Thanks Dave.
That's a nice idea, it would give more flexibility in using Vyatta.


-Piyush



On Tue, Feb 12, 2008 at 1:14 AM, Dave Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  Piyush,
>
> The answer to this varies by the particular release. Assuming you're
> running something VC3 or earlier, then you login as 'root' with password
> 'vyatta' and you'll be at the bash prompt, as others have said. As Stig
> pointed out, in Glendale, the model is slightly different. In Glendale,
> you're always 'at the shell' but with both router and Linux commands
> available (something we call FusionCLI). Depending on who you login as
> (root, vyatta, etc.), you'll have a different set of commands that you'll be
> able to see/execute, but essentially both worlds are always available to you
> from the same prompt. This is nice because Vyatta commands are peers with
> any other Linux command and it eliminates the dual-mode model of previous
> releases.
>
> For instance, you can immediate type something like
>
> show version
>
> and then do
>
> cat /proc/stat
>
> or whatever else you want.
>
> -- Dave
>
>  ------------------------------
> *From:* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] *On Behalf Of *piyush sharma
> *Sent:* Sunday, February 10, 2008 9:10 PM
> *To:* Stig Thormodsrud
> *Cc:* vyatta-users@mailman.vyatta.com
> *Subject:* [Vyatta-users] Going to shell on Vyatta
>
>
>
> Sorry Stig, my question was meant for Vyatta in general.
> I didn't edit the subject line earlier.
> I have to run an application on the linux on the Vyatta machine.
> For that I require to go to the shell prompt.
> I wanted to know how can I do that.
> I have logged in as user vyatta on the router.
> Please help me.
>
> Thanks,
> Piyush
>
>
>
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