
Run following commands from Fortigate firewall CLI: config system settings set sip-helper disable set. The system name of mine had changed to reflect the serial number when the initial factory image booted up. 10 <- Fortigate Default user is admin Check command.

It will ask you to confirm, and then it will reboot. When you are logged in, type the following to perform a reset: Your password for maintainer will be bcpbFG100D3G13802616 To get into CLI: Serial line to connect toĬOM1 (or, if your computer has multiple serial ports, the name of the connected serial port) See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. From there, we can run a command to reset the device. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.

We will login to the CLI with a user and password that is only good for about 15sec after the system fully boots. I really want to get into the CLI and eventually the WebUI, but I need to factory reset this thing. Select the user group that you want to remove. To remove a user group web-based manager Go to User & Device > User Groups. The pinhole just reboots the device, and I’ve never used a FortiGate appliance. If there are, you must remove those references before you are able to delete the user group. I found this FortiNet FortiGate 100D but I forgot the password. The GUI reports " Empty values are not allowed.". Using the gui and/or the CLI, I am unable to remove the last device from a device group or delete a device group.


I now want to remove all the members from the custom group such that they no longer receive the custom FortiClient config, but rather receive the config associated with the default group. I created a custom device group and added several devices to the group in order to push a custom FortiClient config the group members.
