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3-19
Cisco Catalyst Blade Switch 3130 and 3032 for Dell Software Configuration Guide
OL-13270-06
Chapter 3 Assigning the Switch IP Address and Default Gateway
Modifying the Startup Configuration
Modifying the Startup Configuration
These sections describe how to modify the switch startup configuration:
•
Default Boot Configuration, page 3-19
•
Automatically Downloading a Configuration File, page 3-19
•
Booting Manually, page 3-20
•
Booting a Specific Software Image, page 3-21
•
Controlling Environment Variables, page 3-22
See also
Appendix A, “Working with the Cisco IOS File System, Configuration Files, and Software
Images,”
for information about switch configuration files. See the
“Switch Stack Configuration Files”
section on page 7-16
for information about switch stack configuration files.
Default Boot Configuration
Table 3-3
shows the default boot configuration.
Automatically Downloading a Configuration File
You can automatically download a configuration file to your switch by using the DHCP-based
autoconfiguration feature. For more information, see the
“Understanding DHCP-Based
Autoconfiguration” section on page 3-4
.
Table 3-3
Default Boot Configuration
Feature
Default Setting
Operating system software image
The switch attempts to automatically boot up the system using information in the
BOOT environment variable. If the variable is not set, the switch attempts to load and
execute the first executable image it can by performing a recursive, depth-first search
throughout the flash file system.
The Cisco IOS image is stored in a directory that has the same name as the image file
(excluding the .bin extension).
In a depth-first search of a directory, each encountered subdirectory is completely
searched before continuing the search in the original directory.
Configuration file
Configured switches use the
config.text
file stored on the system board in flash
memory.
A new switch has no configuration file.