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Chapter 4
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Introduction to the Cisco IOS and SDM
Allowed output transports are pad telnet rlogin lapb-ta mop v120 ssh.
Preferred transport is telnet.
No output characters are padded
No special data dispatching characters
The terminal history size command, used from privileged mode, can change the size
of the history buffer:
yourname#terminal history size ?
<0-256> Size of history buffer
yourname#terminal history size 25
You verify the change with the show terminal command:
yourname#show terminal
Line 0, Location: "", Type: ""
[output cut]
Editing is enabled.
History is enabled, history size is 25.
Full user help is disabled
Allowed transports are lat pad v120 telnet mop rlogin
nasi. Preferred is lat.
No output characters are padded
No special data dispatching characters
Group codes: 0
When Do You Use the Cisco Editing Features?
A couple of editing features are used quite often and some not so much, if at all. Understand
that Cisco didn’t make these up; these are just old Unix commands. However, Ctrl+A is really
helpful to negate a command.
For example, if you were to put in a long command and then decide you didn’t want to use
that command in your configuration after all, or if it didn’t work, then you could just press
your up arrow key to show the last command entered, press Ctrl+A, type no and then a space,
press Enter—and poof! The command is negated. This doesn’t work on every command, but
it works on a lot of them.
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