Difference between revisions of "fw tab - Check Point man page"
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== Example ==  | == Example ==  | ||
| − |   fw tab -t <table-name> -a -e "1,2;3,4,5" or  | + |   fw tab -t <nowiki> <table-name> </nowiki> -a -e "1,2;3,4,5" or  | 
or  | or  | ||
  fw tab -t <table-name> -a -e "<1,2;3,4,5>"  |   fw tab -t <table-name> -a -e "<1,2;3,4,5>"  | ||
Revision as of 18:12, 28 February 2014
Contents | 
fw tab
Description
The fw tab command enables you to view kernel table contents and change them (that is, only dynamic tables since the content of a static table is indeed static).
Usage
fw tab [-t| Argument | Description | 
|---|---|
| -t <table> | Specifies a table for the command. | 
| -s | Displays a short summary of the table (s) information. | 
| -y | Specifies to not prompt a user before executing any commands. | 
| -f |  Displays a formatted version of the table content. Every table may
 have its own specific format style.  | 
| -o <filename> | Dumps CL formatted output to filename, which can later be read by fw log or any other entity that can read FW log formats. | 
| -c | Displays formatted table information in common format. | 
| -r | Resolves IP addresses in formatted output. | 
| -x, -a, -e |  It is possible to add or remove an entry from an existing dynamic table by using the -a or the -x flags, respectively. These flags must be followed by the -e flag and an entry description (<entry>).
 Caution - Improper use of the -a and -x flags may cause system instability.  | 
| [hostname] | A list of one or more targets. When not used, the local machine is used as the default target. | 
Example
fw tab -t <table-name> -a -e "1,2;3,4,5" or
or
fw tab -t