Cluster Status Tool - Red Hat CLUSTER SUITE FOR ENTERPRISE LINUX 5.0 Overview

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• Cluster Nodes — Displays cluster nodes. Nodes are represented by name as subordinate
elements under Cluster Nodes. Using configuration buttons at the bottom of the right frame
(below Properties), you can add nodes, delete nodes, edit node properties, and configure
fencing methods for each node.
• Fence Devices — Displays fence devices. Fence devices are represented as subordinate
elements under Fence Devices. Using configuration buttons at the bottom of the right frame
(below Properties), you can add fence devices, delete fence devices, and edit fence-device
properties. Fence devices must be defined before you can configure fencing (with the
Manage Fencing For This Node button) for each node.
• Managed Resources — Displays failover domains, resources, and services.
• Failover Domains — For configuring one or more subsets of cluster nodes used to run a
high-availability service in the event of a node failure. Failover domains are represented as
subordinate elements under Failover Domains. Using configuration buttons at the bottom
of the right frame (below Properties), you can create failover domains (when Failover
Domains is selected) or edit failover domain properties (when a failover domain is
selected).
• Resources — For configuring shared resources to be used by high-availability services.
Shared resources consist of file systems, IP addresses, NFS mounts and exports, and
user-created scripts that are available to any high-availability service in the cluster.
Resources are represented as subordinate elements under Resources. Using
configuration buttons at the bottom of the right frame (below Properties), you can create
resources (when Resources is selected) or edit resource properties (when a resource is
selected).
Note
The Cluster Configuration Tool provides the capability to configure private
resources, also. A private resource is a resource that is configured for use with
only one service. You can configure a private resource within a Service
component in the GUI.
• Services — For creating and configuring high-availability services. A service is configured
by assigning resources (shared or private), assigning a failover domain, and defining a
recovery policy for the service. Services are represented as subordinate elements under
Services. Using configuration buttons at the bottom of the right frame (below Properties),
you can create services (when Services is selected) or edit service properties (when a
service is selected).

9.2.2. Cluster Status Tool

You can access the Cluster Status Tool
(Figure 1.28, "Cluster Status
Cluster Administration GUI
Tool") through the
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