Check the running configuration settings, Save the running configuration to nvram – Cisco ASR 1004 User Manual
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cisco ASR1004 (RP1) processor with 548011K/6147K bytes of memory.
8 FastEthernet interfaces
6 Gigabit Ethernet interfaces
32768K bytes of non-volatile configuration memory.
2097152K bytes of physical memory.
947711K bytes of eUSB flash at bootflash:.
253407K bytes of USB flash at usb0:.
--- System Configuration Dialog ---
Would you like to enter the initial configuration dialog? [yes/no]: n
Note
Basic management setup configures enough connectivity for managing the system; extended setup will ask you to
configure each interface on the system. For detailed information about setting global parameters, refer to the Cisco ASR
1000_Series Aggregation Services Routers Software Configuration Guide.
Check the Running Configuration Settings
To check the value of the settings you have entered, enter the show running-config command at the
Router#
prompt:
Router# show running-config
To review changes you make to the configuration, use the EXEC mode show startup-config command to see the changes and
copy run-start stored in NVRAM.
Save the Running Configuration to NVRAM
To store the configuration or changes to your startup configuration in NVRAM, use the copy running-config startup-config
command to save your configuration changes to the startup configuration so that the changes will not be lost if the software
reloads or a power outage occurs. For example:
Router# copy running-config startup-config
Building configuration...
It might take a minute or two to save the configuration. After the configuration has been saved, the following output appears:
[OK]
Router#
On most platforms, this task saves the configuration to NVRAM. On the Class A Flash file system platforms, this task saves
the configuration to the location specified by the CONFIG_FILE environment variable. The CONFIG_FILE variable defaults to
NVRAM.
To review changes you make to the configuration, use the EXEC mode show startup-config command to see the changes and
copy run-start stored in NVRAM.
Note
Using this command saves the configuration settings that you created in the router using configuration mode and the
setup facility. If you fail to do this, your configuration will be lost the next time you reload the router.