HP t1000 T1500/T1510 Windows-based Terminal Network Installation Guide - Page 29

MF_CFG, XFS, XDMCP, BUDDY_BOOT, Setup | Connectivity | Internet, DNS | Hosts

Page 29 highlights

Configuring Terminal Start-Up Resources 15 the share name, and path is an optional path within that share. For name resolution, an entry in the terminal's host file (Setup | Connectivity | Internet | DNS | Hosts) qualifies. For NFS, the directory MUST be exported with read/write/ execute permissions and with root mapping to root, not to nobody. For SMB, the server's guest account needs to be activated and guest users need to be able to connect to that share for full control. MF_CFG When using the flash build utility, this option provides the network services style path to the file that contains the list of images that are available for programming. The syntax for NFS is machine:/path, where machine is the IP address or DNS resolvable machine name for the server, and path is the full pathname. The syntax for SMB (Windows server) is //machine/share[/path], where machine is a DNS resolvable machine name, share is the share name, and path is an optional path within that share. For name resolution, an entry in the terminal's host file (Setup | Connectivity | Internet | DNS | Hosts) qualifies. For NFS, the directory must be exported with read/write/execute permissions and with root mapping to root, not to nobody. For SMB, the server's guest account needs to be activated and guest users need to be able to connect to that share for full control. XFS DHCP provides a standard option for font servers. The standard option (48) is a list of IP addresses and assumes that the font server will be on port 7100. If you want to define your font servers by machine name rather than IP address, or want to run them at a different port (HP/UX puts its font servers at 7000 by default), you must use this option. The data is a comma-delimited list of font servers, of the form: tcp/machine[:port], where the port is optional. The machine can have either an IP address or a DNS-resolvable name. XDMCP DHCP provides a standard option for XDMCP. The standard option (49) is a list of IP addresses that the terminal treats as XDMCP queries. If you wish either to provide XDMCP Indirect connections (where the other side of the connection provides a list of who you can connect to) or to provide a DNS-resolvable name, you can use the T1500/T1510-specific option. BUDDY_BOOT This flag is set by a DHCP/BOOTP server to distinguish a network boot from a Boot Server boot (otherwise known as "Buddy Boot"). A terminal that provides Boot Server service will set this; otherwise, this option should never be used.

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Configuring Terminal Start-Up Resources
15
the share name, and
path
is an optional path within that share. For name
resolution, an entry in the terminal's host file (
Setup | Connectivity | Internet |
DNS | Hosts
) qualifies. For NFS, the directory MUST be exported with read/write/
execute permissions and with root mapping to root, not to nobody. For SMB, the
server's guest account needs to be activated and guest users need to be able to
connect to that share for full control.
MF_CFG
When using the flash build utility, this option provides the network services style
path to the file that contains the list of images that are available for programming.
The syntax for NFS is
machine:/path
, where
machine
is the IP address or DNS
resolvable machine name for the server, and
path
is the full pathname. The syntax
for SMB (Windows server) is
//machine/share[/path]
, where
machine
is a
DNS resolvable machine name,
share
is the share name, and
path
is an optional
path within that share. For name resolution, an entry in the terminal's host file
(
Setup | Connectivity | Internet | DNS | Hosts
) qualifies. For NFS, the directory
must
be exported with read/write/execute permissions and with root mapping to
root, not to nobody. For SMB, the server's guest account needs to be activated and
guest users need to be able to connect to that share for full control.
XFS
DHCP provides a standard option for font servers. The standard option (48) is a list
of IP addresses and assumes that the font server will be on port 7100. If you want
to define your font servers by machine name rather than IP address, or want to run
them at a different port (HP/UX puts its font servers at 7000 by default), you must
use this option. The data is a comma-delimited list of font servers, of the form:
tcp/machine[:port]
, where the port is optional. The machine can have either
an IP address or a DNS-resolvable name.
XDMCP
DHCP provides a standard option for XDMCP. The standard option (49) is a list of
IP addresses that the terminal treats as XDMCP queries. If you wish either to
provide XDMCP Indirect connections (where the other side of the connection
provides a list of who you can connect to) or to provide a DNS-resolvable name,
you can use the T1500/T1510-specific option.
BUDDY_BOOT
This flag is set by a DHCP/BOOTP server to distinguish a network boot from a Boot
Server boot (otherwise known as “Buddy Boot”). A terminal that provides Boot
Server service will set this; otherwise, this option should never be used.