Chapter 5. Configuring Red Hat Cluster With
Figure 5.6. Confirm Deleting a Member
d. At that dialog box, click Yes to confirm deletion.
e. Propagate the updated configuration by clicking the Send to Cluster button. (Propagating
the updated configuration automatically saves the configuration.)
4. Stop the cluster software on the remaining running nodes by running the following commands
at each node in this order:
a.
service rgmanager stop
b.
service gfs stop
c.
service clvmd stop
d.
service cman stop
5. Start cluster software on all remaining cluster nodes by running the following commands in
this order:
a.
service cman start
b.
service clvmd start
c.
service gfs start
d.
service rgmanager start
6. Start the Red Hat Cluster Suite management GUI. At the Cluster Configuration Tool tab,
verify that the configuration is correct. At the Cluster Status Tool tab verify that the nodes
and services are running as expected.
6. Configuring a Failover Domain
A failover domain is a named subset of cluster nodes that are eligible to run a cluster service in
the event of a node failure. A failover domain can have the following characteristics:
66
, if you are using Red Hat GFS
, if CLVM has been used to create clustered volumes
, if CLVM has been used to create clustered volumes
, if you are using Red Hat GFS
system-config-cluster
Need help?
Do you have a question about the CLUSTER SUITE FOR ENTERPRISE LINUX 5.1 and is the answer not in the manual?
Questions and answers