Chapter 4: Using the Command Line Interface
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Example 2 - Outlet Sequence
The following command causes a 10-outlet PDU to first power on the 8th to 6th outlets and then the rest of outlets in the
ascending order after the PDU powers up.
config:#
pdu outletSequence 8-6,1-5,9,10
Example 3 - Outlet Sequence Delay
The following command determines that the outlet 1's delay is 2.5 seconds, outlet 2's delay is 3 seconds, and the delay for
outlets 3 through 5 is 10 seconds.
config:#
pdu outletSequenceDelay 1:2.5;2:3;3-5:10
Example 4 - Non-Critical Outlets
The following command sets outlets 1, 2, 3, 7, and 9 to be critical outlets, and 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11 and 12 to be non-critical
outlets on a 12-outlet PDU.
config:#
pdu nonCriticalOutlets 1-3,7,9:false;4-6,8,10-12:true
Network Configuration Commands
A network configuration command begins with
network
. A number of network settings can be changed through the CLI,
such as the IP address, transmission speed, duplex mode, and so on.
Configuring IPv4 Parameters
An IPv4 configuration command begins with
network ipv4
.
Setting the IPv4 Configuration Mode
This command determines the IP configuration mode.
config:#
network ipv4 interface <ETH> configMethod <mode>
Variables:
•
<ETH> is one of the network interfaces:
ethernet (or ETH1/ETH2)
,
wireless
or
all
.
Interface
Description
eth1
Determine the IPv4 configuration mode of the ETH1 interface (wired networking).
eth2
Determine the IPv4 configuration mode of the ETH2 interface (wired networking).
wireless
Determine the IPv4 configuration mode of the WIRELESS interface (that is, wireless
networking).