7-3 User Guide for AIR-104/AIR-204
the next command in the sequence. At startup, typing ^p or ^n will not cause
anything to happen, since no sequence of commands exists yet. In normal
operation, typing ^p will cause the previous command to show, and the cursor will
sit at the end of the command. At this point, the user can either type a carriage
return to accept the command, or type backspaces to edit the command from the
end, or ^p to display the nextmost previous command in the sequence, or ^n
display the command that comes after it in the sequence (if applicable). The CLI
stores a total of up to 15 previously-entered commands in a sequence that can be
invoked through ^ps and ^ns.
Conventions
The following notations will be used:
lan means the LAN port;
<> specifies the arguments of the command, <1-4> means a number between 1 to
4;
[ ] indicates a required or optional parameter, or choice of parameters; Interface
Name or ifName represents a profile interface, which can be the LAN port (lan), or a
modem profile.
Profile Name means an Internet profile, not the LAN port.
xxx/yyy means xxx, or yyy;
num means any integer number (such as 19200, 9600, ...);
MacAddr, or nn-nn-nn-nn-nn-nn means any MAC address in hexadecimal format,
where each nn can be 00, 01, ... 09, 0A, 0B, 0C, 0D, 0E, 0F, 10, 11,FF;
ipAddr, netMask, or xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx means any ip address or network mask, where
xxx is a decimal integer between 0 and 255
the term string means a string of characters up to the specified length, which may be
enclosed in double quotes () (required if the string contains embedded blanks
Command Categories
From a functional point of view, commands can be grouped into the following functional
categories:
(1) Diagnostics (2) IP (3) Port
(4) Profile (5) Security (6) Statistics
(7) System
This list may vary depending upon the model of AIR-104/204 and the installed features.
For convenience, the section Command List summarizes all commands using the
following categories:
DHCP
Diagnostics
IP
Port Commands
Profile Commands
Security
Statistics
System
Chapter 7 Command Line Interface