Command Reference Guide
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Configuration Menu 
Introduction 
The Configuration Menu is only available from an administrator login. It includes submenus for configuring 
every aspect of the switch. Changes to configuration are not active until explicitly applied. Changes can 
be saved to non-volatile memory (NVRAM). 
Menu information 
Command: /cfg 
[Configuration Menu] 
 sys - System-wide Parameter Menu 
 port - Port Menu 
 l2 - Layer 2 Menu 
 l3 - Layer 3 Menu 
 qos - QOS Menu 
 acl - Access Control List Menu 
 rmon - RMON Menu 
 pmirr - Port Mirroring Menu 
 ufd - Uplink Failure Detection Menu 
 dump - Dump current configuration to script file 
 ptcfg - Backup current configuration to FTP/TFTP server 
 gtcfg - Restore current configuration from FTP/TFTP server 
 cur - Display current configuration 
The following table describes the Configuration Menu options.  
Table 78  Configuration Menu options 
Command 
Usage 
sys 
Displays the System Configuration Menu. 
port <port number> 
Displays the Port Configuration Menu. 
l2 
Displays the Layer 2 Configuration Menu. 
l3 
Displays the Layer 3 Configuration Menu. 
qos 
Displays the Quality of Service Configuration Menu. 
acl 
Displays the Access Control List Configuration Menu. 
rmon 
Displays the RMON Configuration Menu. 
pmirr 
Displays the Mirroring Configuration Menu.  
ufd 
Displays the Uplink Failure Detection Configuration 
Menu. 
dump 
Dumps current configuration to a script file. 
ptcfg <host name or IP address of 
FTP/TFTP server> <filename on host> 
Backs up current configuration to FTP/TFTP server. 
gtcfg <host name or IP address of 
FTP/TFTP server> <filename on host> 
Restores current configuration from FTP/TFTP server. 
cur 
Displays the current configuration parameters. 
Viewing, applying, reverting, and saving changes 
As you use the configuration menus to set switch parameters, the changes you make do not take effect 
immediately. All changes are considered pending until you explicitly apply them. Also, any changes are 
lost the next time the switch boots unless the changes are explicitly saved. 
While configuration changes are in the pending state, you can: 
  View the pending changes 
  Apply the pending changes 
  Revert to restore configuration parameters set with the last apply command 
  Save the changes to flash memory 










