backup
565
The
backup
command places the boot configuration file into the archive.
(The boot configuration file is the
Configured boot configuration
in the
display boot
command’s output.) If the running configuration contains
changes that have not been saved, these changes are not in the boot
configuration file and are not archived. To make sure the archive contains
the configuration that is currently running on the switch, use the
save config
command to save the running configuration to the boot
configuration file, before using the
backup
command.
Examples
— The following command creates an archive of the
system-critical files and copies the archive directly to a TFTP server. The
filename in this example includes a TFTP server IP address, so the archive
is not stored locally on the switch.
WX1200#
backup system tftp:/10.10.20.9/sysa_bak critical
success: sent 28263 bytes in 0.324 seconds [ 87231 bytes/sec]
Table 103 describes the fields.
See Also
dir
on page 570
restore
on page 583
Table 103
Output for backup
Field
Description
[
tftp:/
ip
-addr
/
]
fil
ename
Name of the archive file to create. You can store the file locally in the
switch’s nonvolatile storage or on a TFTP server.
all
Backs up system files and all the files in the user files area.
The user files area contains the set of files listed in the
file
section of
dir
command output.
critical
Backs up system files only, including the configuration file used when
booting, and certificate files. The size of an archive created by this option
is generally 1MB or less.
Summary of Contents for OfficeConnect WX1200
Page 36: ...36 CHAPTER 2 ACCESS COMMANDS...
Page 62: ...62 CHAPTER 3 SYSTEM SERVICE COMMANDS...
Page 200: ...200 CHAPTER 7 IP SERVICES COMMANDS...
Page 264: ...264 CHAPTER 8 AAA COMMANDS...
Page 272: ...272 CHAPTER 9 MOBILITY DOMAIN COMMANDS...
Page 392: ...392 CHAPTER 11 MANAGED ACCESS POINT COMMANDS...
Page 444: ...444 CHAPTER 13 IGMP SNOOPING COMMANDS...
Page 468: ...468 CHAPTER 14 SECURITY ACL COMMANDS...
Page 484: ...484 CHAPTER 15 CRYPTOGRAPHY COMMANDS...
Page 532: ...532 CHAPTER 18 SESSION MANAGEMENT COMMANDS...
Page 588: ...588 CHAPTER 20 FILE MANAGEMENT COMMANDS...
Page 596: ...596 CHAPTER 21 TRACE COMMANDS...
Page 608: ...608 CHAPTER 22 SNOOP COMMANDS...
Page 618: ...618 CHAPTER 23 SYSTEM LOG COMMANDS...