8
Hotkey Function
Esc+B
Moves the cursor to the leading character of the continuous string to the left.
Esc+D
Deletes all the characters of the continuous string at the current cursor position and
to the right of the cursor.
Esc+F
Moves the cursor to the front of the next continuous string to the right.
Esc+N
Moves the cursor down by one line (available before you press
Enter
)
Esc+P
Moves the cursor up by one line (available before you press
Enter
)
Esc+<
Specifies the cursor as the beginning of the clipboard.
Esc+>
Specifies the cursor as the ending of the clipboard.
NOTE:
The hotkeys in
are defined by the switch. If the same hotkeys are defined by the terminal software
that you use to interact with the switch, the hotkeys defined by the terminal software take effect.
Redisplaying entered but not submitted commands
If your command input is interrupted by output system information, you can use this feature to redisplay
the commands entered previously but not submitted.
Follow these steps to enable redisplaying of commands previously entered but not submitted:
To do…
Use the command…
Remarks
Enter system view
system-view
—
Enable redisplaying of entered
but not submitted commands
info-center synchronous
Required
Disabled by default
NOTE:
With this feature enabled, the following rules apply:
•
If you have no input at the command line prompt and the system outputs system information such as
logs, the system will not display the command line prompt after the output.
•
If the system outputs system information when you are entering interactive information (not YES/NO for
confirmation), the system does not redisplay the prompt information but a line break after the output and
then display what you have entered.
•
For more information about the
info-center synchronous
command, see
Network Management and
Monitoring Command Reference.
Understanding command-line errors
If a command contains syntax errors, the CLI reports error information.
lists some common
command line errors.
Table 4
Common command line errors
Error information
Cause
% Unrecognized command found at '^' position. The command was not found.