Chapter 4

SpeedTouch™ Configuration Management

Transfer the configuration file to the SpeedTouch™

To transfer a SpeedTouch™ configuration file stored on your local disk to the

SpeedTouch™, proceed as follows:

Step

 

 

 

Action

 

 

 

1

Open an FTP session to the SpeedTouch™. At the user name prompt,

 

enter a user name and at the password prompt, the password (refer

 

to “The SpeedTouch™ Multi Level Access Policy Configuration

 

Guide” for more information).

 

 

 

2

If required, save the current SpeedTouch™ configuration via the

 

quote site saveall command:

 

 

ftp> quote site saveall

 

 

 

200-

 

 

 

 

 

200 CLI command "saveall" executed

 

3

Enter binary file transfer mode. Optionally you can enable hashing:

 

ftp> bin

 

 

 

 

 

200 TYPE is now 8-bit binary

 

 

ftp> hash

 

 

 

 

 

Hash mark printing On ftp: (2048 bytes/hash mark).

4

Go to the SpeedTouch™ ‘/dl’ subdirectory:

 

 

ftp> cd dl

 

 

 

 

5

You can check whether a user.ini configuration file, or other

 

configuration files are stored in the ‘/dl’ subdirectory by making a

 

listing of the subdirectory’s contents:

 

 

ftp> dir

 

 

 

 

 

200 Connected to 192.168.1.254

 

 

150 Opening data connection for /bin/ls

1971 start.cmd

 

-rwxrwxrwx

1 0

0

20 Jun 29

 

-rwxrwxrwx

1 0

0

2952448 Jun 29

1971 ZZUIAA5.314

 

-r--r--r--

1 0

0

9 Jun 29

1971 seed.dat

 

-r--r--r--

1 0

0

729 Jun 29

1971 sslcert.pem

 

-r--r--r--

1 0

0

908 Jun 29

1971 sslkey.pem

 

-r--r--r--

1 0

0

692 Jun 29

1971 sshdsa.pem

 

-rwxrwxrwx

1 0

0

66920 Jun 29

1971 user.ini

 

-rw-rw-rw-

1 0

0

4056 Jun 29 1971 user.tpl

 

-rw-rw-r--

1 0

0

34633 Jun 29

1971 security.cfg

 

226 Options: -l

: 9 matches total

 

 

ftp: 600 bytes received in 0,00Seconds 600000,00Kbytes/

 

sec.ftp: 400 bytes received in 0.01Seconds 40.00Kbytes/sec.

6

In case the configuration file you intend to upload has the same

 

name as (one of) the configuration file(s) on the SpeedTouch™ file

 

system (for example user.ini), you must either:

 

Rename the file name, of the configuration file stored on your

 

local disk

 

 

 

 

 

Delete the file from the SpeedTouch™ file system.

 

 

7

Optionally you can clean up the SpeedTouch™’s file system via the

 

:software cleanup CLI command:

 

 

ftp> quote site software cleanup

 

 

200-

 

 

 

 

 

200 CLI command "software cleanup" executed

 

 

 

 

 

 

36

E-DOC-CTC-20051017-0155 v1.0

 

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Technicolor - Thomson SpeedTouchTM620 manual Transfer the configuration file to the SpeedTouch, Quote site saveall command