Short-Cut KeyCombinationActionCNTL-I Completes a keyword.CNTL-K Deletes all characters from the cursor to the end of the command line.CNTL-L Re-enters the previous command.CNTL-N Return to more recent commands in the history buffer after recalling commands with CTRL-P or the UP arrow key.CNTL-P Recalls commands, beginning with the last command.CNTL-R Re-enters the previous command.CNTL-U Deletes the line.CNTL-W Deletes the previous word.CNTL-X Deletes the line.CNTL-Z Ends continuous scrolling of command outputs.Esc B Moves the cursor back one word.Esc F Moves the cursor forward one word.Esc D Deletes all characters from the cursor to the end of the word.Command HistoryThe Dell Networking OS maintains a history of previously-entered commands for each mode. For example:• When you are in EXEC mode, the UP and DOWN arrow keys display the previously-entered EXEC mode commands.• When you are in CONFIGURATION mode, the UP or DOWN arrows keys recall the previously-entered CONFIGURATION modecommands.Filtering show Command OutputsFilter the output of a show command to display specific information by adding | [except | find | grep | no-more | save]specified_text after the command.The variable specified_text is the text for which you are filtering and it IS case sensitive unless you use the ignore-case sub-option.Starting with Dell Networking OS version 7.8.1.0, the grep command accepts an ignore-case sub-option that forces the search tocase-insensitive. For example, the commands:• show run | grep Ethernet returns a search result with instances containing a capitalized “Ethernet,” such as interfaceTenGigabitEthernet 1/1/1/1.• show run | grep ethernet does not return that search result because it only searches for instances containing a non-capitalized “ethernet.”• show run | grep Ethernet ignore-case returns instances containing both “Ethernet” and “ethernet.”The grep command displays only the lines containing specified text. The following example shows this command used in combination withthe show system brief command.42 Configuration Fundamentals