Cisco 11503 Administration Guide - Page 106
User Profiles Overview
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User Profiles Overview Chapter 3 Configuring User Profiles User Profiles Overview The CSS contains a default-profile file that resides in the scripts directory on the CSS disk (hard disk or Flash disk). This file contains settings that are user-specific; that is, they apply uniquely to each user when that user logs in. You can customize the following settings for each user: • CLI prompt • Expert mode • History buffer • Terminal parameters • Login banner Though the settings are user-specific, each default setting applies to all users until the user saves the default-profile file to a username-profile (where username is the current login username). You can continue using the default-profile file to ensure all users logging in to a CSS use the same settings. See the "Configuring a Login Banner" section for information on saving the default-profile file. If you change a user setting and want to save this setting in the scripts directory of the current ADI, use the copy profile command. If you do not save this setting, the CSS stores the setting temporarily in a running profile. If you attempt to log out of the CSS without saving profile changes, the CSS prompts you that profile changes have been made and allows you to save or discard the changes. You can also use the save_profile alias command to save your user-profiles settings to the scripts directory and then archive them in the CSS archive directory. When you upgrade the ADI, the CSS does not contain all user profiles from the current ADI directory. If you wish to save user profiles permanently, use the archive script command. This command saves a user-profile file from the scripts directory to the archive directory. The archive directory is not overwritten during a software upgrade. Then you can restore them to the scripts directory with the restore command. To access the CSS disk, FTP to the CSS. Use the appropriate commands to access the scripts directory and list the contents of the default-profile file. When logged into the CSS, use the show profile command to display either the default-profile file or your username-profile file. Cisco Content Services Switch Administration Guide 3-2 OL-5647-02