Prestige 645R-A Series User’s Guide
Remote Node Configuration 13-5
Table 13-1 Menu 11.1 Remote Node Profile
FIELD DESCRIPTION EXAMPLE
Schedule Sets
This field is only applicable for PPPoE and PPPoA encapsulation.
You can apply up to four schedule sets here. For more details please
refer to the Call Scheduling chapter.
Nailed up
Connection
This field is only applicable for PPPoE and PPPoA encapsulation.
This field specifies if you want to make the connection to this remote
node a nailed-up connection.
Session Options
Edit Filter Sets
Use [SPACE BAR] to choose Yes and press [ENTER] to open menu
11.5 to edit the filter sets. See the Remote Node Filter section for
more details.
No
(default)
Idle Timeout (sec) Type the number of seconds (0-9999) that can elapse when the
Prestige is idle (there is no traffic going to the remote node), before
the Prestige automatically disconnects the remote node. 0 means
that the session will not timeout.
When you have completed this menu, press [ENTER] at the prompt “Press ENTER to confirm or ESC to
cancel” to save your configuration or press [ESC] to cancel and go back to the previous screen.
13.2.3 Outgoing Authentication Protocol
For obvious reasons, you should employ the strongest authentication protocol possible. However, some
vendors’ implementation includes specific authentication protocol in the user profile. It will disconnect if
the negotiated protocol is different from that in the user profile, even when the negotiated protocol is
stronger than specified. If the peer disconnects right after a successful authentication, make sure that you
specify the correct authentication protocol when connecting to such an implementation.
13.3 Metric
The metric represents the "cost of transmission". A router determines the best route for transmission by
choosing a path with the lowest "cost". RIP routing uses hop count as the measurement of cost, with a
minimum of "1" for directly connected networks. The number must be between "1" and "15"; a number
greater than "15" means the link is down. The smaller the number, the lower the "cost".