Front Panel Menu Reference
Select System\IO\LAN\Reset
Select System\IO\LAN\Defaults
Selecting Reset activates the selected LAN settings
and restarts networking.
Modifying the LAN Settings
IP Address
Select IP to configure the addressing of the instrument. Press the Menu key, then select
System\IO\LAN\Config\IP. The configurable parameters include:
Front Panel Menu Reference
Select System\IO\LAN\Modify\IP
Select Auto or Manual. See below for a full
description.
Auto - automatically configures the addressing of the instrument. When selected, the instrument
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will first try to obtain an IP address from a DHCP server. If a DHCP server is found, the DHCP
server will assign an IP address, Subnet Mask, and Default Gateway to the instrument. If a DHCP
server is unavailable, the instrument will try to obtain an IP address using AutoIP. AutoIP auto-
matically assigns an IP address, Subnet Mask, and Default Gateway addresses on networks that
do not have a DHCP server.
Manual - allows you to manually configure the addressing of the instrument by entering values in
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the following three fields. These fields only appear when Manual is selected.
IP Address - This value is the Internet Protocol (IP) address of the instrument. An IP address is
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required for all IP and TCP/IP communications with the instrument. An IP Address consists of 4
decimal numbers separated by periods. Each decimal number ranges from 0 through 255 with no
leading zeros (for example, 169.254.2.20).
Subnet Mask - This value is used to enable the instrument to determine if a client IP address is on
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the same local subnet. The same numbering notation applies as for the IP Address. When a client
IP address is on a different subnet, all packets must be sent to the Default Gateway.
DEF Gateway - This value is the IP Address of the default gateway that allows the instrument to
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communicate with systems that are not on the local subnet, as determined by the subnet mask
setting. The same numbering notation applies as for the IP Address. A value of 0.0.0.0 indicates
that no default gateway is defined.
Dot-notation addresses ("nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn" where "nnn" is a byte value from 0 to 255) must be expressed with
care, as most PC web software interprets byte values with leading zeros as octal (base 8) numbers. For example,
"192.168.020.011" is actually equivalent to decimal "192.168.16.9" because ".020" is interpreted as "16" expressed
in octal, and ".011" as "9". To avoid confusion, use only decimal values from 0 to 255, with no leading zeros.
Keysight RP7900 Series Operating and Service Guide
SCPI Command
Not available
SCPI Command
Not available
3 Getting Started
105