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Multi-Tech Systems Multivoip 200 Model Mvp200/800 Standalone Voice/ip Getaway User Guide
Multi-Tech Systems Multivoip 200 Model Mvp200/800 Standalone Voice/ip Getaway User Guide
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62 MultiVOIP User Guide Introduction This chapter starts out with statements about your MultiVOIP 2-year warranty. The next section, Tech Support, should be read carefully if you have questions or problems with your MultiVOIP. It includes the technical support telephone numbers, space for recording your product information, and an explanation of how to send in your MultiVOIP should you require service. The final three sections explain how to use our bulletin board service (BBS), and get support through CompuServe and the Internet. Limited Warranty Multi-Tech Systems, Inc. (“MTS”) warrants that its products will be free from defects in material or workmanship for a period of two years from the date of purchase, or if proof of purchase is not provided, two years from date of shipment. MTS MAKES NO OTHER WARRANTY, EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, AND ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE HEREBY DISCLAIMED. This warranty does not apply to any products which have been damaged by lightning storms, water, or power surges or which have been neglected, altered, abused, used for a purpose other than the one for which they were manufactured, repaired by the customer or any party without MTS’s written authorization, or used in any manner inconsistent with MTS’s instructions. MTS’s entire obligation under this warranty shall be limited (at MTS’s option) to repair or replacement of any products which prove to be defective within the warranty period, or, at MTS’s option, issuance of a refund of the purchase price. Defective products must be returned by Customer to MTS’s factory transportation prepaid. MTS WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES AND UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES WILL ITS LIABILITY EXCEED THE PURCHASE PRICE FOR DEFECTIVE PRODUCTS. On-line Warranty Registration To register your MultiVOIP on-line, click on the following link: http://www.multitech.com/register
63 Chapter 6 - Warranty, Service and Tech Support Tech Support Multi-Tech has an excellent staff of technical support personnel available to help you get the most out of your Multi-Tech product. If you have any questions about the operation of this unit, call 1-800-972- 2439. Please fill out the MultiVOIP information (below), and have it available when you call. If your MultiVOIP requires service, the tech support specialist will guide you on how to send in your MultiVOIP (refer to the next section). Recording MultiVOIP Information Please fill in the following information on your Multi-Tech MultiVOIP. This will help tech support in answering your questions. (The same information is requested on the Warranty Registration Card.) Model No.: _________________________ Serial No.: _________________________ Software Version: ____________________ The model and serial numbers are on the bottom of your MultiVOIP. Please note status of your MultiVOIP including LED indicators, screen messages, diagnostic test results, problems with a specific application, etc. Use the space below to note the MultiVOIP status: ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Contacting Tech Support via E-mail If you prefer to receive service on-line, via the internet, you can contact Tech Support via e-mail at the following address: http://www.multitech.com/_forms/email_tech_support.htm
64 MultiVOIP User Guide Service If your tech support specialist decides that service is required, your MultiVOIP may be sent (freight prepaid) to our factory. Return shipping charges will be paid by Multi-Tech Systems. Include the following with your MultiVOIP: a description of the problem. return billing and return shipping addresses. contact name and phone number. check or purchase order number for payment if the MultiVOIP is out of warranty. (Check with your technical support specialist for the standard repair charge for your MultiVOIP). if possible, note the name of the technical support specialist with whom you spoke. If you need to inquire about the status of the returned product, be prepared to provide the serial number of the product sent. Send your MultiVOIP to this address: MULTI-TECH SYSTEMS, INC. 2205 WOODALE DRIVE MOUNDS VIEW, MINNESOTA 55112 ATTN: SERVICE OR REPAIRS You should also check with the supplier of your MultiVOIP on the availability of local service and/or loaner units in your part of the country. The Multi-Tech BBS For customers who do not have Internet access, Multi-Tech maintains a bulletin board system (BBS). Information available from the BBS includes new product information, product upgrade files, and problem-solving tips. The phone number for the Multi-Tech BBS is (800) 392-2432 (USA and Canada) or (612) 785-3702 (international and local). The BBS can be accessed by any asynchronous modem operating at 1200 bps to 56K bps at a setting of 8 bits, no parity, and 1 stop bit (8-N-1). To Log on to the Multi-Tech BBS 1. Set your communications program to 8-N-1. 2. Dial our BBS at (800) 392-2432 (USA and Canada) or (612) 785-3702 (international and local). 3. At the prompts, type your first name, last name, and password; then press ENTER. If you are a first time caller, the BBS asks if your name is spelled correctly. If you answer yes, a questionnaire appears. You must complete the questionnaire to use the BBS on your first call. 4. Press ENTER until the Main Menu appears. From the Main Menu you have access to two areas: the Files Menu and News. For help on menu commands, type ?. To Download a File If you know the file name 1. From the Main Menu, type F to access the Files Menu, then type D.
