The user will be placed in the following hierarchy when the exit command is run:
C. [edit security policies]
user@vSRX-1#
Explanation:
The exit command moves the user up one level in the hierarchy. In the exhibit, the user is currently in the [edit security policies from-zone trust to-zone dmz policy Trust-DMZ-Access] hierarchy. When the exit command is issued, the user will move one level up, which is [edit security policies].
its is C because there are two edit commands involved
[edit security policies]
then you need to type
edit from-zone abc to-zone def policy blah-blah
which gives you the prompt below
[edit security policies from-zone abc to-zone def policy blah-blah]
when you exit it takes you back one step
[edit security policies]
exit
Moves up the hierarchy to the previous level where you were working. This command is, in effect, the opposite of the edit command. Alternatively, you can use the quit command; exit and quit are interchangeable.
A voting comment increases the vote count for the chosen answer by one.
Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one.
So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.
Bubu3k
Highly Voted 2 years agogpt_test
Most Recent 2 months, 3 weeks agowesth4m1234
9 months, 1 week agodavidrsr
1 year, 1 month agoars92
1 year, 1 month agoTECH3K3
1 year, 2 months agomuch2furious
1 year, 6 months agoRbrahmi
1 year, 9 months agoRbrahmi
1 year, 9 months agokopcink
1 year, 9 months agoOJ1
1 year, 2 months agobigmokey
1 year, 10 months agosajiby3k
1 year, 11 months ago