11-04-2014
AIX Cluster Show shared file systems.
Hello,
I am working on applications on an AIX 6.1 two-node cluster, with an active and passive node. Is there a command that will show me which mount points / file systems are shared and 'swing' from one node to the other when the active node changes, and which mount points are truly local to each node and not shared?
I can run commands with superuser access, but obviously I do not want to change/break anything, this is a production environment. Thanks for any help you can give.
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LEARN ABOUT SUSE
crm_standby
CRM_STANDBY(8) [FIXME: manual] CRM_STANDBY(8)
NAME
crm_standby - manipulate a node's standby attribute to determine whether resources can be run on this node
SYNOPSIS
crm_standby [-?|-V] -D -u|-U node -r resource
crm_standby [-?|-V] -G -u|-U node -r resource
crm_standby [-?|-V] -v string -u|-U node -r resource [-l string]
DESCRIPTION
The crm_standby command manipulates a node's standby attribute. Any node in standby mode is no longer eligible to host resources and any
resources that are there must be moved. Standby mode can be useful for performing maintenance tasks, such as kernel updates. Remove the
standby attribute from the node when it should become a fully active member of the cluster again.
By assigning a lifetime to the standby attribute, determine whether the standby setting should survive a reboot of the node (set lifetime
to forever) or should be reset with reboot (set lifetime to reboot). Alternatively, remove the standby attribute and bring the node back
from standby manually.
OPTIONS
--help, -?
Print a help message.
--verbose, -V
Turn on debug information.
Note
Increase the level of verbosity by providing additional instances.
--quiet, -Q
When doing an attribute query using -G, print just the value to stdout. Use this option with -G.
--get-value, -G
Retrieve rather than set the preference.
--delete-attr, -D
Specify the attribute to delete.
--attr-value string, -v string
Specify the value to use. This option is ignored when used with -G.
--node-uuid node_uuid, -u node_uuid
Specify the UUID of the node to change.
--node-uname node_uname, -U node_uname
Specify the uname of the node to change.
--lifetime string, -l string
Determine how long this preference lasts. Possible values are reboot or forever.
Note
If a forever value exists, it is always used by the CRM instead of any reboot value.
EXAMPLES
Have a local node go to standby:
crm_standby -v true
Have a node (node1) go to standby:
crm_standby -v true -U node1
Query the standby status of a node:
crm_standby -G -U node1
Remove the standby property from a node:
crm_standby -D -U node1
Have a node go to standby for an indefinite period of time:
crm_standby -v true -l forever -U node1
Have a node go to standby until the next reboot of this node:
crm_standby -v true -l reboot -U node1
FILES
/var/lib/heartbeat/crm/cib.xml--the CIB (minus status section) on disk. Editing this file directly is strongly discouraged.
SEE ALSO
???, ???
AUTHOR
crm_standby was written by Andrew Beekhof.
[FIXME: source] 07/05/2010 CRM_STANDBY(8)