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Operating Systems Solaris How to set multiple ownership permission on a file/directory? Post 302979937 by gull04 on Monday 22nd of August 2016 05:34:21 AM
Old 08-22-2016
Hi freshmeat,

Am I correct when I say this is a Cluster, if it is can you give us some more info on the configs.

I'm not sure that you'd be able to mount this up with two unique UID's, as when the service fails over all the existing connections will be lost - the good thing is that the half that couldn't work will now be working.

I's possibly a little messy, but it would be better to use the group access for the fail over service.

Regards

Gull04
 

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sccheckd(1M)						  System Administration Commands					      sccheckd(1M)

NAME
sccheckd - service for the cluster configuration check utility SYNOPSIS
sccheckd DESCRIPTION
Note - Beginning with the Sun Cluster 3.2 release, Sun Cluster software includes an object-oriented command set. Although Sun Cluster software still supports the original command set, Sun Cluster procedural documentation uses only the object-oriented command set. For more infor- mation about the object-oriented command set, see the Intro(1CL) man page. The sccheckd service is the server side of the client-server cluster configuration check utility. This utility is called by the sccheck command. The inetd daemon starts the cluster configuration check service. The service reads the /etc/default/sccheck file at startup and during exe- cution. The service logs diagnostics and error messages to syslog and the console. The sccheckd service has no direct connection to stdin, stdout, or stderr. The sccheckd service exits when the last client connection exits. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWsczu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ FILES
/etc/default/sccheck SEE ALSO
Intro(1CL), sccheck(1M), inetd(1M) Sun Cluster 3.2 19 Sep 2006 sccheckd(1M)
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