42. Defining controlled Internet access
  43. Three kinds of Internet addressing
  44. Overview of configuring Internet access
  45. Adding Internet access
  46. Removing Internet access
  47. Changing Internet access
  48. Managing news group access
  49. Adding news group access
  50. Removing news group access
  51. Changing news group access
  52. Managing incoming port access
  53. Adding incoming port access
  54. Removing incoming port access
  55. Changing incoming port access
  56. Managing RAW sockets
  57. Specifying the message a user sees upon an error
  58. Common user and group access examples
  59. Restricting access to a few sites for everyone
  60. Allowing access to a few sites
  61. Managing a remote Instant Internet unit
  62. Internet activity logging
  63. Monitoring an Instant Internet unit
  64. Viewing users
  65. Viewing Web site access
  66. Viewing diagnostic information
  67. Performing a Trace
  68. Monitoring multiple Instant Internet units
  69. Activating automatic logging
  70. Enabling Auto Run
  71. Editing an automatic logging configuration
  72. Exporting log files
  73. Proxy services
  74. Configuring Instant Internet as a Web proxy server
  75. Using a commercial proxy server
  76. Enabling Web configuration
  77. Configuring Instant Internet as a DNS proxy server
  78. Configuring Instant Internet as a SOCKS proxy server
  79. Using SOCKS workstations with the Administration program
  80. Administration options that do not apply to SOCKS workstations
  81. Configuring socksified applications
  82. Configuring common SOCKS-enabled software
  83. Third-party socksifying software
  84. Advanced IP configuration
  85. Configuring a static route
  86. Configuring IP forwarding
  87. Enabling IP forwarding for a unit
  88. Enabling IP forwarding for two interfaces
  89. Using network address translation
  90. Configuring address translation
  91. Publishing a private server
  92. Configuring Instant Internet to publish a private server
  93. IP address
  94. Example: Publishing a server for NetMeeting
  95. Configuring an IP filter
  96. Processing a packet through an IP filter
  97. Applying a filter to an interface
  98. Enabling Instant Internet as a DHCP server
  99. Using the DHCP/BootP relay agent feature
  100. Configuring Instant Internet as a DHCP server
  101. Using Instant Internet as a DHCP workstation
  102. Configuring an alias for an interface
  103. Configuring Instant Internet to support a DMZ
  104. Publishing the server(s)
  105. Example: Using a DMZ to publish a Web server
  106. IP security and VPN
  107. Understanding modes
  108. Using perfect forward secrecy
  109. Using the default network specification
  110. Managing local and remote IP addresses
  111. Removing a local or remote IP address
  112. Understanding how an Instant Internet-to-Instant Internet VPN works
  113. Allowing only outgoing connections
  114. Allowing both outgoing and incoming connections
  115. Understanding how an Instant Internet-to-CES VPN works
  116. Other issues
  117. How a tunnel is initiated
  118. Tunnel timeouts
  119. Tunneling to CES when Instant Internet has a static IP address
  120. Example for configuring a branch office connection in the CES
  121. Configuring Instant Internet as a main-mode VPN tunnel
  122. Tunneling to the CES when Instant Internet has a dynamic IP address
  123. Configuring Instant Internet as an aggressive-mode VPN tunnel
  124. Troubleshooting a VPN tunnel connection
  125. Viewing a unit's IPsec log
  126. Web cache configuration
  127. How the Instant Internet unit functions as a caching proxy server
  128. How Web caching works with a user's local cache
  129. Connecting to the Instant Internet unit with a Web browser
  130. Viewing the Instant Internet unit system status
  131. Getting started with the Web cache
  132. Increasing efficiency
  133. Fine-tuning cache settings
  134. Deciding how long to run an experiment
  135. How cache levels are defined
  136. Example one
  137. Example two
  138. Predefined cache levels default values
  139. Creating a custom cache level
  140. Interpreting statistics
  141. Viewing why requests are not sent from the cache
  142. Limiting the size of a cached entry
  143. Setting options for special Web requests
  144. Setting the action the cache performs when a Web server error occurs
  145. Managing cookies
  146. Establishing a cookie management policy
  147. Managing cookies for all unconfigured Web sites
  148. Managing cookies for a particular Web site
  149. Sorting the Web sites list
  150. Managing Web site access
  151. Blocking Web site access
  152. Blocking access to a particular Web site
  153. Configuring Web site display options
  154. Saving and Restoring Web site configuration
  155. Refreshing cache entries
  156. Interpreting active refresh statistics
  157. I requested a Web site, but there was no response
  158. to respond
  159. I am not able to configure a personalized Web page
  160. Advanced communications configuration
  161. Adding a backup phone number
  162. Setting the inactivity timeout
  163. Enabling bandwidth on demand
  164. Configuring voice call options
  165. Configuring advanced communication settings for a dial-up connection
  166. Configuring the modem speaker
  167. Setting the number of lines
  168. Configuring advanced communication settings for an E1 connection
  169. Configuring advanced communication settings for a PPPoE connection
  170. IPX configuration and support
  171. Performance considerations
  172. When to consider a higher-speed connection
  173. Configuring IPX frame types
  174. Resolving Winsock conflicts
  175. Winsock 1.1 and Winsock 2.0
  176. Using multiple 16-bit Winsocks
  177. Winsock files installed
  178. Windows 95
  179. IP filters and Winsock compatibility
  180. Configuring fault tolerance and automatic user load balancing
  181. Configuring multiple default sets
  182. Example: Sales
  183. Example: Marketing
  184. Example: normal
  185. Chapter 10 Instant Internet unit configuration, support, and diagnostics
  186. Identifying the login workstation
  187. Adding a unit to the selection list
  188. Understanding the name server list order
  189. Saving and restoring unit configurations
  190. Restoring a unit configuration from disk
  191. Changing the unit configuration
  192. Changing your ISP
  193. Changing registration information
  194. Changing a unit's configuration password
  195. Changing a unit's name
  196. Changing a unit's time, date, or time zone
  197. Selecting additional support options
  198. Testing connections
  199. Testing the connection to the Internet
  200. Testing the response time of a host
  201. Tracing the route to a host
  202. Testing the echo port of a host
  203. Setting host connection test options
  204. Troubleshooting and error messages
  205. Viewing system files
  206. Viewing a unit's update history
  207. Viewing a unit's support hosts
  208. Viewing log files
  209. Viewing the system settings file
  210. IPX workstation error messages
  211. Server name errors
  212. Version errors
  213. Common questions and answers
  214. Glossary
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