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			597 lines
		
	
	
		
			16 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
@node Basic commands
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@chapter Basic commands
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There are five routing daemons in use, and there is one manager daemon.
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These daemons may be located on separate machines from the manager
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daemon.  Each of these daemons will listen on a particular port for
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incoming VTY connections.  The routing daemons are:
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@itemize @bullet
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@item @command{ripd}, @command{ripngd}, @command{ospfd}, @command{ospf6d}, @command{bgpd}
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@item @command{zebra}
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@end itemize
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The following sections discuss commands common to all the routing
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daemons.
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@menu
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* Config Commands::             Commands used in config files
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* Terminal Mode Commands::      Common commands used in a VTY
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* Common Invocation Options::   Starting the daemons
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* Virtual Terminal Interfaces:: Interacting with the daemons
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@end menu
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@node Config Commands
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@section Config Commands
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@cindex Configuration files for running the software
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@c A -not configuration files for installing the software
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@cindex Files for running configurations
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@cindex Modifying the herd's behavior
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@cindex Getting the herd running
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@menu
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* Basic Config Commands::       Some of the generic config commands
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* Sample Config File::          An example config file
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@end menu
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In a config file, you can write the debugging options, a vty's password,
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routing daemon configurations, a log file name, and so forth. This
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information forms the initial command set for a routing beast as it is
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starting.
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Config files are generally found in:
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@itemize @w{}
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@item @file{@value{INSTALL_PREFIX_ETC}/*.conf}
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@end itemize
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Each of the daemons has its own
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config file.  For example, zebra's default config file name is:
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@itemize @w{}
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@item @file{@value{INSTALL_PREFIX_ETC}/zebra.conf}
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@end itemize
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The daemon name plus @file{.conf} is the default config file name. You
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can specify a config file using the @kbd{-f} or @kbd{--config-file}
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options when starting the daemon.
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@node Basic Config Commands
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@subsection Basic Config Commands
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@deffn Command {hostname @var{hostname}} {}
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Set hostname of the router.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {password @var{password}} {}
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Set password for vty interface.  If there is no password, a vty won't
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accept connections.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {enable password @var{password}} {}
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Set enable password.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log trap @var{level}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log trap} {}
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These commands are deprecated and are present only for historical compatibility.
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The log trap command sets the current logging level for all enabled
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logging destinations, and it sets the default for all future logging commands
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that do not specify a level.  The normal default
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logging level is debugging.  The @code{no} form of the command resets
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the default level for future logging commands to debugging, but it does
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not change the logging level of existing logging destinations.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log stdout} {}
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@deffnx Command {log stdout @var{level}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log stdout} {}
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Enable logging output to stdout. 
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If the optional second argument specifying the
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logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging,
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but can be changed using the deprecated @code{log trap} command) will be used.
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The @code{no} form of the command disables logging to stdout.
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The @code{level} argument must have one of these values: 
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emergencies, alerts, critical, errors, warnings, notifications, informational, or debugging.  Note that the existing code logs its most important messages
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with severity @code{errors}.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log file @var{filename}} {}
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@deffnx Command {log file @var{filename} @var{level}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log file} {}
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If you want to log into a file, please specify @code{filename} as
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in this example:
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@example
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log file /var/log/quagga/bgpd.log informational
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@end example
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If the optional second argument specifying the
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logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging,
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but can be changed using the deprecated @code{log trap} command) will be used.
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The @code{no} form of the command disables logging to a file.
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Note: if you do not configure any file logging, and a daemon crashes due
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to a signal or an assertion failure, it will attempt to save the crash
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information in a file named /var/tmp/quagga.<daemon name>.crashlog.
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For security reasons, this will not happen if the file exists already, so
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it is important to delete the file after reporting the crash information.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log syslog} {}
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@deffnx Command {log syslog @var{level}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log syslog} {}
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Enable logging output to syslog.
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If the optional second argument specifying the
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logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging,
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but can be changed using the deprecated @code{log trap} command) will be used.
