20 research outputs found

    OmniSwitch 7700/7800 OmniSwitch 8800 Network Configuration Guide

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    This configuration guide includes information about configuring the following features: • VLANs, VLAN router ports, mobile ports, and VLAN rules. • Basic Layer 2 functions, such as Ethernet port parameters, source learning, Spanning Tree, and Alcatel interswitch protocols (AMAP and GMAP). • Advanced Layer 2 functions, such as 802.1Q tagging, Link Aggregation, IP Multicast Switching, andServer Load Balancing. • Basic routing protocols and functions, such as static IP routes, RIP, DHCP Relay, Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP), and IPX. • Security features, such as switch access control, Authenticated VLANs (AVLANs), authentication servers, and policy management. • Quality of Service (QoS) and Access Control Lists (ACLs) features, such as policy rules for prioritizingand filtering traffic, remapping packet headers, and network address translation. • Diagnostic tools, such as RMON, port mirroring, and switch logging.This OmniSwitch 7700/7800/8800 Network Configuration Guide describes how to set up and monitor software features that will allow your switch to operate in a live network environment. The software features described in this manual are shipped standard with your OmniSwitch 7700, 7800, or 8800. These features are used when setting up your OmniSwitch in a network of switches and routers

    Junos Pulse Secure Access Service Administration Guide

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    This guide describes basic configuration procedures for Juniper Networks Secure Access Secure Access Service. This document was formerly titled Secure Access Administration Guide. This document is now part of the Junos Pulse documentation set. This guide is designed for network administrators who are configuring and maintaining a Juniper Networks Secure Access Service device. To use this guide, you need a broad understanding of networks in general and the Internet in particular, networking principles, and network configuration. Any detailed discussion of these concepts is beyond the scope of this guide.The Juniper Networks Secure Access Service enable you to give employees, partners, and customers secure and controlled access to your corporate data and applications including file servers, Web servers, native messaging and e-mail clients, hosted servers, and more from outside your trusted network using just a Web browser. Secure Access Service provide robust security by intermediating the data that flows between external users and your company’s internal resources. Users gain authenticated access to authorized resources through an extranet session hosted by the appliance. During intermediation, Secure Access Service receives secure requests from the external, authenticated users and then makes requests to the internal resources on behalf of those users. By intermediating content in this way, Secure Access Service eliminates the need to deploy extranet toolkits in a traditional DMZ or provision a remote access VPN for employees. To access the intuitive Secure Access Service home page, your employees, partners, and customers need only a Web browser that supports SSL and an Internet connection. This page provides the window from which your users can securely browse Web or file servers, use HTML-enabled enterprise applications, start the client/server application proxy, begin a Windows, Citrix, or Telnet/SSH terminal session, access corporate e-mail servers, start a secured layer 3 tunnel, or schedule or attend a secure online meeting

    Catalyst 3560 Switch Getting Started Guide

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    Catalyst 3560 Switch guide.This guide provides instructions on how to use Express Setup to configure your switch. It also includes information about switch management options, basic rack-mounting procedures, port and module connections, power connection procedures, and troubleshooting help. For additional installation and configuration information for Catalyst 3560 switches, see the Catalyst 3560 documentation on Cisco.com. For system requirements, important notes, limitations, open and resolved bugs, and last-minute documentation updates, see the release notes, also on Cisco.com. When you use the online publications, refer to the documents that match the Cisco IOS software version running on the switch. The software version is on the Cisco IOS label on the switch rear panel. For translations of the warnings that appear in this publication, see the Regulatory Compliance and Safety Information for the Catalyst 3560 Switch guide

    SFE2000/SFE2000P Fast Ethernet Switch Reference Guide

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    SFE2000/SFE2000P Fast Ethernet Switch Reference GuideSFE2000/SFE2000P Fast Ethernet Switch Reference Guid

    DSpace 5.x Documentation

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    DSpace is an open source software platform that enables organisations to: - capture and describe digital material using a submission workflow module, or a variety of programmatic ingest options - distribute an organisation's digital assets over the web through a search and retrieval system - preserve digital assets over the long term This system documentation includes a functional overview of the system, which is a good introduction to the capabilities of the system, and should be readable by non-technical folk. Everyone should read this section first because it introduces some terminology used throughout the rest of the documentation. For people actually running a DSpace service, there is an installation guide, and sections on configuration and the directory structure. Finally, for those interested in the details of how DSpace works, and those potentially interested in modifying the code for their own purposes, there is a detailed architecture and design section.DSpace is an open source software platform that enables organisations to: - capture and describe digital material using a submission workflow module, or a variety of programmatic ingest options - distribute an organisation's digital assets over the web through a search and retrieval system - preserve digital assets over the long term This system documentation includes a functional overview of the system, which is a good introduction to the capabilities of the system, and should be readable by non-technical folk. Everyone should read this section first because it introduces some terminology used throughout the rest of the documentation. For people actually running a DSpace service, there is an installation guide, and sections on configuration and the directory structure. Finally, for those interested in the details of how DSpace works, and those potentially interested in modifying the code for their own purposes, there is a detailed architecture and design section