65 Appendix A - TCP/IP Description 2. Enter the name of the file you wish to download from the BBS. 3. If a password is required, enter the password. 4. Answer Y or N to the automatic logoff question. 5. Select a file transfer protocol by typing the indicated letter, such as Z for Zmodem (the recommended protocol). 6. If you select Zmodem, the transfer will begin automatically. If you select another protocol, you may have to initiate the transfer yourself. (In most data communications programs, the PAGE DOWN key initiates the download.) 7. When the download is complete, press ENTER to return to the File Menu. 8. To exit the BBS, type G and press ENTER. If you don’t know the file name 1. From the Main Menu, type F to access the Files Menu. For a list of file areas, type L, press ENTER, then type L and press ENTER again. (If you do not type the second L, you will list all of the files on the BBS.) 2. Mark each file area you would like to examine by typing its list number and pressing ENTER. 3. Enter L to list all the files in the selected file areas. Enter C to go forward in the file list and P to go back. 4. To mark one or more files for download, type M, press ENTER, type the list numbers of the files, and press ENTER again. 5. Enter D. You will see a list of the files you have marked. Enter E if you would like to edit the list; otherwise enter D again to start the download process. 6. Select a file transfer protocol by typing the indicated letter, such as Z for Zmodem (the recommended protocol). 7. If you select Zmodem, the file will transfer automatically. If you select another protocol, you may have to initiate the transfer yourself. (In most data communications programs, the PAGE DOWN key initiates the download.) 8. When the download is complete, press ENTER to return to the File Menu. 9. To exit the BBS, type G and press ENTER. About the Internet Multi-Tech is a commercial user on the Internet, and we retrieve messages from our customers on a periodic basis. Multi-Tech’s presence includes a Web site at: http://www.multitech.com and an ftp site at: ftp://ftp.multitech.com
68 MultiVOIP User Guide Appendix A - TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Inter- net Protocol) Description TCP/IP is a protocol suite and related applications developed for the U.S. Department of Defense in the 1970s and 1980s specifically to permit different types of computers to communicate and exchange information with one another. TCP/IP is currently mandated as an official U.S. Department of Defense protocol and is also widely used in the UNIX community. Before you install TCP/IP on your network, you need to establish your Internet addressing strategy. First, choose a domain name for your company. A domain name is the unique Internet name, usually the name of your business, that identifies your company. For example, Multi-Tech’s domain name is multitech.com ( .com indicates this is a commercial organization; .edu denotes educational organizations, .gov denotes government organizations). Next, determine how many IP addresses you’ll need. This depends on how many individual network segments you have, and how many systems on each segment need to be connected to the Internet. You’ll need an IP address for each network interface on each computer and hardware device. IP addresses are 32 bits long and come in two types: network and host. Network addresses come in five classes: A, B, C, D, and E. Each class of network address is allocated a certain number of host addresses. For example, a class B network can have a maximum of 65,534 hosts, while a class C network can have only 254. The class A and B addresses have been exhausted, and the class D and E addresses are reserved for special use. Consequently, companies now seeking an Internet connection are limited to class C addresses. Early IP implementations ran on hosts commonly interconnected by Ethernet local area networks (LAN). Every transmission on the LAN contains the local network, or medium access control (MAC), address of the source and destination nodes. The MAC address is 48-bits in length and is non- hierarchical; MAC addresses are never the same as IP addresses. When a host needs to send a datagram to another host on the same network, the sending application must know both the IP and MAC addresses of the intended receiver. Unfortunately, the IP process may not know the MAC address of the receiver. The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), described in RFC 826 (located at ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc826.txt) provides a mechanism for a host to UDP,determine a receiver’s MAC address from the IP address. In the process, the host sends an ARP packet in a frame containing the MAC broadcast address; and then the ARP request advertises the destination IP address and asks for the associated MAC address. The station on the LAN that recognizes its own IP address will send an ARP response with its own MAC address. An ARP message is carried directly in an IP datagram. Other address resolution procedures have also been defined, including those which allow a diskless processor to determine its IP address from its MAC address (Reverse ARP, or RARP), provides a mapping between an IP address and a frame relay virtual circuit identifier (Inverse ARP, or InARP), and provides a mapping between an IP address and ATM virtual path/channel identifiers (ATMARP). The TCP/IP protocol suite comprises two protocols that correspond roughly to the OSI Transport and Session Layers; these protocols are called the Transmission Control Protocol and the User Datagram Protocol (UDP). Individual applications are referred to by a port identifier in TCP/UDP messages. The port identifier and IP address together form a “socket”. Well-known port numbers on the server side of a connection include 20 (FTP data transfer), 21 (FTP control), 23 (Telnet), 25 (SMTP), 43 (whois), 70 (Gopher), 79 (finger), and 80 (HTTP). TCP, described in RFC 793 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc793.txt) provides a virtual circuit (connection- oriented) communication service across the network. TCP includes rules for formatting messages, establishing and terminating virtual circuits, sequencing, flow control, and error correction. Most of the applications in the TCP/IP suite operate over the “reliable” transport service provided by TCP. described in RFC 768 (ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc768.txt) provides an end-to-end datagram (connectionless) service. Some applications, such as those that involve a simple query and
