Base commands – HP Lights-Out 100 Remote Management User Manual
Page 14
Using Integrated Lights-Out 100 14
•
help
•
load
•
reset
•
set
•
show
•
start
•
stop
•
exit
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version
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Target—The default target is the
/. The target can be changed by the cd command or by
specifying a target on the command line.
•
Options—The valid options are:
•
-help/-h
•
-all/-a
•
Properties are the attributes of the target that can be modified.
•
Output—The output syntax is
text.
The valid Boolean values for any command are
yes, no, true, false, y, n, t, and f.
General notes
If the commands on the CLP command span more than one line, you will not be able to navigate between
different lines.
Operating system-specific notes:
•
The Microsoft® Windows® 2000 telnet client does not support the Functions keys F1 through F12,
Insert, Home, and End keys. These keys will not work in a Lights-Out 100 command line session.
•
The Backspace key in the ProLiant ML110 G2 Lights-Out 100 CLP implementation is mapped to the
value
0x8. Some client operating systems, Novell Linux Desktop and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4
Desktop, map the Backspace key to the value
0x7f, which is used for the Delete key in the
Windows® telnet client. The Backspace key will not work from a client from which it has value of
0x7f. For the Linux clients, using the Home or the End key lets the Lights-Out 100 CLP service remap
the Backspace key to use the value
0x7f, making the key functional.
In the Windows® PuTTY client, the Backspace key can be mapped to a value of
0x8 by changing the
setting for Terminal Keyboard to Control-H.
Base commands
•
help displays context-sensitive help.
Entering
help displays all the supported commands. Entering
help message specific to that command.
•
exit terminates the CLP session.
•
cd sets the current default target. The context works like a directory path. The root context for the
server is
/, and this is the starting point for a CLP system. By changing the context, you can shorten
commands.
For example, to find the current Lights-Out 100 firmware version, you could issue the command
show /map1/firmware version. However, if you issue the cd /map1/firmware command,
then a simple
show version command will display the information.
•
show displays values of a property or contents of a collection target. For example:
/./> show