We use the Livingston PM2. One could hook a modem to it for either
incoming or outgoing, but we telnet to it and attach to the serial ports
for various devices.
For your couriers, make sure you use the autoanswer dip switch setting
rather than solely the autoanswer init string.
On Mon, Nov
, 2007 10:21 AM
Subject: [c-nsp] out-of-band management - modems?
This is probably a repeatedly asked question, even if not a frequently
asked question.
What is everyone doing for out-of-band management of WAN routers that
don't have redundant data connections (or do)? Modems? Something else
On Mon, 5 Nov 2007, Furnish, Trever G wrote:
This is probably a repeatedly asked question, even if not a frequently
asked question.
What is everyone doing for out-of-band management of WAN routers that
don't have redundant data connections (or do)? Modems? Something else?
I would
cards in the Lantronix for those...
Paul
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Furnish, Trever G
Sent: Monday, November 05, 2007 1:21 PM
To: cisco-nsp@puck.nether.net
Subject: [c-nsp] out-of-band management - modems?
This is probably
I am a huge fan of cylades products for locations where you have
multiple devices. When you don't have that luxury, nothing beats a modem
connected to your console.
--
Colin McNamara
(858)208-8105
CCIE #18233,RHCE,GCIH
The difficult we do immediately, the impossible just takes a little longer
Paul Stewart wrote:
We're in the process of adopting Lantronix boxes with modems currently
(multiple console ports at each site so makes sense)... early stages but so
far so good. The one challenge left to try is to reach sites that have no
telco facilities nearby (wireless POPs) so we're
Re Trever,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Furnish, Trever G) wrote:
What is everyone doing for out-of-band management of WAN routers that
don't have redundant data connections (or do)? Modems? Something else?
Don't laugh. We have a global management network on VPN tunnels,
independently routed (read