Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX hacmp network adapter re-define Post 302073747 by johnf on Wednesday 17th of May 2006 09:10:27 AM
Old 05-17-2006
Don't worry solved it. Delete the ent devices with rmdev and then reconfigure the defined device with correct IP address. Make sure HACMP is down on the node before hand. When the adapters are back with the correct addresses restart HACMP. Done!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Sun v440/v880 network adapter teaming

Is it possible to team two network adapters for fault tolerance in a Sun v440 or v880 Solaris 8 box? If so how would I go about doing so? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ghuber
1 Replies

2. IP Networking

define IP protocols on network

what method would I use to determine which IP protocols network (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mar mar
0 Replies

3. AIX

change network adapter

hello i've need to change network adapter on machine H80 aix 4.3.3 hacmp ( ent0 ) what i need to do after the new adapter installed on the machine? thanks best regards ariec (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ariec
1 Replies

4. AIX

How to active this network adapter?

When I configure two VIO Servers, VIOS1 used to ping its gateway, after I configured second VIOS2, VIOS1 cannpt ping its gateway, when I run this command: entstat -all ent#|grep -i priority Priority: 5 Active: False How to make Active to True? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rainbow_bean
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

External Network Adapter for Solaris 10

Hi All, I am new here - this is my first post. I have installed Solaris 10 5/09 on my Dell M6300. The install went well, but the Dell's onboard network card is the Broadcom BCM5756ME Gigabit Ethernet - and sadly no Solaris driver exists for it. The Solaris 10 install just jumped by the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: soulmerchant
1 Replies

6. AIX

HACMP: set preferred adapter for service ip

Hi, lets say we have two boot interfaces en0 en1 and two resource groups, with two service ips, sip1 and sip2, one persistent ip pers1 both persistend and service ips are applied as ip-alias when I start the cluster, and bring the resource groups up, it looks like en0: sip1 and sip2 ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: funksen
4 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

SCO Unixware 7.1.4 Network Adapter Error

Hi All I P2Vd a Unixware 7.1.4 box with VMWare Vsphere. I try to add a network adapter under Network Configuration Manager and it comes up with the error attached. I've added a virtual adapter using the "E1000" option. It detects both the AMD PCI NET and E1000 virtual adapters under Network... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: flashinwrx
8 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Simulated driver for Network Interface Adapter

Hi all, I got sort of a task to do. I have to write in C "simulated network driver". What does it mean? - It has to run on all network adapters - It has to be as simple as it can be - It has to run on all linux distributions (or at least most of them) - It does not have to run a network... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chrisdot
4 Replies

9. Hardware

Problematic RTL8188EE Wireless Network Adapter

Good Day All, There are numerous results when searching google on this issue, however, none seem to have a solution. I have read until my eyes bleed and banged my head on the table more than once! :) I am hoping to resolve this issue -- or at least have a decent workaround. It is a real... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: RogerBaran
13 Replies

10. SCO

Can not recognize network adapter SCO UNIX in HP z400

hi .I've installed an operating system SCO in HP Z400 and network cards ZyXEL model FN312 with Chipset RTL8139D put it on .network card installed but do not display network card with command ifconfig -a in list and just show loopback. show message : dlpid:unable to open network adapter driver... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: moein.mojtaba
14 Replies
ccs_tool(8)                                                                                                                            ccs_tool(8)

NAME
ccs_tool - The tool used to make online updates of CCS config files. SYNOPSIS
ccs_tool [OPTION].. <command> DESCRIPTION
ccs_tool is part of the Cluster Configuration System (CCS). It is used to make online updates to cluster.conf. It can also be used to upgrade old style (GFS <= 6.0) CCS archives to the new xml cluster.conf format. OPTIONS
-h Help. Print out the usage. -V Print the version information. sub-commands have their own options, see below for more detail COMMANDS
addnode [options] <node> [<fenceoption=value>]... Adds a new node to the cluster configuration file. Fencing device options are specified as key=value pairs (as many as required) and are entered into the configuration file as is. See the documentation for your fencing agent for more details (eg a powerswitch fence device may need to know which port the node is connected to). Options: -v <votes> Number of votes for this node (mandatory) -n <nodeid> Node id for this node (optional) -i <interface> Network interface to use for this node. Mandatory if the cluster is using multicast as transport. Forbidden if not. -m <multicast> Multicast address for cluster. Only allowed on the first node to be added to the file. Subsequent nodes will use either multicast or broadcast depending on the properties of the first node. -f <fencedevice> Name of fence device to use for this node. The fence device section must already have been added to the file, probably using the addfence command. -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf -o <file> Output file. Defaults to the same as -c -C Don't run "ccs_tool update" after changing file. This will happen by default if the input file is the same as the output file. -F Force a "ccs_tool update" even if the input and output files are different. delnode [options] <node> Delete a node from the cluster configuration file. Note: there is no "edit" command so to change the properties of a node you must delete it and add it back in with the new properties. Options: -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf -o <file> Output file. Defaults to the same as -c -C Don't run "ccs_tool update" after changing file. This will happen by default if the input file is the same as the output file. -F Force a "ccs_tool update" even if the input and output files are different. addfence [options] <name> <agent> [<option>=<value>]... Adds a new fence device section to the cluster configuration file. <agent> is the name of the fence agent that controls the device. the options following are entered as key-value pairs. See the fence agent documentation for details about these. eg: you may need to enter the IP address and username/password for a powerswitch fencing device. Options: -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf -o <file> Output file. Defaults to the same as -c -C Don't run "ccs_tool update" after changing file. This will happen by default if the input file is the same as the output file. -F Force a "ccs_tool update" even if the input and output files are different. delfence [options] <node> Deletes a fencing device from the cluster configuration file. delfence will allow you to remove a fence device that is in use by nodes. This is to allow changes to be made, but be aware that it may produce an invalid configuration file if you don't add it back in again. Options: -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf -o <file> Output file. Defaults to the same as -c -C Don't run "ccs_tool update" after changing file. This will happen by default if the input file is the same as the output file. -F Force a "ccs_tool update" even if the input and output files are different. lsnode [options] List the nodes in the configuration file. This is (hopefully obviously) not necessarily the same as the nodes currently in the clus- ter, but it should be a superset. Options: -v Verbose. Lists all the properties of the node, and the node-specific properties of the fence device too. -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf lsfence [options] List all the fence devices in the cluster configuration file. Options: -v Verbose. Lists all the properties of the fence device rather than just the names and agents. -c <file> Config file to use. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf create [options] <clustername> Create a new, skeleton, configuration file. Note that "create" on its own will not create a valid configuration file. Fence agents and nodes will need to be added to it before handing it over to ccsd. The new configuration file will have a version number of 1. Subsequent addnode/delnode/addfence/delfence operations will increment the version number by 1 each time. Options: -c <file> Config file to create. Defaults to /etc/cluster/cluster.conf addnodeids Adds node ID numbers to all the nodes in cluster.conf. In RHEL4, node IDs were optional and assigned by cman when a node joined the cluster. In RHEL5 they must be pre-assigned in cluster.conf. This command will not change any node IDs that are already set in clus- ter.conf, it will simply add unique node ID numbers to nodes that do not already have them. SEE ALSO
cluster.conf(5) ccs_tool(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:17 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy