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Operating Systems AIX Connecting to the service processor? Post 302166094 by shaell on Monday 11th of February 2008 01:18:27 AM
Old 02-11-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by bakunin
The IBM cable is crossed out, so you need a "nullmodem" cable. I'm not sure about the 44p using 19200,N,1,p or 9600,N,1,p as interface settings. The older machines used 9600 baud, the newer ones use 19200, but i am not sure to which group the 44p belongs to. One of these settings it is for sure.

You can find a pinout schema here.

I hope this helps.

bakunin

edit: oh, and its half past 9 over here - i sincerely apologize for having been asleep for so long on a saturday and not having responded earlier to your question. The next time i expect a question from you I'll stay up the night.
Hey thanks for the info. Especially for the sarcasm. I did realize that it was the weekend. But when i saw that there were 25 views and no replies, being a newbie i genuinely wondered whether my question made any sense. I did not mean to come off as a jerk in any way. Sorry to bother you. Thanks again for making the newcomers feel welcome.
 

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PPP(1)							      General Commands Manual							    PPP(1)

NAME
pppclient, pppserver - point to point protocol SYNOPSIS
pppclient [ -d ][ -b baudrate ][ -i myipaddr ][ -p peeripaddr ][ dialdevice ] pppserver [ -d ] ndev myipaddr firstipaddr firstdev [ baud0 baud1 ... ] DESCRIPTION
The Point to Point Protocol is used to encapsulate Internet Protocol packets for transfer over serial lines or other protocol connections. Pppclient makes a connection to a PPP server and passes IP packets over the connection. If dialdevice is omitted, standard input and out- put are used as the connection. If dialdevice begins with a slash, pppclient assumes it is a file name, open(2)'s it, and uses the result as the connection. Otherwise, dialdevice is passed as the destination address to dial(2) to set up the connection. If the connection is successful, pppclient creates a pipe, pushes the IP line discipline onto it, and sets the local and remote addresses of the IP interface to myipaddr and peeripaddr. It then loops transferring packets between the pipe and the connection. If either myi- paddr or peeripaddr is omitted, pppclient requests them from the server. The options are d print debugging information. b baud rate of the serial line. p peer ip address (in case the peer asks for its ip address over IPCP). i the local ip address to be established for this connection. Pppserver treats serial lines as PPP connections, switching packets between them and the local machine. It creates a pipe for a local IP interface (address myipaddr), opens a set of serial lines, and switches packets between the local interface and the serial lines. Ndev specifies the number of serial devices to serve. The devices are named /dev/eia{firstdev} through /dev/eia{firstdev+ndev-1}. Their remote IP addresses are firstipaddr through firstipaddr+ndev-1. The default baud rate is 9600. If any arguments follow firstdev (baud0, baud1, ...), they are used as baud rates for the serial lines. The only option, -d, turns on debugging output. Both pppclient and pppserver accept all options defined in RFCs 1331 and 1332. EXAMPLES
Start up a server for serial lines /dev/eia[2-6] with remote IP addresses 131.107.1.100 through 131.107.1.103 and baud rates of 19200, 2400, 9600, 9600. The local IP address is 131.107.1.1. pppserver 4 131.107.1.1 131.107.1.100 2 19200 2400 SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/ppp PPP(1)
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