Cisco G1 Installation Guide - Page 4
Copying the Configuration File, Copying the Configuration File to a Flash Disk or PC Card - npe
UPC - 746320679488
View all Cisco G1 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 4 highlights
Copying the Configuration File Chapter 7 NPE-G1 and NPE-G2 Installation and Configuration Information Copying the Configuration File Caution Before powering down the router to install the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2, you must save the current configuration to a Flash Disk, PC Card, Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) file server, or PC before you install the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2, or the configuration will be lost and you will have to manually re-enter your configuration. Cisco IOS looks to the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2 NVRAM for the startup running configuration, because the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2, by default, stores the running configuration, whether or not an I/O controller is installed with the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2. The following sections provide instructions for copying the file to a Flash Disk, PC Card, or TFTP server, and for copying it manually using a terminal program on a PC: • Copying the Configuration File to a Flash Disk or PC Card, page 7-4 • Copying the Configuration File to a TFTP Server, page 7-5 • Copying the Configuration File Using a PC, page 7-7 Copying the Configuration File to a Flash Disk or PC Card Use the following instructions for copying the router configuration file to a Flash Disk or PC Card. Caution If the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2 will be installed in a router with either a C7200-I/O-GE/E or C7200-I/O-2FE/E I/O controller, copy your running configuration to a Flash Disk, not a PC Card. PC Cards are not supported on these I/O controllers when an NPE-G1 or NPE-G2 is present. If you copy the running configuration to a PC Card with these I/O controllers present, you will not be able to retrieve the running configuration after the NPE-G1 or NPE-G2 is installed. Step 1 Step 2 Insert the Flash Disk or PC Card into I/O controller PC Card slot 0. If slot 0 is full, use slot 1. If you need to format the Flash Disk, go to Step 2. If the Flash Disk is already formatted, go to Step 3. Use the format disk0: command to format a Flash Disk in slot 0. Use the format disk1: command to format a Flash Disk in slot 1. If you are using a PC card, use slot0 or slot1 as part of the command. System# format disk0: Format operation may take a while. Contineu: [confirm] Format operation will destroy all data in 'disk0:'. Continue? [confirm] Format :Drive communication and 1st Sector Write OK... Writing Monlib sectors Monlib write complete Format:All system sectors written. OK... Format:Total sectors in formatted partitioin:81760 Format:Total bytes in formatted partition:49861120 Format:Operation completed successfully. Format of disk0:complete The Flash Disk is now formatted and ready to use in the system on which you formatted it. Network Processing Engine and Network Services Engine Installation and Configuration 7-4 OL-4448-12