Working with STR
A principle behind the configuration representation used in the STR, is to support both manual configuration, i e editing configuration files in a text editor, and scripted configuration using the mzsh topo
 command. Most changes to the files can be done in either way.Â
The figure below illustrates how you can edit a particular system property, either using a command or a text editor.Â
Manual Configuration
There are three methods of manually editing configurations in STR.
Method 1
Open a configuration file under
MZ_HOME/common/config/cell/default/master
.Edit the file and save.
Run the mzsh command
topo activate
. This is required in order the for changes to become effective.Â$ mzsh topo activate
Method 2
Open a configuration by running the
mzsh command
topo open. The configuration opens in vi or the editor specified by the environment variable EDITOR.
Example - Opening a Cell Configuration
$ mzsh topo open cell:default
Example - Opening a Container Configuration
$ mzsh topo open main1
Example - Opening a Pico Configuration
or
If the pico name is not unique in the system, you will be prompted to specify the container.
Edit the configuration and save. The mzsh commandÂ
topo activate
 will be called with theÂ--verbose
 option and the saved changes are displayed in a scripted syntax.
Method 3
As an alternative to the command line  tool, you can manage pico configurations and start/stop pico instances from the System Administration GUI. For further information, see Managing Picos in Desktop.
Activation and Validation
When you use the mzsh commands  topo
 set
or topo open
, changes are automatically validated before they are copied to the active registry. If the command and its arguments can be parsed but fails the validation, you can update the configuration or use a reset command to undo the changes. Â
You can disable the validation by using the option --no-activation
. Changes performed by the mzsh topo
 will then remain in the master registry until you submit a separate activate command.Â
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For further information about the various sub-commands that are available in the mzsh topo
 command, see topo.
For further information about how to manage pico- and service configurations, see Managing Picos with Topo and Managing Service Configurations.