Cisco Cisco Web Security Appliance S170 Guía Del Usuario
B-4
AsyncOS 8.5 for Cisco Web Security Appliances User Guide
Appendix B Command Line Interface
General Purpose CLI Commands
Command History
The CLI keeps a history of all commands entered during a session. Use the Up and Down arrow keys on
your keyboard, or the Ctrl+P and Ctrl+N key combinations to scroll through a running list of the
recently-used commands.
your keyboard, or the Ctrl+P and Ctrl+N key combinations to scroll through a running list of the
recently-used commands.
Completing Commands
The AsyncOS CLI supports command completion. You can enter the first few letters of some commands
followed by the Tab key and the CLI completes the string. If the letters you entered are not unique among
commands, the CLI “narrows” the set. For example:
followed by the Tab key and the CLI completes the string. If the letters you entered are not unique among
commands, the CLI “narrows” the set. For example:
Committing Configuration Changes
Configuration changes do not take effect until you commit them. You can make configuration changes
while web operations proceed as normal.
while web operations proceed as normal.
Step 1
Issue the
commit
command at the command prompt.
Step 2
Give the
commit
command the input required.
Step 3
Receive confirmation of the
commit
procedure at the CLI.
Note
Changes to configuration that have not been committed are recorded, but do not go into effect until you
run the
run the
commit
command. However, not all commands require the
commit
command to be run. Exiting
the CLI session, system shutdown, reboot, failure, or issuing the
clear
command clears changes that
have not yet been committed.
General Purpose CLI Commands
This section describes some basic commands you might use in a typical CLI session, such as committing
and clearing changes.
and clearing changes.
Committing Configuration Changes
The
commit
command allows you to change configuration settings while other operations proceed
normally. Changes are not actually committed until you receive confirmation and a timestamp. Exiting
the CLI session, system shutdown, reboot, failure, or issuing the
the CLI session, system shutdown, reboot, failure, or issuing the
clear
command clears changes that
have not yet been committed.
example.com> set
(type the Tab key)
setgateway, setgoodtable, sethostname, settime, settz
example.com> seth
(typing the Tab again completes the entry with sethostname)