Mounting An Nfs File System - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

S-series 10gbe switches
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Example of Copying a File to an FTP Server
Dell#copy flash://Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin ftp://myusername:mypassword@10.10.10.10/
/Dell/Dell-EF-8.2.1.0
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
27952672 bytes successfully copied
Example of Importing a File to the Local System
core1#$//copy ftp://myusername:mypassword@10.10.10.10//Dell/
Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin flash://
Destination file name [Dell-EF-8.2.1.0.bin.bin]:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
26292881 bytes successfully copied

Mounting an NFS File System

This feature enables you to quickly access data on an NFS mounted file system. You can perform file operations on an NFS mounted
file system using supported file commands.
This feature allows an NFS mounted device to be recognized as a file system. This file system is visible on the device and you can
execute all file commands that are available on conventional file systems such as a Flash file system.
Before executing any CLI command to perform file operations, you must first mount the NFS file system to a mount-point on the
device. Since multiple mount-points exist on a device, it is mandatory to specify the mount-point to which you want to load the
system. The /f10/mnt/nfsdirectory is the root of all mount-points.
To mount an NFS file system, perform the following steps:
Table 4. Mounting an NFS File System
File Operation
To mount an NFS file system:
The foreign file system remains mounted as long as the device is up and does not reboot. You can run the file system commands
without having to mount or un-mount the file system each time you run a command. When you save the configuration using the
write command, the mount command is saved to the startup configuration. As a result, each time the device re-boots, the NFS
file system is mounted during start up.
Table 5. Forming a
copy
Command
Location
For a remote file location:
NFS File System
Important Points to Remember
You cannot copy a file from one remote system to another.
You cannot copy a file from one location to the same location.
When copying to a server, you can only use a hostname if a domain name server (DNS) server is configured.
Example of Copying a File to current File System
Dell#copy tftp://10.16.127.35/mashutosh/dv-maa-s4810-test nfsmount://
Destination file name [dv-maa-s4810-test]:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!
44250499 bytes successfully copied
Dell#
Dell#copy ftp://10.16.127.35 nfsmount:
Syntax
mount nfs rhost:path mount-
point username password
source-file-url Syntax
copy nfsmount://{<mount-
point>}/filepath/filename}
username:password
destination-file-url Syntax
tftp://{hostip | hostname}/
filepath/filename
Getting Started
49

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