Chapter 1
Command Reference Topics
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Using the no Version Versus the default Version of Commands on page 3
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Deprecated Commands on page 4
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Filtering show Commands on page 4
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Interface Types and Specifiers on page 5
Using the no Version Versus the default Version of Commands
Most router configuration commands have a
no
version, which you can use to negate
a command (or a portion of it specified by an optional keyword) or restore its default
setting. When you use a command
without
the keyword
no
, you can reenable a
disabled feature or override a default setting. You have the option of using the
default
keyword whenever the
no
keyword is also a choice; simply enter the keyword
default
instead of
no
.
In most cases, when you execute the
default
version of a command, it produces the
exact results as the
no
version. There are some commands for which the
default
version yields a different result than the
no
version.
Commands for which the
default
behavior differs from the
no
behavior are clearly
identified in this guide. Unless otherwise specified, therefore, the
default
command
is identical to the
no
command and is neither documented nor discussed.
The syntax for each
no
command is described in this guide. Some commands do
not have a
no
version; this is indicated in the individual command descriptions except
for the
show
commands, none of which has a
no
version.
The CLI can act on
no
versions of commands when you have entered sufficient
information to distinguish the command syntactically, and ignores all subsequent
input on that line.
To be compatible with some non–E Series implementations, the
no
versions of
commands accept the same options as the affirmative version of the commands.
The CLI ignores the optional input if it has no effect on the command behavior. If
using the option changes the behavior of the
no
version, the individual command
entry in this guide describes the difference in behavior.
Using the no Version Versus the default Version of Commands
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3
Summary of Contents for JUNOSE 11.1.X - COMMAND REFERENCE N TO Z 4-6-2010
Page 6: ...vi...
Page 8: ...viii JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 36: ...xxxvi Table of Contents JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 38: ...xxxviii List of Tables JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 44: ...2 Commands N to Z JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 62: ...20 Interface Types and Specifiers JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 63: ...Chapter 2 N Commands 21...
Page 149: ...Chapter 3 O Commands 107...
Page 167: ...Chapter 4 P Commands 125...
Page 215: ...Mode Controller Configuration path ds3 t1 loopback 173 Chapter 4 P Commands...
Page 247: ...Mode Privileged Exec User Exec ping mpls vpls 205 Chapter 4 P Commands...
Page 329: ...Chapter 5 Q Commands 287...
Page 346: ...304 queue profile JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 347: ...Chapter 6 R Commands 305...
Page 369: ...Mode Global Configuration radius include dsl forum attributes 327 Chapter 6 R Commands...
Page 465: ...Chapter 7 S Commands 423...
Page 679: ...Mode Privileged Exec User Exec show controllers sonet remote 637 Chapter 7 S Commands...
Page 1093: ...Related Topics Monitoring QoS Parameter Instances show qos parameter 1051 Chapter 7 S Commands...
Page 1292: ...1250 synchronize JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 1293: ...Chapter 8 T Commands 1251...
Page 1304: ...Mode Controller Configuration 1262 t1 loopback JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 1375: ...Mode Router Configuration traps 1333 Chapter 8 T Commands...
Page 1419: ...Chapter 9 U V W and Y Commands 1377...
Page 1468: ...1426 yellow mark JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...
Page 1469: ...Part 2 Index Index on page 1429 Index 1427...
Page 1470: ...1428 Index JUNOSe 11 1 x Command Reference Guide N to Z...