
Using the Bay Command Console (BCC)
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You may find it helpful to first diagram what you want to configure in terms of the
BCC configuration tree or hierarchy for the device. Refer to the following sample
router configuration.
Sample Router Configuration
The following example shows a sequence of commands you can use to configure a
BCN router on a network. You first complete the physical installation of the
router, then boot the router using the image (bn.exe) and the minimum
configuration file (ti.cfg).
This example creates the following objects in the total router configuration
(Figure 4-1
):
• IP (global)
-- ARP (global) on IP
-- RIP (global) on IP
• SNMP (global)
-- Community “public” on SNMP
- Manager (address 0.0.0.0) on community “public”
• FTP (global)
• TFTP (global)
• Telnet (global)
-- Server (global) on Telnet
• Quad Ethernet interface in slot 13
-- IP interface (address 192.168.133.114) on Ethernet connector 1
- ARP on IP interface 192.168.133.114
- RIP on IP interface 192.168.133.114
• Serial interface in slot 5
• Dual token ring interface in slot 9
• FDDI interface in slot 11
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