Information About Basic Device Management
This section provides information about basic device management.
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This section provides information about basic device management.
Follow these guidelines to recover the password:
You must be logged in as admin to change the admin password.
For Cisco Nexus 36180YC-R chassis, press Ctrl-L to interrupt the boot process and get the >loader prompt.
You can change the device hostname displayed in the command prompt from the default (switch) to another character string.
Command or Action | Purpose | |||
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Step 1 |
configure terminal Example:
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Enters global configuration mode. |
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Step 2 |
{ hostname | switchname} name Example:Using the hostname command:
Using the switchname command:
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Changes the device hostname. The name argument is alphanumeric, case sensitive, and has a maximum length of 32 characters. The default is switch.
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Step 3 |
exit Example:
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Exits global configuration mode. |
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Step 4 |
(Optional) copy running-config startup-config Example:
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(Optional)
Copies the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
You can configure the MOTD to display before the login prompt on the terminal when a user logs in. The MOTD banner has the following characteristics:
Maximum of 80 characters per line
Maximum of 40 lines
Command or Action | Purpose | |||
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Step 1 |
configure terminal Example:
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Enters global configuration mode. |
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Step 2 |
banner motd delimiting-character message delimiting-character Example:
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Configures the MOTD banner. Do not use the delimiting-character in the message text.
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Step 3 |
exit Example:
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Exits global configuration mode. |
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Step 4 |
(Optional) show banner motd Example:
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(Optional)
Displays the configured MOTD banner. |
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Step 5 |
(Optional) copy running-config startup-config Example:
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(Optional)
Copies the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
You can configure the time zone to offset the device clock time from UTC.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
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Step 1 |
configure terminal Example:
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Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
clock timezone zone-name offset-hours offset-minutes Example:
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Configures the time zone. The zone-name argument is a 3-character string for the time zone acronym (for example, PST or EST). The offset-hours argument is the offset from the UTC and the range is from –23 to 23 hours. The range for the offset-minutes argument is from 0 to 59 minutes. |
Step 3 |
exit Example:
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Exits global configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) show clock Example:
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(Optional)
Displays the time and time zone. |
Step 5 |
(Optional) copy running-config startup-config Example:
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(Optional)
Copies the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
You can configure when summer time, or daylight saving time, is in effect for the device and the offset in minutes.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
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Step 1 |
configure terminal Example:
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Enters global configuration mode. |
Step 2 |
clock summer-time zone-name start-week start-day start-month start-time end-week end-day end-month end-time offset-minutes Example:
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Configures summer time or daylight saving time. The zone-name argument is a three character string for the time zone acronym (for example, PST and EST). The values for the start-day and end-day arguments are Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday . The values for the start-month and end-month arguments are January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, and December . The value for the start-time and end-time arguments are in the format hh:mm . The range for the offset-minutes argument is from 0 to 1440 minutes. |
Step 3 |
exit Example:
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Exits global configuration mode. |
Step 4 |
(Optional) show clock detail Example:
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(Optional)
Displays the configured MOTD banner. |
Step 5 |
(Optional) copy running-config startup-config Example:
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(Optional)
Copies the running configuration to the startup configuration. |
You can set the clock manually if your device cannot access a remote time source.
Configure the time zone.
Command or Action | Purpose | |
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Step 1 |
clock set time day month year Example:
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Configures the device clock. The format for the time argument is hh:mm:ss . The range for the day argument is from 1 to 31. The values for the month argument are January , February , March , April , May , June , July , August , September , October , November , and December . The range for the year argument is from 2000 to 2030. |
Step 2 |
(Optional) show clock Example:
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(Optional)
Displays the current clock value. |
You can configure the clock manager to synchronize all the clocks of the components in the Cisco Nexus chassis.
Command or Action | Purpose | |||||
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Step 1 |
clock protocol protocol vdc vdc-num Example:
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Configures the clock manager. The values for the protocol argument are ptp , ntp , and none . The following describes the values:
The range for the vdc argument is 1 to 8. |
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Step 2 |
(Optional) show run clock_manager Example:
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(Optional)
Displays the configuration of the clock manager. |
You can display information about users logged into the device and send messages to those users.
To verify the configuration after bootstrapping the device using POAP, use one of the following commands:
Command |
Purpose |
---|---|
show running-config |
Displays the running configuration. |
show startup-config |
Displays the startup configuration. |
For detailed information about the fields in the output from these commands, see the Cisco Nexus command reference for your device.
This table lists the default settings for basic device parameters.
Parameters |
Default |
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MOTD banner text |
User Access Verification |
Clock time zone |
UTC |