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The @code{no} form of the command disables logging to syslog.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log monitor} {}
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@deffnx Command {log monitor @var{level}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log monitor} {}
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Enable logging output to vty terminals that have enabled logging
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using the @code{terminal monitor} command.
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By default, monitor logging is enabled at the debugging level, but this
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command (or the deprecated @code{log trap} command) can be used to change 
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the monitor logging level.
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If the optional second argument specifying the
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logging level is not present, the default logging level (typically debugging,
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but can be changed using the deprecated @code{log trap} command) will be used.
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The @code{no} form of the command disables logging to terminal monitors.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log facility @var{facility}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log facility} {}
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This command changes the facility used in syslog messages.  The default
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facility is @code{daemon}.  The @code{no} form of the command resets
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the facility to the default @code{daemon} facility.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log record-priority} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log record-priority} {}
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To include the severity in all messages logged to a file, to stdout, or to
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a terminal monitor (i.e. anything except syslog),
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use the @code{log record-priority} global configuration command.
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To disable this option, use the @code{no} form of the command.  By default,
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the severity level is not included in logged messages.  Note: some
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versions of syslogd (including Solaris) can be configured to include
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the facility and level in the messages emitted.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log timestamp precision @var{<0-6>}} {}
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@deffnx Command {no log timestamp precision} {}
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This command sets the precision of log message timestamps to the
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given number of digits after the decimal point.  Currently,
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the value must be in the range 0 to 6 (i.e. the maximum precision
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is microseconds).
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To restore the default behavior (1-second accuracy), use the
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@code{no} form of the command, or set the precision explicitly to 0.
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@example
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@group
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log timestamp precision 3
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@end group
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@end example
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In this example, the precision is set to provide timestamps with
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millisecond accuracy.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {log commands} {}
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This command enables the logging of all commands typed by a user to
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all enabled log destinations.  The note that logging includes full
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command lines, including passwords.  Once set, command logging can only
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be turned off by restarting the daemon.
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@end deffn  
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@deffn Command {service password-encryption} {}
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Encrypt password.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {service advanced-vty} {}
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Enable advanced mode VTY.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {service terminal-length @var{<0-512>}} {}
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Set system wide line configuration.  This configuration command applies
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to all VTY interfaces.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {line vty} {}
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Enter vty configuration mode.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {banner motd default} {}
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Set default motd string.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {no banner motd} {}
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No motd banner string will be printed.
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@end deffn
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@deffn {Line Command} {exec-timeout @var{minute}} {}
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@deffnx {Line Command} {exec-timeout @var{minute} @var{second}} {}
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Set VTY connection timeout value.  When only one argument is specified
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it is used for timeout value in minutes.  Optional second argument is
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used for timeout value in seconds. Default timeout value is 10 minutes.
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When timeout value is zero, it means no timeout.
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@end deffn
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@deffn {Line Command} {no exec-timeout} {}
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Do not perform timeout at all.  This command is as same as
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@command{exec-timeout 0 0}.
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@end deffn
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@deffn {Line Command} {access-class @var{access-list}} {}
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Restrict vty connections with an access list.
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@end deffn
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@node Sample Config File
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@subsection Sample Config File
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Below is a sample configuration file for the zebra daemon.
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@example
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@group
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!
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! Zebra configuration file
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!
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hostname Router
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password zebra
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enable password zebra
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!
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log stdout
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!
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!
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@end group
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@end example
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'!' and '#' are comment characters.  If the first character of the word
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is one of the comment characters then from the rest of the line forward
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will be ignored as a comment.
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@example
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password zebra!password
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@end example
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If a comment character is not the first character of the word, it's a
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normal character. So in the above example '!' will not be regarded as a
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comment and the password is set to 'zebra!password'.
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@node Terminal Mode Commands
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@section Terminal Mode Commands
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@deffn Command {write terminal} {}
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Displays the current configuration to the vty interface.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {write file} {}
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Write current configuration to configuration file.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {configure terminal} {}
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Change to configuration mode.  This command is the first step to
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configuration.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {terminal length @var{<0-512>}} {}
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Set terminal display length to @var{<0-512>}.  If length is 0, no
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display control is performed.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {who} {}
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Show a list of currently connected vty sessions.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {list} {}
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List all available commands.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {show version} {}
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Show the current version of @value{PACKAGE_NAME} and its build host information.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {show logging} {}
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Shows the current configuration of the logging system.  This includes
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the status of all logging destinations.
