Users Guide

This is the list of the indexed groups that exhibit this behavior and their corresponding key properties:
cfgUserAdmin — cfgUserAdminUserName
cfgEmailAlert — cfgEmailAlertAddress
cfgTraps — cfgTrapsAlertDestIPAddr
cfgStandardSchema — cfgSSADRoleGroupName
cfgServerInfo — cfgServerBmcMacAddress
Modifying the CMC IP address
When you modify the CMC IP address in the configuration file, remove all unnecessary <variable> =
<value> entries. Only the actual variable group’s label with [ and ] remains, including the two
<variable> = <value> entries pertaining to the IP address change.
Example:
#
# Object Group "cfgLanNetworking"
#
[cfgLanNetworking]
cfgNicIpAddress=192.x.x.x
cfgNicGateway=10.35.10.1
This file is updated as follows:
#
# Object Group "cfgLanNetworking"
#
[cfgLanNetworking]
cfgNicIpAddress=10.35.9.143
# comment, the rest of this line is ignored
cfgNicGateway=10.35.9.1
The command racadm config -f <myfile>.cfg parses the file and identifies any errors by line
number. A correct file updates the proper entries. Additionally, you can use the same getconfig
command from the previous example to confirm the update.
Use this file to download company-wide changes or to configure new systems over the network with the
command, racadm getconfig -f <myfile>.cfg.
NOTE: Anchor is a reserved word and should not be used in the .cfg file.
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