F3726, F3211, F3174, R5135, R3816-HP Firewalls and UTM Devices Getting Started Command Reference-6PW100

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Usage guidelines
CAUTION:
Device reboot can interrupt network services.
Changing any clock setting can cancel the reboot schedule.
The interval between the reboot date and the current date cannot exceed 30 x 24 hours, or 30 days.
When no reboot date is specified:
If the reboot time is later than the current time, a reboot occurs at the reboot time of the current day.
If the reboot time is earlier than the current time, a reboot occurs at the reboot time the next day.
The device supports only one device reboot schedule. If you configure the schedule reboot at command
multiple times, the last configuration takes effect. The schedule reboot at command and the schedule
reboot delay command overwrite each other, and whichever is configured last takes effect.
The alert "REBOOT IN ONE MINUTE" appears one minute before the reboot time.
For data security, if you are performing file operations at the reboot time, the system does not reboot.
Examples
# Configure the switch to reboot at 12:00 AM. This example assumes that the current time is 11: 43.
<Sysname> schedule reboot at 12:00
Reboot system at 12:00 06/06/2006(in 0 hour(s) and 16 minute(s))
confirm? [Y/N]:
Enter y at the prompt. If you have used the terminal logging command to enable the log display function
(enabled by default) on the terminal, the system automatically displays a reboot schedule log message.
<Sysname>
%Jun 6 11:43:11:629 2006 Sysname CMD/4/REBOOT:
vty0(192.168.1.54): Set schedule reboot parameters at 11:43:11 06/06/2006, and system will
reboot at 12:00 06/06/2006.
Related commands
schedule reboot delay
schedule reboot delay
Use schedule reboot delay to schedule a device reboot to occur after a delay.
Use undo schedule reboot to disable the scheduled reboot function.
Syntax
schedule reboot delay { hh:mm | mm }
undo schedule reboot
Default
The scheduled reboot function is disabled.
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