Ctrl-A
|
Moves the
cursor to the beginning of the line.
|
Ctrl-B
|
Moves the
cursor one character to the left. When you enter a command that extends beyond
a single line, you can press the Left Arrow or Ctrl-B keys repeatedly to scroll
back toward the system prompt and verify the beginning of the command entry, or
you can press the Ctrl-A key combination.
|
Ctrl-C
|
Cancels the
command and returns to the command prompt.
|
Ctrl-D
|
Deletes the
character at the cursor.
|
Ctrl-E
|
Moves the
cursor to the end of the line.
|
Ctrl-F
|
Moves the
cursor one character to the right.
|
Ctrl-G
|
Exits to the
previous command mode without removing the command string.
|
Ctrl-K
|
Deletes all
characters from the cursor to the end of the command line.
|
Ctrl-L
|
Redisplays
the current command line.
|
Ctrl-N
|
Displays the
next command in the command history.
|
Ctrl-O
|
Clears the
terminal screen.
|
Ctrl-P
|
Displays the
previous command in the command history.
|
Ctrl-R
|
Redisplays
the current command line.
|
Ctrl-T
|
Transposes
the character under the cursor with the character located to the right of the
cursor. The cursor is then moved one character to the right.
|
Ctrl-U
|
Deletes all
characters from the cursor to the beginning of the command line.
|
Ctrl-V
|
Removes any
special meaning for the following keystroke. For example, press Ctrl-V before
entering a question mark (?) in a regular expression.
|
Ctrl-W
|
Deletes the
word to the left of the cursor.
|
Ctrl-X, H
|
Lists the
history of commands you have entered.
When using
this key combination, press and release the Ctrl and X keys together before
pressing H.
|
Ctrl-Y
|
Recalls the
most recent entry in the buffer (press keys simultaneously).
|
Ctrl-Z
|
Ends a
configuration session, and returns you to EXEC mode.
When used
at the end of a command line in which a valid command has been typed, the
resulting configuration is first added to the running configuration file.
|
Up arrow
key
|
Displays
the previous command in the command history.
|
Down arrow
key
|
Displays
the next command in the command history.
|
Right
arrow key
Left arrow
key
|
Moves your
cursor through the command string, either forward or backward, allowing you to
edit the current command.
|
?
|
Displays a
list of available commands.
|
Tab
|
Completes
the word for you after you enter the first characters of the word and then
press the Tab key. All options that match are presented.
Use tabs
to complete the following items:
-
Command names
-
Scheme
names in the file system
-
Server
names in the file system
-
Filenames in the file system
|
Example:
switch(config)# c<Tab>
callhome class-map clock cts
cdp cli control-plane
switch(config)# cl<Tab>
class-map cli clock
switch(config)# cla<Tab>
switch(config)# class-map
|
Example:
switch# cd bootflash:<Tab>
bootflash: bootflash://sup-1/
bootflash:/// bootflash://sup-2/
bootflash://module-5/ bootflash://sup-active/
bootflash://module-6/ bootflash://sup-local/
|
Example:
switch# cd bootflash://mo<Tab>
bootflash://module-5/ bootflash://module-6/cv
switch# cd bootflash://module-
|