Managing The File System; View Command History - Dell S6100 Configuration Manual

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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 9.10(0.0)
! Last configuration change at Sun Sep 6 12:41:09 2015 by default
!
boot system stack-unit 1 primary system: B:
boot system stack-unit 1 secondary system: A:
boot system stack-unit 1 default system: A:
boot system gateway 10.16.200.254

Managing the File System

The Dell Networking system can use the internal Flash, external Flash, or remote devices to store files.
The system stores files on the internal Flash by default but can be configured to store files elsewhere.
To view file system information, use the following command.
View information about each file system.
EXEC Privilege mode
show file-systems
The output of the show file-systems command in the following example shows the total capacity, amount of free memory, file
structure, media type, read/write privileges for each storage device in use.
Dell#show file-systems
Size(b)
Free(b)
4286574592
4170424320
-
2032525312
590807040
-
-
-
-
You can change the default file system so that file management commands apply to a particular device or memory.
To change the default directory, use the following command.
Change the default directory.
EXEC Privilege mode
cd directory

View Command History

The command-history trace feature captures all commands entered by all users of the system with a time stamp and writes these
messages to a dedicated trace log buffer.
The system generates a trace message for each executed command. No password information is saved to the file.
52
Getting Started
Feature
FAT32 USERFLASH
-
unformatted USERFLASH
Unknown
NFSMOUNT
-
-
network
-
-
network
-
-
network
-
-
network
Type
Flags
Prefixes
rw
flash:
rw
fcmfs:
rw
nfsmount:
rw
ftp:
rw
tftp:
rw
scp:
rw
http:

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