Tripp Lite B050 000 KVM switch Installation and User Guide

Tripp Lite B050 000 KVM switch Installation and User Guide
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Below you will find brief information for KVM switch B050 000. The B050-000 provides server management capabilities. You can use the B050-000 to manage and monitor components in your servers through a modem or LAN, even if your network is down. The B050-000 offers a comprehensive hardware solution for server management.

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Tripp Lite B050 000 Installation and User Guide | Manualzz

B050-000 Installation and User Guide

B050-000 Installation and User Guide:

Copyright © 2005-2006 Tripp Lite, 1111 W. 35th Street, Chicago, IL 60609 USA

Based on Firmware 04.01.00

Last updated on 28 April 2006

Document ID:

Table of Contents

Preface ..................................................................................................................................vii

Copyright ................................................................................................................... vii

About the B050-000 ................................................................................................... vii

Limited Warranty ...................................................................................................... vii

Limitations of Liability ............................................................................................. vii

Technical Support.....................................................................................................viii

1. The Quick Start Guide.....................................................................................................1

Installation.....................................................................................................................1

Connectors and Indicators ..........................................................................................1

General Overview...............................................................................................1

Front Side Connectors (Figure 1-2) ..................................................................1

Rear Side Connectors (Figure 1-3)....................................................................2

Connecting the B050-000 to the Host System...........................................................3

Initial Network Configuration ...................................................................................3

B050-000 Setup Tool .....................................................................................................4

Main Window......................................................................................................4

MAC Address Detection....................................................................................5

Authentication ....................................................................................................6

Configuration via Serial Interface..............................................................................6

Web Interface ................................................................................................................7

The Remote Console ....................................................................................................7

2. Introduction .......................................................................................................................9

Introduction ..................................................................................................................9

Features..........................................................................................................................9

B050-000 System Components ...................................................................................9

When the Server is up and running ........................................................................10

When the Server is dead............................................................................................10

3. Installation .......................................................................................................................13

Operation Overview ..................................................................................................13

Connectors and Indicators ........................................................................................13

General Overview.............................................................................................13

Front Side Connectors and Indicators ...........................................................13

Rear Side Connectors .......................................................................................14

Connecting the B050-000 to the Host System.........................................................15

Connecting a Local Console .....................................................................................15

Connecting Ethernet ..................................................................................................16

10 Mbps Connection.........................................................................................16

100 Mbps Connection.......................................................................................16

4. Configuration...................................................................................................................17

Initial Configuration ..................................................................................................17

B050-000 Setup Tool ...................................................................................................17

Main Window....................................................................................................17

MAC Address Detection..................................................................................18

Authentication ..................................................................................................19

Initial Configuration via DHCP Server...................................................................19

Initial Configuration via Serial Console..................................................................19

Web Interface ..............................................................................................................21

Mouse, Keyboard and Video configuration ...........................................................21

B050-000 USB interface ....................................................................................21

B050-000 Keyboard Settings............................................................................21

Remote Mouse Settings....................................................................................21

Auto Mouse Speed and Mouse Synchronization.........................................22

Host System Mouse Settings...........................................................................23

Single and Double Mouse Mode ....................................................................23

Recommended Mouse Settings ......................................................................23

Video Modes......................................................................................................24

iii

iv

Resetting the B050-000 to its Factory Settings........................................................24

Using the Serial Interface.................................................................................24

5. Usage .................................................................................................................................27

Prerequisites................................................................................................................27

Login into the B050-000 and logout.........................................................................28

Login into the B050-000 ...................................................................................28

Navigation .........................................................................................................29

Logout from the B050-000 ...............................................................................30

The Remote Console ..................................................................................................31

General Description..........................................................................................31

Main Window....................................................................................................31

Optimizing the Video Picture .........................................................................42

Reducing the Noise of the Video Picture ......................................................43

Using the B050-000 with low bandwidth......................................................43

6. Menu Options..................................................................................................................45

Remote Control...........................................................................................................45

KVM Console ....................................................................................................45

Remote Power ...................................................................................................45

Telnet Console ...................................................................................................46

Virtual Media ..............................................................................................................48

Floppy Disk .......................................................................................................48

CD ROM.............................................................................................................49

Drive Redirection..............................................................................................53

Options...............................................................................................................59

Creating an Image ............................................................................................59

User Management ......................................................................................................61

Change Password .............................................................................................62

Users And Groups ............................................................................................62

KVM Settings ..............................................................................................................64

User Console .....................................................................................................64

Keyboard/Mouse .............................................................................................67

Video...................................................................................................................69

Device Settings............................................................................................................70

Network .............................................................................................................70

Dynamic DNS ...................................................................................................73

Security...............................................................................................................75

Certificate...........................................................................................................76

Serial Settings ....................................................................................................79

Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) .....................................81

Date And Time ..................................................................................................82

Event Log ...........................................................................................................83

Maintenance................................................................................................................85

Device Information...........................................................................................85

Event Log ...........................................................................................................86

Update Firmware..............................................................................................87

Unit Reset...........................................................................................................88

A. Frequently Asked Questions.......................................................................................91

B. Glossary ...........................................................................................................................93

C. B050-000 Video Modes ..................................................................................................95

D. Users and Roles..............................................................................................................97

E. Key Codes ........................................................................................................................99

F. Pin Assignment.............................................................................................................103

VGA HD-15...............................................................................................................103

RJ45 Connector Ethernet .........................................................................................103

G. Specifications................................................................................................................105

Sizes and Weight ......................................................................................................105

Environment .............................................................................................................105

Temperature.....................................................................................................105

Humidity..........................................................................................................105

H. B050-000 Operation Advices......................................................................................107

I. Tripp Lite Warranty Information................................................................................109

Limited Warranty .....................................................................................................109

Customer Remedies .................................................................................................109

No Other Warranties................................................................................................109

No Liability For Consequential Damages ............................................................109

J. GNU General Public License (GPL)..........................................................................111

K. The OpenLDAP Public License ................................................................................117

v

vi

Preface

Copyright

This publication contains proprietary information which is protected by copyright.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, translated into any language or computer language, or transmitted in any form whatsoever without the prior written consent of the publisher, Tripp Lite.

Tripp Lite acknowledges the following trademarks:

Intel is a registered trademark of Intel Corporation.

Windows 98, Microsoft Windows, and Windows NT are trademarks of Microsoft

Corporation.

IBM, AT, VGA, PS/2, and OS/2 are registered trademarks and XT and CGA are trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation.

Tripp Lite is a registered trademark of Tripp Lite, 1111 W. 35th Street, Chicago, IL

60609 USA.

Other trademarks and trade names may be used in this document to refer to either the entities claiming the marks and names or their products. Tripp Lite disclaims any proprietary interest in trademarks and trade names other than its own.

The firmware of this product uses in part software under GPL licence. See Appendix

J for the license text.

This product includes software developed by the University of California, Berkeley and its contributors.

This software is based in part on the work of the Independent JPEG Group.

This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project for use in the

OpenSSL Toolkit ( http://www.openssl.org/

).

Authors: Tripp Lite Team

This document was created on 28 April 2006.

About the B050-000

The B050-000 provides server management capabilities. You can use the B050-000 to manage and monitor components in your servers through a modem or LAN, even if your network is down. The B050-000 offers a comprehensive hardware solution for server management.

Limited Warranty

The buyer agrees that if this product proves to be defective, Tripp Lite is only obligated to repair or replace this product at Tripp Lite’s discretion according to the terms and conditions of Tripp Lite’s general trading conditions. Tripp Lite shall not be held liable for any loss, expenses or damage, directly, incidentally or consequentially resulting from the use of this product. Please see the Warranty Information shipped with this product for full warranty details.

vii

Preface

Limitations of Liability

Tripp Lite shall in no event be held liable for any loss, expenses or damages of any kind whatsoever, whether direct, indirect, incidental, or consequential (whether arising from the design or use of this product or the support materials provided with the product). No action or proceeding against Tripp Lite may be commenced more than two years after the delivery of the product to the buyer.

Technical Support

If you need help installing, configuring, or running the B050-000, call your Tripp Lite

OEM or VAD Technical Support representative.

We invite you to access the Tripp Lite’s Web site ( http://www.tripplite.com

).

There you shall find all modifications made after the editorial deadline. You may also contact us via email to < [email protected]

>.

viii

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Installation

The B050-000 redirects local keyboard, mouse and video data to a remote administration console. All data is transmitted with the TCP/IP protocol family. The B050-000 can be used in a multi-administrator and multi-server environment as well. Combining the B050-000 with a KVM switch allows to access multiple remote servers over one single remote console.

Connectors and Indicators

General Overview

The B050-000 has peripheral interfaces and indicators on both the front side and the rear side of the device. See the following sections for a detailed description for each side.

Figure 1-1. Connectors and Indicators (General Overview)

1

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Front Side Connectors (Figure 1-2)

Figure 1-2. Front Side Connectors and Indicators

System port

Attach the system cable with the gray connector to this port.

Power/Status LED

Displays the status of the B050-000:

LED off: the B050-000 has no or not enough power

LED blinking: the B050-000 is booting up (if this process takes longer than one minute, the reason may be a lack of power).

LED on: the B050-000 is up and running.

If the B050-000 is connected via USB only and the Power/Status LED tends not to stop blinking after one minute, the B050-000 may not receive enough power via USB. In that case attach the enclosed power supply to the B050-000.

Power supply DC 5V

Attach the enclosed power supply to the B050-000.

Voltage: 5V

Current: 1.5 A

RJ45 Ethernet

UTP3/5 cables can be connected to the B050-000 using this standard RJ45 jack.

2

Rear Side Connectors (Figure 1-3)

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Figure 1-3. Rear Side Connectors

Port replicator

Here you may attach an optional port replicator enabling PS/2 support, serial and local console.

Connecting the B050-000 to the Host System

Perform the following steps in order to connect the KVM signals of the server system to the B050-000:

1. Attach the pre-mounted system cable to

The VGA outlet of your server or the local console video port of your KVM switch. Use the system cables’s blue connector that is still unused.

The USB to one of the USB interfaces of your server or your USB-KVM switch.

2. Connect the RJ45 Ethernet connector to your local Ethernet hub using a CAT5 cable.

3. Connect the external power supply to the 5V power connector and power on the B050-000.

Warning

The USB standard guarantees up to 500mA power per single USB port.

The B050-000 needs up to 700mA current and therefore does not work on USB alone. However, most of the current USB ports provide more than 700mA so that no external power is needed to power the B050-

000. Taking more power from a USB port than specified may cause damage to your computer and is therefore not recommended.

3

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Initial Network Configuration

Initially, the B050-000 network interface is configured with the parameters shown in

Table 1-1.

Table 1-1. Initial Network Configuration

Parameter

IP auto configuration

IP address

Netmask

Gateway

IP access control

Value

DHCP

-

255.255.255.0

none none

Warning

If the DHCP connection fails on boot up, the B050-000 will not have an

IP address.

If this initial configuration does not meet your local requirements, adjust the values to your needs. You may either configure the B050-000 via serial interface, or use the setup tool that can be found on the CD ROM delivered with this package.

B050-000 Setup Tool

The setup tool is used to determine the IP address assigned to the B050-000 by the

DHCP server or to change the device’s initial network configuration.

Main Window

4

Figure 1-4. B050-000 setup tool (Windows version)

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Figure 1-5. B050-000 setup tool (Linux version)

Connect the B050-000 to your computer either via local network or via USB. Start the setup tool from the CD ROM on the computer where the B050-000 is installed.

Depending on the connection (USB or network), the device detection is different.

Note: Configuration via network requires the device to have a valid IP address. If your network provides a properly configured DHCP server the B050-000 should be automatically assigned an IP address.

A window opens as seen in Figure 1-4 (on a Windows OS) and Figure 1-5 (on a Linux

OS).

MAC Address Detection

Using the tool for Windows

On the upper left corner, the MAC address of the B050-000 is displayed. To detect the MAC address manually, press the button “Refresh Devices”. The displayed

MAC address is the same MAC address printed on the white sticker placed on the back of the B050-000. If the B050-000 is connected via USB, it is classified as a USB device and an appropriate drive letter is chosen for this device.

On the lower right corner of the window, there are two buttons: “Query Device” and “Setup Device”. Press the “Query Device” button to display the preconfigured values of the network configuration. The values are displayed in the text fields located above. If necessary, adjust the network settings to your needs. To save the changes enter an user name and an according password. Then press the

“Setup Device” button.

5

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Using the Linux tool

On the top of the window the MAC address of the device is displayed. To detect the MAC address manually, press the button “Refresh”. The displayed MAC address is the same MAC address printed on the white sticker placed on the back of the B050-000. The Linux setup tool does currently not support device configuration via the USB interface. Please use either a network connection or the serial console for the initial device configuration.

Furthermore, there are two buttons on the window: “Query Device” and “Setup

Device”. Press the “Query Device” button to display the preconfigured values of the network configuration. The values are displayed in the text fields located nearby. If necessary, adjust the network settings to your needs. To save the changes enter an user name and an according password. Then press the “Setup

Device” button.

Authentication

To adjust the authentication settings, enter your login as a superuser and change your password.

Super user login

Enter the login name of the super user. The initial value is “super”.

Super user password

Enter the current password for the super user. This initial value is “pass”.

New super user password

Enter the new password for the super user.

New password (confirm)

Re-type the new password for the super user.

To close the window and accept the changes press the “OK” button, otherwise press the “Cancel” button (on Windows). On a Linux system close the window by the appropiate button of the window frame.

Configuration via Serial Interface

To configure the B050-000 via serial interface both a serial port replicator cable and a null modem cable are required. . (available separately).

Connect the Null Modem Cable to the serial interface with the black connector on the port replicator.

The serial interface needs to be adjusted with the parameters as shown in Table 1-2.

Table 1-2. Serial parameters

Parameter

Bits/second

Data bits

Parity

Value

115200

8 no

6

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Parameter

Stop bits

Flow control

Value

1 none

Use a terminal software (e.g.

hyperterm or minicom

) to connect to the B050-000. Reset the B050-000, and immediately press the “ESC” key. You will see a “=>” prompt.

