Cisco 12406 User Manual

Page 5

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4-5

Cisco 12006 and Cisco 12406 Router Installation and Configuration Guide

OL-11497-03

Chapter 4 Troubleshooting the Installation

Performing Other Configuration Tasks

If you enter the boot command with arguments (that is, by instructing the
system to boot from a specific source), you have these options:

You can instruct the system to boot from a specific Flash SIMM image
by entering the boot bootflash:filename command, or from a specific
image stored on a PCMCIA Flash memory card by entering the
boot slot #: imagename command.

You can instruct the system to boot from a network TFTP server either
by sending broadcast TFTP requests by entering a boot filename
command, or by sending a direct request to a specific network TFTP
server by issuing a boot filename ip-address command.

When the boot field is set to 1, the system automatically boots using the first
image found in the onboard Flash SIMM on the RP.

When the boot field is set to a bit pattern other than 0 or 1, the router uses the
software configuration register settings to compute the filename of a default
system image stored on a network TFTP server. It then uses that system image
to boot the router. But if the configuration file contains boot instructions, the
system uses these instructions to boot the system, rather than using the
filename it computed from the software configuration register settings.

To form this filename, the system starts with cisco and links the octal
equivalent of the boot field value and the processor type in this format:

cisco<bootfieldvalue>-<processorname>

For example, the filename formation process would yield a range of filenames
such as the following:

cisco2-grp

.

.

.

cisco17-grp

or

cisco2-prp

.

.

.

cisco17-prp

The system would use one of the filenames in this range to boot a default system
image stored on a network TFTP server.

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