Hello!
I have a question:
Inspecting the XML of our cluster, I noticed that there are several IDs ending
with "last_0". So I wondered:
It seems those IDs are generated for start and stop operations, and I
discovered one case where an ID is duplicate (the status is for different
nodes, and one i
On 06/01/2016 06:14 AM, Ulrich Windl wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I have a question:
> Inspecting the XML of our cluster, I noticed that there are several IDs
> ending with "last_0". So I wondered:
> It seems those IDs are generated for start and stop operations, and I
> discovered one case where an ID i
For anyone playing with the new alerts feature, there is one difference
from the old ClusterMon external scripts to be aware of.
Resource agents such as ClusterMon run as root, so ClusterMon's external
scripts also run as root.
The new alert scripts are run as the hacluster user. So if you are us
FYI, the ocf:pacemaker:controld (DLM) resource agent released with
Pacemaker 1.1.15-rc3 has an issue. It will work with an upstream patch
applied to DLM, but not with existing DLM versions.
This has been fixed as of commit 2c148ac, which will be in rc4. It
requires a stonith_admin enhancement, so
Hello all,
I have just finished setting up my HA nfs cluster and I am having a small
problem. I would like to have nfs4 working but whenever I try to mount I
get the following message,
mount: no type was given - I'll assume nfs because of the colon
mount.nfs: timeout set for Wed Jun 1 10:08:45 2
On 01.06.2016 20:25, Stephano-Shachter, Dylan wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I have just finished setting up my HA nfs cluster and I am having a small
> problem. I would like to have nfs4 working but whenever I try to mount I
> get the following message,
>
> mount: no type was given - I'll assume nfs be
>>> Ken Gaillot schrieb am 01.06.2016 um 16:14 in
>>> Nachricht
<574eede2.1090...@redhat.com>:
> On 06/01/2016 06:14 AM, Ulrich Windl wrote:
>> Hello!
>>
>> I have a question:
>> Inspecting the XML of our cluster, I noticed that there are several IDs
> ending with "last_0". So I wondered:
>> It