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Oracle Solaris Administration: IP Services Oracle Solaris 11 Information Library |
1. Planning the Network Deployment
2. Considerations When Using IPv6 Addresses
3. Configuring an IPv4 Network
4. Enabling IPv6 on the Network
5. Administering a TCP/IP Network
7. Troubleshooting Network Problems
11. Administering the ISC DHCP Service
12. Configuring and Administering the DHCP Client
13. DHCP Commands and Files (Reference)
14. IP Security Architecture (Overview)
16. IP Security Architecture (Reference)
17. Internet Key Exchange (Overview)
19. Internet Key Exchange (Reference)
20. IP Filter in Oracle Solaris (Overview)
Part IV Networking Performance
22. Integrated Load Balancer Overview
23. Configuration of Integrated Load Balancer (Tasks)
Installing the Integrated Load Balancer
DSR, Full-NAT, and Half-NAT Topologies
Half-NAT Load-Balancing Topology
Full-NAT Load-Balancing Topology
ILB High-Availability Configuration (Active-Passive Mode Only)
ILB HA Configuration Using the DSR Topology
How to Configure ILB to Achieve High-Availability by Using the DSR Topology
ILB High-Availability Configuration by Using the Half-NAT Topology
How to Configure ILB to Achieve High-Availability by Using the Half-NAT Topology
Setting Up User Authorization for ILB Configuration Subcommands
Administering ILB Server Groups
Administering Back-End Servers in ILB
How to Add a Back-End Server to a Server Group
How to Remove a Back-End Server From a Server Group
How to Re-enable or Disable a Back-End Server
Administering Health Checks in ILB
Displaying Health Check Results
Obtaining Statistical Information Using the show-statistics Subcommand
Displaying the NAT Connection Table
Displaying the Session Persistence Mapping Table
24. Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (Overview)
25. VRRP Configuration (Tasks)
26. Implementing Congestion Control
Part V IP Quality of Service (IPQoS)
27. Introducing IPQoS (Overview)
28. Planning for an IPQoS-Enabled Network (Tasks)
29. Creating the IPQoS Configuration File (Tasks)
30. Starting and Maintaining IPQoS (Tasks)
31. Using Flow Accounting and Statistics Gathering (Tasks)
The export subcommand exports the current configuration to a user-specified file. This information can then be used as input for the import subcommand. The import subcommand deletes the existing configuration before importing unless specifically instructed to retain it. Omission of a file name instructs the command to read from standard input or write to standard output.
To export an ILB configuration, use the export-config command. The following example exports the current configuration into the file, /var/tmp/ilb_config, in a format suitable for importing by using the import subcommand:
# ilbadm export-config /var/tmp/ilb_config
To import an ILB configuration, use the import-config command. The following example reads configuration contents of the file, /var/tmp/ilb_config, and overrides the existing configuration:
# ilbadm import-config /var/tmp/ilb_config