ServiceGuard Manager Version A.01.00 Release Notes, December 2000

14 Chapter1
ServiceGuard Manager Version A.01.00 Release Notes
Compatibility Information and Installation Requirements
Adds ServiceGuard messages to the ITO Message Browser if
assigned, and in the NNM Alarm Browser.
Modifies the Event Configuration Tool so you can set up automatic
actions and filter ServiceGuard messages.
Lets you configure the data collection to get historical MIB data from
network nodes, including data stored in ServiceGuard MIB objects.
The ServiceGuard subagent services the ServiceGuard MIB objects.
By default, it is installed in /usr/lbin/cmsnmpd.
Then the installation process looks to see if you have ITO Version 5.30 or
laterer. Then it checks to see if you have ClusterView.
If you do have ClusterView installed, only the launcher will be installed.
No files will be overwritten.
If you do not have ClusterView, but you do have ITO, tools are added to
the ITO Tool Bank, readyfor an OpenView administrator to assign them.
These tools are listed below.
Assign these tools carefully. Some require root access to the
ServiceGuard nodes, and some can grant it indirectly.
ServiceGuard Mgr launcher: You can launch ServiceGuard Manager
from OpenView. ServiceGuard Manager is independent of OpenView.
It does not use the OV daemons or object database to discover the
configuration or status of clusters. Instead, it gets information by
connecting to ServiceGuard Version A.11.12 or greater; then
ServiceGuard goes out on its subnets and gathers the information.
Installs these ITO Tools to work on a selected cluster node:
HA Info Tools:
Query Cluster Conf: uses cmquerycl to gather configuration
information
Scan Cluster: uses cmscancl to display information about
cluster configuration, LAN cards, disks, and filesystems.
View Cluster Binary Config: uses cmviewconf to see an ASCII
extraction of the binary configuration file.
View Cluster Config: uses cmviewcl to see cluster
configuration and status of running clusters.
View System Log: opens vi editor to view
/var/adm/syslog/syslog.log