
Using Technician Interface Software
5-8
308657-14.00 Rev 00
When displaying a previously saved log file, you can use the same optional
arguments as you can to display a current log file. (See the next section, “Saving
the Events Log Automatically,” for instructions.)
Another option is to limit the event types you save to a log file. When you display
the log file after saving it, only those event types you saved are displayed. Enter
the following command to limit the event types you save to a log file:
save log
<vol>
:
<log_file>
[-d
<date>
] [-t
<time>
] [-e
<entity>
] [-f
<severity>
]
[
-s
<slot_ID>
]
See the previous section for a description of the optional arguments.
Examples:
Note:
The
save log
command does not clear events from memory. See
“Clearing Events
” on page 5-13.
save log 2:10_12.log
Saves all events to a file named
10_12.log
in slot 2.
save log 2:10_12.log -d10/
12/98
Saves events logged since October 12, 1998 to a file
named
10_12.log
in slot 2.
save log 2:temp.log
-t09:02:00
Saves events logged since 9:02 today to a file named
temp.log
in slot 2. If it is earlier than 9:02, the system
saves all events logged since 9:02 yesterday.
save log 3:tftp.log -eTFTP
Saves events logged by the TFTP driver to a file
named
tftp.log
in slot 3.
save log 3:snmp.log
-eSNMP -ftf
Saves trace and fault events logged by the SNMP
driver to a file named
snmp.log
and stores the file in
slot 3.
save log 2:slot3.log -s3
Saves events logged in slot 3 to a file named
slot3.log
and stores the file in slot 2.
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