HP P9000 Command View Advanced Edition Suite Software 7.4.0-00 Administrator Guide (web) (TB581-96325, December 2012)

Table Of Contents
CAUTION:
For ordinary use, you do not need to change the values set in the property files of a Device
Manager server.
Use extreme caution when you are modifying the values, because you can cause the server to fail
or to function incorrectly. Do not modify the values unless you have sufficient expertise.
The default values are set during a new installation.
If you perform an overwrite or upgrade installation, values set in the property files of a Device
Manager server before the installation are inherited.
Changing Device Manager server properties
Use a text editor to edit the property files of a Device Manager server.
Operations to complete in advance
Logging in with administrator permissions (for Windows) or as a root user (for Linux)
To change the Device Manager server properties:
1. Stop the services of P9000 Command View AE Suite product.
In Windows:
Select Start > All Programs > HP P9000 Command View Advanced Edition Suite > Manage
Services > Stop.
In Linux:
installation-directory-for-Common-Component/bin/hcmdssrv -stop
2. Use a text editor to specify the appropriate values in the Device Manager server property files.
3. Start the services of P9000 Command View AE Suite product.
In Windows:
Select Start > All Programs > HP P9000 Command View Advanced Edition Suite > Manage
Services > Start.
In Linux:
installation-directory-for-Common-Component/bin/hcmdssrv -start
Syntax rules for Device Manager server property files
The property files are in the Java property file format.
Property files must be created according to the following description conventions:
Each property must be entered as a combination of a property name and value separated by an
equals sign (=). For example, foo.bar=12345.
Each property must be separated by a line delimiter (a line feed character).
A line beginning with a hash mark (#) is a comment line.
You do not need to insert quotation marks around literals (text strings or numerical values).
The backslash (\) is reserved as an escape character. Since absolute path names in Windows
include backslashes, you must add an escape character before every backslash in a Windows
path name.
Device Manager server properties346