Changing Command Modes - Cisco PIX 500 Series Configuration Manual

Security appliance command line
Hide thumbs Also See for PIX 500 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Remote Command Execution
To send a command to a failover peer, perform the following steps:
Step 1
If you are in multiple context mode, use the changeto command to change to the context you want to
configure. You cannot change contexts on the failover peer with the failover exec command.
If you are in single context mode, skip to the next step.
Step 2
Use the following command to send commands to he specified failover unit:
hostname(config)# failover exec {active | mate | standby}
Use the active or standby keyword to cause the command to be executed on the specified unit, even if
that unit is the current unit. Use the mate keyword to cause the command to be executed on the failover
peer.
Commands that cause a command mode change do not change the prompt for the current session. You
must use the show failover exec command to display the command mode the command is executed in.
See

Changing Command Modes

The failover exec command maintains a command mode state that is separate from the command mode
of your terminal session. By default, the failover exec command mode starts in global configuration
mode for the specified device. You can change that command mode by sending the appropriate command
(such as the interface command) using the failover exec command. The session prompt does not change
when you change mode using failover exec.
For example, if you are logged-in to global configuration mode of the active unit of a failover pair, and
you use the failover exec active command to change to interface configuration mode, the terminal
prompt remains in global configuration mode, but commands entered using failover exec are entered in
interface configuration mode.
The following examples shows the difference between the terminal session mode and the failover exec
command mode. In the example, the administrator changes the failover exec mode on the active unit to
interface configuration mode for the interface GigabitEthernet0/1. After that, all commands entered
using failover exec active are sent to interface configuration mode for interface GigabitEthernet0/1. The
administrator then uses failover exec active to assign an IP address to that interface. Although the prompt
indicates global configuration mode, the failover exec active mode is in interface configuration mode.
hostname(config)# failover exec active interface GigabitEthernet0/1
hostname(config)# failover exec active ip address 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0 standby
192.168.1.2
hostname(config)# router rip
hostname(config-router)#
Changing commands modes for your current session to the device does not affect the command mode
used by the failover exec command. For example, if you are in interface configuration mode on the
active unit, and you have not changed the failover exec command mode, the following command would
be executed in global configuration mode. The result would be that your session to the device remains
in interface configuration mode, while commands entered using failover exec active are sent to router
configuration mode for the specified routing process.
hostname(config-if)# failover exec active router ospf 100
hostname(config-if)#
Cisco Security Appliance Command Line Configuration Guide
14-52
Changing Command Modes, page
14-52, for more information.
Chapter 14
Configuring Failover
OL-12172-03

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Asa 5500 series

Table of Contents