Designing Disaster Tolerant High Availability Clusters, 10th Edition, March 2003 (B7660-90013)

Building a Continental Cluster
Maintaining a Continental Cluster
Chapter 5268
3. Ensure that the /.rhosts file on all nodes (including the new node)
contains an entry allowing write access by the host on which you are
running the configuration commands.
4. Use the cmapplyconcl command to apply the new configuration.
5. Restart the monitor packages on both clusters.
6. View the status of the continental cluster.
# cmviewconcl
Checking the Status of Clusters, Nodes, and Packages
To check on the status of the continental clusters and associated
packages, use the cmviewconcl command. The command lists the status
of the clusters, associated package status, and configured events status.
The following is an example of cmviewconcl output in a situation where
there is a single recovery group for which the primary cluster is cjc838
and the recovery cluster is cjc1234.
# cmviewconcl
WARNING: Primary cluster cjc838 is in an alarm state
(cmrecovercl is enabled on recovery cluster cjc1234)
CONTINENTAL CLUSTER cjccc1
RECOVERY CLUSTER cjc1234
PRIMARY CLUSTER STATUS EVENT LEVEL POLLING INTERVAL
cjc838 down ALARM 20
PACKAGE RECOVERY GROUP prg1
PACKAGE ROLE STATUS
cjc838/primary primary down
cjc1234/recovery recovery up
The following is an example of cmviewconcl output from a primary
cluster that it down.
persian (root 2131): cmviewconcl -v
WARNING: Primary cluster cjc838 is in an alarm state
(cmrecovercl is enabled on recovery cluster cjc1234)
Primary cluster cjc838 is not configured to monitor recovery