User's Manual

Using the RACADM Command Line Interface 87
Use the
racresetcfg
subcommand to configure both CMCs with
identical properties.
Use the
racresetcfg
subcommand to reset the CMC to original
defaults, and then run the
racadm config -f <filename>.cfg
command. Ensure that the
.cfg
file includes all desired objects, users,
indexes, and other parameters. See
"CMC Property Database Group and
Object Definitions" on page 385
for a complete list of objects and groups.
NOTICE: Use the racresetcfg subcommand to reset the database and the
CMC NIC settings to the original default settings and remove all users and user
configurations. While the root user is available, other users’ settings are also reset
to the default settings.
Parsing Rules
Lines that start with a hash character (#) are treated as comments.
A comment line
must
start in column one. A "#" character in any other
column is treated as a # character.
Some modem parameters may include # characters in their strings. An
escape character is not required. You may want to generate a
.cfg
from a
racadm getconfig -f
<filename>
.cfg
command, and then
perform a
racadm config -f
<filename>
.cfg
command to a
different CMC, without adding escape characters.
Example:
#
# This is a comment
[cfgUserAdmin]
cfgUserAdminPageModemInitString=<Modem init # not
a comment>
All group entries must be surrounded by open- and close-brackets
([ and ]
)
.
The starting [ character that denotes a group name
must
be in column
one. This group name
must
be specified before any of the objects in that
group. Objects that do not include an associated group name generate an
error. The configuration data is organized into groups as defined in
"CMC
Property Database Group and Object Definitions" on page 385
.