Sponsored Content
Operating Systems AIX IBM Power Linux Cluster Fence device on Power8 Platform Post 302981462 by Padow1 on Tuesday 13th of September 2016 12:13:36 PM
Old 09-13-2016
The fence agent would have to use the HMC for power systems. I don't see an HMC fence agent for CentOS. If you are using and paying for RHEL subscriptions, maybe you can open a ticket with Red Hat for them to add one upstream?

The fence agents are in the main channel of RHEL/Centos systems. You should be able to use the following command to list the available agents. You could use a similar apt-get command for other linux distro's.

Code:
yum list 'fence-agents-*'

Here is a list of all of the packages the base channel for CentOS7 for PPC64.

Code:
http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/os/ppc64/Packages/

 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Increasing Raw device Sun Cluster 3.0

Hi All , I would like to know the procedure for increasing shared volume space in sun cluster . Currently the configuration is like these . Main stripe oradb1/d91 2 1 /dev/did/rdsk/d35s0 1 /dev/did/rdsk/d36s0 =Total 49 Gb oradb1/d94 -p oradb1/d91 -o 88080480 -b 14680064 ==Total 7 GB... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sahil_shine
4 Replies

2. AIX

IBM Power Pseries Open Firmware boot / VIOS POWERVM VET CODE

Hello, I installed PowerVM IVM Virtual I/O on P-550 but later found out that the machine isn't activated for CoD VET code for virtualization. So when booted , it goes into OPEN Firmware I/O Hosting requires a hosting partition boot not permitted exit called > ok Panel shows > IO... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
3 Replies

3. AIX

New IBM Power8 (S822) and StorWiz V3700 SAN, best practices for production setup/config?

Hello, Got a IBM Power8 box (S822) that I am configuring for replacement of our existing IBM machine. Wanted to touch base with the expert community here to ensure I don't miss anything critical in my setup/config of AIX. Did a fresh AIX 7.1 install on the internal scsi hdisk, mirror'ed... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: c3rb3rus
3 Replies

4. Red Hat

PaceMaker Cluster Fence Device

I have 2 VM's setup with a shared VMware disk running RHEL 7.1 (just updated to 7.2 with yum update), and would like to know what is the easiest Fence device to implement for testing purposes. Apparently, I need a fence device before my IP resources will come online. I have the cluster... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mrmurdock
1 Replies

5. Solaris

Solaris Cluster Device Problem

I build up two node cluster (node1, node2) in virtualbox. For these two nodes I add 5 shared disk. (Also each node have own OS disk). 1 shared disk for vtoc 2 shared disk for NFS resource group 2 shared disk for WEB resource group When I finished my work; two nodes was ok and shared disk... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sonofsunra
4 Replies

6. AIX

IBM Power 740 won't boot after firmware update

A team member installed the wrong version of License Code on a Power 740 system used in our Development environment. The system will no longer boot. Does anyone have IBM documentation or experience to share on recovering a system that currently reports "Unsupported License Code version... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kevinedailey
1 Replies
FENCE_NODE(8)							      cluster							     FENCE_NODE(8)

NAME
fence_node - a utility to run fence agents SYNOPSIS
fence_node [OPTIONS] nodename DESCRIPTION
This utility runs a fence agent against nodename. The agent and args are taken from the running cluster configuration based on clus- ter.conf(5). fence_node is a wrapper around the libfence functions: fence_node() and unfence_node(). These libfence functions use libccs to read the node fencing configuration, which means that corosync (with cman and ccs) must be running to use fence_node(8). The fenced(8) daemon is the main user of libfence:fence_node(), and the configuration details for that function are given in the fenced(8) man page. Fencing vs. Unfencing The main use for unfencing is with storage/SAN (non-power) agents. When using power-based fencing agents, the fencing action itself is supposed to turn a node back on after first turning the power off (this happens automatically with a "reboot" action, and needs to be configured explicitly as "off" + "on" otherwise.) When using storage-based fencing agents, the fencing action is not allowed to re-enable a node after disabling it. Re-enabling a fenced node is only safe once the node has been rebooted. A natural way to re-enable a fenced node's access to storage, is for that node to re- enable the access itself during its startup process. The cman init script calls fence_node -U (nodename defaults to local nodename when unfencing). Unfencing a node without an <unfence> configuration (see below) is a no-op. The basic differences between fencing and unfencing: Fencing 1. libfence: fence_node(), command line: fence_node nodename 2. Turns off or disables a node. 3. Agents run with the default action of "off", "disable" or "reboot". 4. Performed by a cluster node against another node that fails (by the fenced daemon). Unfencing 1. libfence: unfence_node(), command line: fence_node -U nodename 2. Turns on or enables a node. 3. Agents run with the explicit action of "on" or "enable". 4. Performed by a cluster node "against" itself during startup (by the cman init script). OPTIONS
-U Unfence the node, default local node name. -v Show fence agent results, -vv to also show agent args. -h Print a help message describing available options, then exit. -V Print program version information, then exit. FILES
The Unfencing/unfence_node() configuration is very similar to the Fencing/fence_node() configuration shown in fenced(8). Unfencing is only performed for a node with an <unfence> section: <clusternode name="node1" nodeid="1"> <fence> </fence> <unfence> </unfence> </clusternode> The <unfence> section does not contain <method> sections like the <fence> section does. It contains <device> references directly, which mirror the corresponding device sections for <fence>, with the notable addition of the explicit action of "on" or "enable". The same <fencedevice> is referenced by both fence and unfence <device> lines, and the same per-node args should be repeated. <clusternode name="node1" nodeid="1"> <fence> <method name="1"> <device name="myswitch" foo="x"/> </method> </fence> <unfence> <device name="myswitch" foo="x" action="on"/> </unfence> </clusternode> SEE ALSO
fenced(8) cluster 2009-12-21 FENCE_NODE(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:22 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy