Chapter 4
| System Management Commands
File Management
– 92 –
copy
This command moves (upload/download) a code image or configuration file
between the switch’s flash memory and an FTP/TFTP server. When you save the
system code or configuration settings to a file on an FTP/TFTP server, that file can
later be downloaded to the switch to restore system operation. The success of the
file transfer depends on the accessibility of the FTP/TFTP server and the quality of
the network connection.
Syntax
copy
file
{
file
|
ftp
|
running-config
|
startup-config
|
tftp
}
copy running-config
{
file
|
ftp
|
startup-config
|
tftp
}
copy startup-config
{
file
|
ftp
|
running-config
|
tftp
}
copy tftp
{
file
|
https-certificate
|
public-key
|
running-config
|
startup-config
}
file
- Keyword that allows you to copy to/from a file.
ftp
- Keyword that allows you to copy to/from an FTP server.
https-certificate
- Keyword that allows you to copy the HTTPS secure site
certificate.
public-key
- Keyword that allows you to copy a SSH key from a TFTP server.
(
See “Secure Shell” on page 190.
)
running-config
- Keyword that allows you to copy to/from the current
running configuration.
startup-config
- The configuration used for system initialization.
tftp
- Keyword that allows you to copy to/from a TFTP server.
Default Setting
None
Command Mode
Privileged Exec
Command Usage
◆
The system prompts for data required to complete the copy command.
◆
The destination file name should not contain slashes (\ or /), and the maximum
length for file names is 32 characters for files on the switch or 127 characters for
files on the server. (Valid characters: A-Z, a-z, 0-9, “.”, “-”)
◆
The switch supports only two operation code files, but the maximum number
of user-defined configuration files is 16.
◆
You can use “Factory_Default_Config.cfg” as the source to copy from the
factory default configuration file, but you cannot use it as the destination.
Summary of Contents for EX-3524
Page 2: ......
Page 28: ...Figures 28 ...
Page 34: ...Section I Getting Started 34 ...
Page 58: ...Chapter 1 Initial Switch Configuration Setting the System Clock 58 ...
Page 72: ...Chapter 2 Using the Command Line Interface CLI Command Groups 72 ...
Page 156: ...Chapter 5 SNMP Commands Notification Log Commands 156 ...
Page 164: ...Chapter 6 Remote Monitoring Commands 164 ...
Page 218: ...Chapter 7 Authentication Commands Management IP Filter 218 ...
Page 268: ...Chapter 8 General Security Measures Port based Traffic Segmentation 268 ...
Page 292: ...Chapter 9 Access Control Lists ACL Information 292 ...
Page 312: ...Chapter 10 Interface Commands Power Savings 312 ...
Page 324: ...Chapter 11 Link Aggregation Commands Trunk Status Display Commands 324 ...
Page 366: ...Chapter 15 Address Table Commands 366 ...
Page 428: ...Chapter 17 VLAN Commands Configuring Voice VLANs 428 ...
Page 572: ...Chapter 25 IP Interface Commands IPv6 Interface 572 ...
Page 578: ...Section I Appendices 578 ...