Enter the command “config”, and press the key “ENTER”. Quite soon afterwards you are asked to adjust the IP auto configuration, the IP address, the net mask, and the default gateway. Pressing the “ENTER” key without entering values does not change settings. The gateway value has to be set to

0.0.0.0

(for no gateway) or any other value for the IP address of the gateway. After the confirmation the B050-000 performs a reset using the new values as set before.

Web Interface

The B050-000 may be accessed using a standard Java enabled web browser. You may use the HTTP protocol or a secure encrypted connection via HTTPS. Just enter the configured IP address of the B050-000 into your web browser. The initial login settings are:

Table 1-3. Standard User Settings

Parameter

Login

Password

Value

super pass

Changing these settings to user specific values is strongly recommended and can be

done on the “User Management” page (see the Section called Users And Groups in

Chapter 6).

The Remote Console

The Remote Console is the redirected screen, keyboard and mouse of the remote host system in which the B050-000 is installed. The web browser which is used for accessing the B050-000 has to supply a Java Runtime Environment version 1.1 or higher. However, it is strongly recommended to install Sun JVM 1.4. The Remote

Console will behave exactly the same way as if you were sitting directly in front of the screen of your remote system. That means that both the keyboard and mouse can be used in the usual way. Open the console by selecting the preview picture on the

main site of the HTML frontend. Figure 1-6 shows the top of the Remote Console.

7

Chapter 1. The Quick Start Guide

Figure 1-6. Top part of the Remote Console

There are some options to choose from the menu, the important ones are the following:

Auto Adjust button

If the video displayed is of bad quality or distorted in some way, press this button and wait a few seconds while the B050-000 tries to adjust itself for the best possible video quality.

Sync Mouse

Choose this option in order to synchronize the local with the remote mouse cursor. This is especially necessary when using accelerated mouse settings on the host system. In general, there is no need to change mouse settings on that.

Video Settings in Options Menu

This opens a new window with elements to control the B050-000 Video Settings.

You can change some values, for instance related to brightness and contrast of the picture displayed, which may improve the video quality. It is also possible to revert to the default settings for all video modes or only the current one.

Note: At first start, if the local mouse pointer is not synchronized with the remote mouse pointer, press the Auto Adjust Button once.

8

Chapter 2. Introduction

Introduction

The B050-000 is a manufacturer-independent remote administration system.

The B050-000 works as an integrated solution on your server system. Based on an embedded operating system, the B050-000 provides both exceptional stability and permanent availability independent of the present state of the server’s operating system. As a system administrator, you have entire control and location-independent remote access to react upon both critical incidents and cases of necessary maintenance.

Figure 2-1. The B050-000

Features

The B050-000 defines a new class of remote access devices . It combines digital remote access via IP networks with comprehensive and integrated system management.

The B050-000 offers convenient, remote KVM access and control via LAN or Internet. It captures, digitizes, and compresses video and transmits it with keyboard and mouse signals to and from a remote computer. Remote access and control software runs on its embedded processors only but not on mission critical servers, so that there is no interference with server operation or impact on network performance.

Furthermore, the B050-000 offers additional remote power management with the help of optional available devices. Features of the B050-000 are:

KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) access over IP or analog telephone line

No impact on server or network performance

Automatically senses video resolution for best possible screen capture

High-performance mouse tracking and synchronization

Port to connect a user console for direct analogous access to KVM device

Local Mouse suppression (only when using SUN’s Java Virtual Machine)

9

Chapter 2. Introduction

B050-000 System Components

The B050-000 is a stand alone product with the following dimensions:

95mm (D) x 25mm (H) x 72mm (W)

The B050-000 is shipped with:

• a B050-000 base unit

• an external power supply

• a power cord

• a KVM cable

• transparent equipment feet

• an Installation and User Manual on a CD ROM

• a quick start guide

When the Server is up and running

The B050-000 gives you full control over the remote server. The Management Console allows you to access the remote server’s graphics, keyboard and mouse and to send special commands to the server.

You can also perform periodic maintenance of the server. Using the Console Redirection Service you can do the following:

Reboot the system (a graceful shutdown)

Watch the boot process

Boot the system from a separate partition to load the diagnostic environment

Run special diagnostic programs

When the Server is dead

Obviously, fixing hardware defects is not possible using a remote management device. Nevertheless, the B050-000 gives the administrator valuable information about the type of a hardware failure.

Serious hardware failures can be categorized into five different categories with different chances to happen

1

:

Table 2-1. Hardware failures

Category

Hard disk failure

Power cable detached, power supply failure

CPU, Controller, motherboard failure

CPU fan failure

RAM failure

Probability

50%

28%

10%

8%

4%

10

Chapter 2. Introduction

Using the B050-000, administrators can determine which kind of serious hardware

failure has occurred (see Table 2-2).

Table 2-2. Host system failures and how they are detected

Type of failure

Hard disk failure

Power cable detached, power supply failure

CPU, Controller, main board failure

CPU fan failure

RAM failure

Detected by

Console screen, CMOS set-up information

Server remains in power off state after power on command has been given.

Power supply is on, but there is no video output.

By IPMI or server specific management software

Boot-Sequence on boot console

Notes

1. According to a survey made by the Intel Corp.

11

Chapter 2. Introduction

12

Chapter 3. Installation

Operation Overview

The B050-000 redirects local keyboard, mouse and video data to a remote administration console. All data is transmitted with the TCP/IP protocol family.

The B050-000 can be used in both a multi-administrator and multi-server environment. Combining one or more B050-000 s with a single KVM switch allows access to multiple servers on a single remote console.

Connectors and Indicators

General Overview

The B050-000 has peripheral interfaces and indicators on both the front side and the rear side of the device. See the following sections for a detailed description for each side.

Figure 3-1. Connectors and Indicators (General Overview)

13

Chapter 3. Installation

Front Side Connectors and Indicators

Figure 3-2. Front Side Connectors and Indicators

System port

Attach the system cable with the gray connector to this port.

Power/Status LED

Displays the status of the B050-000:

LED off: the B050-000 has no or not enough power

LED blinking: the B050-000 is booting up (if this process takes longer than one minute, the reason may be a lack of power).

LED on: the B050-000 is up and running.

If the B050-000 is connected via USB only and the Power/Status LED tends not to stop blinking after one minute, the B050-000 may not receive enough power via USB. In that case attach the enclosed power supply to the B050-000.

Power supply DC 5V

Attach the enclosed power supply to the B050-000.

Voltage: 5V

Current: 1.5 A

RJ45 Ethernet

UTP3/5 cables can be connected to the B050-000 using this standard RJ45 jack.

14

Chapter 3. Installation

Rear Side Connectors

Figure 3-3. Rear Side Connectors

Port replicator

Here you may attach an optional port replicator enabling PS/2 support, serial and local console.

Connecting the B050-000 to the Host System

Perform the following steps in order to connect the KVM signals of the server system to the B050-000:

1. Attach the pre-mounted system cable to

The VGA outlet of your server or the local console video port of your KVM switch. Use the system cables’s blue connector that is still unused.

The USB to one of the USB interfaces of your server or your USB-KVM switch.

2. Connect the RJ45 Ethernet connector to your local Ethernet hub using a CAT5 cable.

3. Connect the external power supply to the 5V power connector and power on the B050-000.

Warning

The USB standard guarantees up to 500mA power per single USB port.

The B050-000 needs up to 700mA current and therefore does not work on USB alone. However, most of the current USB ports provide more than 700mA so that no external power is needed to power the B050-

000. Taking more power from a USB port than specified may cause damage to your computer and is therefore not recommended.

15

Chapter 3. Installation

Connecting a Local Console

To connect a local console to the host system besides the B050-000 you may attach a monitor, a keyboard and a mouse to the connectors on the port replicator (available separately) .

Connecting Ethernet

The front side of the B050-000 provides a RJ45 connector for Ethernet. The connector is used either for a 100 Mbps 100Base-TX connection or for a 10 Mbps 10BASE-T connection. The adapter can sense the connection speed and will adjust to the appropriate operation mode automatically.

10 Mbps Connection

For 10BASE-T Ethernet networks the Fast Ethernet adapter uses category 3, 4, or 5

UTP cable. To establish a 10 Mbps connection, the cable has to be connected to a

10BASE-T hub.

1. Make sure that the cable is wired appropriately for a standard 10BASE-T adapter.

2. Align the RJ45 plug with the notch on the adapter’s connector and insert it into the adapter’s connector.

100 Mbps Connection

For 100BASE-TX Ethernet networks the B050-000 supports category 5 UTP cabling.

To establish a 100 Mbps connection, the cable has to be connected to a 100BASE-TX hub.

1. Make sure that the cable is wired appropriately for a standard 100BASE-TX adapter.

2. Align the RJ45 plug with the notch on the adapter’s connector and insert it into the adapter’s connector.

Warning

The UTP wire pairs and configuration for 100BASE-TX cable are identical to those for 10BASE-T cable when used with category 5 UTP cable.

16

Chapter 4. Configuration

Initial Configuration

The B050-000’s communication interfaces are all based on TCP/IP. It comes pre-

configured with the IP configuration listed in Table 4-1.

Table 4-1. Initial network configuration

Parameter

IP auto configuration

IP address

Netmask

Gateway

IP access control

Value

DHCP

-

255.255.255.0

none none

Warning

If the DHCP connection fails on boot up, the B050-000 will not have an

IP address.

If this initial configuration does not meet your requirements, the following describes the initial IP configuration that is necessary to access the B050-000 for the first time.

B050-000 Setup Tool

The setup tool is used to determine the IP address assigned to the B050-000 by the

DHCP server or to change the device’s initial network configuration.

Main Window

Figure 4-1. B050-000 setup tool (Windows version)

17

Chapter 4. Configuration

18

Figure 4-2. B050-000 setup tool (Linux version)

Connect the B050-000 to your computer either via local network or via USB. Start the setup tool from the CD ROM on the computer where the B050-000 is installed.

Depending on the connection (USB or network), the device detection is different.

Note: Configuration via network requires the device to have a valid IP address. If your network provides a properly configured DHCP server the B050-000 should be automatically assigned an IP address.

A window opens as seen in Figure 4-1 (on a Windows OS) and Figure 4-2 (on a Linux

OS).

MAC Address Detection

Using the tool for Windows

On the upper left corner, the MAC address of the B050-000 is displayed. To detect the MAC address manually, press the button “Refresh Devices”. The displayed

MAC address is the same MAC address printed on the white sticker placed on the back of the B050-000. If the B050-000 is connected via USB, it is classified as a USB device and an appropriate drive letter is chosen for this device.

On the lower right corner of the window, there are two buttons: “Query Device” and “Setup Device”. Press the “Query Device” button to display the preconfigured values of the network configuration. The values are displayed in the text fields located above. If necessary, adjust the network settings to your needs. To

Chapter 4. Configuration save the changes enter an user name and an according password. Then press the

“Setup Device” button.

Using the Linux tool

On the top of the window the MAC address of the device is displayed. To detect the MAC address manually, press the button “Refresh”. The displayed MAC address is the same MAC address printed on the white sticker placed on the back of the B050-000. The Linux setup tool does currently not support device configuration via the USB interface. Please use either a network connection or the serial console for the initial device configuration.

Furthermore, there are two buttons on the window: “Query Device” and “Setup

Device”. Press the “Query Device” button to display the preconfigured values of the network configuration. The values are displayed in the text fields located nearby. If necessary, adjust the network settings to your needs. To save the changes enter an user name and an according password. Then press the “Setup

Device” button.

Authentication

To adjust the authentication settings, enter your login as a superuser and change your password.

Super user login

Enter the login name of the super user. The initial value is “super”.

Super user password

Enter the current password for the super user. This initial value is “pass”.

New super user password

Enter the new password for the super user.

New password (confirm)

Re-type the new password for the super user.

To close the window and accept the changes press the “OK” button, otherwise press the “Cancel” button (on Windows). On a Linux system close the window by the appropiate button of the window frame.

Initial Configuration via DHCP Server

By default, the B050-000 will try to contact a DHCP server in the subnet to which it is physically connected. If a DHCP server is found, it may provide a valid IP address, gateway address and net mask. Before you connect the device to your local subnet, be sure to complete the corresponding configuration of your DHCP server. It is recommended to configure a fixed IP assignment to the MAC address of the B050-000.

You can find the MAC address on the outside of the shipping box and labeled on the bottom side.

If this initial configuration does not meet your local requirements, use the setup tool to adjust the values to your needs. The setup tool can be found on the CD ROM delivered with this package. You can follow the procedure described below.

19

Chapter 4. Configuration

Initial Configuration via Serial Console

To configure the B050-000 via serial interface both a serial port replicator cable and a null modem cable are required (available separately).

Using a serial terminal, the B050-000 has a serial line interface (rear side). This connector is compliant with the RS 232 serial line standard. To establish a serial connection use a standard NULL-Modem cable. The serial line has to be configured with the

parameters given in Table 4-2.

When configuring with a serial terminal, reset the B050-000 and immediately press the “ESC” key. You will see a “=>” prompt. Enter “config”, press “Enter” and wait for a few seconds for the configuration questions to appear.

Table 4-2. Serial line parameters

Parameter

Bits/second

Data bits

Parity

Stop bits

Flow control

Value

115200

8 no

1 none

As you proceed, the following questions will appear on the screen. To accept the default values which are shown in square brackets below, press “Enter”.

IP auto configuration (non/dhcp/bootp) [dhcp]:

IP [192.168.1.22]:

Net mask [255.255.255.0]:

Gateway (0.0.0.0 for none) [0.0.0.0]:

IP autoconfiguration

With this option you can specify whether the B050-000 should get its network settings from a DHCP or BOOTP server. For DHCP, enter “dhcp”, and for BOOTP enter “bootp”. If you do not specify any of these, the IP autoconfiguration is disabled and subsequently you will be asked for the following network settings.

IP address

The IP address the B050-000 uses. This option is only available if IP autoconfiguration is disabled.

Net mask

The net mask of the connected IP subnet. This option is only available if IP autoconfiguration is disabled.

Gateway address

The IP address of the default router for the connected IP subnet. If you do not have a default router, enter

0.0.0.0

. This option is only available if IP autoconfiguration is disabled.

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Chapter 4. Configuration

Finally, you will be asked if the values are correct, and may adjust them if necessary.

