The following examples illustrate Fox tunneling syntax using NiagaraAX-3.3 or later:
Example 1
The following graphic shows an example of tunneling through a Proxy server (67.166.174.44) and then through an intermediate NiagaraAX-3.3 Supervisor tunnel host (192.168.3.76) and on to a final target host (192.168.3.77). In this example, no ports are specified so the default Fox port 1911 is used for all Fox connections.
Example 2
The following graphic shows an example of tunneling through a Proxy server (137.19.60.184) using a specified Fox port (1912) and also specifying a Fox port (1914) for the targeted Host server (137.19.61.192). Figure 4 also shows an additional example ORD that uses “station name” instead of “IP address”. Available starting in NiagaraAX-3.4, the “Only Tunnel Known Stations” option requires you to use station name, not the host IP address and restricts tunneling to stations that are under the proxy server’s NiagaraNetwork.
Example 3
The following graphic shows an example of tunneling through a Proxy server (67.166.174.44) to a target host (192.168.3.76) and specifying a particular view in the station (station:│slot:/Services/AlarmService/ConsoleRecipient). All stations are using the default fox port 1911, since no port is specified.
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