9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. AIX
Setting up HACMP 6.1 on a two node cluster. The other node works fine and can start properly on STABLE state (VGs varied, FS mounted, Service IP aliased). However, the other node is always stuck on ST_JOINING state. Its taking forever and you can't stop the cluster as well or recover from script... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: depam
2 Replies
2. Solaris
Hey Admins,
I am running sun cluster 3.2 x86 on Vmware. I m facing an issue from 2 days..
One main node is continuously rebooting..... not sure... whats woring...
I just had change heartbeat timeout values on 1 this node... Now both node are just rebooting itself..seems panic..
Any... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: snchaudhari2
1 Replies
3. Solaris
Hi,
Is it possible to have a Solaris cluster of 2 nodes at SITE-A using SVM and creating metaset using say 2 LUNs (on SAN). Then replicating these 2 LUNs to remote site SITE-B via storage based replication and then using these LUNs by importing them as a metaset on a server at SITE-B which is... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: dn2011
0 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi,
I want to know is Sun Cluster works for Zones. These Zones are configured on the same OS?
Is Sun Cluster available for x86(Non Sparc) (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: malikshahid85
4 Replies
5. Solaris
Hi Gurus,
I am very new to clustering and for test i have created a single node cluster, now i want to remove the system from cluster. Did some googling however as a newbee in cluster unable to co related the info.
Please help
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kumarmani
1 Replies
6. Solaris
I now the logical name and Virtual IP of the cluster.
How can I find the active sun cluster node without having root access? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sreeniatbp
3 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi Gurus,
For learning purpose, I have installed a single node cluster 3.2 on Solaris 10 for practice. Now I am welling to create two non-global zone and create them as a fail over. Will appreciate your help and assistance.
Thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: newadmin
3 Replies
8. HP-UX
Need help guys!
when running cmrunnode batch i'm getting this error
cmrunnode : Waiting for cluster to... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Tris
1 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
Under ksh I have to run a script on one of the nodes of a Solaris 8 cluster which at some time must execute a command on the alternate node:
# rsh <name> "command"
I have to implement this script on all the clusters of my company (a lot of...).
Fortunately, the names of the two nodes... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: heartwork
11 Replies
ZPRINT(1) General Commands Manual ZPRINT(1)
NAME
zprint - show information about kernel zones
SYNOPSIS
zprint [-w] [-s] [-c] [-h] [-t] [-d] [-p <pid>][name]
DESCRIPTION
zprint(1) displays data about Mach zones. By default, zprint will print out information about all Mach zones. If the optional name is
specified, zprint will print information about each zone for which name is a substring of the zone's name.
zprint interprets the following options:
-c (Default) zprint prints zone info in columns. Long zone names are truncated with '$', and spaces are replaced with '.', to allow
for sorting by column. Pageable and collectible zones are shown with 'P' and 'C' on the far right. Zones with preposterously large
maximum sizes are shown with '----' in the max size and max num elts fields.
-h (Default) Shows headings for the columns printed with the -c option. It may be useful to override this option when sorting by col-
umn.
-s zprint sorts the zones, showing the zone wasting the most memory first.
-w For each zone, zprint calculates how much space is allocated but not currently in use, the space wasted by the zone.
-t For each zone, zprint calculates the total size of allocations from the zone over the life of the zone.
-d Display deltas over time, showing any zones that have achieved a new maximum current allocation size during the interval. If the
total allocation sizes are being displayed for the zones in question, it will also display the deltas if the total allocations have
doubled. -p <pid> Display zone usage related to the specified process id. Each zone will display standard columns and the amount
of memory from that zone associated with a given process. The letter "A" in the flags column indicates that this total is being
accounted to the process. Otherwise, the total is an indication of the influence the process has on the kernel, but the memory is
being accounted to the kernel proper.
Any option (including default options) can be overridden by specifying the option in upper-case; for example, -C overrides the (default)
option -c.
02/12/09 ZPRINT(1)