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Saving or Changing Configuration Settings
When you make changes to the current running configuration and you want those changes to remain in effect when the system
restarts, you must save the changes before leaving the management session. To do so, save the running configuration to the
startup configuration file.
The SCE platform provides multiple interfaces for configuration and management. All interfaces supply an API to the same
database of the SCE platform. Any configuration made through one interface is reflected through all interfaces. Furthermore,
when saving the running configuration to the startup configuration from any management interface, all configuration settings
are saved regardless of the management interface used to set the configuration.
For backup purposes, the old startup-config file is saved under the directory:
To remove a configuration command from the running-config, use the no form of the command.
Step 1
At the SCE# prompt, type show running-config to view the running configuration. The running configuration appears.
Step 2
Check the configuration to make sure that it is set to your specifications. If not, make the changes you want before
saving.
Type copy running-config startup-config. The system saves all running configuration information to the configuration
Step 3
file, which is used when the system reboots.
The configuration file holds all information that is different from the system default in a file called config.tx1 located
in the directory: /system.
Saving or Changing Configuration Settings—Example
The following example shows how to save the running configuration file (first displaying the file to review the settings).
SCE#show running-config
#This is a general configuration file (running-config).
#Created on 12:06:13
UTC
#cli-type 1
#version 1
no management-agent notifications notification-list 1417,1418,804,815,1404,1405,1406,1407,1408,400
no management-agent notifications notification-list 402,421,440,441,444,445,446,450,437,457
no management-agent notifications notification-list 3593,3594,3595,10040
snmp-server community "public" ro
RDR-formatter forwarding-mode multicast
RDR-formatter destination 10.56.96.26 port 33000 category number 1 priority 100
RDR-formatter destination 10.56.96.26 port 33000 category number 2 priority 100
RDR-formatter destination 10.56.96.26 port 33000 category number 3 priority 100
RDR-formatter destination 10.56.96.26 port 33000 category number 4 priority 100
interface LineCard 0
connection-mode inline on-failure external-bypass
no silent
no shutdown
attack-filter subscriber-notification ports 80
replace spare-memory code bytes 3145728
interface GigabitEthernet 1/1
ip address 10.56.96.46 255.255.252.0
interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/0/0
bandwidth 10000000 burst-size 50000
global-controller 0 name "Default Global Controller"
interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/1/0
bandwidth 10000000 burst-size 50000
global-controller 0 name "Default Global Controller"
interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/2/0
bandwidth 10000000 burst-size 50000
global-controller 0 name "Default Global Controller"
interface TenGigabitEthernet 3/3/0
bandwidth 10000000 burst-size 50000
global-controller 0 name "Default Global Controller"
exit
20
SUN
May
11
2008
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/system/prevconf