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Full Discussion: HP Servicequard
Operating Systems Linux HP Servicequard Post 302729235 by Tommyk on Friday 9th of November 2012 10:56:11 AM
Old 11-09-2012
There is an HP service guard for Linux that HP have recently released, it may be worth looking specifically for the setup instructions for Linux. As it is a recent release there will be far fewer Linux documents compared to the HP-UX version so you will need to narrow your search.

you should have a "cmquerycl" command which will tell you if you have any issues with your configuration prior to trying to export that configuration to the second node which should be your first step in troubleshooting cluster problems.
 
4S-BACKEND_SETUP(1J)						      4store						      4S-BACKEND_SETUP(1J)

NAME
4s-backend-setup -- Create a new 4store KB SYNOPSIS
4s-backend-setup kbname [--node node-number] [--cluster cluster-size] [--segments segment-count] kb-name --node Number of this node in the cluster, values range from 0 to cluster-size - 1. The default is 0. --cluster The number of nodes in the cluster. The default is 1. --segments The number of segments in the cluster. The default is 2. We recommend one for each CPU core in the cluster as a good starting point. Higher numbers tend to consume more resources, but may result in increased performance. NOTES
Once crated with 4s-backend-setup KBs should be started with 4s-backend(1) SEE ALSO
4s-query(1), 4s-size(1), 4s-httpd(1), 4s-backend(1), 4s-delete-model(1) EXAMPLES
$ 4s-backend-setup --node 0 --cluster 1 --segments 4 demo Creates the indexes for a single-machine KB with four segments, named "demo". 4store May 31, 2019 4store
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