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Symbol definitions for ip-specific sis commands – Extron Electronics DMS 1600_2000_3200_3600 User Guide User Manual

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DMS 1600, DMS 2000, DMS 3200, and DMS 3600 • Programming Guide

58

Symbol Definitions for IP-specific SIS commands

X3)

= Matrix name

(Up to 240 alphanumeric characters)

NOTE: The following characters are invalid or not recommended in the name: {space} ~ , @ = ` [ ] { } < > ‘ “ ; : | \ and ?.

X3!

= Default name

DMS-nn00 + last 3 pairs of MAC address

X3@

= Time and date (for set)

In the format: MM/DD/YY•HH:MM:SS where:
MM = month: 01 (January) through 12 (December)
DD = day: 01 through 31
YY = year: 00 through 99
HH = hour: 00 through 23
MM = minutes: 00 through 59
SS = seconds: 00 through 59

X3#

= Time and date (for read)

In the format: Day,•DD•Mmm•YYYY•HH:MM:SS where:
Day = weekday: Mon through Sun
DD = date: 01 through 31
Mmm = month: Jan through Dec
YYYY = year: 2000 through 2099
HH = hour: 00 through 24
MM = minutes: 00 through 59
SS = seconds: 00 through 59

X3$

= GMT offset

–12.0 through +14.0. Hours and minutes removed from GMT

X3%

= Daylight Saving Time

0 = Daylight Saving Time off/ignore
1 = Daylight Saving Time on (northern hemisphere)
2 = Daylight Saving Time on (Europe)
3 = Daylight Saving Time on (Brazil)

X3^

= IP address

###.###.###.###

X3&

= Hardware (MAC) address

##-##-##-##-##-##

X3*

= Number of open connections

0 – 255

X3(

= Password

12 alphanumeric characters

NOTE: The following characters are invalid or not recommended in passwords: {space} + ~ , @ = ` [ ] { } < > ‘ “ ; : | \ and ?.

X4)

= Domain name

Standard domain name rules apply (for example: xxx.com)

NOTE: The following characters are invalid or not recommended in a domain name: {space} + ~ , = ` [ ] { } < > ‘ “ ; : | \ and ?.

The @ character is acceptable only as the lead-in to the domain name (such as @extron.com).

X4!

= E-mail account

65 - 72. 65 = e-mail recipient 1, 66 = 2, 67 = 3, ... 72 = recipient 8

X4@

= E-mail address

Typical e-mail address format (for example: nnnn@xxx.com)

X4#

= Notification selections, part 1

I = inputs

F = fans

P = power supply

X4$

= Notification selections, part 2

If

X4#

= I, then

X4$

= 00 (all inputs), or 01 through 16 (20, 32, 36) (input 1 through 16 [20, 32, 36])

If

X4#

= F, then

X4$

=

00 (all fans)

If

X4#

= P, then

X4$

=

00 (both power supplies).

X4%

= Notify when?

0 = no response

2 = fixed/restored 4 = suspend

1 = fail/missing

3 = both 1 & 2

X4^

= DHCP

0 =off, 1 = on. Off (0) is the default.

X4&

= Port #

00 (all ports), 01 (rear panel), 03 – 99

X4*

= Baud rate

9600, 19200, 38400, 115200

X4(

= Parity

odd, even, none, mark, space (Only the first letter required.)

X5)

= Data bits

7, 8

X5!

= Stop bits

1, 2

X5@

= Port type

0 = RS-232, 1 = RS-422

X5#

= Verbose mode

0 = clear/none (default for Telnet connection)
1 = verbose mode (default for RS-232/RS-422 connection)
2 = tagged responses for queries
3 = verbose mode and tagged for queries

NOTE: If tagged responses is enabled, all read commands return the constant string and the value as the set command does (for example,

the read matrix name command,

E

CN

}

, returns Ipn•

X3)]

).

X5$

= Port timeout interval (in 10-sec. increments)

1 (= 10 seconds) – 65000 (default is 30 = 300 seconds = 5 minutes)