R3204P16-HP Load Balancing Module Security Command Reference-6PW101

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days: Specifies the day or days of the week (in words or digits) on which the periodic statement is valid.
If you specify multiple values, separate each value with a space, and be sure that they do not overlap.
These values can take one of the following forms:
A digit in the range 0 to 6, respectively for Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday.
A day of a week in words, sun, mon, tue, wed, thu, fri, and sat.
working-day for Monday through Friday.
off-day for Saturday and Sunday.
daily for the whole week.
from time1 date1: Specifies the start time and date of an absolute statement. The time1 argument
specifies the time of the day in hh:mm format (24-hour clock). Its value ranges from 00:00 to 23:59. The
date1 argument specifies a date in MM/DD/YYYY or YYYY/MM/DD format, where MM is the month
of the year in the range 1 to 12, DD is the day of the month with the range depending on MM, and YYYY
is the year in the calendar in the range 1970 to 2100. If not specified, the start time is 01/01/1970
00:00 AM, the earliest time available in the system.
to time2 date2: Specifies the end time and date of the absolute time statement. The time2 argument has
the same format as the time1 argument, but its value ranges from 00:00 to 24:00. The date2 argument
has the same format and value range as the date1 argument. The end time must be greater than the start
time. If not specified, the end time is 12/31/2100 24:00 PM, the maximum time available in the system.
Description
Use the time-range command to configure a time range.
Use the undo time-range command to delete a time range or a statement in the time range.
By default, no time range exists.
You can create multiple statements in a time range. Each time statement can take one of the following
forms:
Periodic statement in the start-time to end-time days format. A periodic statement recurs periodically
on a day or days of the week.
Absolute statement in the from time1 date1 to time2 date2 format. An absolute statement does not
recur.
Compound statement in the start-time to end-time days from time1 date1 to time2 date2 format. A
compound statement recurs on a day or days of the week only within the specified period. For
example, to create a time range that is active from 08:00 to 12:00 on Monday between January
1, 2010 00:00 and December 31, 2010 23:59, use the time-range test 08:00 to 12:00 mon from
00:00 01/01/2010 to 23:59 12/31/2010 command.
The active period of a time range is calculated as follows:
1. Combining all periodic statements
2. Combining all absolute statements
3. Taking the intersection of the two statement sets as the active period of the time range
You can create a maximum of 256 time ranges, each with a maximum of 32 periodic statements and 12
absolute statements.
Related commands: display time-range.
Examples
# Create a periodic time range t1, setting it to be active between 8:00 to 18:00 during working days.