IP Control
User Guide
w w w . m i n i c o m . c o m
North American HQ
International HQ
European HQ
Jerusalem, Israel
Linden, NJ, USA
Dübendorf, Switzerland
Tel: + 41 44 823 8000
Tel: + 972 2 535 9666
Tel: + 1 908 4862100
Technical support - [email protected]
5UM70166 V1.1 5/06
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USER GUIDE
23.8 Keyboard key sequences ............................................................................................................... 23
23.9 Synchronizing mouse pointers ....................................................................................................... 24
23.9.1 Aligning the mice pointers ...................................................................................................... 25
23.9.2 Calibrating mice pointers........................................................................................................ 25
23.9.3 Manual mice synchronization................................................................................................. 25
23.10 Minicom logo menu features ........................................................................................................ 27
23.11 Disconnecting the remote session ............................................................................................... 28
24. Troubleshooting - Restoring factory defaults.........................................................28
25. Technical specifications..........................................................................................30
26. Video resolution and refresh rates..........................................................................31
27. User guide feedback................................................................................................31
© 2006 Copyright Minicom Advanced Systems. All rights reserved.
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IP CONTROL
1. Welcome
Thank you for buying the IP Control system. This system is produced by Minicom
Advanced Systems Limited.
This document provides installation and operation instructions for Minicom’s IP
Control. It is intended for system administrators and network managers, and
assumes that readers have a general understanding of networks, hardware and
software.
Technical precautions
This equipment generates radio frequency energy and if not installed in accordance
with the manufacturer’s instructions, may cause radio frequency interference.
This equipment complies with Part 15, Subpart J of the FCC rules for a Class A
computing device. This equipment also complies with the Class A limits for radio
noise emission from digital apparatus set out in the Radio Interference Regulation
of the Canadian Department of Communications. These above rules are designed to
provide reasonable protection against such interference when operating the
equipment in a commercial environment. If operation of this equipment in a
residential area causes radio frequency interference, the user, and not Minicom
Advanced Systems Limited, will be responsible.
Changes or modifications made to this equipment not expressly approved by
Minicom Advanced Systems Limited could void the user’s authority to operate the
equipment.
Minicom Advanced Systems Limited assumes no responsibility for any errors that
appear in this document. Information in this document is subject to change without
notice.
No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, for any purpose, without the express written
permission of Minicom Advanced Systems Limited.
Trademarks
All trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective
owners.
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USER GUIDE
2. Introduction
The IP Control extends your KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) from any computer or
server over TCP/IP via LAN, WAN or Internet connection. Now you can control,
monitor and manage your servers from wherever you are, inside or outside the
organization. The IP Control is a cost-effective hardware solution, for secure
remote KVM Control & control of a computer/server from the BIOS level -
independent of the OS. It is designed to connect to a single computer or to a KVM
switch to Control multiple servers, over TCP/IP communication.
3. Key features
BIOS level control to any server’s brand and model, regardless of the server
condition and network connectivity, covering the entire spectrum of crash
scenarios.
Compatible with all major operating systems. Supports many hardware and
software configurations for the remote client and the target server computers, as
well as the KVM switch in use.
Web-based Control - Browser Control to a target server, from any location via
secured standard IP connection.
Multi-user view mode - Allows simultaneous users to view remote sessions.
Remote control can be intuitively handed between users with appropriate
permissions.
4. System components
The IP Control system consists of:
•
•
•
•
1 IP Control (p/n 1SU70017)
1 KVM cable (p/n 5CB00565)
1 RS232 Cross cable (p/n 5CB00566)
1 Universal power adapter (p/n 5PSB0005)
The RS232 Cross cable connects the IP Control to Serial manageable devices such
as Power Management units, Routers, etc.
You can order brackets to rack-mount the IP Control.
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IP CONTROL
5. The IP Control unit
Figure 1 illustrates the front panel of the IP Control.
Monitor
Keyboard
LAN
LAN (Ethernet)
connector
Mouse
Figure 1 IP Control ports – side 1
For (optional) local access to the connected computer you connect a keyboard,
monitor and mouse to the above KVM ports. You connect the IP Control to a
10/100 Mbit Ethernet using the LAN port.
