Users Guide

4. Navigate to Upload Config in the LCD’s Maintenance menu. Confirm the upload (Y/N) and then wait for
the upload to complete.
5. Execute a system reboot either from the LCD menu or from the command line to reload from the uploaded
configuration.
For detailed upgrade and upload instruction, see the Upgrade Chapter in the Release Notes.
Disabling LCD Menu Functions
For security purpose, you can disable all LCD menu functions by disabling the entire menu functionality using
the following command:
(host) (config) #lcd-menu
(host) (lcd-menu) #disable menu
To prevent inadvertent menu changes, you can disable LCD individual menu function using the following
commands:
(host) (lcd-menu) #disable menu maintenance ?
factory-default Disable factory default menu
media-eject Disable media eject menu on LCD
system-halt Disable system halt menu on LCD
system-reboot Disable system reboot menu on LCD
upgrade-image Disable image upgrade menu on LCD
upload-config Disable config upload menu on LCD
To display the current LCD functionality from the command line, use the following command:
(host) (config) #show lcd-menu
lcd-menu
--------
Parameter Value
--------- -----
menu maintenance upgrade-image partition0 enabled
menu maintenance upgrade-image partition1 enabled
menu maintenance upgrade-image enabled
menu maintenance upload-config enabled
menu maintenance factory-default enabled
menu maintenance media-eject enabled
menu maintenance reload-system enabled
menu maintenance halt-system enabled
menu maintenance enabled
menu enabled
Configuring a VLAN to Connect to the Network
You must follow the instructions in this section only if you need to configure a trunk port between the
controller and another layer-2 switch (shown in Deployment Scenario #3: APs on Multiple Different Subnets
from Controllers on page 103).
This section shows how to use both the WebUI and CLI for the following configurations (subsequent steps
show how to use the WebUI only):
l Create a VLAN on the controller and assign it an IP address.
l Optionally, create a VLAN pool. A VLAN pool consists of two more VLAN IDs which are grouped together to
efficiently manage multi-controller networks from a single location. For example, policies and virtual
application configurations map users to different VLANs which may exist at different controllers. This
creates redundancy where one controller has to back up many other controllers. With the VLAN pool
feature you can control your configuration globally.
Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.4.x | User Guide The Basic User-Centric Networks | 109