Managing Configuration Files
S e n d d o c u m e n t a t i o n c o m m e n t s t o m d s f e e d b a c k - d o c @ c i s c o . c o m
Saving to an External CompactFlash Disk (slot0:)
To save a configuration file on an external CompactFlash device, follow these steps:
Log into the switch through the console port or through a Telnet session.
Step 1
Save the running-config file using the copy system:running-config slot0:destination file command or
Step 2
the startup-config file using the copy nvram:startup-config destination file.
Use the following command to save a running configuration file to an external CompactFlash disk:
switch# copy system:running-config slot0:dns-config.cfg
Use the following command to save a startup configuration file to an external CompactFlash disk:
switch# copy nvram:startup-config slot0:dns-config.cfg
Saving the Running Configuration
After you have created a running configuration in system memory, you can save it to the startup
configuration in NVRAM.
Use the following copy command to save the configuration to NVRAM:
switch# copy system:running-config nvram:startup-config
The copy running-config startup-config command is an alias to the previous command and is used
frequently throughout this guide.
To cancel the copy operation initiated by another switch, use the following command:
switch# system startup-config abort
To cancel the operation locally and throughout the fabric, enter Ctrl-c on the console or Telnet session
of the initiator switch.
See the
Saving Startup Configurations in the Fabric
You can use Cisco Fabric Services (CFS) to instruct the other switches in the fabric to save their
configurations to their local NVRAM.
Save to NVRAM using the following copy command:
switch# copy running-config startup-config fabric
Note
If any remote switch in the fabric fails to complete the copy running-config startup-config fabric
process, the request is discarded on the initiator switch and the failure errors are displayed in the initiator
switch CLI session.
You can use the show cfs application command to verify that the Fabric Startup Configuration Manager
(FSCM) application is enabled.
Cisco MDS 9000 Family CLI Configuration Guide
9-4
"Preserving the Module Configuration" section on page
Chapter 9
Working with Configuration Files
12-7.
OL-18084-01, Cisco MDS NX-OS Release 4.x
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