Table C3-5. Arguments For The Superuser Arp Command - Bay Networks 5390 Administering

Communications server
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bg
The bg (background) command puts a job into the background and displays the job number, the
CLI command that created it, and an ampersand (&) to indicate that the job is in the background.
The Model 5390 server forwards output generated by the background job to the terminal, if another
job is active. If another job is not active, the output is held until you activate a job by issuing the fg
command. Table C3-6 describes the arguments for bg. The syntax is:
bg [–d] [%] [%, +, –, n, hostname]
893-741-B
Table C3-5.
Arguments for the Superuser arp Command
Argument
Description
host
Displays the current ARP table entry for that host.
addr
Displays the current ARP table entry for that address.
–a
Displays all entries in the table.
–d
Deletes the entry specified with host.
–s
Creates an entry for host, specified using either a name or
Internet address, at the hardware address specified by addr.
If you do not include temp or pub, the entry is permanent
and not published.
temp
The created entry is temporary and is to be deleted after 20
minutes. Temporary entries are not published.
pub
The created entry is to be published. The Model 5390 server
responds to requests for the host's hardware address.
NOTE: Although the arp command shows AppleTalk information, you
cannot manipulate it. Because arp interprets all address as IP
addresses, if you try to delete an AppleTalk address such as 1.123 using
arp –d, the ARP table entry 1.0.0.123 is deleted.
Using the CLI Commands
C3-13

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