Open System Services Management and Operations Guide (G06.29+, H06.07+)
Operating the OSS Environment
Open System Services Management and Operations Guide—527191-005
2-6
Manually Restarting the OSS File System and the
OSS Environment
For information about shell scripts, see the Open System Services User’s Guide. For
information about the wall command, see the wall(1) reference page either online
or in the Open System Services Shell and Utilities Reference Manual.
You should also follow your site’s broadcast message procedures to warn users who
log in through TACL to use OSS files from Guardian environment processes.
Manually Restarting the OSS File System and the OSS
Environment
Restarting the OSS file system or OSS environment should be a rare occurrence.
Follow these steps:
1. If the OSS Monitor is not running, start it as described under Starting the OSS
Monitor on page 2-7.
2. Unless you have configured the root fileset for automatic restart, check the integrity
of the root fileset if you have not done so recently. Use the SCF DIAGNOSE
FILESET command, as described in Checking and Repairing Fileset Integrity on
page 5-24.
3. If you have not configured the root fileset for automatic restart, restart the OSS file
system by starting the root fileset with the SCF START FILESET Command.
4. If you have not configured filesets for automatic restart, restart all other filesets in
the order of their mount points within the OSS file system; proceed in top-down
order, beginning with the filesets mounted on the root fileset.
5. If you have not configured servers for automatic restart, restart all servers
managed by the OSS Monitor as described in Starting a Server on page 4-36.
Managing the OSS Subsystem
Managing the OSS subsystem involves the tasks described in:
•
Starting the OSS Monitor on page 2-7
•
Stopping the OSS Monitor on page 2-15
•
Obtaining Information About the OSS Subsystem on page 2-15
•
Changing the OSS Subsystem Configuration on page 2-18
•
Enabling the Automatic Startup Service on page 2-18
To a system manager, the OSS subsystem consists of the OSS Monitor and all
processes started by or through the OSS Monitor. That view of the OSS subsystem is
used throughout this guide.
To a system operator, the OSS subsystem consists of all processes in the OSS
environment that log operator messages. Only one subsystem identifier exists for all