Intermec CS40 Intermec Terminal Emulator (ITE) User Guide - Page 56
About 5250 Options, Protocol Opts, Cancel
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Chapter 2 - Configuring and Managing ITE Protocol Options (continued) Option 3270, 5250, VT-ANSI Description Settings for each emulation type. For more information, see: • "About 3270 Options" on page 46. • "About 5250 Options" on page 44. • "About VT/ANSI Options" on page 47. Value 4 Change the settings as needed. When you are finished, tap OK to save your changes and return to the Protocol Opts list, or tap Cancel to return to the Protocol Opts list without saving any changes. About 5250 Options This section describes configurable settings for 5250 emulation. 5250 Protocol Options Option Description Value 5250 Allow Alias When enabled, if your current device name returns Enabled or Disabled. an error, then the computer appends a "$" (dollar Default is Enabled. sign) to the end of its device name to initiate a session to the host. When disabled, the device name is resent to the host, which then sends a FIN packet to the computer, causing the computer to restart. This continues until the device name is no longer in use. Beep on Error Determines if the beeper beeps when there is an Enabled or Disabled. error. Default is Disabled. Destructive BS Enables or disables the destructive backspace key. Enabled or Disabled. When enabled, the backspace key removes (deletes) Default is Disabled. any previously keyed data characters. When disabled, the backspace key goes back one character, but does not delete that character. Device Name Physical name for a device. Allowable values Range is 1 to 30 include all uppercase and lowercase alphanumeric characters. characters, wildcards, pound symbols (#), dollar Default is none. signs ($), ampersands (@), and underscores ( _ ). The first character of Device Name must be a letter. Do not use a wildcard character. To create a unique device name for the computer, use the following wildcard characters to return computer specific information: • %I1, %I2, %I3, %I4 return the 1st through 4th octets of the IP address. • %M1, %M2, %M3, %M4, %M5, %M6 return the 1st through 6th parts of the MAC address. • %S0, %S1, %S2, %S3, %S4, %S5, %S6, %S7, %S8, %S9, %SA return the 1st through 11th digits of the computer serial number. 44 Intermec Terminal Emulator (ITE) User Guide