Ken D'Ambrosio wrote:
Kevin: I don't think Matt made himself quite clear enough -- going with
his dhcpd.conf setup works for FTP, regardless of what the option name
is; it's working great! And I don't even have tftpd installed, much
less populated. (Honestly, I'm not even sure the phone does T
> Interesting... I'll stick with FTP anyway, since I can partially secure
> it, and it works across NAT :-)
Kevin: I don't think Matt made himself quite clear enough -- going with
his dhcpd.conf setup works for FTP, regardless of what the option name
is; it's working great! And I don't even have
What I want to know is if you can specify the ftp user/pass over DHCP,
so I don't have to use the default Polycom one (without manually setting
it on each phone).
As far as I know, there is no option in DHCP to do that. What's wrong
with using the default user/pass?
_
Matt Gibson wrote:
Kevin P. Fleming wrote:
Eric Wieling wrote:
This was fixed in 1.4.1. TFTP and FTP now work the same for deciding
to download the firmware or not.
Interesting... I'll stick with FTP anyway, since I can partially
secure it, and it works across NAT :-)
Yeah, I'm still using FTP,
Kevin P. Fleming wrote:
Eric Wieling wrote:
This was fixed in 1.4.1. TFTP and FTP now work the same for deciding
to download the firmware or not.
Interesting... I'll stick with FTP anyway, since I can partially secure
it, and it works across NAT :-)
Hi,
Yeah, I'm still using FTP, it seemed that
Eric Wieling wrote:
This was fixed in 1.4.1. TFTP and FTP now work the same for deciding to
download the firmware or not.
Interesting... I'll stick with FTP anyway, since I can partially secure
it, and it works across NAT :-)
___
Asterisk-Users mailing
Kevin P. Fleming wrote:
Matt Gibson wrote:
This is what I'm sending from my dhcpd server.
option ntp-servers 10.x.x.x;
option tftp-server-name "ftp.x.x.x";
option time-offset -18000;
Keep in mind that using TFTP for a Polycom boot server is sub-optimal,
because you have to renam
Matt Gibson wrote:
This is what I'm sending from my dhcpd server.
option ntp-servers 10.x.x.x;
option tftp-server-name "ftp.x.x.x";
option time-offset -18000;
Keep in mind that using TFTP for a Polycom boot server is sub-optimal,
because you have to rename files to get new versio
Ken D'Ambrosio wrote:
I'm RTFM'ing, but I can't figure out how the dhcpd.conf file specifies the
boot server, and how it differentiates between whether it's FTP or
TFTP. I've
tried option 66/next-server, and option 150, to no avail. And the docs
just don't -- leastwise, in the way I'm reading t
Ken D'Ambrosio wrote:
tried option 66/next-server, and option 150, to no avail. And the docs
just don't -- leastwise, in the way I'm reading them -- make sense.
I've checked the admin guide, I've checked the wiki... no dice. Do I
need to *specify* my boot server from the LCD panel?
I've never
I'm RTFM'ing, but I can't figure out how the dhcpd.conf file specifies the
boot server, and how it differentiates between whether it's FTP or
TFTP. I've
tried option 66/next-server, and option 150, to no avail. And the docs
just don't -- leastwise, in the way I'm reading them -- make sense.
I
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