16-Security Command Reference

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21-Time range commands
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21-Time range commands 58.71 KB

Time range commands

The following compatibility matrixes show the support of hardware platforms for time range:

 

Hardware series

Model

Product code

Time range compatibility

WX1800H series

WX1804H

EWP-WX1804H-PWR-CN

Yes

WX2500H series

WX2508H-PWR-LTE

WX2510H

WX2510H-F

WX2540H

WX2540H-F

WX2560H

EWP-WX2508H-PWR-LTE

EWP-WX2510H-PWR

EWP-WX2510H-F-PWR

EWP-WX2540H

EWP-WX2540H-F

EWP-WX2560H

Yes

WX3000H series

WX3010H

WX3010H-X

WX3010H-L

WX3024H

WX3024H-L

WX3024H-F

EWP-WX3010H

EWP-WX3010H-X-PWR

EWP-WX3010H-L-PWR

EWP-WX3024H

EWP-WX3024H-L-PWR

EWP-WX3024H-F

Yes:

·     WX3010H

·     WX3010H-X

·     WX3024H

·     WX3024H-F

No:

·     WX3010H-L

·     WX3024H-L

WX3500H series

WX3508H

WX3510H

WX3520H

WX3520H-F

WX3540H

EWP-WX3508H

EWP-WX3510H

EWP-WX3520H

EWP-WX3520H-F

EWP-WX3540H

Yes

WX5500E series

WX5510E

WX5540E

EWP-WX5510E

EWP-WX5540E

Yes

WX5500H series

WX5540H

WX5560H

WX5580H

EWP-WX5540H

EWP-WX5560H

EWP-WX5580H

Yes

Access controller modules

LSUM1WCME0

EWPXM1WCME0

LSQM1WCMX20

LSUM1WCMX20RT

LSQM1WCMX40

LSUM1WCMX40RT

EWPXM2WCMD0F

EWPXM1MAC0F

LSUM1WCME0

EWPXM1WCME0

LSQM1WCMX20

LSUM1WCMX20RT

LSQM1WCMX40

LSUM1WCMX40RT

EWPXM2WCMD0F

EWPXM1MAC0F

Yes

Hardware series

Model

Product code

Time range compatibility

WX1800H series

WX1804H

WX1810H

WX1820H

WX1840H

EWP-WX1804H-PWR

EWP-WX1810H-PWR

EWP-WX1820H

EWP-WX1840H-GL

Yes

WX3800H series

WX3820H

WX3840H

EWP-WX3820H-GL

EWP-WX3840H-GL

Yes

WX5800H series

WX5860H

EWP-WX5860H-GL

Yes

display time-range

Use display time-range to display time range configuration and status.

Syntax

display time-range { time-range-name | all }

Views

Any view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

network-operator

Parameters

time-range-name: Specifies a time range by its name, a case-insensitive string of 1 to 32 characters.

all: Displays the configuration and status of all existing time ranges.

Examples

# Display the configuration and status of time range t4.

<Sysname> display time-range t4

Current time is 17:12:34 11/23/2010 Tuesday

 

Time-range : t4 (Inactive)

 10:00 to 12:00 Mon

 14:00 to 16:00 Wed

 from 00:00 1/1/2011 to 00:00 1/1/2012

 from 00:00 6/1/2011 to 00:00 7/1/2011

Table 1 Command output

Field

Description

Current time

Current system time.

Time-range

Configuration and status of the time range, including its name, status (active or inactive), and start time and end time.

 

time-range

Use time-range to create or edit a time range.

Use undo time-range to delete a time range or a statement in the time range.

Syntax

time-range time-range-name { start-time to end-time days [ from time1 date1 ] [ to time2 date2 ] | from time1 date1 [ to time2 date2 ] | to time2 date2 }

undo time-range time-range-name [ start-time to end-time days [ from time1 date1 ] [ to time2 date2 ] | from time1 date1 [ to time2 date2 ] | to time2 date2 ]

Default

No time ranges exist.

Views

System view

Predefined user roles

network-admin

Parameters

time-range-name: Specifies a time range name, a case-insensitive string of 1 to 32 characters. To avoid confusion, it cannot be all.

start-time to end-time: Specifies a periodic statement. Both start-time and end-time are in hh:mm format (24-hour clock). The value is in the range of 00:00 to 23:59 for the start time, and 00:00 to 24:00 for the end time. The end time must be greater than the start time.

days: Specifies the day or days of the week (in words or digits) on which the periodic statement is valid. If you specify multiple values, separate each value with a space, and make sure they do not overlap. These values can take one of the following forms:

·     A digit in the range of 0 to 6, for Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.

·     A day of a week in abbreviated words: Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, and Sat.

·     working-day for Monday through Friday.

·     off-day for Saturday and Sunday.

·     daily for the whole week.

from time1 date1: Specifies the start time and date of an absolute statement. The time1 argument specifies the time of the day in hh:mm format (24-hour clock). Its value is in the range of 00:00 to 23:59. The date1 argument specifies a date in MM/DD/YYYY or YYYY/MM/DD format, where MM is the month of the year in the range of 1 to 12, DD is the day of the month with the range varying by MM, and YYYY is the year in the calendar in the range of 1970 to 2100. If you do not specify this option, the start time is 01/01/1970 00:00 AM, the earliest time available in the system.

to time2 date2: Specifies the end time and date of the absolute time statement. The time2 argument has the same format as the time1 argument, but its value is in the range of 00:00 to 24:00. The date2 argument has the same format and value range as the date1 argument. The end time must be greater than the start time. If you do not specify this option, the end time is 12/31/2100 24:00 PM, the maximum time available in the system.

Usage guidelines

If an existing time range name is provided, this command adds a statement to the time range.

You can create multiple statements in a time range. Each time statement can take one of the following forms:

·     Periodic statement in the start-time to end-time days format. A periodic statement recurs periodically on a day or days of the week.

·     Absolute statement in the from time1 date1 to time2 date2 format. An absolute statement does not recur.

·     Compound statement in the start-time to end-time days from time1 date1 to time2 date2 format. A compound statement recurs on a day or days of the week only within the specified period. For example, to create a time range that is active from 08:00 to 12:00 on Monday between January 1, 2015, 00:00 and December 31, 2015, 23:59, use the time-range test 08:00 to 12:00 Mon from 00:00 01/01/2015 to 23:59 12/31/2015 command.

You can create a maximum of 1024 time ranges, each with a maximum of 32 periodic statements and 12 absolute statements. The active period of a time range is calculated as follows:

1.     Combining all periodic statements.

2.     Combining all absolute statements.

3.     Taking the intersection of the two statement sets as the active period of the time range.

Examples

# Create a periodic time range t1, setting it to be active between 8:00 to 18:00 during working days.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] time-range t1 08:00 to 18:00 working-day

# Create an absolute time range t2, setting it to be active in the whole year of 2011.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] time-range t2 from 00:00 1/1/2011 to 24:00 12/31/2011

# Create a compound time range t3, setting it to be active from 08:00 to 12:00 on Saturdays and Sundays of the year 2011.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] time-range t3 08:00 to 12:00 off-day from 00:00 1/1/2011 to 24:00 12/31/2011

# Create a compound time range t4, setting it to be active from 10:00 to 12:00 on Mondays and from 14:00 to 16:00 on Wednesdays in January and June of the year 2011.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] time-range t4 10:00 to 12:00 1 from 00:00 1/1/2011 to 24:00 1/31/2011

[Sysname] time-range t4 14:00 to 16:00 3 from 00:00 6/1/2011 to 24:00 6/30/2011

Related commands

display time-range

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