CT320

CT320: Network and System Administration                

Fall 2017                

Configuration                

CT320 Lab Configuration                

Overview                

CT320 labs (recitations) are held in CSB room 315. CT320 uses the workstations around the perimeter of the room—not the center ones. CT320 workstations have pink labels on their monitors. It’s ok to have two students to a workstation, but no more than two.                 

Users & Passwords                

Each machine should have a user “ct320”, with password “ct320”. Similarly, user “root” has password “root”. It's all lower case (small letters).                 

These are horrible passwords, but security is not really an issue, here.                 

Network configuration                

192.168.110.0/24 network
The IP addresses for this private network are of the form 192.168.110.suffix, where suffix is 0–255 (more or less).
Netmask 255.255.255.0
Gateway 192.168.110.1
The gateway is an IP address of a router or computer that provides a route to the world outside of this network.
Machines are named ct320-1, ct320-2, etc.
Per the pink tag on the monitor.
Static IP addresses
The static IP address for ct320-suffix is 192.168.110.100+suffix. For example ct320-4 is IP address 192.168.110.104. Why 104, rather than just 4? Because the address 192.168.110.1 is already used for the gateway.
Search domain
Specify cs.colostate.edu as a search domain, so we can use acushla instead of acushla.cs.colostate.edu.

Services                

The lab has a serious network firewall; only certain services are permitted.                 

No DHCP
There is no DHCP server on this network. Therefore, static IP addresses (see above) must be manually assigned.
DNS server is 129.82.45.181 (bach.cs.colostate.edu)
The DNS server translates names (e.g., denver.cs.colostate.edu or amazon.com) to ip addresses. You must specify the DNS server as an IP address, not a name. If it were a name, who would translate it to a number?
http/https
Web browser access (http: and https:) works to the general Internet. Network OS updates work, because they use http protocol.
ssh/scp
ssh is only permitted to the host acushla.cs.colostate.edu. It has all your files on it, just like the CS Department computers in CSB 120. However, if you need access to other computers, you can first ssh to acushla, then ssh to where you need to go from there.
ping
Pinging anywhere should work.

Modified: 2017-08-22T10:45                 

User: Guest                 

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