Go Local
Serial
KVM In
button
Power
KVM In
Serial
Go Local
3.3V/2A
Power
LED
Power
Figure 2 IP Control ports – side 2
You connect a computer or KVM switch to the KVM In port using the 1 to 3 CPU
cable. You toggle between remote and local access by pressing the Go Local
button.
You can connect an RS232 device to the Serial port using the RS232 Cross cable.
6. Pre-installation guidelines
Place cables away from fluorescent lights, air conditioners, and machines that are
likely to generate electrical noise.
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USER GUIDE
7. Terminology
Below are some terms and their meanings used in this guide.
Term
Meaning
Target server
The computers/servers that are accessed remotely via the IP
Control.
Client computer
Remote Session
The PC running a remote IP Control session
The process of accessing and controlling Target Servers
connected to IP Control from a User station
8. Client computer operating system
Windows 2000 or higher, with Internet Explorer 6.0 or later version. 128 bit
encryption support is required if a secured connection is selected.
9. Connecting the system
Connect the Target Server / KVM switch to the IP Control as follows:
1. Connect the single connector of the KVM cable to the KVM In port of the IP
Control.
2. Connect the other end of the KVM cable to the KVM ports of the Target Server
/ KVM switch.
3. Connect a Network cable to the IP Control LAN port and to an Ethernet port on
your Network switch.
4. Connect the power adapter.
Figure 3 and Figure 4 illustrate the connections to a computer and KVM switch
respectively, with the optional KVM console.
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IP CONTROL
User over IP
LAN / WAN
P
1
1
0
LAN
MINICOM
Target PC
KVM cable
KVM In
Serial
3.3V/2A
Figure 3 IP Control connections to a computer
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USER GUIDE
User over IP
LAN / WAN
KVM switch
P
1
1
0
SERIAL MOUSE
STATION
2
COMPUTER
COMPUTER
5
1
COMPUTER
COMPUTER
6
COMPUTER
COMPUTER
7
COMPUTER
COMPUTER
8
4
KB PS/2 MOUSE
SCREEN
2
3
POWER
KVM cable
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Computer rack
Figure 4 IP Control connections to a KVM switch
10. Initial settings
The following sections provide instructions for setting the IP address for the IP
Control unit.
11. Default IP address
By default, IP Control boots with an automatically assigned IP address from a
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) server on the network. The DHCP
server provides a valid IP address, gateway address and subnet mask.
To identify the IP address, the IP Control MAC address appears on the underside of
the IP Control box. The device number (D.N.) can also be found there.
If no DHCP server is found on the network, IP Control boots with the static IP
address:192.168.0.155.
Note! If a DHCP server later becomes available, the unit picks up the IP settings
from DHCP server. To keep the static IP address, disable DHCP – explained in
section 13.1 on page 10.
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11.1 Static IP addresses for a number of units
Where you want to connect more than 1 IP Control to the same network and there
is no DHCP server, or you want to use static IP addresses, do the following:
Connect the IP Control units one at a time and change the static IP address of each
unit before connecting the next unit.
12. Logging into the Web interface
Complete the initial setup via the Web configuration interface:
1. Open your Web browser (Internet Explorer version 6.0 or higher).
2. Type the IP Control system IP address - https://IP address/config - and press
Enter. The login page appears, see Figure 5.
Figure 5 Login page
3. Type the default Administrator user name - admin - and password - access -
(both lower case).
4. Press Enter. The Web interface opens at the Network Configuration page. See
Figure 6.
5. Bookmark the page for easy reference.
Figure 6 IP Control Web interface
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12.1 SSL Certificate notes
When first connecting to IP Control’s https configuration page, 2 browser security
warnings appear. Click Yes to proceed.
The first warning disappears upon first IP Control client installation, when
Minicom’s root certificate is installed.
