Administrator Guide
Starting with Dell Networking OS version 7.8.1.0, the grep command accepts an ignore-case sub-option
that forces the search to case-insensitive. For example, the commands:
• show run | grep Ethernet returns a search result with instances containing a capitalized
“Ethernet,” such as
interface TenGigabitEthernet 0/1.
• show run | grep ethernet does not return that search result because it only searches for instances
containing a non-capitalized “ethernet.”
• show run | grep Ethernet ignore-case returns instances containing both “Ethernet” and
“ethernet.”
The grep command displays only the lines containing specified text. The following example shows this
command used in combination with the show linecard all command.
Dell(conf)#do show stack-unit all stack-ports all pfc details | grep 0
stack unit 0 stack-port all
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
NOTE: Dell accepts a space or no space before and after the pipe. To filter a phrase with spaces,
underscores, or ranges, enclose the phrase with double quotation marks.
The except keyword displays text that does not match the specified text. The following example shows this
command used in combination with the
show linecard all command.
Example of the except Keyword
Dell(conf)#do show stack-unit all stack-ports all pfc details | except 0
Admin mode is On
Admin is enabled
Local is enabled
Link Delay 65535 pause quantum
Dell(conf)#
The find keyword displays the output of the show command beginning from the first occurrence of
specified text. The following example shows this command used in combination with the show linecard
all command.
Example of the find Keyword
Dell(conf)#do show stack-unit all stack-ports all pfc details | find 0
stack unit 0 stack-port all
Admin mode is On
Admin is enabled
Local is enabled
Link Delay 65535 pause quantum
0 Pause Tx pkts, 0 Pause Rx pkts
Dell(conf)#
The no-more command displays the output all at once rather than one screen at a time. This is similar to the
terminal length command except that the no-more option affects the output of the specified command
only.
The save command copies the output to a file for future reference.
Configuration Fundamentals 48