RE: deleting IOSs off of a Disk0

From: Anthony M Macaluso (amacaluso@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Mon Apr 08 2002 - 14:55:41 GMT-3


   
It should not affect the other files. If space is an issue, you need to
squeeze to recover space from disk0: for the deleted file.

Tony

-----Original Message-----
From: Sean C [mailto:Upp_and_Upp@hotmail.com]
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 1:04 PM
To: Anthony M Macaluso; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: deleting IOSs off of a Disk0

Hi Anthony,

Thanks for the reply. I've found the files to delete - I'm now
receiving this message during the delete process:

delete disk0:c7200-js-mz.122-4.T3.bin
Delete filename [c7200-js-mz.122-4.T3.bin]? y
Delete disk0:y? [confirm]n

Should I select 'y' to delete that one IOS off of my disk0? It won't
hurt the other IOS, will it?

Most appreciated,

Sean

----- Original Message -----

From: Anthony <mailto:amacaluso@tkmnetworks.com> M Macaluso

To: 'Sean C' <mailto:Upp_and_Upp@hotmail.com> ; ccielab@groupstudy.com

Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 12:46 PM

Subject: RE: deleting IOSs off of a Disk0

To view files on disk0: on a 7204VXR, use

dir disk0:

to delete files on disk0: use

delete disk0:filename

Anthony M Macaluso

TKM Network Consultants, Inc.

2626 Lexington Ave

East Meadow, NY 11554

Phone 516-731-7722

Cell 516-458-1155

Fax 516-731-7722

Email amacaluso@tkmnetworks.com

http://www.tkmnetworks.com

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Sean C
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2002 12:25 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: OT: deleting IOSs off of a Disk0

Sorry for the off topic but I've got a question and I can't seem to find
an

answer on CCO (partly because I don't know what to look for).

I have a 7204VXR which has at least 3 IOS's stored on Disk0. The
correct IOS

is hardcoded to load. I'm trying to do to the following:

1) View all IOSs stored on the disk. If I do a 'show disk0', I get
some

output but nothing to do with the stored IOSs.

2) How to delete the unwanted IOSs off of the disk. I'm assuming it's
just

'delete disk0:<filename>'.

Thanks in advance,

Sean



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