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@end deffn
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@deffn Command {logmsg @var{level} @var{message}} {}
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Send a message to all logging destinations that are enabled for messages
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of the given severity.
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@end deffn
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@node Common Invocation Options
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@section Common Invocation Options
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@c COMMON_OPTIONS
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@c OPTIONS section of the man page
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These options apply to all @value{PACKAGE_NAME} daemons.
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@table @samp
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@item -d
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@itemx --daemon
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Runs in daemon mode.
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@item -f @var{file}
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@itemx --config_file=@var{file}
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Set configuration file name.
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@item -h
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@itemx --help
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Display this help and exit.
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@item -i @var{file}
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@itemx --pid_file=@var{file}
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Upon startup the process identifier of the daemon is written to a file,
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typically in @file{/var/run}.  This file can be used by the init system
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to implement commands such as @command{@dots{}/init.d/zebra status},
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@command{@dots{}/init.d/zebra restart} or @command{@dots{}/init.d/zebra
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stop}.
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The file name is an run-time option rather than a configure-time option
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so that multiple routing daemons can be run simultaneously.  This is
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useful when using @value{PACKAGE_NAME} to implement a routing looking glass.  One
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machine can be used to collect differing routing views from differing
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points in the network.
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@item -A @var{address}
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@itemx --vty_addr=@var{address}
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Set the VTY local address to bind to. If set, the VTY socket will only
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be bound to this address. 
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@item -P @var{port}
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@itemx --vty_port=@var{port}
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Set the VTY TCP port number. If set to 0 then the TCP VTY sockets will not
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be opened.
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@item -u @var{user}
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@itemx --vty_addr=@var{user}
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Set the user and group to run as.
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@item -v
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@itemx --version
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Print program version.
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@end table
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@node Virtual Terminal Interfaces
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@section Virtual Terminal Interfaces
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VTY -- Virtual Terminal [aka TeletYpe] Interface is a command line
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interface (CLI) for user interaction with the routing daemon.
 | 
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@menu
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* VTY Overview::                Basics about VTYs                
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* VTY Modes::                   View, Enable, and Other VTY modes
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* VTY CLI Commands::            Commands for movement, edition, and management
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@end menu
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@node VTY Overview
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@subsection VTY Overview
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VTY stands for Virtual TeletYpe interface.  It means you can connect to
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the daemon via the telnet protocol.
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To enable a VTY interface, you have to setup a VTY password.  If there
 | 
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is no VTY password, one cannot connect to the VTY interface at all.
 | 
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 | 
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@example
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@group
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% telnet localhost 2601
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Trying 127.0.0.1...
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Connected to localhost.
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Escape character is '^]'.
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Hello, this is @value{PACKAGE_NAME} (version @value{VERSION})
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@value{COPYRIGHT_STR}
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						|
 | 
						|
User Access Verification
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						|
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Password: XXXXX
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Router> ?
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  enable            Turn on privileged commands
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  exit              Exit current mode and down to previous mode
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  help              Description of the interactive help system
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  list              Print command list
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						|
  show              Show running system information
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						|
  who               Display who is on a vty
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Router> enable
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Password: XXXXX
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Router# configure terminal
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Router(config)# interface eth0
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Router(config-if)# ip address 10.0.0.1/8
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Router(config-if)# ^Z
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Router#
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@end group
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@end example
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'?' is very useful for looking up commands.
 | 
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 | 
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@node VTY Modes
 | 
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@subsection VTY Modes
 | 
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 | 
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There are three basic VTY modes:
 | 
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 | 
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@menu
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* VTY View Mode::               Mode for read-only interaction               
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* VTY Enable Mode::             Mode for read-write interaction
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* VTY Other Modes::             Special modes (tftp, etc)
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@end menu
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There are commands that may be restricted to specific VTY modes. 
