Using the
Searching and Filtering Output of show and more Commands
DETAILED STEPS
| Command or Action | Purpose |
Step 1 |
| Displays the global configuration command entry that extends beyond |
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| one line. |
Example:
Switch(config)#
10.15.22.25255.255.255.0 10.15.22.35
Switch(config)# $ 101 permit tcp
10.15.22.25255.255.255.0 10.15.22.35
255.25
Switch(config)# $t tcp 10.15.22.25 255.255.255.0 131.108.1.20 255.255.255.0 eq
Switch(config)# $15.22.25 255.255.255.0
10.15.22.35255.255.255.0 eq 45
When the cursor first reaches the end of the line, the line is shifted ten spaces to the left and redisplayed. The dollar sign ($) shows that the line has been scrolled to the left. Each time the cursor reaches the end of the line, the line is again shifted ten spaces to the left.
Step 2 |
Example:
Switch(config)#
Checks the complete syntax.
The dollar sign ($) appears at the end of the line to show that the line has been scrolled to the right.
Step 3 | Return key | Execute the commands. |
The software assumes that you have a terminal screen that is 80 columns wide. If you have a different width, use the terminal width privileged EXEC command to set the width of your terminal.
Use line wrapping with the command history feature to recall and modify previous complex command entries.
Searching and Filtering Output of show and more Commands
You can search and filter the output for show and more commands. This is useful when you need to sort through large amounts of output or if you want to exclude output that you do not need to see. Using these commands is optional.
SUMMARY STEPS
1.{show more} command {begin include exclude} regular-expression
DETAILED STEPS
| Command or Action | Purpose |
Step 1 | {show more} command {begin include exclude} | Searches and filters the output. |
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| Catalyst |
10 |