Table Of Contents
Working with Configuration Files
Guidelines for Creating and Using Configuration Files
Creating a Configuration File
Downloading Configuration Files to the Switch Using TFTP
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using TFTP
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a TFTP Server
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a Flash Device
Uploading Configuration Files to a TFTP Server
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
Uploading a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
Copying Configuration Files Using rcp
Downloading Configuration Files from an rcp Server
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using rcp
Configuring the Switch Using a File on an rcp Server
Uploading Configuration Files to an rcp Server
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to an rcp Server
Uploading a Configuration File to an rcp Server
Clearing the Configuration
Working with Configuration Files
This chapter describes how to work with switch configuration files on the Catalyst 6000 family switches.
Note
For complete syntax and usage information for the commands used in this chapter, refer to the Catalyst 6000 Family Command Reference publication.
This chapter consists of these sections:
•
Guidelines for Creating and Using Configuration Files
•
Creating a Configuration File
•
Downloading Configuration Files to the Switch Using TFTP
•
Uploading Configuration Files to a TFTP Server
•
Copying Configuration Files Using rcp
•
Downloading Configuration Files from an rcp Server
•
Uploading Configuration Files to an rcp Server
•
Clearing the Configuration
Note
For more information on working with configuration files on the Flash file system, see "Working With the Flash File System."
Guidelines for Creating and Using Configuration Files
Creating configuration files can aid in the configuration of your switch. Configuration files can contain some or all the commands needed to configure one or more switches. For example, you might want to download the same configuration file to several switches that have the same hardware configuration so that they have identical module and port configurations.
Use the following guidelines when creating a configuration file:
•
We recommend that you connect through the console port when using configuration files to configure the switch. If you configure the switch from a Telnet session, IP addresses are not changed, and ports and modules are not disabled.
•
If no passwords have been set on the switch, you must set them on each switch by entering the set password and set enablepass commands. Enter a blank line after the set password and set enablepass commands. The passwords are saved in the configuration file as clear text.
If passwords already exist, you cannot enter the set password and set enablepass commands because the password verification will fail. If you enter passwords in the configuration file, the switch mistakenly attempts to execute the passwords as commands as it executes the file.
•
Certain commands must be followed by a blank line in the configuration file. The blank line is necessary; without the blank line, these commands might disconnect your Telnet session. Before disconnecting a session, the switch prompts you for confirmation. The blank line acts as a carriage return, which indicates a negative response to the prompt and retains the Telnet session.
Include a blank line after each occurrence of these commands in a configuration file:
–
set interface sc0 ip_addr netmask
–
set interface sc0 disable
–
set module disable mod_num
–
set port disable mod_num/port_num
Creating a Configuration File
When creating a configuration file, you must list commands in a logical way so that the system can respond appropriately. One method of creating a configuration file is as follows:
Step 1
Download an existing configuration from a switch.
Step 2
Open the configuration file in a text editor, such as vi or emacs on UNIX or Notepad on a PC.
Step 3
Extract the portion of the configuration file with the desired commands and save it in a new file. Make sure the file begins with the word begin on a line by itself and ends with the word end on a line by itself.
Step 4
Copy the configuration file to the appropriate TFTP directory on the workstation (usually /tftpboot on a UNIX workstation).
Step 5
Make sure the permissions on the file are set to world-read.
This example shows an example configuration file. This file could be used to set the Domain Name System (DNS) configuration on multiple switches.
set ip dns server 172.16.10.70 primary
set ip dns server 172.16.10.140
set ip dns domain corp.com
Downloading Configuration Files to the Switch Using TFTP
You can configure the switch using configuration files you create or download from another switch. In addition, you can store configuration files on Flash devices on hardware that supports the Flash file system, and you can configure the switch using a configuration stored on a Flash device.
These sections describe how to configure the switch using configuration files downloaded from a TFTP server or stored on a Flash device:
•
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using TFTP
•
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a TFTP Server
•
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a Flash Device
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using TFTP
Before you begin downloading a configuration file using TFTP, do the following:
•
Ensure that the workstation acting as the TFTP server is configured properly. On a Sun workstation, make sure that the /etc/inetd.conf file contains this line:
tftp dgram udp wait root /usr/etc/in.tftpd in.tftpd -p -s /tftpboot
Make sure that the /etc/services file contains this line:
Note
You must restart the inetd daemon after modifying the /etc/inetd.conf and /etc/services files. To restart the daemon, either stop the inetd process and restart it, or enter a fastboot command (on the SunOS 4.x) or a reboot command (on Solaris 2.x or SunOS 5.x). Refer to the documentation for your workstation for more information on using the TFTP daemon.