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@node VTY View Mode
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@subsubsection VTY View Mode
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@c to be written (gpoul)
 | 
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 | 
						|
 | 
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This mode is for read-only access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by
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leaving the system, or by entering @code{enable} mode.
 | 
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 | 
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@node VTY Enable Mode
 | 
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@subsubsection VTY Enable Mode
 | 
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 | 
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@c to be written (gpoul)
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This mode is for read-write access to the CLI. One may exit the mode by
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leaving the system, or by escaping to view mode.
 | 
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 | 
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@node VTY Other Modes
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@subsubsection VTY Other Modes
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 | 
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 | 
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@c to be written (gpoul)
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This page is for describing other modes.
 | 
						|
 | 
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@node VTY CLI Commands
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@subsection VTY CLI Commands
 | 
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 | 
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Commands that you may use at the command-line are described in the following
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three subsubsections.
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 | 
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@menu
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* CLI Movement Commands::       Commands for moving the cursor about
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* CLI Editing Commands::        Commands for changing text
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						|
* CLI Advanced Commands::       Other commands, session management and so on
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						|
@end menu
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@node CLI Movement Commands
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						|
@subsubsection CLI Movement Commands
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						|
These commands are used for moving the CLI cursor. The @key{C} character
 | 
						|
means press the Control Key.
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@table @kbd
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						|
@item C-f
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						|
@itemx @key{RIGHT}
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						|
@kindex C-f
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{RIGHT}
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						|
Move forward one character.
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						|
 | 
						|
@item C-b
 | 
						|
@itemx @key{LEFT}
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						|
@kindex C-b
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{LEFT}
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						|
Move backward one character.
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						|
 | 
						|
@item M-f
 | 
						|
@kindex M-f
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						|
Move forward one word.
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						|
 | 
						|
@item M-b
 | 
						|
@kindex M-b
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						|
Move backward one word.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-a
 | 
						|
@kindex C-a
 | 
						|
Move to the beginning of the line.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-e
 | 
						|
@kindex C-e
 | 
						|
Move to the end of the line.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@end table
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@node CLI Editing Commands
 | 
						|
@subsubsection CLI Editing Commands
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
These commands are used for editing text on a line. The @key{C}
 | 
						|
character means press the Control Key.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@table @kbd
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-h
 | 
						|
@itemx @key{DEL}
 | 
						|
@kindex C-h
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{DEL}
 | 
						|
Delete the character before point.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-d
 | 
						|
@kindex C-d
 | 
						|
Delete the character after point.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item M-d
 | 
						|
@kindex M-d
 | 
						|
Forward kill word.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-w
 | 
						|
@kindex C-w
 | 
						|
Backward kill word.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-k
 | 
						|
@kindex C-k
 | 
						|
Kill to the end of the line.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-u
 | 
						|
@kindex C-u
 | 
						|
Kill line from the beginning, erasing input.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-t
 | 
						|
@kindex C-t
 | 
						|
Transpose character.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@end table
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@node CLI Advanced Commands
 | 
						|
@subsubsection CLI Advanced Commands
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
There are several additional CLI commands for command line completions,
 | 
						|
insta-help, and VTY session management.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@table @kbd
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-c
 | 
						|
@kindex C-c
 | 
						|
Interrupt current input and moves to the next line.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-z
 | 
						|
@kindex C-z
 | 
						|
End current configuration session and move to top node.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-n
 | 
						|
@itemx @key{DOWN}
 | 
						|
@kindex C-n
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{DOWN}
 | 
						|
Move down to next line in the history buffer.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item C-p
 | 
						|
@itemx @key{UP}
 | 
						|
@kindex C-p
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{UP}
 | 
						|
Move up to previous line in the history buffer.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item TAB
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{TAB}
 | 
						|
Use command line completion by typing @key{TAB}.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@item ?
 | 
						|
@kindex @key{?}
 | 
						|
You can use command line help by typing @code{help} at the beginning of
 | 
						|
the line.  Typing @kbd{?} at any point in the line will show possible
 | 
						|
completions.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
@end table
 |