How to Configure Windows 95 for Use with NASI

Last reviewed: September 26, 1997
Article ID: Q125425
95 WINDOWS kb3rdparty kbinterop kbnetwork

The information in this article applies to:

  • Microsoft Windows 95

NOTICE: The configuration described in this article is not supported or endorsed by Microsoft, and will not be supported by Microsoft Product Support Services.

SUMMARY

A common method for sharing modems on a network is to use a dedicated Asynchronous Communication Server (ACS). On Novell networks, you use the Novell Asynchronous Communication Server (NACS), or more commonly, Novell's NetWare Asynchronous System Interface (NASI).

NASI uses a terminate-and-stay-resident program (TSR) that requires the IPX network protocol. You cannot, therefore, use NASI with the Microsoft client for NetWare networks, the IPX/SPX protocol, and an NDIS network adapter driver.

This article describes how to configure Windows 95 to use NASI.

MORE INFORMATION

You can use either of the following methods to configure Windows 95 to use NASI.

Method 1

  1. Click the Start button, point to Settings, and click Control Panel.

  2. Double-click the Network icon.

  3. Add the following items to the network configuration:

          Microsoft Client for NetWare Networks
          IPX/SPX-compatible Protocol for Windows
          Novell IPX ODI Protocol
          Network Adapter (driver type must be ODI)
    

  4. Make sure the following devices are present in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file:

          LSL
          <MLID>
          IPXODI
          <Required NASI entry>
    

    NOTE: NETX.EXE is not loaded in this configuration.

Method 2

  1. Click the Start button, point to Settings, and click Control Panel.

  2. Double-click the Network icon.

  3. Add the following items to the network configuration:

          Novell Netware (Workstation Shell 3.X [NETX])
          Novell IPX ODI Protocol
          Network Adapter (driver type must be ODI)
    

  4. Make sure the following devices are present in the AUTOEXEC.BAT file:

          LSL
          <MLID>
          IPXODI
          <Required NASI entry>
          NETX or VLM
    

Notes

Each of the two methods outlined above has its advantages and disadvantages. Using method 1 lets you reconnect to the server automatically if a connection is lost. NWREDIR supports long filenames and lets you use a login script. TSRs cannot, however, be loaded from within the login script.

Using method 2 lets you load TSRs from within the login script. If a server stops and you lose the connection, however, you must restart the system to establish another connection.


KBCategory: kb3rdparty kbinterop kbnetwork
KBSubcategory: wpp95 win95
Additional reference words: 95
Keywords : win95 wpp95 kb3rdparty kbinterop kbnetwork
Version : 95
Platform : WINDOWS


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Last reviewed: September 26, 1997
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