16
Viewing and managing the output from a display command
effectively
You can use the following methods in combination to filter and manage the output from a
display
command:
•
Numbering each output line from a display command
•
Filtering the output from a display command
•
Saving the output from a display command to a file
To use multiple measures to view and manage the output from a
display
command effectively,
execute the following command in any view:
Task
Command
View and manage the output from a
display command effectively.
display command
[
|
[
by-linenum
] {
begin
|
exclude
|
include
}
regular-expression
] [
>
filename
|
>>
filename
]
For example:
# Save the running configuration to a separate file named
test.txt
, with each line numbered.
<Sysname> display current-configuration | by-linenum > test.txt
# Append lines including
snmp
in the running configuration to the file
test.txt
.
<Sysname> display current-configuration | include snmp >> test.txt
# Display the first line that begins with
user-group
in the running configuration and all the following
lines.
<Sysname> display current-configuration | by-linenum begin user-group
114: user-group system
115- #
116- return
// The colon (:) following a line number indicates that the line contains the string user-group. The
hyphen (-) following a line number indicates that the line does not contain the string
user-group
.
Saving the running configuration
To make your configuration take effect after a reboot, save the running configuration to a
configuration file by using the
save
command in any view. This command saves all commands that
have been successfully executed, except for the one-time commands. Typical one-time commands
include
display
commands used for displaying information and
reset
commands used for clearing
information.
For more information about the
save
command, see
Fundamentals Command Reference
.
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