Reference Guide
11 drw- 8192 Jan 01 1980 00:18:28 diag
12 -rw- 7276 Jul 20 2007 01:52:40 startup-config.bak
13 -rw- 7341 Jul 20 2007 15:34:46 startup-config
14 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 19:52:22 boot-image
15 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 02:23:22 boot-flash
--More--
View Configuration Files
Configuration files have three commented lines at the beginning of the file, as shown in the following 
example, to help you track the last time any user made a change to the file, which user made the 
changes, and when the file was last saved to the startup-configuration.
In the running-configuration file, if there is a difference between the timestamp on the “Last 
configuration change,” and “Startup-config last updated,” you have made changes that have not been 
saved and will not be preserved after a system reboot.
Example of the show running-config Command
Delll#show running-config
Current Configuration ...
! Version 8.2.1.0
! Last configuration change at Thu Apr 3 23:06:28 2008 by admin
! Startup-config last updated at Thu Apr 3 23:06:55 2008 by admin
!
boot system rpm0 primary flash://FTOS-EF-8.2.1.0.bin
boot system rpm0 secondary flash://FTOS-EF-7.8.1.0.bin
boot system rpm0 default flash://FTOS-EF-7.7.1.1.bin
boot system rpm1 primary flash://FTOS-EF-7.8.1.0.bin
boot system gateway 10.10.10.100
--More--
Managing the File System
The Dell Networking system can use the internal Flash, external Flash, or remote devices to store files.
The system stores files on the internal Flash by default but can be configured to store files elsewhere.
To view file system information, use the following command.
• View information about each file system.
EXEC Privilege mode
show file-systems
The output of the show file-systems command in the following example shows the total capacity, 
amount of free memory, file structure, media type, read/write privileges for each storage device in use.
Dell#show file-systems
Size(b) Free(b) Feature Type Flags Prefixes
520962048 213778432 dosFs2.0 USERFLASH rw flash:
127772672 21936128 dosFs2.0 USERFLASH rw slot0:
 - - - network rw ftp:
 - - - network rw tftp:
 - - - network rw scp:
You can change the default file system so that file management commands apply to a particular device 
or memory.
56
Getting Started










