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тАО08-11-2006 06:43 PM
тАО08-11-2006 06:43 PM
Which command will help me to show which cluster my node belongs to.
thanks in advance
jees Joy
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО08-11-2006 07:33 PM
тАО08-11-2006 07:33 PM
Solutionan OpenVMS cluster itself does not have a 'name'. It consists of a number of OpenVMS nodes. You can show the nodes in a cluster with:
$ SHOW CLUSTER
$ SHOW SYSTEM/CLUSTER/NOPROCESS
The cluster may be accessed via various network protocols (DECnet, LAT, TCPIP) and there may be 'cluster alias names' associated with those network protocols.
Volker.
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тАО08-12-2006 12:40 AM
тАО08-12-2006 12:40 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
As Volker mentioned, SHOW CLUSTER will display the members of your OpenVMS cluster (or at least the ones that your cluster member has seen at some point).
But perhaps your real question has been misphrased? What are you trying to accomplish?
- Bob Gezelter, http://www.rlgsc.com
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тАО08-12-2006 04:23 AM
тАО08-12-2006 04:23 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
from your Forum Profile:
I have assigned points to 18 of 43 responses to my questions.
Maybe you can find some time to do some assigning?
http://forums1.itrc.hp.com/service/forums/helptips.do?#33
Mind, I do NOT say you necessarily need to give lots of points. It is fully up to _YOU_ to decide how many. If you consider an answer is not deserving any points, you can also assign 0 ( = zero ) points, and then that answer will no longer be counted as unassigned.
Consider, that every poster took at least the trouble of posting for you!
To easily find your streams with unassigned points, click your own name somewhere.
This will bring up your profile.
Near the bottom of that page, under the caption "My Question(s)" you will find "questions or topics with unassigned points " Clicking that will give all, and only, your questions that still have unassigned postings.
Thanks on behalf of your Forum colleagues.
PS. - nothing personal in this. I try to post it to everyone with this kind of assignment ratio in this forum. If you have received a posting like this before - please do not take offence - none is intended!
Proost.
Have one on me.
jpe
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тАО08-12-2006 04:37 AM
тАО08-12-2006 04:37 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
but it uses a "cluster group number":
$ run sys$system:sysman
SYSMAN> CONFIGURATION SHOW CLUSTER_AUTHORIZATION
Node NODE21: Cluster group number 65240
Multicast address: AB-00-04-01-F2-FF
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тАО08-13-2006 11:16 AM
тАО08-13-2006 11:16 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
There is also a thing called a cluster alias - DECnet and TCPIP (If installed).
The cluster alias allows DECnet protocols to reach any specific or round robin approach (based on system availability) depending upon how its configured. Some machines for instance wouldnt receive incoming responses yet send out going as the cluster alias. At one stage we had a four 6x00 VAX cluster with the alias set on outbound so that VMSmail etc could be handled and on inbound to that cluster only two of the systems would accept it.
For TCPIP cluster alias, one can set a preferred host as the alias, and then failover if that host was down.
Robert.
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тАО08-18-2006 07:13 AM
тАО08-18-2006 07:13 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
I don't remember any LEXICAL function that gives the cluster name. F$GETSYI can tell if a node is a member of local cluster.
Thanks,
Sastry Karra
MS MBA
OpenVMS Consultant
http://vmspros.freeservers.com
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тАО08-18-2006 07:50 AM
тАО08-18-2006 07:50 AM
Re: know which cluster we are in
Network connected cluster with use
a group number and password. So it will
not always work.
Not all clusters have cluster aliases set up. So that won't always work.
You can have single node clusters.
The real answer depends on what problem you
are trying to solve, and your configuration.
Consequently, we are back to show cluster.
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тАО08-21-2006 03:21 AM
тАО08-21-2006 03:21 AM