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Moxa Technologies UC-7420/7410 User Manual

Page 65

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UC-7420/7410 User’s Manual

Managing Communication

4-13

How to check the connection

Once you’ve set up a PPP connection, there are some steps you can take to test the connection.
First, type:

/sbin/ifconfig

(The folder ifconfig may be located elsewhere, depending on your distribution.) You should be
able to see all the network interfaces that are UP. ppp0 should be one of them, and you should
recognize the first IP address as your own, and the “P-t-P address” (or point-to-point address) the
address of your server. Here’s what it looks like on one machine:

lo

Link encap Local Loopback

inet addr 127.0.0.1 Bcast 127.255.255.255 Mask 255.0.0.0

UP LOOPBACK RUNNING MTU 2000 Metric 1

RX packets 0 errors 0 dropped 0 overrun 0

ppp0

Link encap Point-to-Point Protocol

inet addr 192.76.32.3 P-t-P 129.67.1.165 Mask 255.255.255.0

UP POINTOPOINT RUNNING MTU 1500 Metric 1

RX packets 33 errors 0 dropped 0 overrun 0

TX packets 42 errors 0 dropped 0 overrun 0

Now, type:

ping z.z.z.z

where z.z.z.z is the address of your name server. This should work. Here’s what the response
could look like:

waddington:~$p ping 129.67.1.165

PING 129.67.1.165 (129.67.1.165): 56 data bytes

64 bytes from 129.67.1.165: icmp_seq=0 ttl=225 time=268 ms

64 bytes from 129.67.1.165: icmp_seq=1 ttl=225 time=247 ms

64 bytes from 129.67.1.165: icmp_seq=2 ttl=225 time=266 ms

^C
--- 129.67.1.165 ping statistics ---

3 packets transmitted, 3 packets received, 0% packet loss

round-trip min/avg/max = 247/260/268 ms

waddington:~$

Try typing:

netstat -nr

This should show three routes, something like this:

Kernel routing table
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags

Metric

Ref

Use

iface

129.67.1.165 0.0.0.0

255.255.255.255

UH 0

0 6

ppp0

127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0

0

lo

0.0.0.0 129.67.1.165

0.0.0.0 UG

0

0

6298

ppp0

If your output looks similar but doesn’t have the destination 0.0.0.0 line (which refers to the
default route used for connections), you may have run pppd without the ‘defaultroute’ option. At
this point you can try using Telnet, ftp, or finger, bearing in mind that you’ll have to use numeric
IP addresses unless you’ve set up /etc/resolv.conf correctly.