    DSpace 1.5.2 Manual

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    This system documentation includes a functional overview of the system, which is a good introduction to the capabilities of the system, and should be readable by non-technical folk. Everyone should read this section first because it introduces some terminology used throughout the rest of the documentation. For people actually running a DSpace service, there is an installation guide, and sections on configuration and the directory structure. Note that as of DSpace 1.2, the administration user interface guide is now on-line help available from within the DSpace system. Finally, for those interested in the details of how DSpace works, and those potentially interested in modifying the code for their own purposes, there is a detailed architecture and design section. Other good sources of information are: • The DSpace Public API Javadocs. Build these with the command mvn javadoc:javadoc. • The DSpace Wiki [http://wiki.dspace.org/] contains stacks of useful information about the DSpace platform and the work people are doing with it. You are strongly encouraged to visit this site and add information about your own work. Useful Wiki areas are: • A list of DSpace resources [http://wiki.dspace.org/DspaceResources] (Web sites, mailing lists etc.) • Technical FAQ [http://wiki.dspace.org/TechnicalFaq] • A list of projects using DSpace [http://wiki.dspace.org/DspaceProjects] • Guidelines for contributing back to DSpace [http://wiki.dspace.org/ContributionGuidelines] • www.dspace.org [http://www.dspace.org/] has announcements and contains useful information about bringing up an instance of DSpace at your organization. • The dspace-tech e-mail list on SourceForge [#] is the recommended place to ask questions, since a growing community of DSpace developers and users is on hand on that list to help with any questions you might have. The e-mail archive of that list is a useful resource. • The dspace-devel e-mail list [#], for those developing with the DSpace with a view to contributing to the core DSpace code.DSpace is an open source software platform that enables organisations to: • capture and describe digital material using a submission workflow module, or a variety of programmatic ingest options • distribute an organisation's digital assets over the web through a search and retrieval system • preserve digital assets over the long ter

    Microsoft Dynamics AX 2009 Installation Guide

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    Information in this document, including URL and other Internet Web site references, is subject to change without notice. The entire risk of the use or the results from the use of this document remains with the user. Unless otherwise noted, the companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted in examples herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, e-mail address, logo, person, place, or event is intended or should be inferred. Complying with all applicable copyright laws is the responsibility of the user. Without limiting the rights under copyright, no part of this document may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), or for any purpose, without the express written permission of Microsoft Corporation. Microsoft may have patents, patent applications, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual property rights covering subject matter in this document. Except as expressly provided in any written license agreement from Microsoft, the furnishing of this document does not give you any license to these patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other intellectual propertyMicrosoft Dynamics is a line of integrated, adaptable business management solutions that enables you and your people to make business decisions with greater confidence. Microsoft Dynamics works like and with familiar Microsoft software, automating and streamlining financial, customer relationship and supply chain processes in a way that helps you drive business success

    Junos OS Security Configuration Guide

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    This preface provides the following guidelines for using the Junos OS Security Configuration Guide: • J Series and SRX Series Documentation and Release Notes on page xli • Objectives on page xlii • Audience on page xlii • Supported Routing Platforms on page xlii • Document Conventions on page xlii • Documentation Feedback on page xliv • Requesting Technical Support on page xliv Juniper Networks supports a technical book program to publish books by Juniper Networks engineers and subject matter experts with book publishers around the world. These books go beyond the technical documentation to explore the nuances of network architecture, deployment, and administration using the Junos operating system (Junos OS) and Juniper Networks devices. In addition, the Juniper Networks Technical Library, published in conjunction with O'Reilly Media, explores improving network security, reliability, and availability using Junos OS configuration techniques. All the books are for sale at technical bookstores and book outlets around the world. The current list can be viewed at http://www.juniper.net/books .Junos OS for SRX Series Services Gateways integrates the world-class network security and routing capabilities of Juniper Networks. Junos OS includes a wide range of packet-based filtering, class-of-service (CoS) classifiers, and traffic-shaping features as well as a rich, extensive set of flow-based security features including policies, screens, network address translation (NAT), and other flow-based services. Traffic that enters and exits services gateway is processed according to features you configure, such as packet filters, security policies, and screens. For example, the software can determine: • Whether the packet is allowed into the device • Which firewall screens to apply to the packet • The route the packet takes to reach its destination • Which CoS to apply to the packet, if any • Whether to apply NAT to translate the packet’s IP address • Whether the packet requires an Application Layer Gateway (ALG

