Configure The Overload Bit For A Startup Scenario; Viewing Files - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

S-series 10gbe switches
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Configure the Overload Bit for a Startup Scenario

For information about setting the router overload bit for a specific period of time after a switch reload is implemented, refer to the
Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) section in the Dell Networking OS Command Line Reference Guide.

Viewing Files

You can only view file information and content on local file systems.
To view a list of files or the contents of a file, use the following commands.
View a list of files on the internal flash.
EXEC Privilege mode
dir flash:
View the running-configuration.
EXEC Privilege mode
show running-config
View the startup-configuration.
EXEC Privilege mode
show startup-config
Example of the dir Command
The output of the dir command also shows the read/write privileges, size (in bytes), and date of modification for each file.
Dell#dir
Directory of flash:
1 drw-
32768 Jan 01 1980 00:00:00 .
2 drwx
512 Jul 23 2007 00:38:44 ..
3 drw-
8192 Mar 30 1919 10:31:04 TRACE_LOG_DIR
4 drw-
8192 Mar 30 1919 10:31:04 CRASH_LOG_DIR
5 drw-
8192 Mar 30 1919 10:31:04 NVTRACE_LOG_DIR
6 drw-
8192 Mar 30 1919 10:31:04 CORE_DUMP_DIR
7 d---
8192 Mar 30 1919 10:31:04 ADMIN_DIR
8 -rw- 33059550 Jul 11 2007 17:49:46 FTOS-EF-7.4.2.0.bin
9 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 00:20:24 FTOS-EF-4.7.4.302.bin
10 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 19:54:52 boot-image-FILE
11 drw-
8192 Jan 01 1980 00:18:28 diag
12 -rw-
7276 Jul 20 2007 01:52:40 startup-config.bak
13 -rw-
7341 Jul 20 2007 15:34:46 startup-config
14 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 19:52:22 boot-image
15 -rw- 27674906 Jul 06 2007 02:23:22 boot-flash
--More--
View Configuration Files
Configuration files have three commented lines at the beginning of the file, as shown in the following example, to help you track the
last time any user made a change to the file, which user made the changes, and when the file was last saved to the startup-
configuration.
In the running-configuration file, if there is a difference between the timestamp on the "Last configuration change" and "Startup-
config last updated," you have made changes that have not been saved and are preserved after a system reboot.
Example of the show running-config Command
Dell#show running-config
Current Configuration ...
! Version 9.4(0.0)
! Last configuration change at Tue Mar 11 21:33:56 2014 by admin
! Startup-config last updated at Tue Mar 11 12:11:00 2014 by default
51
Getting Started

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