Hardware manual

Appendix A Mac OS X Server Worksheet 55
Saving setup data in
a directory
Navigate to the directory where you want to save
the setup, and name the setup record using one
of these options:
- <MAC-address-of-server> (include any leading
zeros but omit colons). For example,
0030654dbcef.
- <IP-address-of-server>. For example, 10.0.0.4.
- <partial-DNS-name-of-server>. For example,
myserver.
- <built-in-hardware-serial-number-of-server>
(first 8 characters only). For example, ABCD1234.
- <fully-qualified-DNS-name-of-server>.
For example, myserver.example.com.
- <partial-IP-address-of-server>. For example,
10.0 (matches 10.0.0.4 and 10.0.1.2).
- generic (a file that any server will recognize,
used to set up servers that need the same setup
values).
If you choose to encrypt the file, you can save the
passphrase in a file named using the above
conventions, except add the extension .pass.
Place the passphrase file in a location where the
target server or servers can detect it. A server can
detect the file if it resides on a volume mounted
locally in /Volumes/*/Auto Server Setup/, where *
is any device mounted under /Volumes.
Language The language to use for server administration
(English, Japanese, French, or German). The
language affects the server’s time and date
formats, displayed text, and the default encoding
used by the AFP server.
Keyboard layout The keyboard for server administration.
Item Description Your information