SET SNMP CONTACT
<contact>
Configures the name of the system contact.
Only enclosure
administrators may execute
this command.
The <contact> must be 1-20
characters long and can
include alphanumeric, dash,
underscore, and space
characters. If spaces are part
of this information, enclose
the information in quotes.
SET SNMP LOCATION
<location>
Configures the SNMP location of the enclosure.
The default location is blank.
Only enclosure
administrators may execute
this command.
The <location> must be 1-20
characters long and can
include alphanumeric, dash,
underscore, and space
characters. If spaces are part
of this information, enclose
the information in quotes.
SHOW NETWORK
Displays the DHCP state, Dynamic DNS state, IP address,
subnet mask, gateway address, primary and secondary DNS
addresses, HTTP and HTTPS server status, SNMP status,
Secure Shell status, and Telnet status of the enclosure.
None
SHOW SNMP
Displays the SNMP system name, location, and contact, read
community name, write community name, and a list of the trap
destinations.
Only enclosure
administrators may execute
this command.
Enclosure Management Commands
Table 5-5
Command
Description
Restrictions
CLEAR SYSLOG
ENCLOSURE
Clears the enclosure system log.
Only enclosure administrators
may execute this command.
Once deleted, this information
cannot be restored.
POWEROFF ENCLOSURE
{FORCE}
Performs a graceful shutdown of the enclosure. Each blade is
first gracefully shut down. If the FORCE argument is given, the
enclosure and all blades are immediately shutdown.
Only enclosure administrators
may execute this command.
RESTART
Restarts the Integrated Administrator. This does not affect
operation of bays in the system.
Only enclosure administrators
may execute this command.
SET DATE
MMDDhhmm
{{CC}YY} {TZ}
Sets the date of the enclosure with the following definitions:
●
MM: month
●
DD: day
●
hh: hour (24-hour format)
●
mm: minute
●
CC: century
Only enclosure administrators
may execute this command.
●
MM is an integer from
1-12
●
DD is an integer from
1-31
(continued)
ENWW
Operating the Command Line Interface
57