HP Integrity BL870c HP Integrity iLO 2 Operations Guide, Eleventh Edition - Page 156
Command Targets, Command Target Properties, Command Options, Level Option
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• version • exit Command Targets The command target address identifies the specific managed element or association to be affected by the command verb. All SM CLP commands have a command target, whether explicitly or implicitly identified. For instance, the target /map1/telnetsvc1/ can be identified in any of the following ways: Using the target's absolute path: hpiLO-> show /map1/telnetsvc1 Using the target's relative path form map1 target: hpiLO-> show telnetsvc1 Using implicit (current) target's with the verb show hpiLO-> show: Command Target Properties Target properties are identifying and descriptive information related to and defined by the target. Target properties are identified by property names. Each class of target defines a set of valid property names. Property values are expressed in name=value format. You can specify one or more properties on the command line. If you specify multiple properties on the same command line, they must be separated by a space. Command Options Command options control verb behavior. Command options can appear immediately after the verb and must be prefaced with a dash (-). Most command options have both a full name and a short form; for example: show -level all or show -l all Level Option The level option instructs the command verb to include n number of levels in the scope of its execution. A level typically refers to the depth of containment to be processed by the verb. Forms: -level -l Where n is the number of levels to include in command scope. The value of n is interpreted as follows: n=1 Verb is interpreted for the command target only (default). n=2 Verb acts on the command target and any directly contained Managed Elements (MEs). n=3 Verb acts on the command target, directly contained MEs, and any MEs contained by those MEs (such as - current target and two down). n=all Verb acts on the command target and all target MEs recursively contained in the command. The following examples show command display option syntax: Show information about default target and one level of contained MEs: hpiLO-> show -l 2 Show all contained MEs: hpiLO-> show -l all 156 Using iLO 2