3com S7906E Instruccion De Instalación

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1-9 
Hotkey 
Function 
Ctrl+N 
Displays the next command in the history command buffer. 
Ctrl+P 
Displays the previous command in the history command buffer. 
Ctrl+R 
Redisplays the current line information. 
Ctrl+V 
Pastes the content in the clipboard. 
Ctrl+W 
Deletes all the characters in a continuous string to the left of the cursor. 
Ctrl+X 
Deletes all the characters to the left of the cursor. 
Ctrl+Y 
Deletes all the characters to the right of the cursor. 
Ctrl+Z 
Exits to user view. 
Ctrl+] 
Terminates an incoming connection or a redirect connection. 
Esc+B 
Moves the cursor to the leading character of the continuous string to the left. 
Esc+D 
Deletes all the characters of the continuous string at the current cursor position and 
to the right of the cursor. 
Esc+F 
Moves the cursor to the front of the next continuous string to the right.  
Esc+N 
Moves the cursor down by one line (available before you press Enter
Esc+P 
Moves the cursor up by one line (available before you press Enter
Esc+< 
Specifies the cursor as the beginning of the clipboard. 
Esc+> 
Specifies the cursor as the ending of the clipboard. 
 
 
These hotkeys are defined by the device. When you interact with the device from terminal software, 
these keys may be defined to perform other operations. If so, the definition of the terminal software will 
dominate. 
 
Configuring Command Aliases 
You can replace the first keyword of a command supported by the device with your preferred keyword 
by configuring the command alias function. For example, if you configure show as the replacement of 
the display keyword for each display command, you can input the command alias show xx to execute 
the display xx command. 
Note the following when you configure command aliases: 
When you input a command alias, the system displays and saves the command in its original 
format instead of its alias. That is, you can define and use a command alias but the command is not 
saved and restored in its alias. 
When you define a command alias, the cmdkey and alias arguments must be in complete form. 
With the command alias function enabled, when you input an incomplete keyword, which partially 
matches both a defined alias and the keyword of a command, the alias wins; to execute the 
command whose keyword partially matches your input, you need to input the complete keyword.