Managing Serviceguard 12th Edition, March 2006

Cluster and Package Maintenance
Managing the Cluster and Nodes
Chapter 7 333
Using Serviceguard Manager to Remove a Node from the Cluster
Select the node icon, then right-click to display the action menu. Select
“Halt node
<nodename>
” The progress window shows messages as the
action takes place. This will include moving any packages on the node to
adoptive nodes, if appropriate. Click OK on the progress window when
the operation is complete.
Using Serviceguard Commands to Remove a Node from
Operation
Use the cmhaltnode command to halt one or more nodes in a cluster. The
cluster daemon on the specified node stops, and the node is removed from
active participation in the cluster.
To halt a node with a running package, use the -f option. If a package
was running that can be switched to an adoptive node, the switch takes
place and the package starts on the adoptive node. For example, the
following command causes the Serviceguard daemon running on node
ftsys9
in the sample configuration to halt and the package running on
ftsys9
to move to an adoptive node The -v (verbose) option prints out
messages:
# cmhaltnode -f -v ftsys9
This halts any packages running on the node
ftsys9
by executing the
halt instructions in each package's control script.
ftsys9
is halted and
the packages start on their adoptive node.
The use of cmhaltnode is a convenient way of bringing a node down for
system maintenance while keeping its packages available on other
nodes. After maintenance, the package can be returned to its primary
node. See “Moving a Package, below.
To restart a node running in the cluster again, use cmrunnode.
NOTE It is recommended to run cmhaltnode prior to running the HP-UX
shutdown command, especially for cases where a packaged application
might have trouble during shutdown and not halt cleanly.