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 user’s 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 user’s Serviceguard role-based
access configuration.
• A user with HP SMH User access does not have any cluster management
capabilities.
444 Using Serviceguard Manager