10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
I am installing a IBM package (ILMT) on Solaris-10 box, which is having few non global zones. It is not allowing me to remove old package and not allowing me to install new one.
root@pqdb_s50:/root# pkgrm ILMT-TAD4D-agent
## Waiting for up to <300> seconds for package administration commands to... (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: solaris_1977
18 Replies
2. Red Hat
Hello!,
I can't remove a rpm package with rpm -e net-snmp
Nothing happened, and the process returns D status when i see with ps aux | grep rpm. When i say "Nothing Happened", the terminal don't return any message, and not remove the package.
What can I do to remove?
Ps: I work with Red... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Douglas Ramalho
1 Replies
3. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support
Hello,
i have installed a package by using the command
sudo rpm -i filepackage.rpm
package filepackage is already installed
when i try to remove it, i get an error saying "is not installed":
sudo rpm -e filepackage.rpm
error: package filepackage is not installed
How can... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: g_p
4 Replies
4. HP-UX
In HPUX, I want remove a package forcibly on which some other packages are depended.
On Linux following command is used to remove a package forcibly.
rpm -e package_name --nodeps
I want the samething in HPUX through swremove command. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: snreddy_gopu
1 Replies
5. Linux
Dear all,
I would like to install a new version of package without remove old version on Centos and vice versa.
Please give me advice!
thanks much, (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: all4cfa
2 Replies
6. Shell Programming and Scripting
I just upgraded my laptop from Fedora 13 to 14, and normally, before I do the upgrade (Fresh install) I run an rpm command to make a list of all the packages I have installed, but without the version and architectures specified, so that I can just feed that list to yum after the upgrade to... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tsuroerusu
2 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi,
I have a SUN cluster system.
I want to know what script do when the SUN cluster shutdown the package as I may need to modify it ?? Where can I find out this information in the system??
In which directory and log file ???
Any suggestion ??? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: chuikingman
5 Replies
8. 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
9. 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
10. Solaris
sir,
i want remove cluster 3.0 from tow sun server 280R shared with tow storadg
A1000.
please advise me. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shadi_mis
1 Replies
cmcheckconf(1m) cmcheckconf(1m)
NAME
cmcheckconf - check high availability cluster configuration and/or package configuration files
SYNOPSIS
cmcheckconf [-v] [[-k|-K] -C cluster_ascii_file]
[[-p pkg_reference_file] | [-P pkg_ascii_file]...]
DESCRIPTION
cmcheckconf verifies the cluster configuration as specified by the cluster_ascii_file and/or the package configuration files specified by
each pkg_ascii_file in the command. If the cluster has already been configured previously, the cmcheckconf command will compare the con-
figuration in the cluster_ascii_file against the previously configuration information stored in the binary configuration file and validates
the changes. The same rules apply to the pkg_ascii_file. It is not necessary to halt either the cluster or any of the packages to run the
cmcheckconf command.
Only a superuser, whose effective user ID is zero (see id(1) and su(1)), can verify the configuration.
cmcheckconf verifies any configured external script program in each pkg_ascii_file for the package run and halt function by calling it with
a "validate" parameter. A non-zero return value from any external script program will cause the command to fail.
If the cluster_ascii_file specifies a quorum server as the cluster tie-breaker service, the quorum server must be running and all nodes in
the cluster configuration must be authorized to access it. If more than one IP address is specified for the quorum server, the quorum
server must be reachable from all configured nodes through all the IP addresses. Otherwise the cmcheckconf command will fail.
If the cluster_ascii_file specifies the lock lun devices as the cluster tie breaking service, all nodes must be accessing the same physical
device. The lock lun device file must be a block device file. The cluster must be down before you can modify a cluster tie-breaking ser-
vice.
Options
cmcheckconf supports the following options:
-v Verbose output will be displayed.
-k Using the -k option means that cmcheckconf only checks disk connectivity to the LVM volume group that are identified in
the ASCII file. This option does not exist on Linux. Omitting the -k option (the default behavior) means that cmcheckconf
tests the connectivity of all LVM volume groups on all the cluster nodes. Using -k can result in significantly faster
operation of the command. -k must be used with -C and can not be used with -K
-K Using the -K option means that cmcheckconf only checks disk connectivity for cluster lock volume groups. For all other LVM
volume groups no connectivity will be checked. This option does not exist on Linux. Omitting the -K option (the default
behavior) means that cmcheckconf tests the connectivity of all LVM volume groups on all the cluster nodes. Using -K can
result in significantly faster operation of the command. -K can be used only when cluster is already configured and is
used with -C -K can not be used with -k.
-C cluster_ascii_file
Name of the cluster ASCII file to use. This file can be created by either the cmquerycl command or cmgetconf command.
See cmquerycl(1m) or cmgetconf(1m). This is a required parameter if the cluster has never been configured before. If not
specified, the local cluster configuration is used.
-P pkg_ascii_file...
Name of the package configuration file(s) to use. A package configuration template file can be created by using the
cmmakepkg command and must be customized to include specific information for the package. See cmmakepkg(1m). A configu-
ration file for an existing package can be generated by using the cmgetconf command. See cmgetconf(1m). Once a package
configuration file is generated from the existing configuration using cmgetconf, it can be modified to reflect the desired
changes for that package. The package configuration file will be scanned for the purpose of validation.
-p pkg_reference_file
Name of the file containing a list of package configuration file(s) to be used. This file may be necessary if the number
of pkg_ascii_file names given with multiple -P options do not fit on the command line. This option cannot be used with
the -P option.
RETURN VALUE
Upon completion, cmcheckconf returns one of the following values:
0 Successful completion.
1 Command failed.
EXAMPLES
The high availability environment contains an ASCII cluster configuration file, and two packages, pkg1 and pkg2, specified in ASCII files
pkg1.config and pkg1.config.
To verify the cluster configuration and package files, do the following:
cmcheckconf -C clusterA.config -P pkg1.config -P pkg2.config
To verify the cluster configuration while restricting the connectivity check to the volume groups specified in the clusterA.config file,
cmcheckconf -k -C clusterA.config -P pkg1.config -P pkg2.config
To verify the cluster configuration while restricting the connectivity check to the cluster lock volume groups,
cmcheckconf -K -C clusterA.config -P pkg1.config -P pkg2.config
To specify a long list of package configuration files do the following:
cmcheckconf -C clusterA.config -p myfile
where myfile contains:
pkg1.config
pkg2.config
pkg3.config
The cluster is up and running, with both packages pkg1, pkg2 running as well. The package configuration file pkg1.config contains the
changes to the package pkg1. To verify the package configuration changes made for pkg1, do the following:
cmcheckconf -P pkg1.config
AUTHOR
cmcheckconf was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO
cmapplyconf(1m), cmdeleteconf(1m), cmgetconf(1m), cmmakepkg(1m), cmquerycl(1m).
Requires Optional Serviceguard Software cmcheckconf(1m)