After your confirmation the B050-000 performs a reset using the new values.

Web Interface

The B050-000 may be accessed using a standard Java enabled web browser. You may use the HTTP protocol or a secure encrypted connection via HTTPS. Just enter the configured IP address of the B050-000 into your web browser. The initial login settings are:

Table 4-3. Standard User Settings

Parameter

Login

Password

Value

super pass

Changing these settings to user specific values is strongly recommended and can be

done on the “User Management” page (see the Section called Users And Groups in

Chapter 6).

Mouse, Keyboard and Video configuration

Between the B050-000 and the host, there are two interfaces available for transmitting keyboard and mouse data: USB and PS/2 (available separately). The correct operation of the remote mouse depends on several settings which will be discussed in the following subsections.

B050-000 USB interface

To use the USB interface a correct cabling between the managed host and the managing device is necessary. If the managed host has no USB keyboard support in the

BIOS and you have connected the USB cable only, then you will have no remote

keyboard access during the boot process of the host. Please see the Section called

Keyboard/Mouse in Chapter 6 for more details.

B050-000 Keyboard Settings

The B050-000 settings for the host’s keyboard type have to be correct in order to make the remote keyboard work properly. Check the settings in the B050-000 front-end. See

the Section called Keyboard/Mouse in Chapter 6 for details.

Remote Mouse Settings

A common problem with KVM devices is the synchronization between the local and remote mouse cursors. The B050-000 addresses this situation with an intelligent synchronization algorithm. There are three mouse modes available on the B050-000.

Auto Mouse Speed

The automatic mouse speed mode tries to detect the speed and acceleration settings of the host system automatically. See the section below for a more detailed explanation.

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Chapter 4. Configuration

Fixed Mouse Speed

This mode just translates the mouse movements from the Remote Console in a way that one pixel move will lead to n pixel moves on the remote system. This parameter n is adjustable with the scaling. It should be noted that this works only when mouse acceleration is turned off on the remote system.

Single/Double Mouse Mode

This mode is described in the Section called Single and Double Mouse Mode.

Auto Mouse Speed and Mouse Synchronization

The automatic mouse speed mode performs the speed detection during mouse synchronization. Whenever the mouse does not move correctly, there are two ways for re-synchronizing local and remote mouse:

Fast Sync

The fast synchronization is used to correct a temporary but fixed skew. Choose this option from the Remote Console Options menu (entry: Mouse Handling). If

defined you may also press the mouse synchronization hotkey sequence (see the

Section called Remote Console Control Bar in Chapter 5 for details) .

Intelligent Sync

If the Fast Sync does not work or the mouse settings have been changed on the host system, use the Intelligent Synchronization, instead. This method adjusts the parameters for the actual movement of the mouse pointer so that the mouse pointer is displayed at the correct position on the screen.

This method takes more time than the Fast Sync and can be accessed with the appropriate item in the Remote Console Option menu (entry: Mouse Handling).

The Intelligent Synchronization requires a correctly adjusted picture. Use the

Auto Adjustment function or the manual correction in the Video Settings panel to setup the picture.

Furthermore, the shape of the mouse pointer has a significant influence on the pointer detection. We recommend to use a simple, but common pointer shape.

In most cases, the detection and synchronization of animated pointer shapes is likely to fail. In general, pointer shapes that change during the pointer detection process are rather impossible to figure out in the transferred video picture. With the usage of a standard mouse pointer shape the detection is rather simple and the syncronization is at its best.

Figure 4-3. Remote Console Control Bar: Sync Button

The Sync Mouse button on top of the Remote Console can behave differently, depending on the current state of mouse synchronization. Usually pressing this button leads to a Fast Sync, except in situations where the video mode changed

recently. See also the Section called Remote Console Control Bar in Chapter 5.

Note: At first start, if the local mouse pointer is not synchronized with the remote mouse pointer, press the Auto Adjust Button once.

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Chapter 4. Configuration

Host System Mouse Settings

The host’s operating system knows various settings for the mouse driver.

Warning

The following limitations do not apply in case of USB and Mouse Type

“MS Windows 2000 and newer”.

While the B050-000 works with accelerated mice and is able to synchronize the local with the remote mouse pointer, there are the following limitations which may prevent this synchronization from working properly:

Special Mouse Driver

There are mouse drivers which influence the synchronization process and lead to desynchronized mouse pointers. If this happens, make sure you do not use a special vendor-specific mouse driver on your host system.

Windows 2003 Server/XP Mouse Settings

Windows XP knows a setting named “improve mouse acceleration” which has to be deactivated.

Active Desktop

If the Active Desktop feature of Microsoft Windows is enabled, do not use a plain background. Instead, use some kind of wallpaper. As an alternative, you could also disable the Active Desktop completely.

See also the Section called Recommended Mouse Settings for mouse mode recommen-

dations.

Navigate your mouse pointer into the upper left corner of the applet screen and move it slightly forth and back. Thus the mouse will be resynchronized. If resynchronizing fails, disable the mouse acceleration and repeat the procedure.

Single and Double Mouse Mode

The information above applies to the Double Mouse Mode where remote and local mouse pointers are visible and need to be synchronized. The B050-000 also features another mode, the Single Mouse Mode, where only the remote mouse pointer is vis-

ible. Activate this mode in the Remote Console (see the Section called Remote Console

Control Bar in Chapter 5) and click into the window area. The local mouse pointer

will be hidden and the remote one can be controlled directly. To leave this mode it is necessary to define a mouse hotkey in the Remote Console Settings Panel Press this key to free the captured local mouse pointer.

Recommended Mouse Settings

For the different operating systems we can give the following advice:

MS Windows NT4

NT4 supports PS/2, only. Please choose the options PS/2 mouse and Auto

Mouse Speed.

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Chapter 4. Configuration

MS Windows 2000, 2003, XP (all versions)

In general, we recommend the usage of a mouse via USB. Choose USB without

Mouse Sync.

For a PS/2 mouse choose Auto Mouse Speed. For XP disable the option “enhance pointer precision” in the Control Panel.

Note: The remote mouse is always synchronized with the local mouse if selecting the option “MS Windows 2000 or newer”.

SUN Solaris

Adjust the mouse settings either via “xset m 1” or use the CDE Control Panel to set the mouse to “1:1, no acceleration”. As an alternative you may also use the

Single Mouse Mode.

MAC OS X

We recommend using the Single Mouse Mode.

OS/2

We recommend using the Single Mouse Mode.

Linux

First, choose the option “Other Operating Systems” from the the Mouse Type selection box. Second, choose the option Auto Mouse Speed. This applies for both USB and PS/2 mice.

Video Modes

The B050-000 recognizes a limited number of common video modes. When running

X11 on the host system please do not use any custom modelines with special video modes. If you do, the B050-000 may not be able to detect them. We recommend using

any of the standard VESA video modes instead. Please refer to Appendix C for a list

of all supported video modes.

Resetting the B050-000 to its Factory Settings

Using the Serial Interface

Reset the B050-000 and immediately press the “ESC” key. On your screen a command prompt “=>” will be visible. Enter the command “defaults”, press the “Enter” key and wait for a few seconds for the B050-000 to reboot. Now, you may use the default

settings as described in the Section called Initial Configuration.

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Chapter 4. Configuration

Figure 4-4. Terminal with reset messages

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Chapter 4. Configuration

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Chapter 5. Usage

Prerequisites

The B050-000 features an embedded operating system and applications offering a variety of standardized interfaces. This chapter will describe both these interfaces and the way to use them in a more detailed manner. The interfaces are accessed using the TCP/IP protocol family, thus they can be accessed using the built-in Ethernet adapter.

The following interfaces are supported:

HTTP/HTTPS

Full access is provided by the embedded web server. The B050-000 environment can be entirely managed using a standard web browser. You can access the B050-

000 using the insecure HTTP protocol or using the encrypted HTTPS protocol.

Whenever possible use HTTPS.

Telnet

A standard Telnet client can be used to access an arbitrary device connected to the B050-000’s serial port via a terminal mode.

SSH

The B050-000 also offers SSH (Secure Shell) access as a secure alternative to Telnet.

The primary interface of the B050-000 is the HTTP interface. This is covered extensively in this chapter. Other interfaces are addressed in subtopics.

In order to use the Remote Console window of your managed host system, the browser has to come with a Java Runtime Environment version 1.1 or higher. If the browser has no Java support (such as on a small handheld device), you are still able to maintain your remote host system using the administration forms displayed by the browser itself.

Important: We recommend to install a Sun JVM 1.4.

For an insecure connection to the B050-000 we can recommend the following web browsers:

Microsoft Internet Explorer version 5.0 or higher on Windows 98, Windows ME,

Windows 2000 and Windows XP

Netscape Navigator 7.0, Mozilla 1.6 and Mozilla Firefox on Windows 98, Windows

ME, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Linux and other UNIX-like Operating Systems

In order to access the remote host system using a securely encrypted connection, you need a browser that supports the HTTPS protocol. Strong security is only assured by using a key length of 128 Bit. Some of the old browsers do not have a strong 128 Bit encryption algorithm.

Using the Internet Explorer, open the menu entry “?” and “Info” to read about the key length that is currently activated. The dialog box contains a link that leads you to

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Chapter 5. Usage information on how to upgrade your browser to a state of the art encryption scheme.

Figure 5-1 shows the dialog box presented by the Internet Explorer 6.0.

Figure 5-1. The Internet Explorer displaying the encryption key length

Newer web browsers do support strong encryption by default.

Login into the B050-000 and logout

Login into the B050-000

Open your web browser. Type in the address of your B050-000 which you configured during the installation process. The address used might be a plain IP address or a host and domain name, in case you have given your B050-000 a symbolic name in the DNS. For instance, type the following in the address line of your browser when establishing an unsecured connection: http://192.168.1.22/

In order to use a secure connection type in: https://192.168.1.22/

This will lead you to the B050-000 login page as shown in Figure 5-2.

Figure 5-2. Login screen

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Chapter 5. Usage

Warning

Your web browser has to accept cookies or else login is not possible.

The B050-000 has a built-in super user that has all the permissions to administrate your B050-000. See the following table for the default settings. Please note that the user “super” is not allowed to login via the serial interface of the B050-000.

Table 5-1. Standard User Settings

Parameter

Login

Password

Value

super pass

Warning

Please make sure to change the super user password immediately after you have installed and accessed your B050-000 for the first time. Not changing the pass phrase for the super user is a severe security risk and might result in unauthorized access to the B050-000 and to the host system including all possible consequences!

Navigation

Having logged into the B050-000 successfully, the main page of the B050-000 appears

(see Figure 5-3). This page consists of three parts, each of them contains specific in-

formation. The buttons on the upper side allow you to navigate within the front end

(see Table 5-2 for details). The lower left frame contains a navigation bar and allows

you to switch between the different sections of the B050-000. Within the right frame, task-specific information is displayed that depends on the section you have chosen before.

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Chapter 5. Usage

Figure 5-3. Main page

Table 5-2. Buttons from the front end

30

Return to the main page of the B050-000.

Open the B050-000 Remote Console.

Exit from the B050-000 front end.

Warning

If there is no activity for half an hour, the B050-000 will log you out automatically. A click on one of the links will bring you back to the login screen.

Logout from the B050-000

This link logs out the current user and presents a new login screen. Please note that an automatic logout will be performed in case there is no activity for half an hour.

Chapter 5. Usage

The Remote Console

General Description

The Remote Console is the redirected screen, keyboard and mouse of the remote host system that the B050-000 controls.

Figure 5-4. Remote Console

The Remote Console window is a Java Applet that tries to establish its own TCP connection to the B050-000. The protocol that is run over this connection is neither

HTTP nor HTTPS, but RFB (Remote Frame Buffer Protocol). Currently RFB tries to establish a connection to port #443. Your local network environment has to allow this connection to be made, i.e. your firewall and, in case you have a private internal network, your NAT (Network Address Translation) settings have to be configured accordingly.

In case the B050-000 is connected to your local network environment and your connection to the Internet is available using a proxy server only without NAT being configured, the Remote Console is very unlikely to be able to establish the according connection. This is because today’s web proxies are not capable of relaying the RFB protocol.

In case of problems, please consult your network administrator in order to provide an appropriate network environment.

Main Window

Starting the Remote Console opens an additional window. It displays the screen content of your host system. The Remote Console will behave exactly in the same way as if you were sitting directly in front of the screen of your remote system. That means keyboard and mouse can be used in the usual way. However, be aware of the fact that the remote system will react to keyboard and mouse actions with a slight delay.

The delay depends on the bandwidth of the line which you use to connect to the

B050-000.

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Chapter 5. Usage

With respect to the keyboard, the very exact remote representation might lead to some confusion as your local keyboard changes its keyboard layout according to the remote host system. If you use a German administration system and your host system uses a US English keyboard layout, for instance, special keys on the German keyboard will not work as expected. Instead, the keys will result in their US English counterpart. You can circumvent such problems by adjusting the keyboard of your remote system to the same mapping as your local one.

The Remote Console window always tries to show the remote screen with its optimal size. That means it will adapt its size to the size of the remote screen initially and after the screen resolution of the remote screen has been changed. However, you can always resize the Remote Console window in your local window system as usual.

Warning

In difference to the remote host system, the Remote Console window on your local window system is just one window among others. In order to make keyboard and mouse work, your Remote Console window must have the local input focus.

Remote Console Control Bar

The upper part of the Remote Console window contains a control bar. Using its elements you can see the status of the Remote Console and influence the local Remote

Console settings. A description for each control follows.

Figure 5-5. Remote Console Control Bar

Ctrl+Alt+Delete

Special button key to send the “Control Alt Delete” key combination to the re-

mote system (see also the Section called KVM Settings in Chapter 6 for defining

new button keys).

Auto Adjust button

If the video displayed is of bad quality or distorted in some way, press this button and wait a few seconds while the B050-000 tries to adjust itself for the best possible video quality.

Sync Mouse

Choose this option in order to synchronize the local with the remote mouse cursor. This is especially necessary when using accelerated mouse settings on the host system. In general, there is no need to change mouse settings on that.

