HP 1032 Manual page 131

Clusterpack v2.4 tutorial
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new command will not begin until the previous one is finished, i.e. these do not run in parallel.
Sending a SIGINT (usually a ^C) will cause the current host to be skipped, and sending a
SIGQUIT (usually a ^\) will immediately abort the whole clsh command.
Percent interpolation, as in clcp, is also supported.
clsh exits wth a non-zero status if there are problems running the remote shell commands. A
summary of hosts on which problems occurred is printed at the end.
clsh is used as follows:
% clsh [-C cluster-group] [options] cmd [args]
Examples
To grep for something on all hosts in the cluster:
% clsh grep pattern files ...
To append something to a file on all machines:
% clsh -i "cat >> file" < addendum
To run a command with a five second timeout on all the hosts in the cluster group "hp",
directing output into separate files:
% clsh -o -t5 -C hp date
% clsh -o -t5 hp date
A cluster name without a -C must follow all flag arguments.
For more details on the usage of clsh, invoke the command:
% man clsh
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3.1.6 clcp - Copies files to one, some, or all cluster nodes.
clcp copies files between nodes in the cluster using rcp. Each file for directory argument is
either a remote file name of the form "%h:path", "cluster:path", or a local file name
(containing no ":" characters).
clcp can do the following types of copies:

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