Chapter 12: Using Cisco Tools from a Command Line

How to Use the Registry Utility from a Command Line

Use the Registry utility to:

View the ICM Windows registry settings for the current system

Save registry settings to a file

To Run the Registry Utility from a Command Line

To run the Registry utility in interactive mode from a command line:

Step 1 From a command prompt on a Support Tools node, navigate to <support_tools_root>.

Step 2 Enter registry.

To view a list of systems defined in the current system's system list, use the systemlist command. To view connection status for systems in the list, use the systemlist /check command.

Step 3 Enter commands as described in the Command Line Options section below.

Note: For additional information on basic Web Tools command line use, including system selection options and command-line mode vs interactive mode see Using Cisco Common Tools from a Command Line (page 125).

Using the Registry Utility from a Command Line

Table 8: Command Line Options

Command:

Description:

Example:

cmdhelp, chelp

Displays a list of commands specific to this utility.

>cmdhelp

 

Note: Using Help or ? also displays this list, but includes several

 

 

additional ICM commands (e.g., echo, error_stop) not used by

 

 

this utility.

 

/?

Displays syntax for a specified command.

><command> /?

appserver

Specifies the system on which the utility should run. If not

><app_servername> /

 

specified, the utility is run on the local system.

<options>

system

Specifies the target system the utility should run against. If not

> /system <host_name> /

 

specified, the utility is run against the local system.

<options>

localhost

Sets the network address of name of the target node to the local

>localhost

 

host.

 

 

Note: By default, unless a different system is specified (using the

 

 

system command) the local host is assumed to be the target system.

 

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Cisco Systems 2.1(1) To Run the Registry Utility from a Command Line, Using the Registry Utility from a Command Line, 137