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Chapter 5. Usage

Single/Double Mouse Mode

Switches between the Single Mouse Mode (where only the remote mouse pointer is visible) and the Double Mouse Mode (where remote and local mouse pointers are visible and need to be synchonized). Single Mouse Mode is only available if using SUN JVM 1.4 or higher.

Options

To open the Options menu click on the button “Options”. See the Section called

Remote Console Options for a detailed description of the available options for the

B050-000.

Remote Console Options

To open the Options menu click on the button “Options”.

Figure 5-6. Remote Console Options Menu

A description of the options follows.

Monitor Only

Toggles the Monitor Only filter on or off. If the filter is switched on no remote console interaction is possible. The remote screen can be viewed, only.

Exclusive Access

If a user has the appropriate permission, he can force the Remote Consoles of all other users to close. No one can open the Remote Console at the same time again until this user disables the exclusive access or logs off.

Note: This option is only accessible for members of the “administrator” group and the user

“super”.

A change in the access mode is also visible in the status line. See the Section called

Remote Console Status Line for more information.

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Chapter 5. Usage

Scaling

Allows you to scale down the Remote Console. You can still use both mouse and keyboard, however the scaling algorithm will not preserve all display details.

Figure 5-7. Remote Console Options Menu: Scaling

Mouse Handling

The submenu for mouse handling offers two options for synchronizing the local and

the remote mouse pointer as explained in the Section called Mouse, Keyboard and Video configuration in Chapter 4.

34

Figure 5-8. Remote Console Options Menu: Mouse Handling

Fast Sync

The fast synchronization is used to correct a temporary but fixed skew.

Intelligent Sync

Chapter 5. Usage

Use this option if the fast sync does not work or the mouse settings have been changed on the host system.

Warning

This method takes more time than the fast one and requires a correctly adjusted picture. To setup the picture you may use either the auto adjustment function or the manual correction in the Video

Settings panel .

Local Cursor

Offers a list of different cursor shapes to choose from for the local mouse pointer.

The selected shape will be saved for the current user and activated the next time this user opens the Remote Console. The number of available shapes depends on the Java

Virtual Machine, a version of 1.2 or higher offers the full list.

Figure 5-9. Remote Console Options Menu: Cursor

Video Settings

Opens a panel for changing the B050-000 video settings. The B050-000 features two different dialogs which influence the video settings.

Video Settings through the HTML Frontend

Select this option to enable local video port. This option decides if the local video output of the B050-000 is active and passing through the incoming signal from the host system.

The option Noise Filter defines how the B050-000 reacts to small changes in the video input signal. A large filter setting needs less network traffic and leads to a faster video display but small changes in some display regions may not be recognized immediately. A small filter displays all changes instantly but may lead to a constant amount of network traffic even if display content is not really changing

(depending on the quality of the video input signal). All in all the default setting should be suitable for most situations.

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Chapter 5. Usage

Video Settings through the remote console

36

Figure 5-10. Video Settings Panel

Brightness

Controls the brightness of the picture.

Contrast

Controls the contrast of the picture.

Clock

Defines the horizontal frequency for a video line and depends on the video mode. Different video card types may require different values here. The default settings in conjunction with the auto adjustment procedure should be adequate for all common configurations. To achieve a better picture quality you may try to change this setting together with the sampling phase.

Phase

Defines the phase for video sampling, used to control the display quality together with the setting for sampling clock.

Horizontal Position

Use the left and right buttons to move the picture in horizontal direction while this option is selected.

Vertical Position

Use the left and right buttons to move the picture in vertical direction while this option is selected.

Reset this Mode

Reset mode specific settings to the factory-made defaults.

Reset all Modes

Reset all settings to the factory-made defaults.

Save changes

Save changes permanently.

Chapter 5. Usage

Undo Changes

Restore last settings.

Note: The Video Settings Panel and the according entry in the Options menu is only available for members of the “administrator” group and the user “super”.

Refresh Video

Use this option to refresh the video picture. The video data for the Remote Console is updated completely.

On startup of the Remote Console, the B050-000 transmits the entire video picture from the remote host. Subsequently, the parts of the video picture that did not change are filtered and not transmitted, again. This leads to less video data to be transmitted.

It may happen that there are parts of the video picture that are not updated correctly

(video noise, compression errors). You may use this option to initiate an entire refresh, manually.

Soft Keyboard

The Soft Keyboard simulates an entire keyboard that is connected to the remote system. It is necessary in case your remote system runs with a completely different language and country mapping than your administration machine. By selecting the according button(s) you can send key codes and also key sequences to the remote system and act as if you would work with a keyboard that is directly connected to the remote system.

In order to open the Soft Keyboard select the entry “Soft Keyboard” from the Options menu. You can send single key strokes like

F as well as combinations of keys such as

Ctrl+C or

AltGr+Shift+F4

.

For a single key stroke you can click on the button with the according character.

Single keys such as regular characters and numbers are sent immediately. Special keys like

Ctrl

,

Shift as well as the function keys

F1 to

F12 have to be selected twice.

The first press sends the signal “key is pressed”, the second press indicated the signal

“key is released” to the remote system. After the first press the button will change its color to signalize that the according key is pressed, currently. After the second press the button will appear as usual and signalize that the key was sent.

To send the key combination

Ctrl+C select the button

Ctrl first. The button will change its color. Press the button

C

. The following key (

C in our example) will be combined with the previously selected key. Both the buttons

Ctrl and

C are released and the key combination will be sent to the remote system. The button

Ctrl will appear as normal (color change).

In order to send the key combination

Ctrl+F5 three steps have to be done. Select the button

Ctrl once and the button

F5 twice. The last press will release both buttons and send the key combination to the remote system.

In order to send the key combination

AltGr+Shift+F4 four steps are required. First, select the button

AltGr once. Second, select the button

Shift

. Finally, choose the button

F4 twice. The last press will release all the buttons and send the key combination to the remote system.

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Chapter 5. Usage

Figure 5-11. Soft Keyboard

Show

Displays the Soft Keyboard.

Mapping

Used for choosing the according language and country mapping of the Soft Keyboard.

38

Figure 5-12. Soft Keyboard Mapping

Chapter 5. Usage

Local Keyboard

Used to change the language mapping of your browser machine running the Remote Console Applet. Normally, the applet determines the correct value automatically. However, depending on your particular JVM and your browser settings this is not always possible. A typical example is a German localized system that uses a

US-English keyboard mapping. In this case you have to change the Local Keyboard setting to the right language manually.

Hotkeys

Opens a list of hotkeys defined before. In order to send a registered command to the host system choose the according entry.

A confirmation dialog can be added that will be displayed before sending the selected command to the remote host. Choose “OK” to perform the command on the remote

host. For a detailed description see the Section called Remote Console Button Keys in

Chapter 6.

Figure 5-13. Remote Console Confirmation Dialog

Encoding

These options are used to adjust the encoding level in terms of compression and color depth. They are only available unless “Transmission Encoding” is determined

automatically (see the Section called Transmission Encoding in Chapter 6).

Compression level

You may select an value between 1 and 9 for the desired compression level with level 1 enabling the fastest compression and level 9 the best compression. The most suitable compression level should always be seen as a compromise between the network bandwith that is available, on your video picture to be transferred, and on the number of changes between two single video pictures. We recommend to use a higher compression level if the network bandwidth is low. The higher the compression level the more time is necessary to both pack or unpack the video data on either side of the connection. The compression quality depends on the video picture itself, e.g. the number of the colors or the diversity of pixels. The lower the compression quality, the more data have to be sent and the longer it may take to transfer the whole video picture.

If level 0 is chosen the video compression is disabled, completely.

The option “Video Optimized” has its advantages if transferring high-quality motion pictures. In this case the video compression is disabled, completely and all video data is transferred via network as full-quality video snippets. Therefore, a high amount of bandwidth is required to ensure the quality of the video picture.

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Chapter 5. Usage

40

Figure 5-14. Remote Console Options: Encoding compression

Color depth

Set the desired color depth. You may select between 8 or 16 bit for Video Optimized/compression level 0, or between 1 and 8 bit for compression level 1 to 9.

The higher the color depth, the more video information has to be captured and to be transferred.

Chapter 5. Usage

Figure 5-15. Remote Console Options: Color Depth

Note: If displaying motion pictures on a connection with low speed you may achieve an improvement regarding the video transfer rate by lowering the color depth and disabling the option “Video Optimized”. As a general result, the data rate is reduced (less bits per color). Furthermore, the B050-000 will not have to do any video compression. In total, this will lead to less transfer time of the motion picture.

Remote Console Status Line

The status line shows both console and the connection state. On the left the size of

the remote screen is displayed. Figure 5-16 was taken from a Remote Console with

a resolution of 800x600 pixels (see Appendix C for a list of screen resolutions that

can be displayed using the B050-000). The value in brackets describes the connection to the Remote Console. “Norm” means a standard connection without encryption,

“SSL” indicates a secure connection using Secure Socket Layer (SSL).

Figure 5-16. Status line

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Chapter 5. Usage

The status line displays the number of frame buffer updates (“Fps”) as well as the incoming (“In:”) and the outgoing (“Out:”) network traffic in kilobyte per second. A low value of the network traffic is recommended and can be achieved as described

in the Section called Optimizing the Video Picture. If compressed encoding is enabled,

a value in brackets displays the compressed transfer rate.

Figure 5-17. Status line transfer rate

The next button displays the Remote Console Access settings.

Table 5-3. Buttons displaying the access state

One single user is connected to the Remote Console of the

B050-000.

One or more users are connected to the Remote Console of the

B050-000.

Exclusive access is set for you. Any other user may not access the remote host via Remote Console unless you disable this option.

A remote user has exclusive access. You may not access the remote host via Remote Console unless the other user disables this option.

The outer right button displays the state of the Monitor Only settings.

Table 5-4. Buttons displaying the Monitor Only state

The option Monitor Only is disabled.

The option Monitor Only is enabled.

For more information about Monitor Only and Exclusive Access settings see the ac-

cording paragraphs in the Section called Remote Console Control Bar.

Optimizing the Video Picture

To achieve an optimal video picture for the Remote Console you may follow the steps as given here:

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Chapter 5. Usage

1. Press the Auto Adjust button once (see the Section called Remote Console Control

Bar for details).

2. Choose the option “Video Settings” from the Options Menu of the Remote

Console. Press the button “Reset this Mode”.

Figure 5-18. Remote Console Video Settings: Reset this Mode

3. Again, press the Auto Adjust button once.

4. The B050-000 detects the video mode with 8 bits (256 colors) automatically. To improve the picture quality you may select 16 bit (True Color) from the Options

Menu of the Remote Console, sub menu “Encoding”, entry “Color Depth” (see

the Section called Encoding for details).

5. Finally, if the the Remote Console transfer rate is too high you may do an adjustment using the Noise filter. The higher the filter level the more information

is filtered from the transferred video picture (see the Section called Video in

Chapter 6 for details) and the data rate is reduced.

Currently, the video picture with the best quality can be achieved with the settings

“16 bit (High Color)” in the Remote Console or “LAN (High Colour)” in the web

frontend. This option can also be preset in the Section called User Console in Chapter

6.

The sub menu “Compression” from the Options menu has no influence on the picture quality but on the data rate of the picture that is transferred to the Remote Console.

Reducing the Noise of the Video Picture

To reduce the noise from the video picture for the Remote Console you may adjust the

Noise filter. Prior to that we recommend to optimize the video picture as described

in the Section called Optimizing the Video Picture.

In most cases the rate of transferred data indicates the noise level. The higher the transfer rate, the higher the noise of the video picture. You may do an adjustment using the Noise filter. The higher the filter level the more information is filtered from

the transferred video picture (see the Section called Video in Chapter 6 for details) and

the data rate is reduced.

Using the B050-000 with low bandwidth

The network connection of the B050-000 has an important influence on the time between two single video pictures. On a connection with low bandwidth it takes longer

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Chapter 5. Usage to transfer the video data from the B050-000 to the Remote Console on the local host.

If the remote screen has changed a new picture is sent.

In terms of transfer time there is no difference between text screens and screens in graphics mode. The video picture is taken as graphics data no matter what the screen looks like and which video mode is chosen.

In terms of transferred data there can be an improvement. The compression plays an important role here. You can choose a compression level from the sub menu “Compression” in the Options menu of the Remote Console.

Please note that the video will be compressed on the B050-000, transferred to the

Remote Console and unpacked in a Java environment. Depending on the remote host and on the local machine this procedure may take some time and may result in an slowly updated picture in the Remote Console.

To improve the speed you may also set the picture quality in the Remote Console to either “8 bit” or even to grayscale. Due to less video data to be processed this is likely to be more effective than the highest compression level.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Remote Control

KVM Console

Figure 6-1. KVM Console

Remote Console Preview

To open the KVM console either click on the menu entry on the left or on the console picture on the right. To refresh the picture click on the button that is named “Refresh”.

45

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Remote Power

46

Figure 6-2. B050-000 Power Buttons

Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI)

The B050-000 is capable of controlling the power status of an IPMI-enabled host sys-

tem. See the Section called Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) for config-

uration instructions.

If the B050-000 is configured to act as an IPMI client the Remote Power Control page will show three buttons:

Power On

Sends an IPMI “Power On” command to the Baseboard Management Controller

(BMC).

Power Off

Sends an IPMI “Power Off” command to the BMC.

Reset

Sends an IPMI “Hard Reset” command to the BMC.

Telnet Console

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-3. Telnet Console

The B050-000 firmware features a Telnet gateway that enables a user to connect to the

B050-000 via a standard Telnet client.

For connecting to the B050-000 via Telnet protocol you may use a terminal program such as xterm

,

TeraTerm or

Putty

. As an alternative you may also enter the telnet command on the command line or use the “Run” dialog from the Windows Start

Menu. As an example you may type the following sequence: telnet 192.168.1.22

Replace the IP address by the one that is actually assigned to the B050-000. This will prompt for user name and password in order to log into the device. The credentials that need to be entered for authentication are identical to those of the web interface.

That means the user management of the Telnet interface is entirely controlled with the according functions of the web interface.

Once you have successfully logged into the B050-000 a command line will be presented and you can enter the according management commands.

