Setup guide

2-23
Cisco 6400 Software Setup Guide
OL-1183-04
Chapter2 Basic NSP Configuration
Storing the NSP Configuration
Interface User Mode Idle Peer Address
NSP#
In the following example, the show line EXEC command is entered on the NSP to look at the console
connection to the NRP-2:
NSP# show line 6
Tty Typ Tx/Rx A Modem Roty AccO AccI Uses Noise Overruns Int
* 6 TTY 0/0 - - - - - 7 0 0/0 -
Line 6, Location:"", Type:"XTERM"
Length:24 lines, Width:80 columns
Status:Ready, Connected, Active
Capabilities:EXEC Suppressed, Software Flowcontrol In,
Software Flowcontrol Out
Modem state:Ready
Modem hardware state:CTS DSR DTR RTS
Special Chars:Escape Hold Stop Start Disconnect Activation
^^x none ^S ^Q none
Timeouts: Idle EXEC Idle Session Modem Answer Session Dispatch
00:10:00 never none not set
Idle Session Disconnect Warning
never
Login-sequence User Response
00:00:30
Autoselect Initial Wait
not set
Modem type is unknown.
Session limit is not set.
Time since activation:00:03:26
Editing is enabled.
History is enabled, history size is 10.
DNS resolution in show commands is enabled
Full user help is disabled
Allowed transports are telnet. Preferred is telnet.
No output characters are padded
No special data dispatching characters
NSP#
Storing the NSP Configuration
When autoconfiguration and any manual configurations are complete, you should copy the configuration
into nonvolatile random-access memory (NVRAM). If you reload the NSP before you save the
configuration in NVRAM, you will lose all manual configuration changes.
To save your running configuration as the startup configuration in NVRAM, use the
copysystem:running-config EXEC command:
Switch# copy system:running-config nvram:startup-config
Building configuration...
[OK]
Switch#
Verifying the NSP Configuration
To view the running configuration, use the more system:running-config EXEC command.
To view the startup configuration in NVRAM, use the more nvram:startup-config EXEC command.