Release Notes

Key Effect Description
Ctrl A
Home Move the cursor to the beginning of the line.
Ctrl B or the
left arrow
Back Move the cursor one character left.
Ctrl D
Delete Right Delete the character to the right of the cursor.
Ctrl E
End Move the cursor to the end of the line.
Ctrl F or the
right arrow
Forward Move the cursor one character right.
Ctrl K
Delete Right Delete all characters to the right of the cursor.
Ctrl N or the
down arrow
Next Display the next command in the command
history.
Ctrl P or
up arrow
Previous Display the previous command in the command
history.
Ctrl T
Transpose Swap the character to the left of the cursor with
the character to the right of the cursor.
Ctrl U
Clear Clear the line.
Ctrl W
Delete Word Delete the characters from the cursor up to and
including the first space encountered.
Ctrl X
Delete Left Delete all characters to the left of the cursor.
Table 3:
Line Editing Keys
Specifying Addresses and Identifiers in Commands
This section describes addresses and other identifiers that you can reference in CLI commands.
Address/Identifier Description
IP address For any command that requires entry of an IP address to specify a network
entity, use IPv4 network address format in the conventional dotted decimal
notation (for example, 10.4.1.258).
Netmask address For subnet addresses, specify a netmask in dotted decimal notation (for
example, 255.255.255.0).
Media Access Control
(MAC) address
For any command that requires entry of a device’s hardware address, use the
hexadecimal format (for example, 00:05:4e:50:14:aa).
Service Set Identifier
(SSID)
A unique character string (sometimes referred to as a network name),
consisting of no more than 32 characters. The SSID is case-sensitive (for
example, WLAN-01).
Table 4: Addresses and Identifiers
Dell Networking W-Series ArubaOS 6.4.x | Reference Guide The ArubaOS Command-Line Interface | 17