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Cisco ASR 9000 Series Aggregation Services Router Getting Started Guide
OL-17502-01
Chapter 3 Configuring General Router Features
Managing Configuration Sessions
Viewing Active Configuration SessionsBefore you start a configuration session, check to see if there are other configuration sessions in
progress. More than one user can open a target configuration session at a time, allowing multiple users
to work on separate target configurations.
The procedure for viewing the active configuration sessions depends on the type of configuration
session. For administration configuration sessions, that assign hardware components in RSPs, you must
be in administration EXEC mode. For RSP configuration sessions, you must be in EXEC mode.
To view the active administration configuration sessions, connect to the router and type the show
configuration sessions command in administration EXEC mode:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# admin
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(admin)# show configuration sessions
To view active RSP configuration sessions, connect to the RSP and type the show configuration
sessions command in EXEC mode:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router# show configuration sessions
Current Configuration Session Line User Date Lock
00000041-006d60d3-00000000 vty0 merenenre Wed Dec 3 00:33:32 2008
If an asterisk (*) appears in the Lock column, the user is using an exclusive configuration session and
you cannot start a configuration session until the session closes. For more information, see the “Starting
an Exclusive Configuration Session” section on page 3-21.
Note Configuration sessions for administration configuration and each RSP are managed independently. For
example, if a user locks the administration configuration, you can still configure an RSP if other users
have not locked a configuration session for that RSP.
Step 3 commit
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(your-config-mode)# commit
Saves configuration changes.
Step 4 end
Example:
RP/0/RSP0/CPU0:router(your-config-mode)# end
Saves configuration changes.
• When you issue the end command, the system prompts
you to commit changes:
Uncommitted changes found, commit them before
exiting(yes/no/cancel)?
[cancel]:
–
Entering yes saves configuration changes to the
running configuration file, exits the configuration
session, and returns the router to EXEC mode.
–
Entering no exits the configuration session and
returns the router to EXEC mode without
committing the configuration changes.
–
Entering cancel leaves the router in the current
configuration session without exiting or
committing the configuration changes.
Command or Action Purpose