Managing Serviceguard Sixteenth Edition, March 2009

A user with HP SMH Administrator access has full cluster management
capabilities.
A user with HP SMH Operator access can monitor the cluster and has restricted
cluster management capabilities as defined by the users Serviceguard role-based
access configuration.
A user with HP SMH User access does not have any cluster management
capabilities.
See the online help topic About Security for more information.
Have created the security “bootstrap” file cmclnodelist. See Allowing Root
Access to an Unconfigured Node” (page 195)for instructions.
At least one cluster member node with Serviceguard A.11.19 and Serviceguard
Manager B.02.00 installed.
Launching Serviceguard Manager
See the latest version of the Serviceguard Release Notes for a summary of options for
launching Serviceguard Manager to manage one or more clusters running recent
Serviceguard releases. This section provides information about three common scenarios.
TIP: To reduce the time it takes to launch a session of HP Serviceguard Manager, do
the following from the command line:
1. Stop hpsmh
/opt/hpsmh/bin/hpsmh stop
2. Edit the file /etc/rc.config.d/hpsmh Set the value to the START_TOMCAT to
1. For example:
START_TOMCAT=1
3. Start hpsmhd.
/opt/hpsmh/bin/hpsmh autostart
Scenario 1 - Single cluster management
Scenario 1 applies if the following is true:
Manage a single cluster
Have installed Serviceguard version A.11.19.
A user with HP SMH Administrator access has full cluster management capabilities.
A user with HP SMH Operator access can monitor the cluster and has restricted
cluster management capabilities as defined by the users Serviceguard role-based
access configuration.
A user with HP SMH User access does not have any cluster management
capabilities.
444 Using Serviceguard Manager