C
OMMAND
L
INE
I
NTERFACE
4-10
Command Line Processing
Commands are not case sensitive. You can abbreviate commands and
parameters as long as they contain enough letters to differentiate them
from any other currently available commands or parameters. You can use
the Tab key to complete partial commands, or enter a partial command
followed by the “?” character to display a list of possible matches. You can
also use the following editing keystrokes for command-line processing:
Table 4-3 Keystroke Commands
Keystroke
Function
Ctrl-A
Shifts cursor to start of command line.
Ctrl-B
Shifts cursor to the left one character.
Ctrl-C
Terminates the current task and displays the
command prompt.
Ctrl-E
Shifts cursor to end of command line.
Ctrl-F
Shifts cursor to the right one character.
Ctrl-K
Deletes all characters from the cursor to the end of
the line.
Ctrl-L
Repeats current command line on a new line.
Ctrl-N
Enters the next command line in the history buffer.
Ctrl-P
Enters the last command.
Ctrl-R
Repeats current command line on a new line.
Ctrl-U
Deletes from the cursor to the beginning of the line.
Ctrl-W
Deletes the last word typed.
Esc-B
Moves the cursor back one word.
Esc-D
Deletes from the cursor to the end of the word.
Esc-F
Moves the cursor forward one word.
Delete key or backspace key Erases a mistake when entering a command.
Summary of Contents for 6128L2
Page 2: ......
Page 21: ...CONTENTS xvii Glossary Index ...
Page 22: ...CONTENTS xviii ...
Page 26: ...TABLES xxii ...
Page 40: ...INTRODUCTION 1 10 ...
Page 54: ...INITIAL CONFIGURATION 2 14 ...
Page 193: ...PORT CONFIGURATION 3 139 Figure 3 61 Displaying Etherlike and RMON Statistics ...
Page 257: ...QUALITY OF SERVICE 3 203 Figure 3 90 Configuring Policy Maps ...
Page 313: ...COMMAND GROUPS 4 13 PE Privileged Exec VC VLAN Database Configuration ...
Page 592: ...TROUBLESHOOTING B 4 ...
Page 605: ......