Atlantis Land Mistral Lan Router ISDN ユーザーズマニュアル

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Console Commands 
General Guidelines 
When the router is powered up, the user can connect a terminal (or the PC running terminal emulation 
software) to the auxiliary (console) port to perform configuration and management functions. 
Alternatively, the Command Line Interface may be accessed via a standard telnet application. When 
properly connected, setting the console speed to a baud rate of 19200 bits per second, eight data bits, 
no parity, one stop bit, and pressing a carriage return key, the user will see a system sign-on message 
followed by a password prompt as follows. 
Local Router Manager Console Version
1
rev_no 
Please enter your password: ******** 
A default password “password” has been pre-configured with the system. The user should use it to log 
into the system until the password is explicitly changed using the change password command. Note 
that the entered password is case-sensitive. This password may also be changed using the browser-
based GUI configuration utility. 
The password entered will be echoed as asterisks (*). After the Carriage Return is entered, if the 
password string is validated, the command prompt Router> will be displayed, and the user can then 
issue other commands. Otherwise, the password prompt will be redisplayed. 
Many commands are single-line commands, and commands are not context sensitive: each command 
is independent of other commands before or after it. Exceptions to the single line mode are indicated in 
this manual by the prefix “
⊕”. These commands invoke an interactive user dialog. 
The command syntax is straightforward. 
The following briefly summarizes the guideline for the interface. 
•  At any time, the user can type a “ ?” (preceded by a space) to request context-sensitive help on 
what the user can enter next. 
•  At any time, the user can type control-p (^p, by pressing both the Ctrl key and the p key at the 
same time) to repeat the previous command, or control n to return to the following (next) 
command. At startup, typing ^p or ^n will not cause anything to happen - since previous 
commands do not yet exist. In normal operation typing ^p will cause the previous command to 
show, and the cursor will sit at the end of the command. At this point, the user can either type 
a carriage return to accept the command, or type backspaces to edit the command from the 
end, or ^p to get to its previous command, or ^n to get to its following command (if 
applicable). Up to 15 previously entered commands can be invoked through ^p’s and ^n’s.