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After installing the Cisco 2517 or Cisco 2519 and connecting a terminal or PC to the EIA/TIA-232 port on the management card, configure the Cisco IOS software.
The following steps are required to configure the router card, and are explained in more detail later in this chapter:
The remainder of this chapter explains these procedures in detail.
Connect a terminal or PC to the EIA/TIA-232 console port of the management card as described in the chapter "Installing the Router/hub."
Step 1 Apply power to the Cisco router/hub. Wait approximately two minutes for the system to initialize and complete the self-tests.
Step 2 After the SNMP manager starts, press Ctrl-E to exit to the console prompt, <<C>>.
Step 3 At the console prompt, enter the following command to connect to the router card console:
You can now begin configuring the router card.
This section describes the following procedures:
You should follow the procedure that best fits the needs of your network configuration.
If you do not plan to use AutoInstall, do not connect the router card's serial (WAN) cable to the CSU/DSU or the router card itself. This will prevent the router card from attempting to run the AutoInstall process. The router card will attempt to run AutoInstall whenever you start it if the serial (WAN) connection is connected on both ends and the router card does not have a configuration stored in NVRAM.
It can take several minutes for your router card to determine that AutoInstall is not set up on a remote TCP/IP host. After the router card determines that AutoInstall is not configured, it will default to the setup routine. If the serial (WAN) cable is not connected, the router card will boot from Flash memory and go into the setup routine immediately.
After you boot from Flash memory, the following information appears after about 30 seconds.
Step 1 If you are not connected to the router card, use the router command from the management card console:
router
Step 2 Enter the initial configuration dialog:
yes
yes
Step 3 Configure global parameters. Choose which protocols to support on your Token Ring interface. For IP-only installations, you can accept the default values for most of the questions. A typical configuration follows:
c2517
1111
2222
yes
public
yes
no
no
no
yes
no
no
no
no
no
yes
no
NTI1
yes
yes
x.x.x.x
0
255.0.0.0
no
no
Step 4 Configure the PCbus. The PCbus is used to communicate with the hub manager SNMP agent on the management card. The PCbus must have a unique IP address on a subnetwork. The management card SNMP agent determines its IP address by adding 1 to the PCbus IP address that you assign. For more information, see the section "PCbus ARP" in the chapter "Configuring the Router/hub SNMP Agent with SPSET."
yes
yes
no
x.x.x.x
0
255.0.0.0
no
no
![]() | Caution The IP address you assign to the router's PCbus interface must be at least one less than the maximum. |
Step 5 Configure the serial interfaces:
yes
yes
no
x.x.x.x
0
no
no
yes
yes
no
x.x.x.x
0
x.x.x.x
no
no
Step 6 Configure the Token Ring interface:
yes
16
yes
x.x.x.x
0
yes
5
yes
Step 7 Complete the configuration:
Step 8 Now the configuration you entered is displayed and you are asked if you want to use the displayed configuration. If you answer no, you can begin the configuration again and make any changes you want. If you answer yes, then this configuration will be entered and saved in the configuration database.
yes
Step 9 To allow you to manage the router/hub with an SNMP manager, enable IBM LAN management on the router card:
enable
****
config t
int pcbus 0
local-lnm
no shut
Ctrl-Z
Step 10 Write the configuration to memory:
copy running-config startup-config
The router is now configured.
The AutoInstall process is designed to configure the router card automatically after connecting to your wide-area network (WAN). For AutoInstall to work properly, a Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) host on your network must be preconfigured to provide the required configuration files. The TCP/IP host may exist anywhere on the network if the following two conditions are maintained:
This functionality is coordinated by your system administrator at the site where the TCP/IP host is located. Do not attempt to use AutoInstall unless the required files have been provided on the TCP/IP host.
To prepare your router card for the AutoInstall process:
Step 1 Shut down the Cisco router/hub.
Step 2 Place the Cisco router/hub in a location that will allow the serial (WAN) cable to make a connection between the router card and the CSU/DSU without placing a strain on the cable.
Step 3 Attach the serial cable or cables to the Cisco router/hub and the CSU/DSU.
Step 4 The BRI port, which is a female RJ-45 connector (see Figure 4-1), is located on the interface panel of the daughter card to the right of the serial 1 port.
Using the appropriate cable, connect the BRI port to the ISDN through the NT1. The common carrier will provide the NT1 connection worldwide, except in North America where the NT1 is owned by individual customers.
The router card will load the operating system image from Flash memory. If the remote end of the WAN connection is connected and properly configured, the AutoInstall process will begin.

![]() | Warning Network hazardous voltages are accessible in the BRI cable. If you detach the BRI cable, detach the end away from the router card first to avoid possible electric shock. Network hazardous voltages also are accessible on the router card in the area of the BRI port (RJ-45 connector), regardless of when power is turned off. (See Figure 4-2.) See this warning in multiple languages in the appendix "Translated Safety Warnings." |

The router card will send a Serial Line Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (SLARP) packet over the serial line. When the packet reaches the opposite end of the WAN connection, the remote router will reply with the IP address of its serial interface. The router card will increment the serial interface address by one and assign this address to its own serial interface. This process will take approximately one minute.
After the serial interface on the router card has been assigned a valid serial interface IP address, it will resolve its host name. It will send a Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) request on the serial line for the configuration file called network-confg. If the TCP/IP host responds with this file, AutoInstall will search the file's contents for the host name associated with its IP address.
If the TCP/IP host does not respond with the network-confg file, AutoInstall will broadcast a reverse domain name server (DNS) request containing the IP address for the router card's serial port that it was assigned over the network. If the DNS services have been set up, AutoInstall will resolve the router card's name from this file. After the IP address and host name have been found, AutoInstall will broadcast a TFTP request to the TCP/IP host for the file called hostname-confg. If this file has been set up by the system administrator, it will be downloaded automatically to the router card's memory, completing the configuration.
If the AutoInstall completed successfully, you still need to write the configuration data to the router card's non-volatile random-access memory (NVRAM) and reset the configuration registers. Perform the following steps to complete these tasks:
Step 1 Enter the enable command to enter enable mode. Configuration changes can only be made in enable mode.
enable
Step 2 Enter the enable password that was configured into the router card by the AutoInstall process:
*******
Step 3 Enter the following command at the prompt:
copy running-config startup-config
This will save the configuration settings that the AutoInstall process created in the router card. If you fail to do this, your configuration will be lost the next time you reload the router card.
Step 4 You can check the value of these settings by entering the show version command at the Hostname# prompt:
show version
If the AutoInstall feature is not set up, or if your router card is unable to locate the appropriate files, you should use the manual configuration with or without the setup utility.
For more information on router software configuration, refer to UniverCD or the following Cisco publications:
Configuration Builder Getting Started Guide
Router Products Getting Started Guide
Router Products Configuration Guide
Router Products Command Reference
Troubleshooting Internetworking Systems (as needed)
Cisco Hub/Ring Manager for Windows Getting Started Guide
To order UniverCD, Cisco's online library of product information, or paper documentation, refer to the section "Ordering Cisco Documentation," which is in the warranty booklet that accompanied your router card.
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