Cluster I/O Protocols (CIP) Configuration and Management Manual (H06.16+, J06.05+)
CIP E00004 Duplicate attribute specified.
Probable Cause
You specified an attribute more than once in a command.
Recommended Action
Omit the duplicate attribute and retry the command.
5>
LISTDEV CIP and LISTDEV TCPIP
When you need to obtain a list of CIP processes, use the LISTDEV CIP command. The SCF LISTDEV
CIP command lists all the CIP processes and the SCF LISTDEV TCPIP command lists all the TCP/IP
processes (including conventional TCP/IP and NonStop TCP/IPv6, if present). A program name
in the SCF LISTDEV display of CIPSAM indicates a CIP socket access method process.
CIPMAN SCF Commands
ABORT Commands
ABORT is a sensitive command used to halt the operation of the specified object even if it has
existing users. If any sockets are using the object, a warning is first issued and the operator must
confirm that execution is desired, unless the FORCED option is specified. The object is left in the
STOPPED state if the command succeeds.
ABORT CLIM
The ABORT CLIM command stops operations on the specified CLIM even if it has open sockets.
Existing sockets are closed and the CLIM refuses all new connections that would have been directed
to the NonStop host system. If the associated PROVIDER object is in the STARTED state, that provider
goes to the STARTING state.
ABORT CLIM Command Syntax
ABORT CLIM $ZZCIP.clim-name [,FORCED ][,INTFALL]
clim-name
Is the name of the CLIM to abort. A wildcard can specify a set of the CLIMs known to this
system.
FORCED
Causes the command to execute without displaying a warning and request for operator
confirmation.
INTFALL
Causes all interfaces configured on the specified CLIM to be stopped, even the ones that are
running on other CLIMs due to failover. This option works even if the specified CLIM(s) are
already in the STOPPED state.
Example 23: ABORT CLIM ends operation of N1002532.
Example 23 ABORT CLIM
> ABORT CLIM $ZZCIP.N1002532
Open sockets still exist, okay to continue? Y
ABORT MON
The ABORT MON command terminates the operation of the CIPMON process, even if it has open
sockets, clearing all connections and closing all sockets on its processor. If the process has been
224 SCF Reference for CIP










