3com WXR100 3CRWXR10095A User Manual

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606
C
HAPTER
 27: M
ANAGING
 S
YSTEM
 F
ILES
The above command copies the file to the same filename. To rename the 
file when copying it, type the following command:
WX1200# copy tftp://10.1.1.1/newconfig wxconfig
success: received 637 bytes in 0.253 seconds [ 2517 
bytes/sec]
To copy system image wxb04102.rel from a TFTP server to boot partition 
1 in nonvolatile storage, type the following command:
WX1200# copy tftp://10.1.1.107/wxb04102.rel boot1:wxb04102.rel
................................................................................
............................success: received 9163214 bytes in 105.939 seconds 
[ 86495 bytes/sec]
To rename test-config to new-config, you can copy it from one name to 
the other in the same location, and then delete test-config. Type the 
following commands:
WX1200# copy test-config new-config
WX1200# delete test-config
success: file deleted.
To copy file corpa-login.html from a TFTP server into subdirectory corpa in 
a WX switch’s nonvolatile storage, type the following command:
WX1200# copy tftp://10.1.1.1/corpa-login.html corpa/corpa-login.html
success: received 637 bytes in 0.253 seconds [ 2517 bytes/sec]
Using an Image File’s
MD5 Checksum To
Verify Its Integrity
If you download an image file from the 3Com support site and install it in 
a switch’s boot partition, you can verify that the file has not been 
corrupted while being copied. 
md5 [boot0: | boot1:]filename
To verify an image file’s integrity:
Download the image file from the 3Com support site onto a TFTP server, 
and use the CLI copy tftp command on the WX switch to copy the 
image onto the switch’s nonvolatile storage.
On the 3Com support site, click on the MD5 link next to the link for the 
image file, to display the MD5 checksum for the file. Here is an example:
b9cf7f527f74608e50c70e8fb896392a wxb04102.rel
On the WX switch, use the dir command to display the contents of 
nonvolatile storage.