69 Appendix A - TCP/IP Description response, are better suited to the datagram service of UDP because there is no time lost to virtual circuit establishment and termination. UDP’s primary function is to add a port number to the IP address to provide a socket for the application. The Application Layer protocols are examples of common TCP/IP applications and utilities, which include: Telnet (Telecommunication Network): a virtual terminal protocol allowing a user logged on to one TCP/IP host to access other hosts on the network, described in RFC 854 ( ftp:// ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc854.txt). FTP: the File Transfer Protocol allows a user to transfer files between local and remote host computers per IETF RFC 959 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc959.txt). Archie: a utility that allows a user to search all registered anonymous FTP sites for files on a specified topic. Gopher: a tool that allows users to search through data repositories using a menu-driven, hierarchical interface, with links to other sites, per RFC 1436 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/ rfc1436.txt). SMTP: the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol is the standard protocol for the exchange of electronic mail over the Internet, per IETF RFC 821 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc821.txt). HTTP: the Hypertext Transfer Protocol is the basis for exchange of information over the World Wide Web (WWW). Various versions of HTTP are in use over the Internet, with HTTP version 1.0 (per RFC 1945) ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1945.txt) being the most current. HTML: WWW pages are written in the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML), an ASCII-based, platform-independent formatting language, per IETF RFC 1866 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/ rfc1866.txt). Finger: used to determine the status of other hosts and/or users, per IETF RFC 1288 ( ftp:// ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1288.txt). POP: the Post Office Protocol defines a simple interface between a user’s mail reader software and an electronic mail server; the current version is POP3, described in IETF RFC 1460 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1460.txt). DNS: the Domain Name System defines the structure of Internet names and their association with IP addresses, as well as the association of mail, name, and other servers with domains. SNMP: the Simple Network Management Protocol defines procedures and management information databases for managing TCP/IP-based network devices. SNMP, defined by RFC 1157 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1157.txt) is widely deployed in local and wide area network. SNMP Version 2 (SNMPv2), per RFC 1441< ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1441.txt) adds security mechanisms that are missing in SNMP, but is also more complex. Ping: a utility that allows a user at one system to determine the status of other hosts and the latency in getting a message to that host. Ping uses ICMP Echo messages. Whois/NICNAME: Utilities that search databases for information about Internet domain and domain contact information, per RFC 954 ( ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc954.txt). Traceroute: a tool that displays the route that packets will take when traveling to a remote host.
70 MultiVOIP 200 User Guide Internet Protocol (IP) IP is the Internet standard protocol that tracks Internetwork node addresses, routes outgoing messages and recognizes incoming messages, allowing a message to cross multiple networks on the way to its final destination. The IPv6 Control Protocol (IPV6CP) is responsible for configuring, enabling, and disabling the IPv6 protocol modules on both ends of the point-to-point link. IPV6CP uses the same packet exchange mechanism as the Link Control Protocol (LCP). IPV6CP packets are not exchanged until PPP has reached the Network-Layer Protocol phase. IPV6CP packets received before this phase is reached are silently discarded. (See also TCP/IP.) Before you install TCP/IP on your network, you need to establish your Internet addressing strategy. You first choose a domain name for your company. A domain name is the unique Internet name, usually the name of your business, that identifies your company. For example, Multi-Tech’s domain name is multitech.com (where .com indicates this is a commercial organization; .edu denotes educational organizations, .gov denotes government organizations). Next, you determine how many IP addresses you’ll need. This depends on how many individual network segments you have, and how many systems on each segment need to be connected to the Internet. You need an IP address for each network interface on each computer and hardware device. IP addresses are 32 bits long and come in two types: network and host. Network addresses come in five classes: A, B, C, D, and E. Each class of network address is allocated a certain number of host addresses. For example, a class B network can have a maximum of 65,534 hosts, while a class C network can have only 254. The class A and B addresses have been exhausted, and the class D and E addresses are reserved for special use. Consequently, companies now seeking an Internet connection are limited to class C addresses. The current demand for Internet connections will exhaust the current stock of 32-bit IP addresses. In response, Internet architects have proposed the next generation of IP addresses, Ipng (IP Next Generation). It will feature 16-byte addressing, surpassing the capacities of 32-bit IP. Still in its design phase, IPng is not expected to be widely deployed before late 1997. An IP address can serve only a single physical network. Therefore, if your organization has multiple physical networks, you must make them appear as one to external users. This is done via “subnetting”, a complex procedure best left to ISPs and others experienced in IP addressing. Since IP addresses and domain names have no inherent connection, they are mapped together in databases stored on Domain Name Servers (DNS). If you decide to let an Internet Service Provider (ISP) administer your DNS server, the ISP can assist you with the domain name and IP address assignment necessary to configure your company’s site-specific system information. Domain names and IP addresses are granted by the InterNIC. To check the availability of a specific name or to obtain more information, call the InterNIC at (703)742-4777.