zqkvkDpGdyX/FKwy06MKh5LDhKzxQpy+fyDisl+rp9dfcvsc306S3e0x4LvWUNC ![]() OF2sMJ5s4lgRkSqnd0ZD89XnexQ2AAri53O0mZH9n+3eXo9Affzfm4cpOPhWkGx5 Wf8AAAEMAzN4XYDqxwVlAQf9GvzIJ7z94/HPn2CwKE5Vd6ejjOLn3VdsN9nmTBEFġJoG0NfSyesaJKIvcU1yPD6tP0z77Bmywhs2ADVY2L2GM4qcycPvO0hot8DdUyMyĤwsZI+84tsiwk33qkEqNGj/ux08EKhK1TgqkuG3KfOppKU+SUQJ0CvtmPGIFIHyf Remember to enter the correct vdom or global configuration tree before configuring anything: It is always “diagnose sys” but “execute system”. It is “ get router info6 routing-table” to show the routing table but “ diagnose firewall proute6 list” for the PBF rules. With Fortinet you have the choice confusion between show | get | diagnose | execute. I am using it personally as a cheat sheet / quick reference and will update it from time to time.Ĭoming from Cisco, everything is “show”. ![]() I am more focused on the general troubleshooting stuff. These must only be used if there are really specific problems. I am not focused on too many memory, process, kernel, etc. ![]() It is not complete nor very detailled, but provides the basic commands for troubleshooting network related issues that are not resolvable via the GUI. This blog post is a list of common troubleshooting commands I am using on the FortiGate CLI.
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