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}