Service Manual
# Configure FTP - Interface
print_f10do "configure terminal"
print_f10do "interface TenGigabitEthernet 0/22"
print_f10do "ip address 20.0.0.34/16"
print_f10do "no shutdown"
print_f10do "end"
puts "Uploading Status File($status_file) to $ftp_ip ...\n"
spawn ftp "$ftp_ip"
expect "Name .*: "
send "lab\n"
expect "Password:"
send "lab\n"
expect "ftp>"
send "cd scripts\n"
expect "ftp>"
send "ls\n"
expect "ftp>"
send "put $status_file\n"
expect "ftp>"
send "ls\n"
expect "ftp>"
send "bye\n"
expect eof
print_f10do "configure terminal"
print_f10do "interface TenGigabitEthernet 0/22"
print_f10do "no ip address"
print_f10do "shutdown"
print_f10do "end"
puts "Post-Config Script Execution Successfull !!!!!\r\n"
exit 0
BMP Operations on Servers Overview
The following sections describe how to prepare the different servers for BMP functionality.
• Configuring the DHCP Server Settings
• File Server Settings
• Domain Name Server Settings
DHCP Server
To configure the DHCP server use the following information.
Configuring the DHCP Server Settings
Before you can use BMP mode on a switch, first configure a DHCP server.
To assign an IP address to the system and other parameters, configure the DHCP server. For more
information, refer to the Dell Networking OS Configuration Guide, the Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol chapter.
• Configure the DHCP server with the following set of parameters for each client switch.
Update the following parameters on the appropriate DHCP server:
– Boot File Name — the Dell Networking OS image loaded on the system. Option 67 in the DHCP
offer is the boot filename; the filename is BOOTP payload. If you specify both, option 67 is used.
The system supports the TFTP, HTTP, HTTPS, SFTP, SCP, FTP, FLASH, and USBFLASH protocols.
Bare Metal Provisioning
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