Monitoring and Configuring the Printer
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access
Use the “access” command to view and configure access control. You can also
specify two or more access ranges.
❖ View settings
msh> access
❖ IPv4 Configuration
msh> access range “start-address end-address”
• The star mark represents a target number between 1 and 5. (Up to five ac-
cess ranges can be registered and selected.)
Example: to specify accessible IPv4 addresses between 192.168.0.10 and
192.168.0.20:
msh> access 1 range 192.168.0.10 192.168.0.20
❖ IPv6 Configuration
msh> access range6 “start-address end-address”
• The star mark represents a target number between 1 and 5. (Up to five ac-
cess ranges can be registered and selected.)
Example: to specify accessible IPv6 addresses between 2001:DB8::100 and
2001:DB8::200.
msh> access 1 range6 2001:DB8::100 2001:DB8::200
❖ IPv6 access mask Configuration
msh> access mask6 “base-address prefixlen”
• The star mark represents a target number between 1 and 5. (Up to five ac-
cess ranges can be registered and selected.)
Example: to specify accessible IPv6 addresses to 2001:DB8::/32
msh> access 1 mask6 2001:DB8:: 32
❖ Access control initialization
msh> access flush
• Use the "flush" command to restore the default settings so that all access
ranges become "0.0.0.0" for IPv4, and "::" for IPv6.
Note
❒ The access range restricts computers from use of the machine by IP address.
If you do not need to restrict printing, make the setting "0.0.0.0" for IPv4, and
"::" for IPv6.
❒ Valid ranges must be from lower (start address) to higher (end address).
❒ If you are running IPv4 or IPv6, up to five access ranges can be registered and
selected.
❒ IPv6 can register and select the range and the mask for each access ranges.