Chapter 1 Command Line Interface

 

 

 

Table 3 Input-Value Formats for Strings in CLI Commands (continued)

TAG

# VALUES

LEGAL VALUES

domain name

Used in content filtering

 

 

0+

lower-case letters, numbers, or .-

 

Used in ip dns server

 

 

0-247

alphanumeric

or .-

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

 

Used in domainname, ip dhcp pool, and ip domain

 

0-254

alphanumeric

or ._-

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

email

1-63

alphanumeric

or .@_-

e-mail

1-64

alphanumeric

or .@_-

encryption key

16-64

“0x” or “0X”

+ 16-64 hexadecimal values

 

8-32

alphanumeric

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

file name

0-31

alphanumeric

or _-

filter extension

1-256

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

fqdn

Used in ip dns server

 

 

0-252

alphanumeric

or .-

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

 

Used in ip ddns, time server,

device HA, VPN, certificates, and interface ping

 

check

 

 

 

0-254

alphanumeric

or .-

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

full file name

0-256

alphanumeric

or _/.-

hostname

Used in hostname command

 

 

0-63

alphanumeric

or .-_

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

 

Used in other commands

 

 

0-252

alphanumeric

or .-

 

 

first character: alphanumeric or -

import configuration

1-26+”.conf”

alphanumeric

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

file

 

add “.conf” at the end

import shell script

1-26+”.zysh”

alphanumeric

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

 

 

add “.zysh” at the end

initial string

1-64

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

isp account password

0-63

alphanumeric

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

isp account username

0-30

alphanumeric

or -_@$./

ipv6_addr

 

An IPv6 address. The 128-bit IPv6 address is written as eight 16-bit

 

 

hexadecimal blocks separated by colons (:). This is an example IPv6

 

 

address 2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000.

 

 

IPv6 addresses can be abbreviated in two ways:

 

 

Leading zeros in a block can be omitted. So

 

 

2001:0db8:1a2b:0015:0000:0000:1a2f:0000 can be written as

 

 

2001:db8:1a2b:15:0:0:1a2f:0.

 

 

Any number of consecutive blocks of zeros can be replaced by a double

 

 

colon. A double colon can only appear once in an IPv6 address. So

 

 

2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f:0000:0000:0015 can be written as

 

 

2001:0db8::1a2f:0000:0000:0015, 2001:0db8:0000:0000:1a2f::0015,

 

 

2001:db8::1a2f:0:0:15 or 2001:db8:0:0:1a2f::15.

 

29

ZyWALL (ZLD) CLI Reference Guide