*ADD Allows the addition of hardware to the running system. Hardware may be controllers, CI disks, NI networks, and CPUs. In addition, memory may be added to the system with the MEMORY keyword. The first address is the lower bound, the second is the upper bound. The default input radix for the addresses is decimal. to change the input radix, prefix the number with a "#". An address may also be specified with the "K" or "P" suffix, e.g., ADD MEMORY 256K TO 512K. *AUTO-CONFIGURE Initiate the process which causes automatic configuration of the disks and tapes on the system. This command is useful when equipment was not present (powered off when the system was orgionally bootstraped), e.g., field service was working on the gear. It can also be used in the event that a drive was missed at bootstrap time, e.g., a drive address thumb wheel was miss selected on a tape drive at boot time or a lap plug had been pulled from an RP06 disk drive. *HELP HELP allows you to display the function and format of any CONFIG command. The format is; CONFIG> HELP keyword where keyword can be any one of the following CONFIG commands: ADD AUTO-CONFIGURE HELP LOAD REMOVE SET SHOW SHUTDOWN SNAPSHOT SUSPEND *LOAD Allows the loading of microcode into the CPUs, DX-20 controllers for tape drives and disk drives, and CI or NI network interface controllers. *REMOVE This command is the exact opposite of the ADD command. This command will dynamically remove hardware from a running system. The options are the same as that for the ADD command. *SET Allows the setting of certain parameters which control an action automatically when some event occurs. The options are: 1. AUTO-RELOAD Enable automatic reload of the monitor. This command allows the monitor to use the BOOTXT command string to automatically reload the monitor when it crashes or is taken down. Note there are other conditions that will prevent such an auto reload; this command is a master enable. See also SET NO RELOAD. 2. BOOT-TEXT command-string Set the boot text command string to the specified value. The boot text command string is the command string passed to the bootstrap on an automatic monitor reload. Since the bootstrap interprets a space as an end-of-command character, multiple commands may be specified on the same line by separating the commands with spaces. The command string starts with the first non-space, non-tab character after the keyword "BOOT-TEXT" and ends with the end of line. A typical use of this command might be: SET BOOT-TEXT /D DSKA:SYSTEM.EXE[1,4] 3. DUMP stopcd-type Causes the monitor to take continuable dumps after the specified stopcd type. 4. IGNORE unit Causes the monitor to ignore "online" interrupts fron the specified unit. 5. KLINIK Sets KLINIK line parameters on the specified CPUs. A carriage return after the KLINIK keyword will enter the sub-command dialog for the specified KLINIK parameters. 6. MICROCODE Enable the automatic reload of microcodes by the monitor. This command allows the monitor to reload microcodes on the CPU(s) or controller devices as well as network devices such as the CI and NI. 7. NO Negates the effect of any of the other SET keywords. *SHOW Displays information about the current system configuration. Options are; BOOT-TEXT HARDWARE-CONFIGURATION KLINIK STOPCODE-FLAGS *SHUTDOWN Take the system down with an RLD stopcode and reload it. Before doing so, CONFIG asks the operator for the reason for the reload and puts the address of the resulting string in AC 0. When looking at a dump from an RLD stopcode, the reason the dump was taken can be determined by examining user AC 0. *SNAPSHOT Take a continuable stopcode dump using the CI7 stopcode and continue the monitor. Before doing so, CONFIG asks the operator for the reason for the snapshot and puts the address of the resulting string in AC 0. When looking at a dump taken from a CI7 stopcode, the reason the dump was taken can be determined by examining user AC 0. *SUSPEND Initiate the process used to suspend system operations and write a system sleep dump file. this dump file may be later reloaded with the BOOT /REBOOT switch and the system operation continued.