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Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services Planning and Administration Guide Oracle Solaris Cluster 4.0 |
1. Planning for Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services
2. Administering Data Service Resources
Overview of Tasks for Administering Data Service Resources
Configuring and Administering Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services
How to Install and Register an Upgrade of a Resource Type
How to Migrate Existing Resources to a New Version of the Resource Type
How to Unregister Older Unused Versions of the Resource Type
How to Downgrade a Resource to an Older Version of Its Resource Type
How to Create a Failover Resource Group
How to Create a Scalable Resource Group
Configuring Failover and Scalable Data Services on Shared File Systems
How to Configure a Failover Application Using the ScalMountPoint Resource
How to Configure a Scalable Application Using the ScalMountPoint Resource
Tools for Adding Resources to Resource Groups
How to Add a Logical Hostname Resource to a Resource Group by Using the clsetup Utility
How to Add a Logical Hostname Resource to a Resource Group Using the Command-Line Interface
How to Add a Shared Address Resource to a Resource Group by Using the clsetup Utility
How to Add a Shared Address Resource to a Resource Group Using the Command-Line Interface
How to Add a Failover Application Resource to a Resource Group
How to Add a Scalable Application Resource to a Resource Group
Bringing Resource Groups Online
How to Bring Resource Groups Online
Switching Resource Groups to Preferred Primaries
How to Switch Resource Groups to Preferred Primaries
How to Quiesce a Resource Group
How to Quiesce a Resource Group Immediately
Suspending and Resuming the Automatic Recovery Actions of Resource Groups
Immediately Suspending Automatic Recovery by Killing Methods
How to Suspend the Automatic Recovery Actions of a Resource Group
How to Suspend the Automatic Recovery Actions of a Resource Group Immediately
How to Resume the Automatic Recovery Actions of a Resource Group
Disabling and Enabling Resource Monitors
How to Disable a Resource Fault Monitor
How to Enable a Resource Fault Monitor
How to Remove a Resource Group
Switching the Current Primary of a Resource Group
How to Switch the Current Primary of a Resource Group
Disabling Resources and Moving Their Resource Group Into the UNMANAGED State
How to Disable a Resource and Move Its Resource Group Into the UNMANAGED State
Displaying Resource Type, Resource Group, and Resource Configuration Information
Changing Resource Type, Resource Group, and Resource Properties
How to Change Resource Type Properties
How to Change Resource Group Properties
How to Change Resource Properties
How to Modify a Logical Hostname Resource or a Shared Address Resource
Clearing the STOP_FAILED Error Flag on Resources
How to Clear the STOP_FAILED Error Flag on Resources
Clearing the Start_failed Resource State
How to Clear a Start_failed Resource State by Switching Over a Resource Group
How to Clear a Start_failed Resource State by Restarting a Resource Group
How to Clear a Start_failed Resource State by Disabling and Enabling a Resource
Upgrading a Preregistered Resource Type
Information for Registering the New Resource Type Version
Information for Migrating Existing Instances of the Resource Type
Reregistering Preregistered Resource Types After Inadvertent Deletion
How to Reregister Preregistered Resource Types After Inadvertent Deletion
Adding or Removing a Node to or From a Resource Group
Adding a Node to a Resource Group
How to Add a Node to a Scalable Resource Group
How to Add a Node to a Failover Resource Group
Removing a Node From a Resource Group
How to Remove a Node From a Scalable Resource Group
How to Remove a Node From a Failover Resource Group
How to Remove a Node From a Failover Resource Group That Contains Shared Address Resources
Example - Removing a Node From a Resource Group
Synchronizing the Startups Between Resource Groups and Device Groups
Managed Entity Monitoring by HAStoragePlus
Troubleshooting Monitoring for Managed Entities
Additional Administrative Tasks to Configure HAStoragePlus Resources for a Zone Cluster
How to Set Up the HAStoragePlus Resource Type for New Resources
How to Set Up the HAStoragePlus Resource Type for Existing Resources
Configuring an HAStoragePlus Resource for Cluster File Systems
Sample Entries in /etc/vfstab for Cluster File Systems
How to Set Up the HAStoragePlus Resource for Cluster File Systems
How to Delete an HAStoragePlus Resource Type for Cluster File Systems
Enabling Highly Available Local File Systems
Configuration Requirements for Highly Available Local File Systems
Format of Device Names for Devices Without a Volume Manager
Sample Entries in /etc/vfstab for Highly Available Local File Systems
How to Set Up the HAStoragePlus Resource Type by Using the clsetup Utility