The second warning can be avoided by adding a line to your window’s ‘hosts’ file
(typically at \winnt\system32\drivers\etc\hosts – edit with Notepad)
The line format should be: any-IP any-name.kvm.net
Example:
10.0.0.200 IPControl.kvm.net
From now on, you can browse to IP Control by typing (or book-marking) https://
IPControl.kvm.net. Minicom dedicates the kvm.net domain to this usage. You can
13. Network > Configuration
Consult your Network Administrator for the network settings.
Device name - Type a name for the IP Control. Default device name consists of the
letter ‘D’ followed by the 6-digit device number (D.N.) found on the silver label on
the underside of the IP Control box.
First TCP Port - Choose 3 consecutive ports, and type in the first port number of
the series. The default port – 900 – is suitable for the majority of installations.
Note
Firewall or router security access list must enable inbound communication through
the selected TCP ports for the IP Control’s IP address.
For Client computer access from a secured LAN, the selected ports should be open
for outbound communication.
13.1 LAN 1
Under LAN 1 in Figure 6, is the following:
Enable DHCP – When a DHCP server is active on the same network to which IP
Control is connected, DHCP provides automatic IP assignment.
When DHCP is disabled – (Recommended) – You can assign a fixed IP address to
the IP Control.
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IP CONTROL
Consult your Network Administrator regarding the use of the DHCP. Note! Where
you have access to the server – your configured (or default) IP Control device
name will appear on the DHCP server’s interface, making it easy to locate.
When DHCP is disabled, enter the IP Address, Subnet Mask, and Default
Gateway for LAN 1, as given by your Network Administrator.
14. Saving changes
Click
to save any configuration changes and restart the IP Control
system.
15. Administration > User Settings
From the menu click User Settings, Figure 7 appears.
Figure 7 User Settings
On this page an Administrator creates and edits users.
There are 3 levels of user access:
•
•
•
Administrator
User
View only
Administrator
An Administrator has unrestricted access to all windows and settings and can “take
over” any active session (explained in section 23.1 on page 18). An Administrator
can change the name and password of all users.
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User
A User can access/control Target Servers, but cannot use the following:
•
•
Advanced mouse settings
Power cycle
A User has no access to the Web configuration interface.
View only
View only can view the screen of any Target Server without keyboard and mouse
control. Only limited options appear such as switching Servers and Disconnect
(Explained on pages 20 and 28). A “view only” indicator appears on the viewer’s
local mouse pointer.
15.1 Adding a user
To add a user:
1. Click
and type a name and a password. The password must be at
least 6 characters – letters or numbers, and must not include the user name, even
if other characters are added. Depending on the security level chosen the user
name and password parameters are different. See section 18 on page 15.
2. Select the permission type from the Permission box.
3. Click
, the user appears in the list of users.
15.2 Editing a user
To edit a user:
1. Select the user from the list.
2. Click
. You can now change all the parameters – user name,
permission and password.
3. Click
, the changes are saved.
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15.3 Deleting a user
To delete a user:
1. Select the user from the list.
2. Click
3. Click
.
, the changes are saved.
15.4 Blocking a user
An alternative to deleting a user is blocking a user. This means that the user’s name
and password is stored, but the user is unable to access the system. Check Block to
block a user. Uncheck Block to allow the user access.
16. Administration > Switch Configuration
When a KVM switch is connected to the system, you must configure the switch in
the system.
To do so:
1. From the menu click Switch Configuration. The KVM Switch Configuration
window appear, see Figure 8.
Figure 8 Switch Configuration
2. Choose the manufacturer and model of the connected KVM switch. The number
of possible connected servers appears in the Server Name section.
3. Change the name of the connected servers by highlighting the server and typing
a new name. Click
to save changes.
Note! Server names left as UNUSED cannot be accessed.
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Install switch definition file
Where the KVM switch type is not listed in the manufacturer/model drop-down
lists, contact Minicom to request an updated Switch Definition file with the
desired KVM switch listed.
1. Load the file onto the Client computer.
2. Locate and install the KVM switch definition file. The switch definition file is
updated.
17. Administration > Serial Settings
Where you have a Serial device connected to the system you must configure the
RS232 settings.
To do so:
From the menu click Serial Settings, the Serial Settings appear, see Figure 9.
Figure 9 Serial Settings
Type a device name and choose the correct device parameters.
17.1 Show
Tick Show to make the Serial device appear in the list of servers/devices that can
be accessed.
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18. Security > Settings
Configure the security features, such as Account Blocking, Password Policy and
Idle Timeout, as explained below.
From the Security section click Settings, the Security Settings appear, see Figure
10.
Figure 10 Security Settings
The security Settings elements:
Account Blocking – decide on the number of attempts to login with a wrong
username or password after which there is a time lock or a total block.
Password Policy – You have the option of a standard or high security level of
password. The table below shows the parameters of the 2 options.
Standard Security Password
High security Password
6 characters or more
8 characters or more must
include at least 1 digit and 1
upper case letter and 1 “special”
character as follows
!@#$%^&*()_-+={[}]”’:;?/><
Must not include the user name
Must not include the user name
Check the box to enable the high security password policy. Unchecked, the
standard security policy applies.
Idle Timeout – Select the Timeout inactivity period after which the user is
disconnected from the system. Choose No Timeout to disable Timeout.
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19. Security > SSL Certificate
You can install an SSL certificate.
To do so:
From the menu, select SSL Certificate, the install SSL Certificate box appears, see
Figure 11.
Figure 11 Install SSL Certificate box
Certificate File - Browse to locate the cer file.
Private File - Browse to locate the private key file.
Key Password - Type the “private key” password.
Click
.
20. Maintenance > Firmware Upgrade
Upgrade the IP Control firmware to take advantage of new features. You can
receive firmware upgrades by email or download them from Minicom’s website.
Save the firmware file on the Client computer.
From the menu select Firmware Upgrade. The Firmware Upgrade appears see
Figure 12.
Figure 12 Firmware Upgrade
1. Locate and install the firmware file.
2. Click
. The upgrade starts. On completion, click
.
The unit reboots. After about 30 seconds the Login page appears.
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IP CONTROL
Note!
Depending on the type of firmware upgrade, the following settings may be erased:
User settings, KVM switch settings, mouse and video adjustments and RS232
settings. For more information refer to the firmware release notes.
The network settings remain intact.
21. Restore Factory Settings
You can restore the IP Control system to the factory settings. This restores the
original IP Control parameters, resetting all the information added by the
administrators, including: Network settings*, Servers, Switches, Users, Passwords
etc.
* You have the option to preserve Network settings – explained below.
Warning! Once reset the data cannot be retrieved.
To restore factory settings:
1. From the menu select Restore Factory Settings. Restore Factory Settings
appears see Figure 13.
Figure 13 Restore factory settings
2. Check the box if you want to preserve Network settings.
3. Click
22. Logging out
To exit the Configuration menu and close the session, click
.
Only one Administrator can log into the Configuration area at a time. An idle
timeout of 30 minutes terminates the session.
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23. Starting a remote session
At a Client computer open Internet Explorer (6.0 and above) and type the IP
username and password and press Enter. By default, the user name is: admin and
the password is access, (both lower case).
On first connection install the Minicom certificate and ActiveX control. You must
login as an Administrator to your computer to install the ActiveX control. Once the
ActiveX control is installed, all types of users can login.
The screen of the Target Server connected directly to IP Control, or the currently
selected server on the KVM switch with IP Control toolbar appears see Figure 14.
Figure 14 Remote session window
23.1 Taking over a busy remote session
When connecting to a busy Target Server an Administrator has the option to take
over the Target Server. A User only has this option when the current session is run
by another User, but not by an Administrator. The following message appears
Figure 15 Busy remote session options
Choose to take over or view only or cancel.
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23.2 Full screen mode
Work on the Target Server as if you are working on a local computer, with full
screen mode.
To work in full screen mode:
1. Ensure that the Client computer has the same screen resolution as the Target
Server.
2. Press F11. The Internet Explorer window disappears, leaving the Internet
Explorer menu bar at the top.
3. Right click the Internet Explorer menu bar and check Auto-Hide. The Internet
Explorer menu bar disappears. You are in full screen mode.
To exit full screen mode:
Press F11. Or place the mouse at the top of the window to display the Internet
Explorer toolbar and click the Restore button.
Note! Full screen mode can also be activated from the Toolbar menu, see page 28.
23.3 Moving or hiding the Toolbar
The Toolbar can be dragged and dropped to anywhere on the screen, by clicking
and dragging the logo
.
To hide the Toolbar, either:
Double-click the IP Control System tray Icon
.
Or
Press F9.
To display the Toolbar repeat the above actions. See also page 28.
To minimize the Toolbar:
Click the arrow . Click again to maximize the Toolbar.
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23.4 Switching to a different server/device
To connect to a different server/device:
1. From the Toolbar, click
servers/devices appears.
, or right-click
. A list of connected
2. Click the desired server or Serial device. The screen of the server or the Serial
device window appears.
23.5 Changing the performance settings
You can alter the bandwidth settings from the Toolbar.
To alter the settings:
From the Toolbar, click
. The Settings.. box appears, see Figure 16.
Figure 16 Settings.. box
Bandwidth
Choose from the following options
Adaptive – automatically adapts to the best compression and colors.
Low - Select Low for high compression and 16 colors.
Medium - Select medium for medium compression and 256 colors. Medium is
recommended when using a standard internet connection.
High - For optimal performance when working on a LAN, select High. This gives
a low compression and high colors (16bit).
Custom – You cam choose your own compression and color levels.
Click OK. The screen of the last accessed Target Server appears.
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23.6 Adjusting the Video settings
To change the video settings:
From the Toolbar, click
. You have the following options:
•
•
•
Refresh
Manual Video Adjust
Auto Video Adjust
Each option is explained below.
23.6.1 Refresh
Select Refresh or press Ctrl+R to refresh the Video image. Refresh may be needed
when changing the display attributes of a Target Server.
23.6.2 Manual Video Adjust
Use the manual video adjustment for fine-tuning the Target Server video settings
after auto adjustment or for adapting to a noisy environment or a non-standard
VGA signal or when in full-screen DOS/CLI mode.
To adjust the video manually:
1. Click Manual Video Adjust. A slider bar appears. See Figure 17. Also a red
frame appears around the screen. This represents the screen area according to
the Server's screen resolution. Perform the adjustments inside and relative to
this frame.
Figure 17 Manual Video Adjustments controls
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2. Move the sliders to change the displayed image. Click in the area of the sliders
for fine-tuning.
Brightness / Contrast - use the scales to adjust the brightness and contrast of the
displayed image.
Horizontal Offset - defines the starting position of each line on the displayed
image.
Vertical Offset - defines the vertical starting position of the displayed image.
Phase - defines the point at which each pixel is sampled.
Noise Level - represents the Video "noise" when a static screen is displayed.
Automated adjust – When checked, the video adjusts automatically whenever
there is a change in the screen resolution.
23.6.3 Auto Video Adjust
To adjust the video automatically:
We recommend opening Windows Explorer (or similar) in the background.
Click Auto Video Adjust. The process takes a few seconds. If the process runs for
more than 3 times, there is an abnormal noise level. Check the video cable and
verify that no dynamic video application is running on the Target Server’s desktop.
Perform the procedure where necessary for each Target Server or new screen
resolution.
23.7 Power cycle
KB-Power™ and KB-Power IPMI™ offer remote power control via a remote
session.
To shut down and restart the Target Server via KB-Power™ / KB-Power IPMI™:
From the Toolbar, click
. A prompt appears. Click yes to continue.
Only an administrator can initiate a hard reset command.
The Power Management Console can be accessed when the Power Management
Console is activated.
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23.8 Keyboard key sequences
Click . A list of defined keyboard sequences appears. When clicked, these
transmit directly to the Target Server, and will not affect the Client computer.
For example, select Ctrl-Alt-Del to send this three key sequence to the Target
Server to initiate its Shutdown/Login process.
To add a keyboard sequence:
1. Click Add/Remove. The Special Key Manager box appears see Figure 18.
Figure 18 Special Key Manager box
To add a predefined sequence:
1. Click Add Predefined. A list of sequences appears.
2. Select the desired sequence and click OK. The sequence appears in the Special
Key Manager box.
3. Click OK. The sequence appears in the Keyboard Key sequence list.
To record a key sequence:
1. From the Special Key Manager box press Record New. The Add Special Key
box appears see Figure 19.
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Figure 19 Add Special Key box
2. Give the key sequence a name in the Label box.
3. Click Start Recording.
4. Press the desired keys. The keys appear in the area provided.
5. Click Stop Recording.
6. Click OK.
To edit a key sequence:
1. From the Special Key Manager box select the desired key.
2. Click Edit.
3. Click Start Recording
4. Press the desired keys. The keys appear in the area provided.
5. Click Stop Recording.
6. Click OK.
23.9 Synchronizing mouse pointers
When working at the Client computer, two mouse pointers appear: The Client
computer’s is on top of the Target Server’s. The mouse pointers should be
synchronized. The following explains what to do if they are not synchronized.
Warning
Before synchronizing mouse pointers adjust the video of the Target Server,
(explained above) otherwise mouse synchronization may not work..
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23.9.1 Aligning the mice pointers
When accessing the Target Server, the mice may appear at a distance to each other.
To align the mouse pointers:
From the Toolbar click
align.
/ Align or press Ctrl+M simultaneously. The mice
23.9.2 Calibrating mice pointers
A Target Server may have a different mouse pointer speed to the Client computer.
Calibrating automatically discovers the mouse speed of the Target Server and
aligns the two pointers.
To perform the calibration when the Target Server Operating system is, Windows
NT4, 2000 or 98:
From the Toolbar click
/ Calibrate. IP Control saves this alignment so
calibration is only needed once per Target Server.
If the Video Noise Level is above zero, calibration may not work. Go to Video
Adjustment and try to eliminate the noise by pressing Auto video adjust and/or
adjusting the bars in Manual video adjust, then perform the mouse calibration.
Note! If the mouse settings on the Target Server were ever changed, you must
synchronize mouse pointers manually, as explained below.
23.9.3 Manual mice synchronization
If the mouse settings on the Target Server were ever changed, or when the
Operating system on the Target Server is, Windows XP, Windows 2003 Server,
Linux, Novell, SCO UNIX or SUN Solaris you must synchronize the mouse
pointers manually.
To manually synchronize mouse pointers:
1. From the Toolbar click
appears see Figure 20.
/ Manual Settings. The Mouse Settings box
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Figure 20 Mouse Settings box
2. Select the Target Server’s Operating System and click OK. Instructions and
sliders appear.
3. Follow the instructions and set any relevant sliders to the same values as set in
the Target Server’s Mouse Properties window.
2 examples!
For Windows XP, go to the Mouse settings on the Target Server and uncheck
Enhance pointer precision.
For Windows NT4. If Mouse Properties were ever changed for the Target Server –
even if they have been returned to their original state - uncheck default -
.
Click OK. The mouse pointers should be synchronized.
23.9.3.1 USB
The USB option in Mouse Settings box is available for RICC and X-RICC USB
and Phantom Specter USB and for unsupported operating systems and SUN
Solaris. Use this option if you are sure of the custom acceleration algorithm you are
using, or have been informed so by customer support.
23.9.3.2 Advanced – Mouse Emulation
In the Advanced Mouse settings, you can set the type of mouse that you would like
IP Control to emulate. We recommend not changing the advanced settings unless
there is erratic mouse behavior (the mouse is making random clicks and jumping
arbitrarily around the screen).
Click
the Mouse Emulation box appears see Figure 21.
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IP CONTROL
Figure 21 Mouse Emulation box
Select the mouse connected to the Local Console port on the IP Control, e.g. if the
local mouse is a non-Microsoft 2 button mouse, select Standard Mouse and
uncheck Microsoft Mouse.
Switch Acceleration - In some KVM switch brands (for example G&D, Rittal),
the switch accelerates the mouse on top of the acceleration provided by the
operating system. If necessary, check this option to compensate (decelerate) the
switch acceleration and achieve full synchronization.
Max Rate - this defines the maximum mouse report rate. For Sun Solaris the
default value is 20 in order to support older Sun versions.
23.10 Minicom logo menu features
Right click the Minicom logo
, a menu appears. From this menu you can
access the connected devices. You also have the following features:
Disconnect – You can disconnect the session by clicking Disconnect.
About - Click About to verify the Client, Firmware, KME (Keyboard/Mouse
Emulation firmware) and Switch file versions installed on your IP Control.
Local Settings – Click Local settings, the Client Configuration box appears, see
Figure 22
Figure 22 Client Configuration box
Pointer type – From the Drop-down menu you can change the Client computer
mouse pointer to appear as a dot or to not appear at all.
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Hide Toolbar – Check this option to hide the Toolbar from the next reconnection
onwards. To toggle the Toolbar on and off, press F9. See above page 19.
Full Screen Mode - Check this option to make the remote session screen appear in
full screen mode from the next reconnection onwards. To toggle the full screen
mode on and off, press F11.
23.11 Disconnecting the remote session
To disconnect the session, on the Toolbar, click
can re-login or close the browser window.
. The Login box appears. You
24. Troubleshooting - Restoring factory defaults
Section 21 on page 17 explained how to restore factory settings from the Web
interface. When you cannot access the system e.g. you have forgotten the
Username or Password, you can restore factory defaults from the IP Control unit.
To restore factory defaults:
1. Press and hold down the Go-Local button for 3-4 seconds while powering up
the IP Control. The device boots up in safe mode.
2. Wait until the unit finishes booting.
not start the address with https). The Login box appears see Figure 23.
Figure 23 Login box
4. Type username: admin , password: SAFEmode. (Case sensitive). This
username and password works only after the reset procedure described above. A
menu appears.
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IP CONTROL
5. From the menu choose Restore Factory Settings. A warning appears see
Figure 24.
Figure 24 Restore factory settings
6. Check the box if you want to preserve Network settings.
7. Click
8. Select Restore. The factory defaults are restored. When the process finishes
Figure 25 appears.
Figure 25 Reboot
9. Click Reboot to restart the unit.
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USER GUIDE
25. Technical specifications
Target Server
DOS, Win 3.1, 9X, 2000, XP, NT4, 2003 Server,
Novell 3.12 – 6.5, Linux, SUN Solaris for PC
Operating systems
Client Computer
Windows 2000 or higher with IE 6.0 or higher and
ActiveX
Target Server
Up to 1600 x 1200 @ 85Hz
Resolution
Client Computer
Recommended - resolution should be higher than on
Target Server
Video and mouse synchronization Both auto and manual modes
Security
128-bit SSL encryption
Ethernet – RJ45 – 10/100 Mbit/sec autosensing
Serial – RJ45
Local KVM connection – Screen HDD15,
Keyboard./Mouse – MiniDIN6
Connections
Computer / switch connection –HDD15, KVM
cable 1.8m. Monitor HDD15, Keyboard./Mouse –
MiniDIN6
0.2kg / 0.45lb
Weight
3 x 10 x 8 cm / 1.1 x 3.9 x 3.1in
3.3VDC, 1.3 A.
Dimensions (H x D x W)
Power consumption
Operating temperature
Storage temperature
Humidity
0°C to 40°C / 32° to 104°F
-40°C to 70°C/-40°F to 158°F
80% non condensing relative humidity
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IP CONTROL
26. Video resolution and refresh rates
Hz →
56
60
65
66
70
x
72
73
75
76
85
x
86
640x480
x
x
x
x
720x400
x
x
800x600
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
1024x768
1152x864
1152x900
1280x720
1280x768
1280x960
1280x1024
1600x1200
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
27. User guide feedback
Your feedback is very important to help us improve our documentation. Please
email any comments to: [email protected]
Please include the following information: Guide name, part number and version
number (as appears on the front cover).
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Regional Offices
Germany
France
Italy
Kiel
Vincennes
Rome
Tel: + 49 431 668 7933
Tel: + 33 1 49 57 00 00
Tel: + 39 06 8209 7902
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