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Rebooting Your System
You can reboot your system as a whole or select
a single slot in the system to be rebooted. You can reboot your system
immediately or in a designated interval of time, and can configure
the system to prompt you if the modules are in a state that could
lead to a loss of configuration data or an NVS corruption.
If you reboot the system before it has completely
written configuration updates to NVS, the system will start with the
last saved configuration. If you reboot the system after it has written
the configuration updates to NVS, but before it has applied those
updates to actual configuration data, the configuration update process
resumes immediately following the reboot and completes before any
application accesses its configuration data.
reload
- Use to reload the software on the system immediately.
- Reloads the system software (.rel) file and the configuration
(.cnf) file on the system.
- When you issue this command, the system prompts you for
a confirmation before the procedure starts.
- If you specify the force keyword,
the procedure will fail if the system is updating the boot prom. In
this case, the system will display a message that indicates that the
procedure cannot currently be performed and the cause. However, if
the system is in a state that could lead to a loss of configuration
data or an NVS corruption, such as during the synchronization of SRP
modules, the system displays a message that describes the state, and
asks you to confirm (enter y for yes, n for no) whether you want to
proceed.
- If you do not specify the force keyword, the procedure will fail if the system is in a state that
could lead to a loss of configuration data or an NVS corruption, and
the system will display a message that explains why the procedure
failed.
- Use the standby-srp keyword
to reload the system software (.rel) file and the configuration (.cnf)
file on the standby SRP module without having to look up its slot
number to use with the reload slot command.
- When you issue this command, the system prompts you for
a confirmation before the procedure starts.
- If you remove a standby SRP module without issuing the slot erase command to delete the configuration, the
E-series router cannot guarantee that the SRP modules were synchronized.
In this situation, you must do either of the following to reload the
router:
- Issue the reload command with
the force keyword.
- Issue the slot erase command
followed by the reload command.
- Example
- host1#reload
- host1#reload force
- There is no no version.
- See reload.
reload
reload
reload slot
- Use to reboot a selected slot on the router.
- Reloads the system software (.rel) file and the configuration
(.cnf) file on the module in the selected slot.
- When you issue this command, the system prompts you for
a confirmation before the procedure starts.
- If you specify the force keyword
and the slot number of the primary SRP module, the procedure will
fail if the system is updating the boot prom. In this case, the system
will display a message that indicates that the procedure cannot currently
be performed and the cause. However, if the system is in a state that
could lead to a loss of configuration data or an NVS corruption, such
as using the synchronization of SRP modules, it displays a message
that describes the state, and asks you to confirm (enter yes or no)
whether you want to proceed.
- If you do not specify the force keyword, the procedure will fail if the system is in a state that
could lead to a loss of configuration data or an NVS corruption, and
the system will display a message that explains why the procedure
failed.
- Example
- host1#reload slot 3
- There is no no version.
- See reload slot.
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