•
Ensure that the switch has a route to the TFTP server. The switch and the TFTP server must be in the same subnetwork if you do not have a router to route traffic between subnets. Check connectivity to the TFTP server using the ping command.
•
Ensure that the configuration file to be downloaded is in the correct directory on the TFTP server (usually /tftpboot on a UNIX workstation).
•
Ensure that the permissions on the file are set correctly. Permissions on the file should be world-read.
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a TFTP Server
Use this procedure to configure the switch using a configuration file downloaded from a TFTP server:
Step 1
Copy the configuration file to the appropriate TFTP directory on the workstation.
Step 2
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 3
Configure the switch using the configuration file downloaded from the TFTP server with the copy tftp config command. Specify the IP address or host name of the TFTP server and the name of the file to download.
The configuration file downloads and the commands are executed as the file is parsed line-by-line.
This example shows how to configure the switch using a configuration file downloaded from a TFTP server:
Console> (enable) copy tftp config
IP address or name of remote host []? 172.20.52.3
Name of file to copy from []? dns-config.cfg
Configure using tftp:dns-config.cfg (y/n) [n]? y
Finished network download. (134 bytes)
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.70 primary
172.16.10.70 added to DNS server table as primary server.
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.140
172.16.10.140 added to DNS server table as backup server.
>> set ip dns domain corp.com
Default DNS domain name set to corp.com
Configuring the Switch Using a File on a Flash Device
Use this procedure to configure a switch using a configuration file stored on a Flash device in the Flash file system:
Step 1
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 2
Locate the configuration file using the cd and dir commands (for more information, see "Working With the Flash File System").
Step 3
Configure the switch using the configuration file stored on the Flash device using the copy file-id config command.
The commands are executed as the file is parsed line-by-line.
This example shows how to configure the switch using a configuration file stored on a Flash device:
Console> (enable) copy slot0:dns-config.cfg config
Configure using slot0:dns-config.cfg (y/n) [n]? y
Finished network download. (134 bytes)
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.70 primary
172.16.10.70 added to DNS server table as primary server.
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.140
172.16.10.140 added to DNS server table as backup server.
>> set ip dns domain corp.com
Default DNS domain name set to corp.com
Uploading Configuration Files to a TFTP Server
These sections describe how to upload the running configuration or a configuration file stored on a Flash device to a TFTP server:
•
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
•
Uploading a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
Before you attempt to upload a configuration file to a TFTP server, do the following:
•
Ensure that the workstation acting as the TFTP server is configured properly. On a Sun workstation, make sure that the /etc/inetd.conf file contains this line:
tftp dgram udp wait root /usr/etc/in.tftpd in.tftpd -p -s /tftpboot
Make sure that the /etc/services file contains this line:
Note
You must restart the inetd daemon after modifying the /etc/inetd.conf and /etc/services files. To restart the daemon, either stop the inetd process and restart it, or enter a fastboot command (on the SunOS 4.x) or a reboot command (on Solaris 2.x or SunOS 5.x). Refer to the documentation for your workstation for more information on using the TFTP daemon.
•
Ensure that the switch has a route to the TFTP server. The switch and the TFTP server must be in the same subnetwork if you do not have a router to route traffic between subnets. Check connectivity to the TFTP server using the ping command.
•
You might need to create an empty file on the TFTP server before uploading the configuration file. To create an empty file, enter the touch filename command, where filename is the name of the file you will use when uploading the configuration to the server.
•
If you are overwriting an existing file (including an empty file, if you had to create one), ensure that the permissions on the file are set correctly. Permissions on the file should be world-write.
Uploading a Configuration File to a TFTP Server
Use this procedure to upload a configuration file from a switch to a TFTP server for storage:
Step 1
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 2
Upload the switch configuration to the TFTP server with the copy config tftp command. Specify the IP address or host name of the TFTP server and the destination filename.
The file is uploaded to the TFTP server.
This example shows how to upload the running configuration to a TFTP server for storage:
Console> (enable) copy config tftp
IP address or name of remote host []? 172.20.52.3
Name of file to copy to []? cat6000_config.cfg
Upload configuration to tftp:cat6000_config.cfg, (y/n) [n]? y
Configuration has been copied successfully.
Copying Configuration Files Using rcp
Remote copy protocol (rcp) provides another method of downloading, uploading, and copying configuration files between remote hosts and the switch. Unlike TFTP which uses User Datagram Protocol (UDP), a connectionless protocol, rcp uses Transmission Control Protocol (TCP), which is connection-oriented.
To use rcp to copy files, the server from or to which you will be copying files must support rcp. The rcp copy commands rely on the rsh server (or daemon) on the remote system. To copy files using rcp, you do not need to create a server for file distribution, as you do with TFTP. You need only to have access to a server that supports the remote shell (rsh). (Most UNIX systems support rsh.) Because you are copying a file from one place to another, you must have read permission on the source file and write permission on the destination file. If the destination file does not exist, rcp creates it for you.
