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Dell 3250 - Table 26. Terminal Mode Text Commands

Dell 3250
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152
Table 26. Terminal Mode Text Commands
Command Switches Description
-U USERNAME
<password>
Used to activate a terminal mode session. USERNAME
corresponds to the ASCII text for the username. <password>
represents a printable password (up to 16 characters). If
<password> is not provided, then a null password (all binary 0) is
submitted. Passwords are case sensitive.
Either the SYS PWD command (or Activate Session IPMI
message) must be successfully executed before any command or
IPMI messages are accepted. Note that a modem connection may
be automatically dropped if multiple bad passwords are entered.
-N
<password>
-N represents a Null username. <password> represents a
printable password (up to 16 characters). If <password> is not
provided, then a null password (all binary 0) is submitted.
Passwords are case sensitive.
Either the SYS PWD command (or Activate Session IPMI
message) must be successfully executed before any command or
IPMI messages are accepted. Note that a modem connection may
be automatically dropped if multiple bad passwords are entered.
SYS PWD
-X -X immediately logs out any presently active session. Entering an
invalid password with -U or -N also has the same effect.
SYS TMODE Used as a no-op confirm that Terminal Mode is active. BMC
returns an OK response followed by TMODE.
SYS SET
BOOT XX
YY ZZ AA
BB
Sets the boot flags to direct a boot to the specified device following
the next IPMI command or action initiated reset or power-on.
XX…BB represent five hex-ASCII encoded bytes, which are the
boot flags parameter in the Boot Option Parameters. See Table
27 for information.
Upon receiving this command, the BMC automatically sets the
valid bit in the boot options and sets all the Boot Initiator
Acknowledge data bits to 1b.
SYS SET
BOOTOPT
XX YY…NN
This is essentially a text version of the IPMI Set System Boot
Options command. It allows any of the boot option parameters to
be set, not just the boot flags. XX YY…NN represent the hex-
ASCII encoding for the data bytes that are passed in the Set
System Boot Options request. See Table 27 for information.
XX - Parameter valid
[7] - 1b = Mark parameter invalid / locked
0b = Mark parameter valid / unlocked
[6:0] - Boot option parameter selector
YY…NN -– Boot Option Parameter Data
Passing 0-bytes of parameter data allows the parameter valid bit to
be changed without affecting the present parameter setting.

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