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set

Use the “set” command to set the protocol information display “active” or “inactive”.

View settings

The following command displays protocol information (active/inactive).

msh> set ipv4

msh> set ipv6

msh> set smb

msh> set protocol

  • When protocol is specified, information about TCP/IP and SMB appears.

msh> set web

msh> set snmp

msh> set ssl

msh> set ssl6

msh> set nrs

msh> set rfu

msh> set rfu6

msh> set http

msh> set http6

msh> set bonjour

msh> set bonjour6

msh> set nbt

msh> set ssdp

Configuration

  • Enter “up” to enable protocol, and enter “down” to disable protocol.

You can set the protocol to “active” or “inactive”.

msh> set ipv4 {up|down}

  • If you disable IPv4, you cannot use remote access after logging off. If you did this by mistake, you can use the control panel to enable remote access via IPv4.

  • Disabling IPv4 also disables web, snmp, ssl, http, and bonjour.

msh> set ipv6 {up|down}

  • If you disable IPv6, you cannot use remote access after logging off. If you did this by mistake, you can use the control panel to enable remote access via IPv6.

  • Disabling IPv6 also disables ssl6, http6, and bonjour6.

msh> set ipsec {up|down}

msh> set smb {up|down}

msh> set web {up|down}

msh> set snmp {up|down}

msh> set ssl {up|down}

msh> set ssl6 {up|down}

  • If Secured Sockets Layer (SSL, an encryption protocol) function is not available for the machine, you cannot use the function by enabling it.

msh> set nrs {up|down}

msh> set rfu {up|down}

msh> set rfu6 {up|down}

msh> set http {up|down}

msh> set http6 {up|down}

msh> set bonjour {up|down}

msh> set bonjour6 {up|down}

msh> set nbt {up|down}