    คู่มือการใช้งาน Dspace เวอร์ชั่น 3.x

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    DSpace is an open source repository software package typically used for creating open access repositories for scholarly and/or published digital content. While DSpace shares some feature overlap with content management systems and document management systems, the DSpace repository software serves a specific need as a digital archives system, focused on the long-term storage, access and preservation of digital content. The first public version of DSpace was released in November 2002, as a joint effort between developers from MIT and HP Labs.[1] Following the first user group meeting in March 2004, a group of interested institutions formed the DSpace Federation,[2] which determined the governance of future software development by adopting the Apache Foundation's community development model as well establishing the DSpace Committer Group.[3] In July 2007 as the DSpace user community grew larger, HP and MIT jointly formed the DSpace Foundation,[4] a not-for-profit organization that provided leadership and support. In May 2009 collaboration on related projects and growing synergies between the DSpace Foundation and the Fedora Commons organization led to the joining of the two organizations to pursue their common mission in a not-for-profit called DuraSpace.[5] Currently the DSpace software and user community receives leadership and guidance from DuraSpace. DSpace is a set of cooperating Java web applications and utility programs that maintain an asset store and an associated metadata store. The web applications provide interfaces for administration, deposit, ingest, search and access. The asset store is maintained on a file system or similar storage system. The metadata, including access and configuration information is stored in a relational database and supports the use of PostgreSQL and Oracle database.[6] DSpace currently support two primary web interfaces: JSPUI which uses JSP and the Java Servlet API and XMLUI (aka Manakin)[7] based on Apache Cocoon, using XML and XSLT. DSpace holdings are made available primarily via a web interface, but it also supports the OAI-PMH v2.0, and is capable of exporting METS (Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard) packages. DSpace supports the common interoperability standards used in the Institutional repository domain, such as Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting, SWORD,[8] OpenSearch, and RSS. More recent versions of DSpace also support faceted search and browse functionality using Apache Solr.[DSpace is an open source software platform that enables organisations to: capture and describe digital material using a submission workflow module, or a variety of programmatic ingest options distribute an organisation's digital assets over the web through a search and retrieval system preserve digital assets over the long term. This system documentation includes a functional overview of the system (see page 20), which is a good introduction to the capabilities of the system, and should be readable by non-technical folk. Everyone should read this section first because it introduces some terminology used throughout the rest of the documentation. For people actually running a DSpace service, there is an installation guide (see page 39), and sections on configuration (see page 145) and the directory structure (see page 564). Finally, for those interested in the details of how DSpace works, and those potentially interested in modifying the code for their own purposes, there is a detailed architecture and design section (see page 570)

    XenServer 5.5.0 Installation Guide

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    This document is primarily aimed at system administrators who need to set up XenServer hosts on physical servers. Other documentation shipped with this release includes: • XenServer Virtual Machine Installation Guide describes how to install Linux and Windows VMs on top of a XenServer deployment. As well as installing new VMs from install media (or using the VM templates provided with the XenServer release), this guide also explains how to create VMs from existing physical machines, using a process called P2V. • XenServer Administrator's Guide describes the tasks involved in configuring a XenServer deployment -- how to set up storage, networking and resource pools, and how to administer XenServer hosts using the xe command line interface (CLI). • XenServer Software Development Kit Guide presents an overview of the XenServer SDK -- a selection of code samples that demonstrate how to write applications that interface with XenServer hosts. • XenAPI Specification provides a programmer's reference guide to the XenServer API. • Release notes provide a list of known issues that affect this release.This document is an installation guide for XenServer™, the platform virtualization solution from Citrix®. The XenServer package contains all you need for creating a network of virtual x86 computers running on Xen®, the open-source paravirtualizing hypervisor with near-native performance. This document contains procedures to guide you through the installation, configuration, and initial operation of XenServer. This document also contains information about troubleshooting problems that might occur during installation, and where to get further information
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