Managing Serviceguard Eighteenth Edition, September 2010

6 Configuring Packages and Their Services
Serviceguard packages group together applications and the services and resources they
depend on.
The typical Serviceguard package is a failover package that starts on one node but can
be moved (“failed over”) to another if necessary. See “What is Serviceguard? (page 29),
“How the Package Manager Works” (page 67), and “Package Configuration Planning
” (page 168) for more information.
You can also create multi-node packages, which run on more than one node at the
same time.
System multi-node packages, which run on all the nodes in the cluster, are supported
only for applications supplied by HP.
Before you begin, make sure you have done the necessary planning; see “Package
Configuration Planning ” (page 168).
Creating or modifying a package requires the following broad steps, each of which is
described in the sections that follow:
1. Decide on the package’s major characteristics and choose the modules you need
to include ((page 280)).
2. Generate the package configuration file (page 311).
3. Edit the configuration file (page 313).
4. Verify and apply the package configuration (page 317).
5. Add the package to the cluster (page 318).
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