You lost all heartbeats from node 1 to node 2 - thats the reason for the crash. This might happen when your system is simply too busy - but since you should have both heartbeat on disk and heartbeat via network, you should think that there is time enough to send at least one every couple of seconds, Your cluster heartbeat settings might be too tight - giving it more time for the heartbeat might help preventing this issue in the future.
Just out of curiosity - using GPFS and HACMP and RAC on the same systems appears to me to be a completely unnecessary setup, as you are running essentially 3 different cluster products on a system when RAC alone would suffice. Why ?
Hi Experts,
I have configured HP-UX Service Guard cluster and it dumps crash every time i reboot a cluster node. Can anyone please help me to prevent these unnecessary crash dumps at the time of rebooting SG cluster node?
Thanks in advance.
Vaishey (2 Replies)
Hi
I had an active passive cluster. Node A went down and all resource groups moved to Node B.
Now we brought up Node A. What is the procedure to bring everything back to Node A.
Node A #lssrc -a | grep cl
clcomdES clcomdES 323782 active
clstrmgrES cluster... (9 Replies)
Hi Guys,
I have to design a multinode hacmp cluster and am not sure if the design I am thinking of makes any sense.
I have to make an environment that currently resides on 5 nodes more resilient but I have the constrain of only having 4 frames. In addition the business doesnt want to pay for... (7 Replies)
Hi.
I have started heartbeat on two redhat servers. Using eth0.
Before I start heartbeat I can ping the two server to each other.
Once I start heartbeat both the server become active as they both have warnings that the other node is dead.
Also I am not able to ping each other. After stopping... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I have two nodes clustered. Each node is AIX 5.2 & they are clustered with HACMP 5.2. The mode of the cluster is Active/Passive which mean one node is the Active node & have all resource groups on it & the 2nd node is standby.
Last Monday I noted that all resource groupes have been... (2 Replies)
hi friends,
i know that when there is a crash then that memory image is
put into /var/adm/crash
but if the system hangs up and if i have access to console of
that machine then how can i take the crash dump manully.
thanks (2 Replies)
savecore(1M) System Administration Commands savecore(1M)NAME
savecore - save a crash dump of the operating system
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/savecore [-Lvd] [-f dumpfile] [directory]
DESCRIPTION
The savecore utility saves a crash dump of the kernel (assuming that one was made) and writes a reboot message in the shutdown log. It is
invoked by the dumpadm service each time the system boots.
savecore saves the crash dump data in the file directory/vmcore.n and the kernel's namelist in directory/unix.n. The trailing .n in the
pathnames is replaced by a number which grows every time savecore is run in that directory.
Before writing out a crash dump, savecore reads a number from the file directory/minfree. This is the minimum number of kilobytes that must
remain free on the file system containing directory. If after saving the crash dump the file system containing directory would have less
free space the number of kilobytes specified in minfree, the crash dump is not saved. if the minfree file does not exist, savecore assumes
a minfree value of 1 megabyte.
The savecore utility also logs a reboot message using facility LOG_AUTH (see syslog(3C)). If the system crashed as a result of a panic,
savecore logs the panic string too.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-d Disregard dump header valid flag. Force savecore to attempt to save a crash dump even if the header information stored on
the dump device indicates the dump has already been saved.
-f dumpfile Attempt to save a crash dump from the specified file instead of from the system's current dump device. This option may be
useful if the information stored on the dump device has been copied to an on-disk file by means of the dd(1M) command.
-L Save a crash dump of the live running Solaris system, without actually rebooting or altering the system in any way. This
option forces savecore to save a live snapshot of the system to the dump device, and then immediately to retrieve the data
and to write it out to a new set of crash dump files in the specified directory. Live system crash dumps can only be per-
formed if you have configured your system to have a dedicated dump device using dumpadm(1M).
savecore -L does not suspend the system, so the contents of memory continue to change while the dump is saved. This means
that live crash dumps are not fully self-consistent.
-v Verbose. Enables verbose error messages from savecore.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
directory Save the crash dump files to the specified directory. If directory is not specified, savecore saves the crash dump
files to the default savecore directory, configured by dumpadm(1M).
FILES
directory/vmcore.n
directory/unix.n
directory/bounds
directory/minfree
/var/crash/'uname -n' default crash dump directory
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWcsu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO adb(1), mdb(1), svcs(1), dd(1M), dumpadm(1M), svcadm(1M), syslog(3C), attributes(5), smf(5)NOTES
The system crash dump service is managed by the service management facility, smf(5), under the service identifier:
svc:/system/dumpadm:default
Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The ser-
vice's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.
If the dump device is also being used as a swap device, you must run savecore very soon after booting, before the swap space containing the
crash dump is overwritten by programs currently running.
SunOS 5.10 25 Sep 2004 savecore(1M)