HP Fabric Clustering System HP-UX Administrator's Guide, March 2008

Image files require additional processing. After they have been copied onto the system chassis,
image files must be installed before they can be used to initialize the system.
After configuration files are downloaded to the system chassis, they may be specified in the
configure boot-config command and used the next time the system is booted.
The File Transfer Protocol (FTP is used to copy data to and from a remote host. As such, part of
the copy command requires you to include your network user name and password, as well as
the host DNS name or IP address.
The copy and show logging commands are the only CLI commands which recognize <Ctrl>-c.
You may enter <Ctrl>-c during the uploading/downloading process to terminate file transfer in
the event network transfer hangs.
NOTE: You can only download image and configuration files. Log files cannot be downloaded.
You can only upload configuration and log files. System-image data cannot be uploaded.
Examples:
HP-IB# copy
ftp://root:infini@15.13.113.96/tmp/HP-AB291A-Release-1.1.3hp-build020.img
image:HP-AB291A-Release-1.1.3hp-build020.img
operation completed successfully
HP-IB#
The example above shows downloading a system-image file from a remote host to the system
chassis. Once downloaded it may be installed and propagated to all the gateway and switch
cluster connections in the chassis (some gateway functions are not supported by HP InfiniBand).
HP-IB# copy running-config startup-config
operation completed successfully
HP-IB
The second example shows copying the current configuration to the default configuration file
that is read by the chassis as it initializes itself upon reboot.
Defaults: This command has no defaults.
Related Commands: “boot-config” (page 190)
“delete” (page 194)
“dir” (page 195)
“install” (page 200)
“show boot-config” (page 135)
delete
Synopsis: The delete command is used to remove image, configuration, and log files from
the system chassis.
Syntax: delete fs:file
The arguments related to the delete command are described below.
Table B-62 delete Command Argument Descriptions
DescriptionArgument
System file-system. This is an internal directory that is identified by name only. The
file-systems are config, images, and syslog. The specified file-system must be appropriate
for the type of file being deleted. For example, if an attempt is made to delete a configuration
file from the syslog file-system, an error is returned because the name of the file is not
appropriate for the file-system. The file-system specification is always followed by a colon
(:). Note that startup-config is aliased to config:startup-config. Therefore, the file system for
this file is assumed and does not have to be explicitly stated.
fs
Name of the configuration, image, or log file to be deleted.file
Command Modes: Privileged-execute mode.
Privilege Level: Unrestricted read-write user.
194 Switch Command Line Interface