User's Manual

82 Using the RACADM Command Line Interface
The starting [ character that denotes a group name
must
be in column
one. This group name
must
be specified before any of the objects in that
group. Objects that do not include an associated group name generate an
error. The configuration data is organized into groups as defined in the
database property chapter of the
Dell Chassis Management Controller
Firmware Version 2.0 Administrator Reference Guide
.
The following example displays a group name, object, and the object’s
property value:
[cfgLanNetworking] -{group name}
cfgNicIpAddress=143.154.133.121 {object name}
{object value}
All parameters are specified as "object=value" pairs with no white space
between the object, =, or value.
White spaces that are included after the value are ignored. A white space
inside a value string remains unmodified. Any character to the right of the
= (for example, a second =, a #, [, ], and so on) is taken as-is. These
characters are valid modem chat script characters.
[cfgLanNetworking] -{group name}
cfgNicIpAddress=143.154.133.121 {object value}
•The
.cfg
parser ignores an index object entry.
Yo u
cannot
specify which index is used. If the index already exists, it is
either used or the new entry is created in the first available index for that
group.
The
racadm getconfig -f <filename>.cfg
command places a
comment in front of index objects, allowing you to see the included
comments.
NOTE: You may create an indexed group manually using the following
command:
racadm config -g <groupName> -o <anchored
object> -i <index 1–16> <unique anchor name>
The line for an indexed group
cannot
be deleted from a
.cfg
file. If you do
delete the line with a text editor, RACADM will stop when it parses the
configuration file and alert you of the error.