Chapter 1 Command Line Interface

1.7 Input Values

You can use the ? or [TAB] to get more information about the next input value that is required for a command. In some cases, the next input value is a string whose length and allowable characters may not be displayed in the screen. For example, in the following example, the next input value is a string called <description>.

Router# configure terminal Router(config)# interface ge1 Router(config-if-ge)# description <description>

When you use the example above, note that ZyWALL USG 200 and below models use a name such as wan1, wan2, opt, lan1, ext-wlan, or dmz.

The following table provides more information about input values like <description>.

Table 3 Input-Value Formats for Strings in CLI Commands

TAG

# VALUES

LEGAL VALUES

 

*

1

 

*

 

 

all

--

 

ALL

 

 

authentication key

Used

in IPSec SA

 

 

 

 

32-40

 

“0x” or “0X”

+ 32-40 hexadecimal values

 

16-20

 

alphanumeric

or

;`~!@#$%^&*()_+\\{}':,./<>=-

 

Used in MD5 authentication keys for RIP/OSPF and text authentication key for RIP

 

0-16

 

alphanumeric

or

_-

 

Used

in text authentication keys

for OSPF

 

0-8

 

alphanumeric

or

_-

certificate name

1-31

 

alphanumeric

or

;`~!@#$%^&()_+[\]{}',.=-

community string

0-63

 

alphanumeric

or

.-

 

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

connection_id

1+

 

alphanumeric

or

-_:

contact

1-61

 

alphanumeric, spaces, or '()+,/:=?;!*#@$_%-.

country code

0 or

2

alphanumeric

 

 

custom signature file

0-30

 

alphanumeric

or

_-.

name

 

 

first character: letter

description

Used

in keyword criteria for log

entries

 

1-64

 

alphanumeric, spaces, or '()+,/:=?;!*#@$_%-.

 

Used

in other commands

 

 

 

1-61

 

alphanumeric, spaces, or '()+,/:=?;!*#@$_%-

distinguished name

1-511

 

alphanumeric, spaces, or .@=,_-

28

 

ZyWALL (ZLD) CLI Reference Guide