In general, the Telnet interface supports two operation modes: the command line mode and the terminal mode. The command line mode is used to control or display some parameters. In terminal mode the pass-through access to serial port 1 is activated (if the serial settings were made accordingly). To access the B050-000 via serial interface both a serial port replicator cable and a null modem cable are required

(available separately). All inputs are redirected to the device on serial port #1 and its answers are displayed on the Telnet interface.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

The following list shows the command syntax and their usage.

help

Displays the list of possible commands quit

Exits the current session and disconnects from the client version

Displays the release information terminal

Starts the terminal pass-through mode for serial port #1. The key sequence esc exit switches back to the command mode. The command has an optional parameter (1 or 2) to select the desired serial port for pass-through access.

Virtual Media

Floppy Disk

48

Figure 6-4. Virtual Floppy Area

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Upload a Floppy Image

Within two small steps working on the basis of a certain (floppy) image can be achieved.

First the path of the image has to be specified. You can do that either by hand or by using the file selection dialog of your web browser. To open the file selection dialog click on the button “Browse” and select the desired image file.

Figure 6-5. Select Image File

The maximum image size is limited to 1.44MB. To use a larger image mount this

image via Windows Share (or SAMBA) (see the Section called Use Image on Windows

Share (SAMBA) for details).

Secondly, click on the button “Upload” to initiate the transfer of the chosen image file into the B050-000’s on-board memory. This image file is kept in the on-board memory of the B050-000 until the end of the current session, until you logged out or initiated a reboot of the B050-000.

Download a Floppy Image

A floppy image kept in the B050-000’s memory can be both read and written to. To retrieve the changed image contents after writing to it click the “Download” button and select a folder to store the file in.

Figure 6-6. Active Image File

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

CD ROM

Use Image on Windows Share (SAMBA)

To include an image from a Windows share select “CD-ROM” from the submenu.

50

Figure 6-7. Selecting CD ROM and Windows Share

The following information has to be given to mount the selected image properly:

Share host

The server name or its IP address. On Windows 95, 98 and Windows ME do not specify the IP address but the server name (“NetBIOS Name”).

Share name

The name of the share to be used.

Path to image

The path of the image file on the share.

User (optional)

If necessary, specify the user name for the share named before. If unspecified and a guest account is activated, this guest account information will be used as your login.

Password (optional)

If necessary, specify the password for the given user name.

For an example you may have a look on Figure 6-7. First, the B050-000 will look

for a server named mysql.acme.com

. Then, the entered share name is selected (in

Chapter 6. Menu Options our example we use the share storage

) and the image file

\cdrom_image.iso

is opened. If this file can only be accessed with both an user name and password enter the according values in the input fields for user name and password. In our case the file is owned by the user “johndoe” and protected by an user-specific pass-phrase

(displayed as a number of stars).

To register the specified file image and its location click on the button “Set”.

The specified image file is supposed to be accessible from the B050-000. The information above has to be given from the point of view of the B050-000. It is important to specify correct IP addresses and device names. Otherwise, the B050-000 may not be able to access the referenced image file properly, leave the given file unmounted and will display an according error message, instead. So, we recommend to state correct values and repeat this step if necessary.

Figure 6-8. The image file on the share

Furthermore, the specified share has to be configured correctly. Therefore, administrative permissions are required. As a regular user you may not have these permissions. You should either login as a system administrator (or as “root” on UNIX systems) or ask your system administrator for help to complete this task.

Windows 2000/XP

Open the Explorer, navigate to the directory (or share) and press the right mouse button to open the context menu. Select “Sharing” to open the configuration

dialog (see Figure 6-9).

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-9. Explorer Context Menu

52

Figure 6-10. Share configuration dialog

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Adjust the settings for the selected directory.

Activate the selected directory as a share. Select “Share this folder”.

Choose an appropriate name for the share. You may also add a short description for this folder (input field “Comment”).

If necessary, adjust the permissions (button “permissions”).

Click “OK” to set the options for this share.

UNIX and UNIX-like OS (UNIX, Solaris, Linux)

If you like to access the share via SAMBA, SAMBA has to be set up properly. You may either edit the SAMBA configuration file

/etc/samba/smb.conf

or use the

Samba Web Administration Tool (SWAT) or WebMin to set the correct parameters.

For additional options see the Section called Options for details.

Drive Redirection

The Drive Redirection is another possibility to use a virtual disc drive on the remote computer. With Drive Redirection you do not have to use an image file but may work with a drive from your local computer on the remote machine. The drive is hereby shared over a TCP network connection. Devices such as floppy drives, hard discs,

CD ROMs and other removable devices like USB sticks can be redirected. It is even possible to enable a write support so that for the remote machine it is possible to write data to your local disc.

Figure 6-11. Drive Redirection

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Please note that Drive Redirection works on a level which is far below the operating system. That means that neither the local nor the remote operating system is aware that the drive is currently redirected, actually. This may lead to inconsistent data as soon as one of the operating systems (either from the local machine, or from the remote host) is writing data on the device. If write support is enabled the remote computer might damage the data and the file system on the redirected device. On the other hand, if the local operating system writes data to the redirected device the drive cache of the operating system of the remote host might contain older data. This may confuse the remote host’s operating system. We recommend to use the Drive

Redirection with care, especially the write support.

Drive Redirection Options

As shown in Figure 6-11 the following options may be enabled:

Disable Drive Redirection

If enabled the Drive Redirection is switched off.

Force read-only connections

If enabled the Write Support for the Drive Redirection is switched off. It is not possible to write on a redirected device.

Click “Apply” to submit your changes.

Software Requirements

To use this feature, you have to install the Drive Redirection software that is currently only available for Microsoft Windows. This software can be found on the product CD

ROM.

54

Configuration

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-12. Main View

Specify the parameters of the network connection (see Figure 6-12).

Device

This is the address (either the DNS name or the IP address) of the B050-000 you would like to connect to.

Port

This is the network port. By default, B050-000 uses the remote console port (#443) here. You may change this value if you have changed the remote console port in your B050-000’s network settings.

Secure Connection

Enable this box to establish a secure connection via SSL. This will maximize the security but may reduce the connection speed.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Drive Selection

56

Figure 6-13. Selecting the desired drive

Select the drive you would like to redirect. All available devices (drive letters) are shown here. Please note that the whole drive is shared with the remote computer, not only one partition. If you have a hard disc with more than one partition all drive letters that belong to this disc will be redirected.

The Refresh button may be used to regenerate the list of drive letters, especially for an USB stick.

Write Support

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-14. Selecting write support

This feature may be enabled here. Write support means that the remote computer is allowed to write on your local drive. As you can imagine, this is very dangerous. If both the remote and the local system try to write data on the same device, this will certainly destroy the file system on the drive. Please use this only when you exactly know what you are doing.

57

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Device Authentication

58

Figure 6-15. Device Authentication

To use the Drive Redirection, you have to authenticate on the B050-000 using a valid username and password. A permission to change the virtual disc configuration is necessary .

Navigation Buttons

Connect/Disconnect

To establish the drive redirection press the Connect button once. If all the settings are correct, the status bar displays that the connection has been established, the

Connect button is disabled and the Disconnect button is enabled.

On an error, the status line shows the error message. The drive redirection software tries to lock the local drive before it is redirected. That means that it tries to prevent the local operating system from accessing the drive as long as it is redirected. This may also fail, especially if a file on the drive is currently open.

In the case of a locking failure, you will be prompted if you want to establish the connection anyhow. This should not be a serious problem when the note above is respected. If the write support is enabled, a drive which is not locked might be damaged by the Drive Redirection.

With the Disconnect button, a connection via Drive Redirection connection is stopped.

Exit/Hide

If the Exit button is pressed, the Drive Redirection software is closed. If a Drive

Redirection connection is active, the connection will be closed before the application terminates.

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Using the Hide to Tray button the application is hidden, but not terminated completely. That means that an active connection will be kept active until it is closed explicitly. You can access the software by its tray icon. The tray icon also shows whether a connection is established or not. A double click on the icon shows the application window, or with a right click you may access a small menu (see

Figure 6-16).

Figure 6-16. Tray Info

Options

Figure 6-17. USB mass storage option

Set this option to disable the mass storage emulation (and hide the virtual drive) as long as no image file is currently loaded. If unset and no file image will be found, it may happen that the host system will hang on boot due to changes in the boot order or the boot manager (LILO, GRUB). This case was reported for some Windows versions (2000, XP), other OS may not be fully excluded. This behaviour depends on the BIOS version used in that machine.

To set this option press the button “Apply”.

Creating an Image

Floppy Images

UNIX and UNIX-like OS

To create an image file make use of “dd”. This is one of the original UNIX utilities and is included in every UNIX-like OS (UNIX, Sun Solaris, Linux).

To create a floppy image file copy the contents of a floppy to a file. You can use the following command:

dd

[ if=/dev/fd0

] [ of=/tmp/floppy.image

] dd reads the entire disc from the device

/dev/fd0 and saves the output in the specified output file

/tmp/floppy.image

. Adjust both parameters exactly to your needs

(input device etc.)

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

MS Windows

You can use the tool “RawWrite for Windows”.

60

Figure 6-18. RawWrite for Windows selection dialog

Select the tab “Read” from the menu. Enter (or choose) the name of the file in which you would like to save the floppy content. Click on the button “Copy” to initiate the image creation process.

For related tools you may have a look at the homepage of the fdos project

( http://www.fdos.org/ripcord/rawrite/

).

CD ROM/ISO 9660 Images

UNIX and UNIX-like OS

To create an image file make use of “dd”. This is one of the original UNIX utilities and is included in every UNIX-like OS (UNIX, Sun Solaris, Linux).

To create a CDROM image file copy the contents of the CDROM to a file. You can use the following command:

dd

[ if=/dev/cdrom

] [ of=/tmp/cdrom.image

] dd reads the entire disc from the device

/dev/cdrom and saves the output in the specified output file

/tmp/cdrom.image

. Adjust both parameters exactly to your needs

(input device etc.).

Chapter 6. Menu Options

MS Windows

To create the image file use your favourite CD imaging tool. Copy the whole contents of the disc into one single ISO image file on your harddisk.

For example, with “Nero” you choose “Copy and Backup”. Then, navigate to the

“Copy Disc” section. Select the CD ROM or DVD drive you would like to create an

ISO image from. Specify the filename of the ISO image and save the CD ROM content in that file.

Figure 6-19. Nero selection dialog

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

User Management

Change Password

Figure 6-20. Set password

To change your password enter the new password in the upper entry field. Retype the password in the field below.

Click “Apply” to submit your changes.

62

Users And Groups

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-21. Set User

User Management

The B050-000 comes with a pre-configured user account for the user “super” that has fixed permissions. This user has all possible rights to configure the device and to use all functions the B050-000 offers.

Upon delivery, the account for the user “super” has the password “pass”. Make sure to change the password immediately after you have installed and firstly accessed your B050-000.

A full list of available options follows. This list can only be seen by the superuser.

Existing users

Select an existing user for modification. Once a user has been selected, click the lookup button to see the user information.

New User name

The new user name for the selected account.

Password

The password for the login name. It must be at least four characters long.

Confirm password

Confirmation of the password above.

Email address

This is optional.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Mobile number

This information may be optionally provided.

Role

Each user can be a member of a group (named a “role”) - either an administrator, or a regular user. Choose the desired role from the selection box.

To create an user press the button “Create”. The button “Modify” changes the displayed user settings. To delete an user press the button “Delete”.

Note: The B050-000 is equipped with an host-independent processor and memory unit which both have a limitation in terms of the processing instructions and memory space. To guarantee an acceptable response time we recommend not to exceed the number of 25 users connected to the B050-000 at the same time. The memory space that is available onto the B050-000 mainly depends on the configuration and the usage of the B050-000

(log file entries etc.). That’s why we recommend not to store more than 150 user profiles.

KVM Settings

User Console

The following settings are user specific. That means the super user can customize these settings for every users separately. Changing the settings for one user does not affect the settings for the other users.

64

Figure 6-22. User Console Settings (Part 1)

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Remote Console Settings for User

This selection box displays the user ID for which the values are shown and for which the changes will take effect. Select the desired user from the selection box and press the button “Update”. This will result in displaying the according user settings below.

Note: You are allowed to change the settings of other users only if you have the necessary access rights for this task. For a regular user without the correct permissions it is not possible to change the settings for any other users.

Transmission Encoding

The Transmission Encoding setting allows changing the image-encoding algorithm that is used to transmit the video data to the Remote Console window. It is possible to optimize the speed of the remote screen depending on the number of users working at the same time and the bandwidth of the connection line (Modem, ISDN, DSL,

LAN, etc.).

Automatic detection

The encoding and the compression level is determined automatically from the available bandwidth and the current content of the video image.

Pre-configured

The pre-configured settings deliver the best result because of optimized adjustment of compression and color depth for the indicated network speed.

Manually

Allows to adjust both compression rate and the color depth individually. Depending on the selected compression rate the data stream between the B050-000 and the Remote Console will be compressed in order to save bandwidth. Since high compression rates are very time consuming, they should not be used while several users are accessing the B050-000 simultaneously.

The standard color depth is 16 Bit (65536 colors). The other color depths are intended for slower network connections in order to allow a faster transmission of data. Therefore compression level 0 (no compression) uses only 16 Bit color depth. At lower bandwidths only 4 Bit (16 colors) and 2 Bit (4 gray scales) are recommended for typical desktop interfaces. Photo-like pictures have best results with 4 Bit (16 gray scales). 1 Bit color depth (black/white) should only be used for extremely slow network connections.

65

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Remote Console Type

66

Figure 6-23. User Console Settings (Part 2)

Specifies which Remote Console Viewer to use.

Default Java Virtual Machine (JVM)

Uses the default JVM of your web browser. This may be the Microsoft JVM for the Internet Explorer or the Sun JVM if it is configured this way. Use of the Sun

JVM may also be forced (see below).

Sun Microsystems Java Browser Plugin

Instructs the web browser of your administration system to use the JVM of Sun

Microsystems. The JVM in the browser is used to run the code for the Remote

Console window which is actually a Java Applet. If you check this box for the first time on your administration system and the appropriate Java plug-in is not yet installed on your system, it may be downloaded and installed automatically.

