Maintenance Object Repair Procedures
555-233-123
10-1046 Issue 4 May 2002
d. Try pinging another device on the same subnet.
e. Try pinging the gateway to the rest of the network from the subnet.
f. Try pinging a device not on the local subnet but on the network or
another subnet.
5. When finished, at the command prompt type exit and press
Enter.
Internal connections to the LAN
Test the internal connections to the LAN by pinging the
■ local host
■ internal IP trunk server
■ another device connected to the network:
1. Click Start in Windows (lower lefthand corner), then select Programs, then
Command Prompt.
This starts a DOS command line session.
2. At the command prompt, type ping 127.0.0.1 (the local host default
address) and press
Enter.
If configured correctly, the system displays:
Reply from nnn.nn.nn.nn: bytes=32 time <##ms TTL=###
If there is no reply:
a. Check that the internal cables on the TN802 circuit pack (Notes 4
and 6 in Figure 10-67 on page 10-1049) have not worked loose.
b. Otherwise, replace the circuit pack.
3. At the command prompt, type ping 10.32.64.97 (the internal IP trunk
server address) and press
Enter.
■ If configured correctly, the system displays:
Reply from nnn.nn.nn.nn: bytes=32 time <##ms
TTL=###
■ If there is no reply:
— Check that the internal cables on the TN802 circuit pack
(Notes 4 and 6 in Figure 10-67 on page 10-1049) are not
loose.
— Replace the circuit pack.