User manual

Chapter 3
34
The IP address of your DNS is necessary for the NASRaQ to
be able to convert between IP addresses and names. The
hostname and domain name must be coordinated with your
network administrator to access the NASRaQ by its name
and not just its IP address.
Access Rights
This screen is for controlling telnet access. You can choose to
either make telnet available to only the root user (the system
administrator) or turn it off.
Note: Telnet access should be used only by advanced users —
people who are proficient in the internal workings of the Linux
operating system. It is possible to adversely affect the
performance of your NASRaQ if you modify system
configuration files.
Time
Click the Time button at the top of the Control Panel section
to enter the correct time, date and time zone. You can also
specify the name of the server (NTP server) with which the
NASRaQ will synchronize its internal clock.
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
After youÕve turned on this option in the Service Settings
table, you can click Parameters (next to SNMP in the table) to
specify the SNMP communities that can have read-only and
read-and-write access to this SNMP agent. The default read-
access community is Òpublic.Ó
NT Domain
If the system is set up in NT Authentication mode, you can
adjust settings including:
¥ PDC name
¥ User name used for synchronizing NASRaQ
¥ Password
If the system is not in NT Domain mode, this control does not
apply.