Reference Guide

Key Combination Action
CNTL-D Deletes the character at the cursor.
CNTL-E Moves the cursor to the end of the line.
CNTL-F Moves the cursor forward one character.
CNTL-I Completes a keyword.
CNTL-K Deletes all the characters from the cursor to the end of the command line.
CNTL-L Re-enters the previous command.
CNTL-N Returns to the more recent commands in the history buffer after recalling
commands with Ctrl-P or the up Arrow key.
CNTL-P Recalls commands, beginning with the last command.
CNTL-R Re-enters the previous command.
CNTL-U Deletes the line.
CNTL-W Deletes the previous word.
CNTL-X Deletes the line.
CNTL-Z Ends continuous scrolling of the command outputs.
Esc B Moves the cursor back one word.
Esc F Moves the cursor forward one word.
Esc D Deletes all the characters from the cursor to the end of the word.
Using the Keyword no Command
To disable, delete or return to default values, use the no form of the commands.
For most commands, if you type the keyword no in front of the command, you disable that command or
delete it from the running configuration. In this guide, the no form of the command is described in the
Syntax portion of the command description.
Filtering show Commands
To find specific information, display certain information only or begin the command output at the first
instance of a regular expression or phrase, you can filter the display output of a show command.
When you execute a show command, and then enter a pipe ( | ), one of the following parameters, and a
regular expression, the resulting output either excludes or includes those parameters.
NOTE: You can enter a space before or after the pipe, no space before or after the pipe, or any
combination. For example: Dell#command | grep fortyGigE |except regular-
expression | find regular-expression
CLI Basics
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