Downloading Configuration Files from an rcp Server
These sections describe how to download a configuration file from an rcp server to the running configuration or to a Flash device:
•
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using rcp
•
Configuring the Switch Using a File on an rcp Server
Preparing to Download a Configuration File Using rcp
Before you begin downloading a configuration file using rcp, do the following:
•
Ensure that the workstation acting as the rcp server supports the remote shell (rsh).
•
Ensure that the switch has a route to the rcp server. The switch and the server must be in the same subnetwork if you do not have a router to route traffic between subnets. Check connectivity to the rcp server using the ping command.
•
If you are accessing the switch through the console or a Telnet session without a valid username, make sure that the current rcp username is the one you want to use for the rcp download. You can enter the show users command to view the current valid username. If you do not want to use the current username, create a new rcp username using the set rcp username command. The new username will be stored in NVRAM. If you are accessing the switch through a Telnet session with a valid username, this username will be used and there is no need to set the rcp username.
Configuring the Switch Using a File on an rcp Server
Use this procedure to configure a Catalyst 6000 family switch using a configuration file downloaded from an rcp server:
Step 1
Copy the configuration file to the appropriate rcp directory on the workstation.
Step 2
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 3
Configure the switch using the configuration file downloaded from the rcp server using the copy rcp config command. Specify the IP address or host name of the rcp server and the name of the file to download.
The configuration file downloads and the commands are executed as the file is parsed line-by-line.
This example shows how to configure a Catalyst 6000 family switch using a configuration file downloaded from an rcp server:
Console> (enable) copy rcp config
IP address or name of remote host []? 172.20.52.3
Name of file to copy from []? dns-config.cfg
Configure using rcp:dns-config.cfg (y/n) [n]? y
Finished network download. (134 bytes)
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.70 primary
172.16.10.70 added to DNS server table as primary server.
>> set ip dns server 172.16.10.140
172.16.10.140 added to DNS server table as backup server.
>> set ip dns domain corp.com
Default DNS domain name set to corp.com
Uploading Configuration Files to an rcp Server
These sections describe how to upload the running configuration or a configuration file stored on a Flash device to an rcp server:
•
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to an rcp Server
•
Uploading a Configuration File to an rcp Server
Preparing to Upload a Configuration File to an rcp Server
Before you attempt to upload a configuration file to an rcp server, do the following:
•
Ensure that the workstation acting as the rcp server is configured properly.
•
Ensure that the switch has a route to the rcp server. The switch and the rcp server must be in the same subnetwork if you do not have a router to route traffic between subnets. Check connectivity to the rcp server using the ping command.
•
If you are overwriting an existing file (including an empty file, if you had to create one), ensure that the permissions on the file are set correctly. Permissions on the file should be user write.
Uploading a Configuration File to an rcp Server
Use this procedure to upload a configuration file from a switch to an rcp server for storage:
Step 1
Log into the switch through the console port or a Telnet session.
Step 2
Upload the switch configuration to the rcp server using the copy config rcp command. Specify the IP address or host name of the rcp server and the destination filename.
The file is uploaded to the rcp server.
This example shows how to upload the running configuration on a Catalyst 6000 family switch to an rcp server for storage:
Console> (enable) copy config rcp
IP address or name of remote host []? 172.20.52.3
Name of file to copy to []? cat6000_config.cfg
Upload configuration to rcp:cat6000_config.cfg, (y/n) [n]? y
Configuration has been copied successfully.
Clearing the Configuration
To clear the configuration on the entire switch, perform this task in privileged mode:
Task
|
Command
|
Clear the switch configuration.
|
clear config all
|
This example shows how to clear the configuration for the entire switch:
Console> (enable) clear config all
This command will clear all configuration in NVRAM.
This command will cause ifIndex to be reassigned on the next system startup.
Do you want to continue (y/n) [n]? y
.............................
System configuration cleared.
To clear the configuration on an individual module, perform this task in privileged mode:
Task
|
Command
|
Clear the configuration for a specific module.
|
clear config mod_num
|
Note
If you remove a module and replace it with a module of another type (for example, if you remove a 10/100 Ethernet module and insert a Gigabit Ethernet module), the module configuration is inconsistent. The output of the show module command indicates this problem. To resolve the inconsistency, clear the configuration on the problem module.
This example shows how to clear the configuration on a specific module:
Console> (enable) clear config 2
This command will clear module 2 configuration.
Do you want to continue (y/n) [n]? y
.............................
Module 2 configuration cleared.