El 21 Feb 2001, a las 16:08, Andrew P. Kaplan escribió:
> In my Total Control Chassis one HiPerARC was controlling all my DSP modem
> cards. I added a second HiperARC and gave ownership of the last card to the
> second HiPer ARC. There was a new pool of IP's assigned to the card. It only
> took a few calls and stopped. Log file had "bad encrypted password" In
> addition my log file was filled with the following. I moved the last card
> back to the first HiPer ARC and it promptly filled up and the error messages
> dissapeared.
>
>
> Wed Feb 21 06:28:15 2001: ERR: Attribute number 38998 (vendor 429) is not
> defined in your dictionary
> Wed Feb 21 06:28:15 2001: ERR: Attribute number 39000 (vendor 429) is not
> defined in your dictionary
> Wed Feb 21 06:28:15 2001: ERR: Attribute number 39001 (vendor 429) is not
> defined in your dictionary
> Wed Feb 21 06:28:15 2001: ERR: Attribute number 39051 (vendor 429) is not
> defined in your dictionary
I guess you'll have to wait a better response from Hugh (his messages
sent yesterday had the usual line stating that he was travelling and not
answering as often as usual).
As for these message, they are generated because there are no dictionary
entries for those vendor specific attributes.
You usually has to ask your NAS vendor about what these attributes are
and Hugh allways ask for you to send them to the list so they can be
incorporated into Radiator´s next release dictionary.
FYI, vendor 429 is 3Com Carrier Systems Group., and the contact (usually
completely outdated so it's probably useless) is Bill Vroman
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
BTW, to find out about a vendor number you don't know, these are the
private enterprise numbers that IANA gives to any enterprise that request
it. It's main use is in defining private MIB's for SNMP, but they are
also used for LDAP (or, more apropriately X.500 directories) attributes
and objectclasses, and are also used for radius attributes.
These list is available at:
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/iana/assignments/enterprise-numbers
(this is where I took the 429 entry from).
>
> Andrew P. Kaplan, CNE, MCSE+Internet, MCT, CCNA, CCDA
> CyberShore, Inc. -- Premium Internet Services -- http://www.cshore.com
>
> --- To understand recursion, one must first understand recursion.
>
>
>
>
>
>
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