However, in order to make the installation possible, you still have to answer the according dialogs with “yes”. The download volume is around 11 Mbytes. The advantage of downloading Sun’s JVM is the usage of a stable and identical JVM across different platforms. The Remote Console software is optimized for this

JVM version and offers a wider range of functionality when run in SUN’s JVM.

Chapter 6. Menu Options

(Hint: If you are connected over a slow connection to the Internet you can also pre-install the JVM on your administration machine. )

Miscellaneous Remote Console Settings

Start in Monitor Mode

Sets the initial value for the monitor mode. By default the monitor mode is disabled. In case you switch it on, the Remote Console window will be started in a read only mode.

Start in Exclusive Access Mode

Enables the exclusive access mode immediately at Remote Console startup. This forces the Remote Consoles of all other users to close. Nobody else can open the

Remote Console at the same time again until you disable this feature or log off.

Mouse Hotkey

Allows to specify a hotkey combination which starts either the mouse synchronization process if pressed in the Remote Console or is used to leave the single mouse mode.

Remote Console Button Keys

Button Keys allow simulating keystrokes on the remote system that cannot be generated locally. The reason for this might be a missing key or just the fact that the local operating system of the Remote Console is unconditionally catching this keystroke already. Typical examples are “Control+Alt+Delete” on Windows and DOS, that is always caught, or the key sequence “Control+Backspace” on Linux that can be used for terminating the X-Server.

In order to define a new Button Key or to adjust an existing one have a look at the rules that describe the setting for a key. In general, the syntax for a key is as follows:

[confirm] <keycode>[+|-|>[*]<keycode>]*

A term in brackets is optional. The star at the end means that you add further keys as often as required for your case. The term “confirm” adds an confirmation dialogue that is displayed before the key strokes will be sent to the remote host.

The “keycode” is the key to be sent. Multiple key codes can be concatenated with either a plus, a minus, or an “>” sign. The plus sign builds key combinations - all the keys will be pressed until a minus sign or the end of the combination is encountered.

In this case all pressed keys will be released in reversed sequence. So, the minus sign builds single, separate keypresses and keyreleases. The “>” sign releases the last key, only. The star inserts a pause with a duration of 100 milliseconds.

As an example, the key combination of Ctrl, Alt and F2 is represented by the sequence

Ctrl+Alt+F2

For a full list of key codes and aliases please refer to the Appendix E.

Note: If you need more button keys than shown use the button “More entries”. This will open a list of additional entry fields.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Keyboard/Mouse

68

Figure 6-24. Keyboard and Mouse Settings

Host Interface

Enables a certain interface the mouse is connected to. You can choose between “Auto” for automatic detection, “USB” for a USB mouse and “PS/2” for a PS/2 mouse.

Warning

To use the USB and/or PS/2 interface you need a correct cabling between the managed host and the managing device. If the managed host has no USB keyboard support in the BIOS and you have connected the

USB cable only then you will have no remote keyboard access during the boot process of the host. If USB and PS/2 are both connected and you selected “Auto” as host interface, then the card will select “USB” if available or otherwise falls back to “PS/2”.

To get USB remote keyboard access during the boot process of the host, the following conditions must be fulfilled:

• the host BIOS must have USB keyboard support

Chapter 6. Menu Options

• the USB cable must be connected or must be selected in the Host interface option

PS/2 Keyboard Model

Enables a certain keyboard layout. You can choose between “Generic 101-Key PC” for a standard keyboard layout, “Generic 104-Key PC” for a standard keyboard layout extended by three additional Windows keys, “Generic 106-Key PC” for a Japanese keyboard, and “Apple Macintosh” for the Apple Macintosh.

If a keyboard timout is required the according option can be enabled. Additionally, set the desired time value in the input field below.

USB Mouse Type

Enables the USB mouse type. Choose an appropriate option from the selection box.

For a detailed description about the mouse type and recommended options for the

different operating systems see the Section called Recommended Mouse Settings in

Chapter 4.

Mouse Speed

Auto mouse speed

Use this option if the mouse settings on the host use an additional acceleration setting. The B050-000 tries to detect the acceleration and speed of the mouse during the mouse sync process.

Fixed mouse speed

Use a direct translation of mouse movements between the local and the remote pointer.

You may also set a fixed scaling which determines the amount the remote mouse pointer is moved when the local mouse pointer is moved by one pixel. This option only works when the mouse settings on the host are linear. This means that there is no mouse acceleration involved.

To set the options click on the button “Apply”.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Video

Figure 6-25. Video Settings

To set the options (see below) click on the button “Apply”.

Miscellaneous Video Settings

Noise filter

This option defines how the B050-000 reacts to small changes in the video input signal. A large filter setting needs less network traffic and leads to a faster video display, but small changes in some display regions may not be recognized immediately. A small filter displays all changes instantly but may lead to a constant amount of network traffic even if the display content is not really changing (depending on the quality of the video input signal). All in all the default setting should be suitable for most situations.

Force Composite Sync (Required for Sun Computers)

To support signal transmission from a Sun machine enable this option. If not enabled the picture of the remote console will not be visible.

Device Settings

Network

The Network Settings panel as shown in Figure 6-26 allows changing network related

parameters. Each parameter will be explained below. Once applied the new network settings will immediately come into effect.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-26. Network Settings

Warning

The initial IP configuration is usually done directly at the host system

using the special procedure described in Table 4-1.

Warning

Changing the network settings of the B050-000 might result in losing connection to it. In case you change the settings remotely make sure that all the values are correct and you still have an option to access the

B050-000.

Basic Network Settings

IP auto configuration

With this option you can define if the B050-000 should fetch its network settings from a DHCP or BOOTP server. For DHCP select “dhcp” and for BOOTP select

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

“bootp” accordingly. If you choose “none” then IP auto configuration is disabled.

Preferred host name

Preferred host name to request from DHCP server. Whether the DHCP server takes the B050-000’s suggestion into account or not depends on the server configuration.

IP address

IP address in the usual dot notation.

Subnet Mask

The net mask of the local network.

Gateway IP address

In case the B050-000 should be accessible from networks other than the local one, this IP address must be set to the local network router’s IP address.

Primary DNS Server IP Address

IP address of the primary Domain Name Server in dot notation. This option may be left empty, however the B050-000 will not be able to perform name resolution.

Secondary DNS Server IP Address

IP address of the secondary Domain Name Server in dot notation. It will be used in case the Primary DNS Server cannot be contacted.

Miscellaneous Network Settings

Remote Console And HTTPS port

Port number at which the B050-000’s Remote Console server and HTTPS server are listening. If left empty the default value will be used.

HTTP port

Port number at which the B050-000’s HTTP server is listening. If left empty the default value will be used.

Telnet port

Port number at which the B050-000’s Telnet server is listening. If left empty the default value will be used.

SSH port

Port number at which the B050-000’s Secure Shell (SSH) server is listening. If left empty the default value will be used.

Bandwidth Limit

The maximum network traffic generated through the B050-000 Ethernet device.

Value in Kbit/s.

Enable Telnet access

Set this option to allow accessing the B050-000 using the Telnet gateway (see the

Section called Telnet Console).

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Enable SSH access

Set this option to allow accessing the B050-000 using the Secure Shell (SSH) pro-

tocol. Ths SSH console offers the same features as Telnet (see the Section called

Telnet Console), but uses a secure, encrypted connection instead.

Disable Setup Protocol

Enable this option to exclude the B050-000 from the setup protocol.

LAN Interface Settings

This entry field displays the current settings for the Ethernet/LAN interface of the

B050-000. You may choose between auto negotiation and a fixed setting for the Ethernet transceiver settings “interface speed” and “duplex mode” in case auto negotiation does not work correctly.

LAN interface speed

Depending on your network connection you may select an according speed value for this interface. To adjust the interface automatically choose “autodetect”

(default value). If this selection results in misbehaviour of the interface, choose one of other speed options to work with. The interface will transmit and receive data with that fixed speed.

LAN interface duplex mode

If necessary you may also select a specific duplex mode. The default value is set to “autodetect” which leads to an automatic setting of the duplex mode depending on your network (recommended). As an alternative you may explicitly set the interface to either “half duplex” or “full duplex” mode.

These settings may also be configured via serial console. See the Section called Initial

Configuration via Serial Console in Chapter 4 for details.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Dynamic DNS

Figure 6-27. Dynamic DNS

A freely available Dynamic DNS service ( dyndns.org

) can be used in the following

scenario (see Figure 6-28):

74

Figure 6-28. Dynamic DNS Scenario

The B050-000 is reachable via the IP address of the DSL router which is dynamically assigned by the provider. Since the administrator does not know the IP address as-

Chapter 6. Menu Options signed by the provider, the B050-000 connects to a special dynamic DNS server in regular intervals and registers its IP address there. The administrator may contact this server as well and pick up the same IP address belonging to his card.

The administrator has to register a B050-000 that is supposed to take part in the service with the Dynamic DNS Server and assign a certain hostname to it. He will get a nickname and a password in return to the registration process. This account information together with the hostname is needed in order to determine the IP address of the registered B050-000.

You have to perform the following steps in order to enable Dynamic DNS:

Make sure that the LAN interface of the B050-000 is properly configured.

Enter the Dynamic DNS Settings configuration dialog as shown in Figure 6-27.

Enable Dynamic DNS and change the settings according to your needs (see below).

Enable Dynamic DNS

This enables the Dynamic DNS service. This requires a configured DNS server

IP address.

Dynamic DNS server

This is the server name where B050-000 registers itself in regular intervals. Currently this is a fixed setting since only dyndns.org

is supported for now.

Hostname

This is the hostname of the B050-000 that is provided by the Dynamic

DNS Server.

(use the whole name including the domain, e.g.

testserver.dyndns.org

, not just the actual hostname).

Username

You have registered this username during your manual registration with the

Dynamic DNS Server. Spaces are not allowed in the Nickname.

Password

You have used this password during your manual registration with the Dynamic

DNS Server.

Check time

The B050-000 card registers itself in the Dynamic DNS server at this time.

Check interval

This is the interval for reporting again to the Dynamic DNS server by the B050-

000.

Warning

The B050-000 has its own independent real time clock. Make sure the

time setting of the B050-000 is correct (see the Section called Date And

Time).

The option “Delete saved external IP” is useful if you would like to update your IP address saved externally. To delete the saved address press the button “Delete”.

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Chapter 6. Menu Options

Security

76

Figure 6-29. Device Security

Encryption Settings

Force HTTPS

If this option is enabled, access to the web front-end is only possible using a

HTTPS connection. The B050-000 will not listen on the HTTP port for incoming connections.

In case you want to create your own SSL certificate that is used to identify the

B050-000 refer to the Section called Certificate.

KVM encryption

This option controls the encryption of the RFB protocol. RFB is used by the Remote Console to transmit both the screen data to the administrator machine and keyboard and mouse data back to the host.

If set to “Off” no encryption will be used. If set to “Try” the applet tries to make an encrypted connection. In case that the connection cannot be established an unencrypted connection will be used instead. If set to “Force” the applet tries to make an encrypted connection. An error will be reported in case the connection establishment fails.

Certificate

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-30. Certificate Settings

The B050-000 uses the Secure Socket Layer (SSL) protocol for any encrypted network traffic between itself and a connected client. During the connection establishment the B050-000 has to expose its identity to a client using a cryptographic certificate.

Upon delivery this certificate and the underlying secret key is the same for all B050-

000 ever produced and certainly will not match the network configuration that will be applied to the B050-000 by its user. The certificate’s underlying secret key is also used for securing the SSL handshake. Hence, this is a security risk (but far better than no encryption at all).

However, it is possible to generate and install a new base64 x.509 certificate that is unique for a particular B050-000. In order to do that, the B050-000 is able to generate a new cryptographic key and the associated Certificate Signing Request (CSR) that needs to be certified by a certification authority (CA). A certification authority verifies that you are the person who you claim you are and signs and issues a SSL certificate to you.

To create and install a SSL certificate for the B050-000 the following steps are necessary:

Create a SSL Certificate Signing Request using the panel shown in Figure 6-30.

You need to fill out a number of fields that are explained below. Once this is done, click on the button “Create” which will initiate the Certificate Signing Request generation. The CSR can be downloaded to your administration machine with the

“Download CSR” button (see Figure 6-31).

Send the saved CSR to a CA for certification. You will get the new certificate from the CA after a more or less complicated traditional authentication process (depending on the CA).

77

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Upload the certificate to the B050-000 using the “Upload” button as shown in Figure 6-31.

78

Figure 6-31. SSL Certificate Upload

After completing these three steps the B050-000 has its own certificate that is used for identifying the card to its clients.

Warning

If you destroy the CSR on the B050-000 there is no way to get it back!

In case you deleted it by mistake, you have to repeat the three steps as described above.

Common name

This is the network name of the B050-000 once it is installed in the user’s network

(usually the fully qualified domain name). It is identical to the name that is used to access the B050-000 with a web browser but without the prefix “http://”. In case the name given here and the actual network name differ, the browser will pop up a security warning when the B050-000 is accessed using HTTPS.

Organizational unit

This field is used for specifying to which department within an organization the

B050-000 belongs.

Organization

The name of the organization to which the B050-000 belongs.

Locality/City

The city where the organization is located.

State/Province

The state or province where the organization is located.

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Country (ISO code)

The country where the organization is located. This is the two-letter ISO code, e.g. DE for Germany, or US for the U.S.

Challenge Password

Some certification authorities require a challenge password to authorize later changes on the certificate (e.g. revocation of the certificate). The minimal length of this password is four characters.

Confirm Challenge Password

Confirmation of the Challenge Password.

Email

The email address of a contact person that is responsible for the B050-000 and its security.

Key length

This is the length of the generated key in bits. 1024 Bits are supposed to be sufficient for most cases. Longer keys may result in slower response time of the

B050-000 during connection establishment.

Serial Settings

Figure 6-32. Serial Settings

The B050-000 Serial Settings (Figure 6-32) allow you to specify what device is con-

nected to the serial port and how to use it. To access the serial interface a port repli-

79

Chapter 6. Menu Options

cator cable is required (see the Section called B050-000 System Components in Chapter

2).

Configuration or console login

Do not use the serial port for any special function, use it only for the initial con-

figuration (see Table 4-1).

