Installation on PC’s using Win2000 OS. Please take all the defaults during installation.










The Telnet Server Administration session starts - select 3 and press enter, select 7 and press enter, Change current value of 2 to 1 and then exit according to the instructions.







Reboot the system.



Note: If the above ping test fails, then find the PBM IP address based on the following rules. (The above IP is based on the following settings;
PBM 10.254.1.0 = PBM cabinet ID 0, drawer ID = 1)
The thirty two bit private LAN address is defined as follows:
nnnnnnnn. mmmmmmmm . pppppppp . eeeeeeee
The value of mmmmmmmm determines the meaning of the values of pppppppp and eeeeeeee.
The LAN address = nnnnnnnn = 10
Cabinet IDs are unique and are determined by the setting of the OCP push-wheel on each cabinet door. Each cabinet must have a unique number. Cabinet IDs are represented in network addresses in two ways depending upon whether you are addressing components in system space or components in IO space:
When addressing system space components like MBMs, CMMs, and CPUs, the upper 4 bits of mmmmmmmm are the cabinet ID number.
When addressing IO space components like the PBM, mmmmmmmm = 254 and eeeeeeee = the cabinet ID.
The valid range for the cabinet ID set by the push-wheel on the cabinet door is 0 to 7.
The MBM ID is set by the push-wheel on the 2P or 8P drawer. This ID corresponds to the address of the backplane in the drawer and is fundamental in determining other physical addresses for both the system and the server management LAN. The lower four bits of mmmmmmmm are the MBM ID number. Thus mmmmmmmm = a specific MBM in a specific cabinet. With this unique number, firmware determines addresses for memory, CPUs, and the port locations for north, south, east, and west IP ports.
The valid range for the MBM ID set by the push-wheel on both the 2P and 8P drawers are 0 to 3.
The PBM ID is set by the push-wheel on the IO drawer. When mmmmmmmm = 254, pppppppp = the PMB ID set by the push-wheel on the OCP of the IO drawer.
Network ID Table
|
|
If mmmmmmmm = Cabinet ID + MBM push- wheel |
If mmmmmmmm = PBM flag (254 decimal) |
If mmmmmmmm = special (253 decimal) |
|
nnnnnnnn |
network number (10 decimal) |
network number (10 decimal) |
network number (10 decimal) |
|
mmmmmmmm |
MBM in cab0, 1-4 MBM in cab1, 11-14 |
254 |
See special addresses |
|
pppppppp |
0 for MBM, |
PBM push-wheel |
See special addresses |
|
eeeeeeee |
0
for CMM itself, |
Cabinet ID push-wheel |
See special addresses |
Some examples
|
Device |
|
Comment |
|
MBM |
10.1.0.1 |
MBM cabinet ID 0, drawer ID 1 (eeeeeeee default = 1) |
|
PBM |
10.254.1.0 |
PBM cabinet ID 0, drawer ID 1 |
|
CMM |
10.2.1.0 |
CMM #1 connected to MBM 2 |
|
EV7 |
10.2.1.2 |
second EV7 connected to CMM 1 connected MBM 2 |
Special Addresses
|
|
Address |
Comment |
|
PMU server |
10.253.0.1 |
Address used to get to the PMU |
|
Route for NXMs |
10.253.0.2 |
default address for addresses not in the proper range of addresses |
|
Telnet server |
10.253.0.3 |
Dedicated address for a telnet session |
|
DHCP addresses |
10.253.0.4-253 |
DHCP address pool |
|
Dedicated PMU address |
10.253.0.254 |
For VMS use |
Drive: W
Folder: \\rwhid1.mro.cpqcorp.net\marvelab

Username: marvel
Password: MarvelLab1+



Server interface: 10.253.0.254

Use the Browse button and select the following path for the Base Directory.
Base Directory: W:\fw_rel\
