R21xx-HP FlexFabric 11900 Fundamentals Command Reference
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<Sysname> restore startup-configuration from 2.2.2.2 config.cfg
Restore next startup-configuration file from 2.2.2.2, please wait...Finished.
Related commands
backup startup-configuration
save
In standalone mode:
Use save file-url to save the running configuration to a configuration file, without specifying the file as a
next-startup configuration file.
Use save [ safely ] [ backup | main ] [ force ] to save the running configuration to the root directory of
the flashes on both active MPU and standby MPU, and specify the file as a next-startup configuration file.
In IRF mode:
Use save file-url [ chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ] to save the running configuration to a
configuration file, without specifying the file as a next-startup configuration file.
Use save [ safely ] [ backup | main ] [ force ] to save the running configuration to the root directory of
the flashes on each member device, and specify the file as a next-startup configuration file.
Syntax
In standalone mode:
save file-url
save [ safely ] [ backup | main ] [ force ]
In IRF mode:
save file-url [ chassis chassis-number slot slot-number ]
save [ safely ] [ backup | main ] [ force ]
Views
Any view
Predefined user roles
network-admin
Parameters
file-url: Specifies a file path, where the file extension must be .cfg. If the file path includes a folder name,
you must first create the folder on the specified MPU. (In standalone mode.)
file-url: Specifies a file path, where the file extension must be .cfg. If an MPU slot is specified, the file path
cannot include a slot number. If the file path includes a folder name, you must first create the folder on
the specified MPU. (In IRF mode.)
chassis chassis-number slot slot-number: Saves the running configuration with the specified file name to
an MPU. The chassis-number argument represents the IRF member ID of the device that holds the MPU.
The slot-number represents the MPU's slot number. (In IRF mode.)
safely: Saves the configuration file in safe mode. If this keyword is not specified, the device saves the
configuration file in fast mode. Safe mode is slower than fast mode, but more secure. In safe mode, the
system saves configuration in a temporary file and starts overwriting the target next-startup configuration
file after the save operation is complete. If a reboot or power failure event occurs during the save