Modem

The B050-000 offers remote access using a telephone line in addition to the standard access over the built-in Ethernet adapter. The modem needs to be connected to the serial interface of the B050-000.

Logically, connecting to the B050-000 using a telephone line means nothing else than building up a dedicated point-to-point connection from your console computer to the B050-000. In other words, the B050-000 acts as an Internet Service

Provider (ISP) to which you can dial in. The connection is established using the

Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP). Before you connect to the B050-000 make sure to configure your console computer accordingly. For instance, on Windows based operating systems you can configure a dial-up network connection which defaults to the right settings like PPP.

The Modem Settings panel allows you to configure the remote access to the B050-

000 using a modem. The meaning of each parameter will be described below. The modem settings are part of the serial settings panel .

Serial line speed

The speed with which the B050-000 is communicating with the modem.

Most of all modems available today will support the default value of 115.200

bps. In case you are using an old modem and discovering problems try to lower this speed.

Modem Init String

The initialization string used by the B050-000 to initialize the modem. The default value will work with all modern standard modems directly connected to a telephone line. In case you have a special modem or the modem is connected to a local telephone switch that requires a special dial sequence in order to establish a connection to the public telephone network, you can change this setting by giving a new string. Refer to the modem’s manual about the AT command syntax.

Modem server IP address

This IP address will be assigned to the B050-000 itself during the PPP handshake. Since it is a point-to-point IP connection virtually every IP address is possible but you must make sure that it is not interfering with the IP settings of the B050-000 and your console computer. The default value will work in most cases.

Modem client IP address

This IP address will be assigned to your console computer during the PPP handshake. Since it is a point-to-point IP connection virtually every IP address is possible but you must make sure that it is not interfering with the IP settings of the B050-000 and your console computer. The default value will work in most cases.

80

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Passthrough access to serial port via Telnet/SSH

Using this option it is possible to connect an arbitrary device to the serial port and access it (assuming it provides terminal support) via Telnet or SSH. Select the appropriate options for the serial port and use the Telnet Console or a standard Telnet/SSH client to connect to the B050-000. For more information about

the Telnet interface you may have a look at the Section called Telnet Console.

IPM 220-L (Inline Power Module)

This is an optionally available external module to switch power of a single system by putting it in the power supply line of the controlled system.

Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI)

Figure 6-33. IPMI

Generals

By using the B050-000 IPMI facilities you have an additional way to power on or off the system or to perform a hard reset. Furthermore, it provides the possibility to show an event log of the host system and the status of some system sensors (i.e.

temperature). If your host system supports IPMI, you can access it by one of the following ways:

IPMI over LAN (IPMI V1.5 is required)

81

Chapter 6. Menu Options

IPMI Settings

Figure 6-33 shows the B050-000 IPMI settings panel. Its options will be explained

below.

IPMI disabled

Disables IPMI on the B050-000. This means that Status via IPMI and Event Log via IPMI are not available and the power on/off and reset functions do not use

IPMI rather than the ATX and the reset cable connected from the B050-000 to the motherboard.

IPMI over LAN

You can connect the IPMI over a LAN connection, too. The prerequisite for this access type is a host system with IPMI V1.5 and a network adapter with a sideband connection to the BMC (mostly on board). In the IPMI Settings you have to enter the IP address of this host system, the user name of a valid IPMI account and password for this account. You can also access other IPMI systems if you enter their IP address.

Date And Time

82

Figure 6-34. Date and Time

This link refers to a page where the internal realtime clock of the B050-000 can be

set up (see Figure 6-34). You have the possibility to adjust the clock manually or to

use a NTP time server. Without a time server your time setting will not be persistent, so you have to adjust it again after the B050-000 loses power for more than a few minutes. To avoid this you can use a NTP time server which sets up the internal clock

Chapter 6. Menu Options automatically to the current UTC time. Because NTP server time is always UTC, there is a setting that allows you to set up a static offset to get your local time.

Warning

There is currently no way to adjust the daylight saving time automatically. So you have to set up the UTC offset twice a year properly to the local rules of your country.

Event Log

Figure 6-35. Event Log

Important events like a login failure or a firmware update are logged to a selection of

logging destinations (see Figure 6-35). Each of those events belong to an event group

83

Chapter 6. Menu Options which can be activated separately.

The common way to log events is to use the internal log list of the B050-000. To show the log list click on the item “Event Log” from the section “Maintenance”. In the

Event Log Settings you can choose how many log entries are shown on each page.

Furthermore, you can clear the log file here.

Event Log Targets

List logging enabled

To log events you may use the internal log list of the B050-000. To show the log list click on “Event Log” on the “Maintenance” page.

Since the B050-000’s system memory is used to save all the information, the maximum number of possible log list entries is restricted to 1.000 events. Every entry that exceeds this limit overrides the oldest one automatically.

Warning

If the reset button on the HTML frontend is used to restart the B050-000, all logging information is saved permanently and is available after the B050-000 has been started. If the

B050-000 loses power or a hard reset is performed, all logging data will be lost. To avoid this use one of the log methods described below.

NFS Logging enabled

Define a NFS server where a directory or a static link has to be exported to, in order to write all logging data to a file that is located there. To write logging data from more than one B050-000 devices to only one NFS share, you have to define a file name that is unique for each device. When you change the NFS settings and press the button “Apply”, the NFS share will be mounted immediately. That means the NFS share and the NFS server must be filled with valid sources or you will get an error message.

Warning

In contrast to the internal log file on the B050-000, the size of the NFS log file is not limited. Every log event will be appended to the end of the file so it grows continuously and you may have to delete it or move it away from time to time.

SMTP Logging enabled

With this option the B050-000 is able to send Emails to an address given by the

Email address text field in the Event Log Settings. These mails contain the same description strings as the internal log file and the mail subject is filled with the event group of the occurred log event. In order to use this log destination you have to specify a SMTP server that has to be reachable from the B050-000 device and that needs no authentication at all (<serverip>:<port>).

SNMP Logging enabled

If this is activated, the B050-000 sends a SNMP trap to a specified destination

IP address, every time a log event occurs. If the receiver requires a community string, you can set it in the appropriate text field. Most of the event traps only contain one descriptive string with all information about the log event. Only

84

Chapter 6. Menu Options authentication and host power events have an own trap class that consists of several fields with detailed information about the occurred event. To receive this

SNMP traps any SNMP trap listener may be used.

Event Log Assignments

You may choose which actions of the B050-000 will be saved in the log file. Tick the desired box(es) and click “Apply” to confirm your selection.

Maintenance

Device Information

Figure 6-36. Device Information

This section contains a summary with various information about this B050-000 and

its current firmware and allows you to reset the card. You may have a look at Figure

6-36 for an example.

The Data file for support allows you to download the B050-000 data file with specific support information. This is an XML file with certain customized support information like the serial number etc. You may send us this information together with a support request. It will help us to locate and solve your reported problem.

85

Chapter 6. Menu Options

Figure 6-37. Connected Users

Figure 6-37 displays the B050-000 activity. From left to right the connected user(s), its

IP address (from which host the user comes from) and its activity status is displayed.

“RC” indicates that the Remote Console is open. If the Remote Console is opened in

“exclusive mode” the term “(exclusive)” is added. For more information about this

option see the Section called Remote Console Control Bar in Chapter 5. To display the

user activity the last column is used. It contains either the term “active” for an active user or the according idle time for an inactive user.

Event Log

86

Figure 6-38. Event Log List

Figure 6-38 displays the Event Log list. It includes the events that are kept by the

B050-000 extended by the event date, a short event description and an IP address the request was sent from.

Chapter 6. Menu Options

You may use the text buttons “Prev” and “Next” to browse within the data. The button “Prev” displays the previous page with newer log information whereas the button “Next” switches to the following page with older log information.

Update Firmware

Figure 6-39. Update Firmware

The B050-000 is a complete standalone computer. The software it runs is called the firmware. The firmware of the B050-000 can be updated remotely in order to install new functionality or special features.

A new firmware update is a binary file which will be sent to you by email . If the firmware file is a compressed file with suffix

.zip

you have to unzip it before you can proceed. In order to extract the archive you may use WinZip from http://www.winzip.com/

(for Windows OS) or a tool named unzip that might be already provided in your OS (UNIX, Linux, OS X).

Before you can start updating the firmware of your B050-000 the new and uncompressed firmware file has to be accessible on the system that you use for connecting to the B050-000.

Updating the firmware is a three-stage process:

Firstly, the new firmware file is uploaded onto the B050-000. In order to do that you need to select the file on your local system using the button “Browse” of the Up-

load Firmware panel (see Figure 6-39). Then, click “Upload” to transfer the previ-

ously selected file from your local file system onto the B050-000. Once the firmware file has been uploaded, it is checked whether it is a valid firmware file and whether there were any transmission errors. In case of any error the Upload Firmware function will be aborted and the current firmware is kept as is.

Secondly, if everything went well, you see the Update Firmware panel . The panel shows you the version number of the currently running firmware and the version

87

Chapter 6. Menu Options number of the uploaded firmware. Pressing the button “Update” will store the new version and substitute the old one completely.

Warning

This process is not reversible and might take some minutes. Make sure the B050-000’s power supply will not be interrupted during the update process, because this may cause an unusable device.

Thirdly, after the firmware has been stored, the B050-000 will reset automatically.

After about one minute you will be redirected to the Login page and requested to login once again.

Warning

The three-stage firmware update process and complete consistency check are making a mistake in updating the firmware almost impossible. However, only experienced staff members or administrators should perform a firmware update. Make sure the B050-000’s power supply will not be interrupted!

Unit Reset

88

Figure 6-40. Unit Reset

This section allows you to reset specific parts of the device. This involves the both keyboard and mouse, the video engine and the B050-000 itself. Resetting the card itself is mainly needed to activate a newly updated firmware. It will close all current

Chapter 6. Menu Options connections to the administration console and to the Remote Console. The whole process will take about half a minute. Resetting subdevices (e.g. video engine) will take some seconds only and does not result in closing connections.

To reset a certain B050-000 functionality click on the button “Reset” as displayed in

Figure 6-40.

Note: Only the user “super” is allowed to reset the B050-000.

89

Chapter 6. Menu Options

90

Appendix A. Frequently Asked Questions

1.

The remote mouse does not work or is not synchronous.

First, check the VGA connection. Both the B050-000 and the local monitor have to support the same video resolution.

Make sure that your mouse settings match your mouse model, i.e. PS/2 or wheel mouse. The mouse model has to be set similarly on both the B050-000 and the Operating System you use on your host.

In some circumstances the mouse synchronization process could behave incorrectly,

refer to the Section called Mouse, Keyboard and Video configuration in Chapter 4 for

further explanation.

2.

The video quality is bad or the picture is grainy.

Enter the Remote Console and press the Auto Adjust button (see the Section called

Remote Console Control Bar in Chapter 5) to adjust the B050-000’s video input param-

eters to the correct values.

3.

Login on the B050-000 fails.

Verify both your user login and your password. By default, the user “super” has the password “pass”. Moreover, your web browser has to be configured to accept cookies.

4.

The Remote Console window of the B050-000 does not open.

A firewall may prevent the access to the Remote Console. The TCP ports #80 (for

HTTP) and #443 (for both HTTPS and RFB) have to be open (the server providing the firewall has to accept incoming TCP connections on these ports).

5.

Remote console is unable to connect and displays a timeout error.

Have a look on your hardware. If there is a proxy server between the B050-000 and your host, then you may not be able to transfer the video data using RFB. Establish a direct connection between the B050-000 and the client.

Furthermore, check the settings of the B050-000 and choose a different server port used for RFB transfer. If you use a firewall then check the according port for accepting connections. You may restrict these connections for the IP addresses used by the

B050-000 and your client.

6.

No connection can be established to the B050-000.

Have a look on your hardware. Is the B050-000 attached to a power supply? Verify your network configuration (IP address, router). You may send a “ping” request to the B050-000 to find out whether the B050-000 is reachable via network.

7.

Special key combinations, e.g. ALT+F2, ALT+F3 are intercepted by the console system and not transmitted to the host.

You have to define a so-called “Button Key”. This can be done in the Remote Console

settings (see the Section called Remote Console Control Bar in Chapter 5). Alternatively

you can use the soft keyboard feature (see the Section called Soft Keyboard in Chapter

5).

91

Appendix A. Frequently Asked Questions

8.

The B050-000 web pages are not displayed correctly.

Check your browser’s cache settings. Make sure the cache settings are not set to something like “never check for newer pages”. Otherwise the B050-000 pages may be loaded from your browser cache and not from the card.

9.

Windows XP does not awake from standby mode.

This is possibly a Windows XP problem. Try not to move the mouse pointer while XP switches into standby mode.

10.

For SUN computers a USB keyboard does not work.

The B050-000 emulates a USB keyboard. If you attach a USB keyboard to your host two keyboards are detected. It cannot be predicted which one of these comes first and you will be able to work with. SUN supports only one USB keyboard.

11.

Cannot upload the signed certificate in MacOS X.

If an “internal error” occurs while uploading the signed certificate either change the extension of the file to

.txt

or add a file helper using the Internet Explorer preferences for this type of file. Make sure that the encoding is set to “plain text” and the checkbox “use for outgoing” is set. As an alternative, you may also use a Mozilla based browser (Mozilla, FireFox).

12.

Every time I open a dialog box with some buttons the mouse pointers are not synchronous anymore.

Disable the setting “Automatically move mouse pointer to the default button of dialog boxes” in the mouse settings of your operating system.

13.

The Remote Console does not open with Opera in Linux.

Some versions of Opera do not grant enough permissions if the signature of the applet cannot be verified. To solve the problem, add the lines grant codeBase "nn.pp.rc.RemoteConsoleApplet" { permission java.lang.RuntimePermission "accessClassInPackage.sun.*"; to the java policy file of opera (e.g.

/usr/share/opera/java/opera.policy

).

14.

The Remote Console remains black.

Check the B050-000 for being USB powered only. If there is not enough power via

USB the remote Console opens but remain black. Attach an external power supply to the B050-000. Verify the B050-000 settings using the according section in the front end.

15.

I forgot my password. How can I reset the B050-000 to factory defaults?

