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

Building a Continental Cluster
Maintaining a Continental Cluster
Chapter 5 273
You can also review the monitor startup and shutdown log file
/etc/cmcluster/ccmonpkg/ccmonpkg.cntl.log on any node where a
ContinentalClusters monitor has been running. Information about the
primary or recovery packages may be found in their respective startup
and shutdown log files.
Messages from the ContinentalClusters daemon are reported in log file
/var/adm/cmconcl/sentryd.log, and Object Manager messages
appear in /var/opt/cmom/cmomd.log. These messages may be helpful
in troubleshooting. Use the cmreadlog command to view the entries in
these files. Examples:
# /opt/cmom/tools/bin/cmreadlog -f
/var/adm/cmconcl/sentryd.log slog.txt
# /opt/cmom/tools/bin/cmreadlog -f /var/opt/cmom/cmomd.log
omlog.txt
The following is sample output from the cmreadlog command for the
sentryd.log file:
Oct 20 18:28:22:[[main,5,main]]:FATAL:dr.sentryd:No
continental cluster found on this node
Oct 22 13:38:45:[[Thread-309,5,main]]:ERROR:dr.sentryd:Error
connecting to axe28
Oct 22
13:38:45:[[Thread-309,5,main]]:ERROR:dr.sentryd:Connection
refused
Oct 22
13:38:45:[[Thread-309,5,main]]:INFO:dr.sentryd:Connection
failed to axe28
Oct 22 13:38:45:[[Thread-311,5,main]]:ERROR:dr.sentryd:Cannot
find cluster KC-cluster at location axe29
Oct 22 13:38:45:[[Thread-311,5,main]]:ERROR:dr.sentryd:null
result
from query
General information about MC/ServiceGuard operation is found in
/var/adm/syslog/syslog.log.
Deleting a Continental Cluster Configuration
The cmdeleteconcl command is used to delete the configuration on all
nodes in the continental cluster configuration. To delete a continental
cluster use the following command: