RDL-3000
User Manual
70-00158-01-DRAFT
Proprietary Redline Communications © 2010
Page
117
of 142
November 25, 2010
5.3.23
user
Use the
user
command to manage user accounts, passwords, and user Groups. When
in user mode, only the <chgpasswd> field is available, since the user can change only
their own password. The other commands are available only for members of the
administrator Group.
Table 33: CLI - user
Manage the user accounts.
user <add> <attr> <chgpasswd> <del> <print>
add <username> <usertype>
Administrators can use this command to add new user accounts. Usernames may be 1 to
19 alpha-numeric characters including a-z, A-Z, 0-9, dash (-), and underscore (_),
Passwords may be 8 to 15 alpha-numeric characters including a-z, A-Z, 0-9, dash (-), and
underscore (_). The operator must confirm their own password and a password for the
new account.
The RDL-3000 supports administrator and user accounts. See Table 4: Web - Screens
and User Access on page 42 for permissions associated with each group.
username
Enter name of new administrator or user account.
usertype
Specify the type of account being created.
user
User account.
admin
Administrator account.
attr <username> <
none | MD5 | SHA > <
none | DES | AES >
Designate an authentication method and privacy method to be used for SNMP v3
requests. An authentication method must be selected to enable usage of the privacy
method. Only combination SHA authenti AES privacy is valid in FIPS mode.
username
- Account to setup for SNMP v3 authorization.
chgpasswd <user name>
Administrators can change the password of any account. Users can change only their own
password. Users are prompted to enter new password information.
username
Account to be modified.
del <username>
Delete a user account.
username
Account to be deleted.
Display a list of user accounts.
5.3.24
whoami
Use the
whoami
command to display the username of the current Telnet session. This
command is not available when logged in as administrator.
Table 34: CLI - whoami
Display username for this Telnet session.
whoami