Managing Serviceguard Eighteenth Edition, September 2010
hacl-probe stream tcp nowait root /opt/cmom/lbin/cmomd /opt/cmom/lbin/cmomd -i -f
/var/opt/cmom/cmomd.log -r /var/opt/cmom
3. Restart inetd:
/etc/init.d/inetd restart
Deleting the Cluster Configuration
As root user, you can delete a cluster configuration from all cluster nodes by using
Serviceguard Manager or the command line. The cmdeleteconf command prompts
for a verification before deleting the files unless you use the -f option. You can delete
the configuration only when the cluster is down. The action removes the binary
configuration file from all the nodes in the cluster and resets all cluster-aware volume
groups to be no longer cluster-aware.
NOTE: The cmdeleteconf command removes only the cluster binary file
/etc/cmcluster/cmclconfig. It does not remove any other files from the
/etc/cmcluster directory.
Although the cluster must be halted, all nodes in the cluster should be powered up
and accessible before you use the cmdeleteconf command. If a node is powered
down, power it up and boot. If a node is inaccessible, you will see a list of inaccessible
nodes together with the following message:
It is recommended that you do not proceed with the
configuration operation unless you are sure these nodes are
permanently unavailable.Do you want to continue?
Reply Yes to remove the configuration. Later, if the inaccessible node becomes available,
you should run the cmdeleteconf command on that node to remove the configuration
file.
Managing the Running Cluster 277