Motorola T3 Power Broadband manual Global Commands, Command Completion, Style Conventions

Page 10

Commands and Syntax

Global Commands

Commands that are available from any command context are called global commands. For example, the help command can be used whether you are at the root command context or down a few levels in the command hierarchy. Global commands can also be used from either the user or admin account.

Note: The default prompt is “system>”. If you set the system name using the “system name” command, the prompt changes to the new system name.

Command

clear

exit

help

history

logout

tree

Description

Clears the screen

Use this command to switch to the previous context. Note that using the exit command at the root command context performs the same function as logout.

Displays the help files

Shows the history of the commands used in the current session.

Can be used with either the login (admin, user, RADIUS network authenticated) and at any command level to terminate the current session

Shows the structure of the command tree

Command Completion

The CLI allows you to shorten commands as long as the characters are not ambiguous. While typing a command, press the tab key to have the system complete the current command word or type (?) to have the system display a list of available options. The options displayed vary according to the context:

If you type a ? at a prompt, the system displays a list of all available commands.

If you type an unambiguous command word, pressing ? displays all available subcommands or arguments. For example, show ? (note the space before the question mark) displays a list of all show subcommands.

Style Conventions

The style conventions used in this manual distinguish various elements of the commands and facilitate the proper interpretation of command syntax, parameters, and their use.

Keyword

<ip-address>

[ ]

-

For example:

Show the actual text you must enter. A keyword is found within carrots <>, followed by an input parameter. You must type the keyword, followed by the parameter.

Indicates the text is a variable where you must supply the actual value

Square brackets delimit optional keywords or arguments. One or more of these optional parameters can be entered on the same line. For example, the “interface wireless config” command has 12 optional parameters of which you can choose only the parameters you want to configure.

Hyphens are used to indicate remote ports on a connected WallPlate. Port numbers following the hyphen are remote Ethernet ports or remote WLANs.

interface wireless enable <radio<1-25>(interface-id)>

where;

“radio” is a keyword and must be typed

<1-25> is a port range parameter for the wireless radio connected to the DSL line (interface-id) is a description and is not typed

Proper command form:

interface wireless enable radio5

wifi wlan enable <wlan<1-25>-<1-16>(interface-id)>

Motorola, Inc.

570510-001-00 rev A

Page 10 of 50

 

 

 

Image 10
Contents T3 PowerBroadband Page RF Exposure Guidelines Regulatory Statements Model Number45225Frequency of Operation FCC and IC InternationalRadio Frequency Interference Requirements- FCC Marking and European Economic Area EEAT2-2500 and T3 Switch M2 WallPlateWaste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Weee Commands and Syntax Quality of Service QoS Administrative Commands Commands and SyntaxCommand Hierarchy Show CommandsCommand Completion Global CommandsStyle Conventions Interface Range System Description T3 PowerBroadband SwitchAdaptive Line Power M2 Ethernet WallPlateFeatures of the MC-802 802.11b/g radio Physical MC-802 Wireless WallPlateM2 Ethernet WallPlate Physical Radio Model Numbers and Description for related Products HardwareModel Numbers and Description Model Number Part Number DescriptionCross-Connect Connections Front ViewRear View Mounting OptionsM2 2 port Ethernet WallPlate LED Status LightsPage CLI Configuration Script files System AdministrationManagement Access Access MethodsConfiguration Files using the webUI File dirHttp Menus Upgrading the Firmware Wireless WallPlate FirmwareReboot the Wireless WallPlate to activate the new software T3 FirmwareLine Quality View System Configuration and Status Summary Startup RunningOther Configuration Help Commit modeReset to Default Configuration System config mode automanualmodeShow remote inventory Managing the Wireless WallPlatesWallPlate Inventory and Firmware Image Show remote imageIP Addresses Private IP addressPublic IP address Static IP address poolConfiguring a Wlan Global Radio CommandsMonitor the WLANs and radios Per-WLAN CommandsExpanded Statistics and Status Access Control Lists ACLs Ip access-list config 1 deny httpAuthenticating Clients using Radius network authenticated loginAuthenticating Administrative Access Configure the Radius ServerTools Required WallPlate InstallationBasic Configuration Components provided with the MC-802 WallPlateComponents required to purchase StepEnable line power Determine which port is being installedFinish the installation Enable line powerVlan terminology Vlan Specification802.1Q VLANs Tagged UntaggedVlan commands Tag-based Vlan Mode Port-based Vlan ModeWeb UI configuration Vlan General webUISet Vlan Egress Rules Tag-based Vlan webUICreate/Delete VLANs Set Vlan Ingress RulesPort-based Vlan webUI Quality of Service QoS QoS commands and conceptsNetwork qos interface queue interface-id mode mode 802.1P bit Dynamic packet classificationQueue Packet Classification CommandsQoS Example Packet transmissionLine Status Line Current Line Current Value Watts ReferenceAppendix a Pin-out Assignments Fast Ethernet WallPlate portsT3 PowerBroadband Appendix B Hardware SpecificationsM2 WallPlate MC-802 Wireless WallPlate