How to Delete an HAStoragePlus Resource That Makes a Local Solaris ZFS Highly Available
Sharing a Highly Available Local File System Across Zone Clusters
Modifying Online the Resource for a Highly Available Local File System
How to Add File Systems Other Than Solaris ZFS to an Online HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Remove File Systems Other Than Solaris ZFS From an Online HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Add a Solaris ZFS Storage Pool to an Online HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Remove a Solaris ZFS Storage Pool From an Online HAStoragePlus Resource
Changing a ZFS Pool Configuration That is Managed by an HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Change a ZFS Pool Configuration That is Managed by an Online HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Recover From a Fault After Modifying the Zpools Property of an HAStoragePlus Resource
Changing the Cluster File System to a Local File System in an HAStoragePlus Resource
How to Change the Cluster File System to Local File System in an HAStoragePlus Resource
Distributing Online Resource Groups Among Cluster Nodes
Enforcing Collocation of a Resource Group With Another Resource Group
Specifying a Preferred Collocation of a Resource Group With Another Resource Group
Distributing a Set of Resource Groups Evenly Among Cluster Nodes
Specifying That a Critical Service Has Precedence
Delegating the Failover or Switchover of a Resource Group
Combining Affinities Between Resource Groups
Zone Cluster Resource Group Affinities
Configuring the Distribution of Resource Group Load Across Nodes
How to Configure Load Limits for a Node
How to Set Priority for a Resource Group
How to Set Load Factors for a Resource Group
How to Set Preemption Mode for a Resource Group
How to Concentrate Load Onto Fewer Nodes in the Cluster
Enabling Oracle Solaris SMF Services to Run With Oracle Solaris Cluster
Encapsulating an SMF Service Into a Failover Proxy Resource Configuration
Encapsulating an SMF Service Into a Multi-Master Proxy Resource Configuration
Encapsulating an SMF Service Into a Scalable Proxy Resource Configuration
Tuning Fault Monitors for Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services
Setting the Interval Between Fault Monitor Probes
Setting the Timeout for Fault Monitor Probes
Defining the Criteria for Persistent Faults
Complete Failures and Partial Failures of a Resource
Dependencies of the Threshold and the Retry Interval on Other Properties
System Properties for Setting the Threshold and the Retry Interval
A resource type provides specification of common properties and callback methods that apply to all of the resources of the given type. You must register a resource type before you create a resource of that type. For details about resource types, see Chapter 1, Planning for Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services.
An administrator can register a resource type for a zone cluster by specifying a resource type registration (RTR) file that resides inside the zone cluster. In other words, the file must be under the zone root path. The RTR file inside the zone cluster cannot have the Global_zone property set to TRUE. The RTR file inside the zone cluster cannot be of type RTR_LOGICAL_HOSTNAME or RTR_SHARED_ADDRESS.
The administrator can also register a resource type for a zone cluster from the location /usr/cluster/lib/rgm/rtreg. The administrator in the zone cluster cannot modify any RTR files in this directory. This enables registering system resource types for a zone cluster, even when the RTR file has one of the properties that cannot be set directly from the zone cluster. This process provides a secure way of delivering system resource types.
The resource types in the /usr/cluster/lib/rgm/rtreg directory are for the exclusive use of the global cluster.
Note - Perform this procedure from any cluster node.
Before You Begin
Ensure that you have the name for the resource type that you plan to register. The resource type name is an abbreviation for the data service name.
# clresourcetype register resource-type
Specifies name of the resource type to add.
# clresourcetype show
Example 2-1 Registering a Resource Type
The following example registers the SUNW.oracle_server:8 resource type, which represents the HA Oracle Server application in an Oracle Solaris Cluster configuration.
# clresourcetype register SUNW.oracle_server:8 # clresourcetype show SUNW.oracle_server:8 Resource Type: SUNW.oracle_server:8 RT_description: Resource type for Oracle Server RT_version: 8 API_version: 2 RT_basedir: /opt/SUNWscor/oracle_server Single_instance: False Proxy: False Init_nodes: All potential masters Installed_nodes: <All> Failover: True Pkglist: <NULL> RT_system: False Global_zone: False
Next Steps
After registering resource types, you can create resource groups and add resources to the resource group. For details, see Creating a Resource Group.
See Also
The following man pages: