9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers
Hello Experts,
I have a requirement to start and stop weblogic services in a clustered environment.
First i need to start weblogic server and once the server is in Running mode i need to do SSH to other server and there i need to start Node Manager and Managed server, After these two are in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: beginner786
1 Replies
2. Filesystems, Disks and Memory
Hi all,
I'm a bit new to advanced filesystem types. I've just only learned that if you wish to share a single fibre channel extent with many servers you need to use a clustered filesystem to prevent data corruption.
looking through a list of clustered file systems I saw gfs2 which I thought... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jokken
1 Replies
3. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
I would like to write a script that would remove and/or create shortcuts in Gnome desktop in RHEL 6.3...
I googled all over the place could never find what I needed...
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Thank you! (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ruberked
0 Replies
4. Red Hat
Hi all,
Im studying rhcsa as of now, so yum installation and dependencies are messing me to not workit out.
i have dual os, win 7 & rhel 6.
i have tried this installation of vsftpd package with rhel 6 dvd in VM rhel 6 in win 7 as well as host rhel 6.still the same issue.
below error... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: redhatlbug
6 Replies
5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Hi,
How to remove the allocate SAN Lun on the Linux Server. I am using rhel 5.8. I have assigned a LUN to the existing Volume group.
For eg: I have allocated a LUN with 20GB to the existing volume group(test123). Now, how can I take back the allocated lun without any issues. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gsiva
1 Replies
6. Red Hat
Hi, I can't delete an NIS user. Does it sound too simple for you? :( Here is the result:
nis_server# ypcat passwd | grep heisgone
heisgone:xxxxxx:1000:200:He is gone:/home/heisgone:/usr/bin/ksh
nis_server# userdel heisgone
userdel: error deleting password entry
userdel: error deleting... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aixlover
1 Replies
7. Solaris
Hello Admins...
How can we migrate a solaris 10 zone which is clustered...??
We have sun cluster 3.2 in our environment. And this is 2 -node cluster
Let me know guys...
Thanks. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: snchaudhari2
0 Replies
8. Red Hat
Friends ,
I cannot upgrade or add any package in RHEL 5 using 'package manager' GUI tools . When I run the 'package manager' tool then in BROWSE tab , it shows nothing . I try it inserting the RHEL5 DVD in the DVD-Rom . But the condition is the same .
Would anybody plz tell me , How can I... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: shipon_97
4 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have 2 clustered hosts, is it possible for me to issue a netstat command against 1 host from the other ? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: murphyboy
4 Replies
cmdeleteconf(1m) cmdeleteconf(1m)
NAME
cmdeleteconf - Delete either the cluster or the package configuration
SYNOPSIS
cmdeleteconf [-f] [-v] [-c cluster_name] [[-p package_name]...]
DESCRIPTION
cmdeleteconf deletes either the entire cluster configuration, including all its packages, or only the specified package configuration. If
neither cluster_name nor package_name is specified, cmdeleteconf will delete the local cluster's configuration and all its packages. If
the local node's cluster configuration is outdated, cmdeleteconf without any argument will only delete the local node's configuration. If
only the package_name is specified, the configuration of package_name in the local cluster is deleted. If both cluster_name and pack-
age_name are specified, the package must be configured in the cluster_name, and only the package package_name will be deleted. cmdelete-
conf with only cluster_name specified will delete the entire cluster configuration on all the nodes in the cluster, regardless of the con-
figuration version. The local cluster is the cluster that the node running the cmdeleteconf command belongs to.
Only a superuser, whose effective user ID is zero (see id(1) and su(1)), can delete the configuration.
To delete the cluster configuration, halt the cluster first. To delete a package configuration you must halt the package first, but you do
not need to halt the cluster (it may remain up or be brought down). To delete the package VxVM-CVM-pkg (HP-UX only), you must first delete
all packages with STORAGE_GROUP defined.
While deleting the cluster, if any of the cluster nodes are powered down, the user can choose to continue deleting the configuration. In
this case, the cluster configuration on the down node will remain in place and, therefore, be out of sync with the rest of the cluster. If
the powered-down node ever comes up, the user should execute the cmdeleteconf command with no argument on that node to clean up the config-
uration before doing any other Serviceguard command.
Options
cmdeleteconf supports the following options:
-f Force the deletion of either the cluster configuration or the package configuration.
-v Verbose output will be displayed.
-c cluster_name
Name of the cluster to delete. The cluster must be halted already, if intending to delete the cluster.
-p package_name
Name of an existing package to delete from the cluster. The package must be halted already. There should not be any
packages in the cluster with STORAGE_GROUP defined before having a package_name of VxVM-CVM-pkg (HP-UX only).
RETURN VALUE
Upon completion, cmdeleteconf returns one of the following values:
0 Successful completion.
1 Command failed.
EXAMPLES
The high availability environment contains the cluster, clusterA , and a package, pkg1.
To delete package pkg1 in clusterA, do the following:
cmdeleteconf -f -c clusterA -p pkg1
To delete the cluster clusterA and all its packages, do the following:
cmdeleteconf -f -c clusterA
AUTHOR
cmdeleteconf was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO
cmcheckconf(1m), cmapplyconf(1m), cmgetconf(1m), cmmakepkg(1m), cmquerycl(1m).
Requires Optional Serviceguard Software cmdeleteconf(1m)