Command Mode
Global Configuration
Command Usage
This command sets the local time zone relative to the Coordinated Universal
Time (UTC, formerly Greenwich Mean Time or GMT), based on the earth’s
prime meridian, zero degrees longitude. To display a time corresponding to
your local time, you must indicate the number of hours and minutes your time
zone is east (before) or west (after) of UTC.
Example
Console(config)#clock timezone-predefined GMT-0930-Taiohae
Console(config)#
Related Commands
show clock (23-43)
clock summer-time
(date)
This command sets the start, end, and offset times of summer-time (daylight savings
time) for the switch on a one-time basis. Use the
no
form to disable summer-time.
Syntax
clock summer-time
name
date
b-month b-day b-year b-hour b-minute
e-month e-day e-year e-hour e-minute offset
no clock summer-time
• name
-
Name of the time zone while summer-time is in effect, usually an
acronym. (Range: 1-30 characters)
• b-month
-
The month when summer-time will begin. (Options:
january
|
february
|
march
|
april
|
may
|
june
|
july
|
august
|
september
|
october
|
november
|
december
)
• b-day
-
The day summer-time will begin. (Options:
sunday
|
monday
|
tuesday
|
wednesday
|
thursday
|
friday
|
saturday
)
• b-year-
The year summer-time will begin.
•
b-hour
-
The hour summer-time will begin. (Range: 0-23 hours)
•
b-minute
- The minute summer-time will begin. (Range: 0-59 minutes)
• e-month
-
The month when summer-time will end. (Options:
january
|
february
|
march
|
april
|
may
|
june
|
july
|
august
|
september
|
october
|
november
|
december
)
• e-day
-
The day summer-time will end. (Options:
sunday
|
monday
|
tuesday
|
wednesday
|
thursday
|
friday
|
saturday
)
• e-year-
The year summer-time will end.
•
e-hour
-
The hour summer-time will end. (Range: 0-23 hours)
•
e-minute
- The minute summer-time will end. (Range: 0-59 minutes)
23-40
System Management Commands
23
Summary of Contents for IC40240-10G
Page 1: ...IntraCore 40240 40480 10G Layer 3 Gigabit Stackable Ethernet Switch User s Manual ...
Page 4: ...IC40240 10G 99 00837 IC40480 10G 99 00836 ...
Page 6: ...ii ...
Page 33: ...Getting Started ...
Page 43: ...1 1 10 Introduction ...
Page 61: ...2 2 18 Initial Configuration ...
Page 63: ...Switch Management ...
Page 75: ...3 3 12 Configuring the Switch ...
Page 117: ...4 4 42 Basic Management Tasks ...
Page 163: ...6 6 28 User Authentication ...
Page 175: ...7 7 12 Access Control Lists ...
Page 283: ...14 14 8 Quality of Service ...
Page 293: ...15 15 10 Multicast Filtering ...
Page 299: ...16 16 6 Domain Name Service ...
Page 309: ...17 17 10 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol ...
Page 319: ...18 18 10 Configuring Router Redundancy ...
Page 343: ...19 19 24 IP Routing ...
Page 355: ...Web Click Routing Protocol RIP Statistics Figure 20 5 RIP Statistics 20 12 Unicast Routing 20 ...
Page 385: ...20 20 42 Unicast Routing ...
Page 387: ...Command Line Interface ...
Page 399: ...21 21 12 Overview of the Command Line Interface ...
Page 465: ...24 24 16 SNMP Commands ...
Page 519: ...26 26 18 Access Control List Commands ...
Page 545: ...30 30 2 Rate Limit Commands ...
Page 611: ...34 34 24 VLAN Commands ...
Page 625: ...35 35 14 Class of Service Commands ...
Page 633: ...36 7 police 36 ...
Page 670: ...39 39 16 DHCP Commands ...
Page 716: ...41 41 36 IP Interface Commands ...
Page 768: ...42 42 52 IP Routing Commands ...
Page 770: ...Appendices ...
Page 791: ......
Page 792: ...IC40240 10G IC40480 10G ...