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EdgeRouter - Archiving and Managing the Configuration Files

Overview

Readers will learn different ways to manage the EdgeOS configuration files using the Command Line Interface (CLI).

NOTES & REQUIREMENTS: Applicable to the latest EdgeOS firmware on all EdgeRouter models. Knowledge of the Command Line Interface (CLI) and basic networking knowledge is required. Please see the Related Articles below for more information.
Device used in this article:

Table of Contents

  1. Saving and Loading Backup Configurations
  2. Commit Revisions and Archival
  3. Related Articles

Saving and Loading Backup Configurations

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The EdgeRouter uses three configuration sets:

  • Boot/Startup Config When the EdgeRouter reboots, it loads the boot/startup configuration (config.boot) located in the /config/ directory.
  • Active Config The active configuration including changes that have committed but not yet saved to the boot/startup configuration yet. When changes are committed, but not saved, and a reboot occurs the committed changes that have not been saved are lost.
  • Working Config Non-active configuration with changes that have not been applied (committed) yet.

Use the following commands (in CLI) to make changes to the configuration:

  • set Adds a configuration statement to the device.
  • delete Removes a configuration statement from the device.
  • commit Applies any changes that were added with the set or delete commands.
  • save Saves the active configuration to the boot/startup configuration.

Typically, you use the save command to save the active configuration to the boot/startup configuration (config.boot). However, you can also save the active configuration to a different file or remote server.

NOTE: EdgeRouters boot from the default startup configuration file (config.boot) located in the /config/ directory.

If you wish to save the active configuration to a different file on the local device, follow the steps below:

CLI: Access the Command Line Interface.You can do this using the CLI button in the GUI or by using a program such as PuTTY.

1. Enter configuration mode.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ configure

2. Save the configuration to a different local file.

[edit] 
ubnt@edgerouter# save ?
Possible completions:   <Enter>                               Save to system config file
  <file>                                Save to file on local machine

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# save backupconfig.boot

Warning: saving configuration to non-default location '/config/backupconfig.boot

3. Verify that the backup file is saved to the config directory and optionally verify its contents.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# ls -l /config/
-rw-rw----    1 root     vyattacf      2874 Apr  1 22:24 config.boot
-rw-rw-r--    1 root     vyattacf      2757 Apr  2 13:43 backupconfig.boot

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# cat /config/backupconfig.boot
firewall {
    all-ping enable
    broadcast-ping disable
<...output shortened...>

If you wish to save the active configuration to a remote device, follow the steps below:

CLI: Access the Command Line Interface.

1. Enter configuration mode.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ configure

2. Save the configuration to a remote machine using either TFTP, SCP, FTP or SFTP.

[edit] 
ubnt@edgerouter# save ?
Possible completions:   scp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file>   Save to file on remote machine
  sftp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file>  Save to file on remote machine
ftp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file> Save to file on remote machine
  tftp://<host>/<file>                  Save to file on remote machine

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# save tftp://192.168.1.10/config.boot

Warning: saving configuration to non-default location 'tftp://192.168.1.10/config.boot'...
######################################################################## 100.0%
Done

If you wish to load a backup configuration from a remote device, follow the steps below:

CLI: Access the Command Line Interface.

1. Enter configuration mode.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ configure

2. Load the backup configuration from a local or a remote file.

[edit] 
ubnt@edgerouter# load ?

Possible completions:
  <Enter>                               Load from system config file
  <file>                                Load from file on local machine
  scp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file>   Load from file on remote machine
  sftp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file>  Load from file on remote machine
ftp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<file> Load from file on remote machine
http://<host>/<file> Load from file on remote machine
tftp://<host>/<file> Load from file on remote machine

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# load backupconfig.boot

Loading configuration from '/config/backupconfig.boot'...

Load complete. Use 'commit' to make changes active.

3. Compare the differences between the backup/working configuration and the active configuration.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# compare

4. Commit the changes

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# commit

5. Save the active configuration to the startup/boot configuration.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# save

Saving configuration to '/config/config.boot'...

Commit Revisions and Archival

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Instead of manually backing up and maintaining backup files, EdgeOS also supports an automatic remote backup feature. The commit-archive command allows you to automatically backup the configuration after each commit.

CLI: Access the Command Line Interface.You can do this using the CLI button in the GUI or by using a program such as PuTTY.

1. Enter configuration mode.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ configure

2. Automatically send committed configurations to a TFTP, SCP or FTP server:

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# set system config-management commit-archive location ?
Possible completions:
  <uri>         Uniform Resource Identifier Detailed information:
    "scp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<dir>"
    "ftp://<user>:<passwd>@<host>/<dir>"
    "tftp://<host>/<dir>"

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# set system config-management commit-archive location tftp://192.168.1.1/archive

3. Commit the changes.

[edit] 
ubnt@edgerouter# commit

Archiving config... tftp://192.168.1.1/archive OK

You can also keep a specified number of commit revisions (configuration files) on the local device by using the commit‑revisions statement.

1. Enter configuration mode.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ configure

2. Specify the amount of revisions to keep.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# set system config-management commit-revisions 10

3. Commit the changes.

[edit] 
ubnt@edgerouter# commit

4. Test the feature by enabling a random service.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# set service telnet port 23

ubnt@edgerouter# compare
[edit service]
+telnet {
+ port 23
+}

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# commit

[ service telnet ]
Starting the telnet service. Check /var/log/messages.

5. Verify the commit revision list.

ubnt@edgerouter:~$ show system commit 
0 2018-04-02 22:07:58 by ubnt via cli
commit
1 2018-04-02 22:07:50 by ubnt via cli
commit
2 2018-04-02 22:07:50 by root via init
commit
NOTE: The currently active configuration is commit revision 0.

The following commands allow you to compare the different commit files.

  • show system commit List all the current commit revisions
  • show system commit diff <nr> Compare the difference between this commit and the previous commit.
  • show system commit file <nr> Display the contents of this commit configuration file.

It is possible to add comments to commits to easily see which revision added which feature:

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# delete service telnet

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# commit comment removed-telnet

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# run show system commit
0 2018-04-02 22:18:07 by ubnt via cli
removed-telnet
1 2018-04-02 22:17:17 by ubnt via cli
commit
2 2018-04-02 22:17:08 by ubnt via cli
commit

Lastly, you can restore a previous configuration revision by using the rollback command.

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# rollback ?

Possible completions:
<N> Rollback to revision N (currently requires reboot)

Revisions:
0 2018-04-02 22:18:07 ubnt by cli
1 2018-04-02 22:17:17 ubnt by cli
2 2018-04-02 22:17:08 ubnt by cli
3 2018-04-02 22:07:58 ubnt by cli
4 2018-04-02 22:07:50 ubnt by cli
5 2018-04-02 22:07:50 root by init

[edit]
ubnt@edgerouter# rollback 2

Proceed with reboot? [confirm][y]

The system is going down for reboot NOW
NOTE: The rollback feature currently requires the device to be rebooted.

Related Articles

Back to Top

Intro to Networking - How to Establish a Connection Using SSH

EdgeRouter - Configuration and Operational Mode

EdgeRouter - Backup and Restore Configuration

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