1-19
<Sysname>
***
***
***Message from vty1 to vty1
***
hello
service-type
Syntax
service-type
{
ftp
|
lan-access
|
{
ssh
|
telnet
|
terminal
}* [
level level
] }
undo service-type
{
ftp
|
lan-access
|
{
ssh
|
telnet
|
terminal
}* }
View
Local user view
Parameters
ftp
: Specifies the users to be of FTP type.
lan-access
: Specifies the users to be of LAN-access type, which normally means Ethernet users, such
as 802.1x users.
ssh
: Specifies the users to be of SSH type.
telnet
: Specifies the users to be of Telnet type.
terminal
: Makes terminal services available to users logging in through the console port.
level level
: Specifies the user level for Telnet users, Terminal users, or SSH users. The
level
argument
ranges from 0 to 3 and defaults to 0.
Description
Use the
service-type
command to specify the login type and the corresponding available command
level.
Use the
undo service-type
command to cancel login type configuration.
Commands fall into four command levels: visit, monitor, system, and manage, which are described as
follows:
z
Visit level: Commands at this level are used to diagnose network and change the language mode
of user interface, such as the
ping
,
tracert
, and
language-mode
command. The
telnet
command
is also at this level. Commands at this level cannot be saved in configuration files.
z
Monitor level: Commands at this level are used to maintain the system, to debug service problems,
and so on. The
display
and
debugging
commands are at monitor level. Commands at this level
cannot be saved in configuration files.
z
System level: Commands at this level are used to configure services. Commands concerning
routing and network layers are at system level. You can utilize network services by using these
commands.
z
Manage level: Commands at this level are for the operation of the entire system and the system
supporting modules. Services are supported by these commands. Commands concerning file