Managing HP Serviceguard for Linux Ninth Edition, April 2009

them. You can preview the effect on packages of certain actions or events before they
actually occur.
For example, you might want to check to see if the packages are placed as you expect
when the cluster first comes up; or preview what happens to the packages running on
a given node if the node halts, or if the node is then restarted; or you might want to
see the effect on other packages if another, currently disabled, package is enabled, or
if a package halts and cannot restart because none of the nodes on its node_list is
available.
Serviceguard provides two ways to do this: you can use the preview mode of
Serviceguard commands, or you can use the cmeval (1m) command to simulate
different cluster states.
Alternatively, you might want to model changes to the cluster as a whole; cmeval
allows you to do this; see “Using cmeval” (page 243).
What You Can Preview
You can preview any of the following, or all of them simultaneously:
Cluster bring-up (cmruncl)
Cluster node state changes (cmrunnode, cmhaltnode)
Package state changes (cmrunpkg, cmhaltpkg)
Package movement from one node to another
Package switching changes (cmmodpkg -e)
Availability of package subnets, resources, and storage
Changes in package priority, node order, dependency, failover and failback policy,
node capacity and package weight
Using Preview mode for Commands and in Serviceguard Manager
The following commands support the -t option, which allows you to run the command
in preview mode:
cmhaltnode [t] [f] <node_name>
cmrunnode [t] <node_name>
cmhaltpkg [t] <package_name>
cmrunpkg [t] [-n node_name] <package_name>
cmmodpkg { -e [-t] | -d } [-n node_name] <package_name>
cmruncl v [t]
242 Cluster and Package Maintenance