CLI Guide

Table Of Contents
Shows whether the SNMP interface is enabled or disabled. When this is disabled, all SNMP requests
to the MIB are disabled and SNMP traps are disabled.
Service Debug
Shows whether the Telnet debug port is enabled or disabled.
In-band SES Management (SES)
Shows whether the in-band SES interface is enabled or disabled.
Activity Progress Reporting (activity)
Shows whether access to the activity progress interface via HTTP port 8081 is enabled or disabled.
This mechanism reports whether a firmware update or partner firmware update operation is active
and shows the progress through each step of the operation. In addition, when the update operation
completes, status is presented indicating either the successful completion, or an error indication if the
operation failed.
Management Mode
Shows the default management mode.
Linear: Uses linear-storage terminology in command output and system messages. For example,
vdisk for disk groups and pools.
Virtual: Uses terminology in command output and system messages that is generalized for
managing virtual and linear storage. For example, disk group for disk groups and pool for pools.
To see the management mode for the current CLI session, which can be set differently than the
default, use the show cli-parameters command.
SSH Port
Shows the port number used for SSH.
SFTP Port
Shows the port number used for SFTP.
Examples
Show the status of service and security protocols.
# show protocols
Basetypes
security-communications-protocols
communication-ports
status
See also
set protocols
show cli-parameters
show provisioning
Description
Shows information about how the system is provisioned. This command shows the associations
between controllers, disks, disk groups or pools, volumes, and mappings. The command will show
information for all associations by default, or you can use parameters to filter the output.
This command is useful for the following purposes:
You want a quick overview of how the system is provisioned.
You know of a disk-related issue (perhaps from the event log) and want to understand what
components it may be impacting. You can use this command to see which volume WWNs are
affected, which you can use on the host to determine which device node might be seeing errors.
You know of a volume-level issue and want to determine which associated components to
investigate. You can use this command to quickly see which controller owns the volume and which
disks are associated with the volume. For example, perhaps at the OS level, a certain device node
(target) looks slow relative to the rest of the targets. You can correlate the OS device node to
Alphabetical list of commands 229