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author | Daniil Baturin <daniil@baturin.org> | 2024-09-06 15:45:25 +0100 |
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committer | Daniil Baturin <daniil@baturin.org> | 2024-09-06 15:45:25 +0100 |
commit | 0a98076e88d0df05be43dd7cd90b900858f0d74a (patch) | |
tree | e0a80106d7611b67fe368163beab99c02956db3f | |
parent | ac6681ca8baab2546ba4522913147582a058de64 (diff) | |
download | vyos-documentation-0a98076e88d0df05be43dd7cd90b900858f0d74a.tar.gz vyos-documentation-0a98076e88d0df05be43dd7cd90b900858f0d74a.zip |
cli: Document top-level op mode word meanings
-rw-r--r-- | docs/cli.rst | 109 |
1 files changed, 109 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/cli.rst b/docs/cli.rst index c1a9d14c..8169cbd5 100644 --- a/docs/cli.rst +++ b/docs/cli.rst @@ -71,6 +71,115 @@ When viewing in page mode the following commands are available: * ``left-arrow`` and ``right-arrow`` can be used to scroll left or right in the event that the output has lines which exceed the terminal size. +Operational mode command families +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Many operational mode commands in VyOS are placed in families such as +``show``, ``clear``, or ``reset``. Every such family has a specific +meaning to allow the user to guess how the command is going to behave — +in particular, whether it will be disruptive to the system or not. + +Note that this convention was not always followed with perfect +consistency and some commands may still be in wrong families, so you +should always check the command help and documentation if you are not +sure what exactly it does. + +clear +''''' + +"Clear" commands are completely non-disruptive to any system operations. +Generally, they can be used freely without hesitation. + +Most often their purpose is to remove or reset various debug and +diagnostic information such as system logs and packet counters. + +Examples: + +- ``clear console`` — clears the screen. +- ``clear interfaces ethernet eth0 counters`` — zeroes packet counters + on ``eth0``. +- ``clear log`` — deletes all system log entries. + +reset +''''' + +"Reset" commands can be locally-disruptive. They may, for example, +terminate a single user session or a session with a dynamic routing +protocol peer. + +They should be used with caution since they may have a significant +impact on a particular users in the network. + +- ``reset pppoe-server username jsmith`` — terminate all PPPoE sessions + from user ``jsmith``. +- ``reset bgp 192.0.2.54`` — terminates the BGP session with neighbor + 192.0.2.54. +- ``reset vpn ipsec site-to-site peer vpn.example.com`` — terminates + IPsec tunnels to ``vpn.example.com``. + +restart +''''''' + +"Restart" operations may disrupt an entire subsystem. Most often they +initiate a restart of a server process, which causes it to be +unavailable for a brief period and resets all the process state. + +They should be used with extreme caution. + +- ``restart dhcp server`` — restarts the IPv4 DHCP server process (DHCP + requests are not served while it is restarting). +- ``restart ipsec`` — restarts the IPsec process (which forces all + sessions and all IPsec process state to reset). + +force +''''' + +"Force" commands force the system to perform an action that it might +perform by itself at a later point. + +Examples: + +- ``force arp request interface eth1 address 10.3.0.2`` — send a + gratuitious ARP request. +- ``force root-partition-auto-resize`` — grow the root filesystem to + the size of the system partition (this is also done on startup, but + this command can do it without a reboot). + +execute +''''''' + +"Execute" commands are for executing various diagnostic and auxilliary +actions that the system would never perform by itself. + +Examples: + +- ``execute wake-on-lan interface <intf> host <MAC>`` — send a + Wake-On-LAN packet to a host. + +show +'''' + +"Show" commands display various system information. They may +occasionally use a pager for long outputs, that you can quit by pressing +the Q button. Their output is always finite, however. + +Examples: + +- ``show system login`` — displays current system users. +- ``show ip route`` — displays the IPv4 routing table. + +monitor +''''''' + +"Monitor" commands initiate various monitoring operations that may +output information continuously, until terminated with ``Ctrl-C`` or +disabled. + +Examples: + +- ``monitor log`` — continuously outputs latest system logs. + + Configuration Mode ################## |