You may use the serial interface. For a detailed description see the Section called

Resetting the B050-000 to its Factory Settings in Chapter 4.

92

Appendix B. Glossary

ACPI

Advanced Configuration and Power Interface

A specification that enables the operating system to implement power management and system configuration.

ATX

Advanced Technology Extended

A particular specification that covers the style of motherboards and enclosure introduced by Intel in 1995.

DHCP

Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol

A protocol for dynamically assigning IP configurations to host names, especially used in a local network.

DNS

Domain Name System

A protocol used to locate computers on the Internet by their name.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

HTTP

Hypertext Transfer Protocol

One of the protocols used for communication between single computers, especially between web browsers and web servers.

HTTPS

Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure

The secure version of HTTP.

IPMI

Intelligent Platform Management Interface

A specification defining a set of common interfaces for operating system independent platform management and health monitoring.

LED

Light Emitting Diode

A semiconductor device that emits incoherent monochromatic light when electrically biased in the forward direction.

PS/2

Personal System/2

IBM’s second generation of personal computers, which was released to the public in 1987. Today, PS/2 is known as a device interface for mouse and keyboard.

93

Appendix B. Glossary

SNMP

Simple Network Management Protocol

A widely used network monitoring and control protocol.

SSH

Secure Shell

An encrypted network protocol providing a secure replacement for Telnet.

SSL

Secure Socket Layer

An encryption technology for the Internet used to provide secured data transmissions.

SVGA

Super Video Graphics Array

A refinement of the Video Graphics Array (VGA) that provides increased pitch and resolution performance.

UTP

Unshielded Twisted Pair

A cable with two conductors twisted as a pair and bundled within the same outer PVC covering.

94

Appendix C. B050-000 Video Modes

Table C-1 lists the video modes the B050-000 supports. Please do not use any other

custom video settings besides of these. If done so, the B050-000 may not be able to detect them.

Table C-1. B050-000 Video Modes

Resolution (x,y)

640x340

640x400

640x480

720x400

800x600

832x624

1024x768

1152x864

1152x870

1152x900

1280x960

1280x1024

1600x1200

2048x1536

Refresh Rates (Hz)

70, 85

56, 85

60, 67, 72, 75, 85, 90, 100, 120

70, 85

56, 60, 70, 72, 75, 85, 90, 100

75

60, 70, 72, 75, 85, 90, 100

75

75

66, 76

60, 85

60, 75, 85

60, 65, 70, 75

85 (local port only)

95

Appendix C. B050-000 Video Modes

96

Appendix D. Users and Roles

Table D-1. Roles

Frontend Section

Remote Control: KVM

Regular User

x

Remote Control: Remote Power -

Remote Control: Telnet Console x

Virtual Media

User Management: Change

Password x x

User Management: Users

KVM Settings: User Console

x (w/o Misc.

Settings)

KVM Settings:

Keyboard/Mouse

KVM Settings: Video

Device Settings

Maintenance: Device

Information

-

x

Maintenance: Event Log -

Maintenance: Update Firmware -

Maintenance: Unit Reset Keyboard/

Mouse, Video

Administrator Superuser

x x x x x

x x x

x

-

-

Keyboard/

Mouse, Video x x x x x x x x x x x x x

Keyboard/

Mouse, Video,

Device

97

Appendix D. Users and Roles

98

Appendix E. Key Codes

Table E-1 shows the key codes used to define the key strokes or hotkeys for sev-

eral functions. Please note that these key codes do not necessarily represent the key characters that are used on international keyboards. A key on a standard 104 key PC keyboard with a US English language mapping is named. The layout for this key-

board is shown in Figure E-1. However, most modifier keys and other alphanumeric

keys used for hotkey purposes in application programs are on a similar position, no matter what language mapping you are using. Some of the keys also have aliases.

This means that a key can be named by two different key codes.

Figure E-1. English (US) keyboard Layout, used for the key codes

Table E-1. Key Names

Alias Key(s) Key

<

;

=

~

_

0 - 9

A - Z

.

,

/

BACKSPACE

TAB

[

]

ENTER

CAPS LOCK

\

LSHIFT

RCTRL

RSHIFT

LCTRL

TILDE

MINUS

EQUALS

LESS

SLASH

BACK SLASH

SHIFT

CTRL, STRG

SHIFT

CTRL, STRG

99

Appendix E. Key Codes

Key

F5

F6

F7

F8

F1

F2

F3

F4

LALT

SPACE

ALT GR

ESCAPE

F9

F10

F11

F12

PRINTSCREEN

SCROLL LOCK

BREAK

INSERT

HOME

PAGE_UP

PAGE_DOWN

DELETE

END

UP

LEFT

DOWN

RIGHT

NUM_LOCK

NUMPAD0

NUMPAD1

NUMPAD2

NUMPAD3

NUMPAD4

NUMPAD5

NUMPAD6

NUMPAD7

NUMPAD8

NUMPAD9

NUMPADPLUS

100

Alias Key(s)

ALT

ESC

POS 1

DEL

NUMPAD_PLUS, +

Key Alias Key(s)

NUMPAD /

NUMPADMUL

/

NUMPAD_MUL, x

NUMPADMINUS NUMPAD_MINUS, -

NUMPADENTER

WINDOWS

MENU

Appendix E. Key Codes

101

Appendix E. Key Codes

102

Appendix F. Pin Assignment

VGA HD-15

Table F-1. VGA HD-15

Pin

7

8

5

6

3

4

1

2

Assignment

Red

Green

Blue

USB_D -

GND

GND red

GND green

GND blue

RJ45 Connector Ethernet

Figure F-1. VGA HD-15

Pin

13

14

15

9

10

11

12

Assignment

USB+5V

GND sync

USB_D+

SDA, DDC...

HSYNC

VSYNC

SCL, DDC

Table F-2. RJ45

Pin

3

4

1

2

Assignment

TX +

TX -

RX +

Not connected

Figure F-2. RJ45

Pin

7

8

5

6

Assignment

Not connected

RX-

Not connected

Not connected

103

Appendix F. Pin Assignment

104

Appendix G. Specifications

Sizes and Weight

Table G-1. B050-000 Specification

Attribute

Height

Width

Length

Weight

Housing

Power Consumption

Value

95mm

25mm

72mm

160g (w/o replicator cable)

290g (with attached replicator cable)

Aluminium silver anodized up to 700mA

Environment

Temperature

Table G-2. Temperature

Attribute

Operating

Storage

Humidity

Table G-3. Humidity

Attribute

Operating

Storage

Value

0

â—¦

C to 55

â—¦

-18

â—¦

C (32

â—¦

F to 131

â—¦

F)

C to 70

â—¦

C (-0.4

â—¦

F to 158

â—¦

F)

Value

10% to 90% (non-condensing)

5% to 95% (non-condensing)

105

Appendix G. Specifications

106

Appendix H. B050-000 Operation Advices

This device has to be operated with the provided power supply only. The use of other power supplies voids the product liability of the manufacturer. If the power supply shows a malfunction, it must not be opened. Instead a request a replacement from the manufacturer or the vendor.

The power cord of the power supply is the point of junction to the supply network

AC 230 V. Therefore both the power supply and the socket have to be easily accessible to disconnect them quickly if it is necessary.

107

Appendix H. B050-000 Operation Advices

108

Appendix I. Tripp Lite Warranty Information

Limited Warranty

Tripp Lite, 1111 W. 35th Street, Chicago, IL 60609 USA (“Tripp Lite”) manufactures its hardware products from parts and components that are new or equivalent to new in accordance with industry-standard practices. Tripp Lite warrants that the hardware products including the firmware will be free from defects in materials and workmanship under normal use. Any implied warranties on the Tripp Lite firmware and hardware are limited to 24 months, respectively, beginning on the date of invoice.

Some states/jurisdictions do not allow limitations on duration of an implied warranty, so the above limitation may not apply to you. Additionally Tripp Lite grants a special warranty for 6 month.

Customer Remedies

Tripp Lite’s entire liability and exclusive remedy shall be, at Tripp Lite’s option, either (a) return of the price paid, or (b) repair or replacement of the firmware or hardware that does not meet this Limited Warranty and which is returned to Tripp Lite with a copy of your receipt. Damage due to shipping the products to you is covered under this warranty. Otherwise warranty does not cover damage due to external causes, including accident, abuse, misuse, problems with electrical power, servicing not authorized by Tripp Lite, usage not in accordance with product instructions, failure to perform required preventive maintenance and problems caused by use of parts and components not supplied by Tripp Lite. Any replacement hardware will be warranted for the remainder of the original period or thirty (30) days, whichever is longer. Tripp Lite will repair or replace products returned to Tripp Lite’s facility.

To request warranty service you must inform Tripp Lite within the warranty period.

If warranty service is required, Tripp Lite will issue a Return Material Authorization Number. You must ship the products back to Tripp Lite in their original or an equivalent packaging, prepay shipping charges, and insure the shipment or accept the possibility of loss or damage during shipment.

No Other Warranties

To the maximum extend permitted by applicable law, Tripp Lite disclaim all other warranties, either express or implied, including, but not limited to implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, with regard to the firmware, the accompanying written materials, and any accompanying hardware.

This limited warranty gives you specific legal rights. You may have others, which vary from state/jurisdiction to state/jurisdiction.

No Liability For Consequential Damages

To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, in no event shall Tripp Lite be liable for any damages whatsoever (including without limitation, special, incidental, consequential or indirect damages for personal injury, loss of business information, or any other pecuniary loss) arising out of the use of or inability to use this product, even if Tripp Lite has been advised of the possibility of such damages. In any case,

Tripp Lite’s entire liability under any provision of this agreement shall be limited to the amount actually paid by you for the firmware and/or hardware. Because some states/jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or limitation of liability for consequential or incidental damages, the above limitation may not apply to you.

109

Appendix I. Tripp Lite Warranty Information

110

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL)

Version 2, June 1991

Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place, Suite 330,

Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.

Preamble

The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation’s software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other

Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public

License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.

When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General

Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.

To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.

For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights.

We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.

Also, for each author’s protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors’ reputations.

Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone’s free use or not licensed at all.

The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow.

GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE

TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICA-

TION

0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The “Program”, below, refers to any such program or work, and a “work based on the Program” means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language.

(Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term “modification”.)

Each licensee is addressed as “you”.

Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this

License; they are outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program is covered only if its contents constitute a work

111

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL) based on the Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).

Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.

1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program’s source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License along with the

Program.

You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.

2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: a. You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.

b. You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License.

c. If the modified program normally reads commands interactively when run, you must cause it, when started running for such interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on the Program is not required to print an announcement.)

These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based on the

Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.

Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective works based on the Program.

In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the

Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under the scope of this License.

3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following: a. Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, b. Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding

112

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL) source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, c. Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)

The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components

(compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable.

If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object code.

4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance.

5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Program or works based on it.

6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients’ exercise of the rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this License.

7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you

(whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the

Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.

If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances.

It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance on

113

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL) consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice.

This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License.

8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the

Program under this License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation as if written in the body of this License.

9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the

General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns.

Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and “any later version”, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the

Free Software Foundation.

10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free

Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.

NO WARRANTY

11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO

WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICA-

BLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT

HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM “AS IS” WITH-

OUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUD-

ING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABIL-

ITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE

QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD

THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECES-

SARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.

12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN

WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY

MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE

LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, IN-

CIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR

INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS

OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED

BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE

WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY

HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.

END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS

How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs

If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.

To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey the exclusion of warranty; and each

114

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL) file should have at least the “copyright” line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.

<one line to give the program’s name and a brief idea of what it does.>

Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY

WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FIT-

NESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite

330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA

Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.

If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:

Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type "show w". This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type "show c" for details.

The hypothetical commands “show w” and “show c” should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may be called something other than “show w” and “show c”; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items-- whatever suits your program.

You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign a “copyright disclaimer” for the program, if necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:

Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program “Gnomovision” (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.

<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989

Ty Coon, President of Vice

This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General Public License instead of this License.

115

Appendix J. GNU General Public License (GPL)

116

Appendix K. The OpenLDAP Public License

Version 2.8, 17 August 2003

Redistribution and use of this software and associated documentation (“Software”), with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

1. Redistributions in source form must retain copyright statements and notices,

2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce applicable copyright statements and notices, this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution, and

3. Redistributions must contain a verbatim copy of this document.

The OpenLDAP Foundation may revise this license from time to time. Each revision is distinguished by a version number. You may use this Software under terms of this license revision or under the terms of any subsequent revision of the license.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OPENLDAP FOUNDATION AND ITS

CONTRIBUTORS “AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,

INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF

MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE

DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE OPENLDAP FOUNDATION, ITS

CONTRIBUTORS, OR THE AUTHOR(S) OR OWNER(S) OF THE SOFTWARE BE

LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY,

OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,

PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA,

OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON

ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR

TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY

OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY

OF SUCH DAMAGE.

The names of the authors and copyright holders must not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or other dealing in this Software without specific, written prior permission. Title to copyright in this Software shall at all times remain with copyright holders.

OpenLDAP is a registered trademark of the OpenLDAP Foundation.

Copyright 1999-2003 The OpenLDAP Foundation, Redwood City, California, USA.

All Rights Reserved. Permission to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this document is granted.

117

Appendix K. The OpenLDAP Public License

118

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Key Features

  • KVM access over IP or analog telephone line
  • No impact on server or network performance
  • Automatically senses video resolution
  • High-performance mouse tracking and synchronization
  • Port to connect a user console
  • Local Mouse suppression
  • Remote power management
  • User management
  • Virtual Media
  • Drive Redirection

Frequently Answers and Questions

How to power on the device?
Connect the external power supply to the 5V power connector and power on the B050-000.
How to configure the device?
You can configure the B050-000 via serial interface, or use the setup tool that can be found on the CD ROM delivered with this package.
How to connect the device to the server?
Attach the pre-mounted system cable to the VGA outlet of your server or the local console video port of your KVM switch. Use the system cables’s blue connector that is still unused. Attach the USB to one of the USB interfaces of your server or your USB-KVM switch. Connect the RJ45 Ethernet connector to your local Ethernet hub using a CAT5 cable.
How to login to the device?
The initial login settings are: Login: super, Password: pass.

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