- Table of Contents
-
- H3C MSR1000[2600][3600] Routers Configuration Examples All-in-One-R9141-6W100
- 00-Preface
- 01-Local 802.1X Authentication Configuration Examples
- 02-RADIUS-Based 802.1X Authentication Configuration Examples
- 03-AAA Configuration Examples
- 04-ACL Configuration Examples
- 05-MPLS over ADVPN Configuration Examples
- 06-ARP Attack Protection Configuration Examples
- 07-BFD Configuration Examples
- 08-Basic BGP Configuration Examples
- 09-BGP Route Attribute-Based Route Selection Configuration Examples
- 10-EAA Monitor Policy Configuration Examples
- 11-GRE with OSPF Configuration Examples
- 12-HoVPN Configuration Examples
- 13-IGMP Snooping Configuration Examples
- 14-IGMP Configuration Examples
- 15-IPsec Configuration Examples
- 16-IPsec Digital Certificate Authentication Configuration Examples
- 17-IPv6 IS-IS Configuration Examples
- 18-IPv6 over IPv4 GRE Tunnel Configuration Examples
- 19-IPv6 over IPv4 Manual Tunnel with OSPFv3 Configuration Examples
- 20-IS-IS Configuration Examples
- 21-Combined ISATAP Tunnel and 6to4 Tunnel Configuration Examples
- 22-L2TP over IPsec Configuration Examples
- 23-Multi-Instance L2TP Configuration Examples
- 24-L2TP Multidomain Access Configuration Examples
- 25-MPLS L3VPN Configuration Examples
- 26-MPLS OAM Configuration Examples
- 27-MPLS TE Configuration Examples
- 28-Basic MPLS Configuration Examples
- 29-NAT DNS Mapping Configuration Examples
- 30-NetStream Configuration Examples
- 31-NQA Configuration Examples
- 32-NTP Configuration Examples
- 33-OSPFv3 Configuration Examples
- 34-OSPF Configuration Examples
- 35-OSPF Multi-Process Configuration Examples
- 36-OSPF Multi-Instance Configuration Examples
- 37-Portal Configuration Examples
- 38-PPP Configuration Examples
- 39-RBAC Configuration Examples
- 40-RMON Configuration Examples
- 41-IPv4 NetStream Sampling Configuration Examples
- 42-SNMP Configuration Examples
- 43-SRv6 Configuration Examples
- 44-SSH Configuration Examples
- 45-Tcl Commands Configuration Examples
- 46-VLAN Configuration Examples
- 47-VRRP Configuration Examples
- 48-VXLAN over IPsec Configuration Examples
- 49-WLAN AC Configuration Examples
- 50-Small and Medium-Sized Store Configuration Examples
- 51-Cloudnet VPN Configuration Examples
- 52-Ethernet Link Aggregation Configuration Examples
- 53-Ethernet OAM Configuration Examples
- 54-Outbound Bidirectional NAT Configuration Examples
- 55-NAT Hairpin in C-S Mode Configuration Examples
- 56-Load Sharing NAT Server Configuration Examples
- 57-BIDIR-PIM Configuration Examples
- 58-Control Plane-Based QoS Policy Configuration Examples
- 59-Scheduling a Task Configuration Examples
- 60-Client-Initiated L2TP Tunnel Configuration Examples
- 61-LAC-Auto-Initiated L2TP Tunnel Configuration Examples
- 62-Authorized ARP Configuration Examples
- 63-GTS Configuration Examples
- 64-Traffic Policing Configuration Examples
- 65-Traffic Accounting Configuration Examples
- 66-Mobile Communication Modem Management Configuration Examples
- 67-Port Isolation Configuration Examples
- 68-PBR Configuration Examples
- 69-TFTP Client Software Upgrade Configuration Examples
- 70-FTP Client Software Upgrade Configuration Examples
- 71-FTP Server Software Upgrade Configuration Examples
- 72-Routing Policy Configuration Examples
- 73-Software Upgrade from the BootWare Menu Configuration Examples
- 74-Mirroring Configuration Examples
- Related Documents
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Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
00-Preface | 109.73 KB |
Preface
This preface includes the following topics about the documentation:
· Audience.
· Conventions.
Audience
This documentation is intended for:
· Network planners.
· Field technical support and servicing engineers.
· Network administrators working with the SR6600 router series.
Conventions
The following information describes the conventions used in the documentation.
Command conventions
Convention |
Description |
Boldface |
Bold text represents commands and keywords that you enter literally as shown. |
Italic |
Italic text represents arguments that you replace with actual values. |
[ ] |
Square brackets enclose syntax choices (keywords or arguments) that are optional. |
{ x | y | ... } |
Braces enclose a set of required syntax choices separated by vertical bars, from which you select one. |
[ x | y | ... ] |
Square brackets enclose a set of optional syntax choices separated by vertical bars, from which you select one or none. |
{ x | y | ... } * |
Asterisk marked braces enclose a set of required syntax choices separated by vertical bars, from which you select a minimum of one. |
[ x | y | ... ] * |
Asterisk marked square brackets enclose optional syntax choices separated by vertical bars, from which you select one choice, multiple choices, or none. |
&<1-n> |
The argument or keyword and argument combination before the ampersand (&) sign can be entered 1 to n times. |
# |
A line that starts with a pound (#) sign is comments. |
GUI conventions
Convention |
Description |
Boldface |
Window names, button names, field names, and menu items are in Boldface. For example, the New User window opens; click OK. |
> |
Multi-level menus are separated by angle brackets. For example, File > Create > Folder. |
Symbols
Convention |
Description |
An alert that calls attention to important information that if not understood or followed can result in personal injury. |
|
An alert that calls attention to important information that if not understood or followed can result in data loss, data corruption, or damage to hardware or software. |
|
An alert that calls attention to essential information. |
|
NOTE: |
An alert that contains additional or supplementary information. |
An alert that provides helpful information. |
Network topology icons
Convention |
Description |
Represents a generic network device, such as a router, switch, or firewall. |
|
Represents a routing-capable device, such as a router or Layer 3 switch. |
|
Represents a generic switch, such as a Layer 2 or Layer 3 switch, or a router that supports Layer 2 forwarding and other Layer 2 features. |
|
Represents an access controller, a unified wired-WLAN module, or the access controller engine on a unified wired-WLAN switch. |
|
Represents an access point. |
|
Represents a wireless terminator unit. |
|
Represents a wireless terminator. |
|
Represents a mesh access point. |
|
Represents omnidirectional signals. |
|
Represents directional signals. |
|
Represents a security product, such as a firewall, UTM, multiservice security gateway, or load balancing device. |
|
Represents a security module, such as a firewall, load balancing, NetStream, SSL VPN, IPS, or ACG module. |
Examples provided in this document
Examples in this document might use devices that differ from your device in hardware model, configuration, or software version. It is normal that the port numbers, sample output, screenshots, and other information in the examples differ from what you have on your device.
Documentation feedback
You can e-mail your comments about product documentation to [email protected].
We appreciate your comments.