o2cb_ctl (8) Linux Manual Page
o2cb_ctl – Control program for the O2CB cluster service.
Synopsis
o2cb_ctl -C -n object -t type [-i] [-a attribute ]
o2cb_ctl -D -n object [-u]
o2cb_ctl -I [-o-z] -l manager> [-n object>] [-t type] [-a attribute]
o2cb_ctl -H [-n object] [-t type>] [-a attribute>]
o2cb_ctl -h
o2cb_ctl -V
Description
o2cb_ctl is the control program for the O2CB cluster service. Users are not advised to use this program directly but instead use the O2CB init service and/or ocfs2console.
Options
-C- Create an object in the OCFS2 Cluster Configuration.
-D- Delete an object from the existing OCFS2 Cluster Configuration.
-I- Print information about the OCFS2 Cluster Configuration.
-H- Change an object or objects in the existing OCFS2 Cluster Configuration.
-h- Displays help and exit.
-V- Print version and exit.
Other Options
-a<attribute>- With
-C, <attribute> is in format "parameter=value", where the parameter is a valid parameter that can be set in the file /etc/ocfs2/cluster.conf. With-I, <attribute> may be "parameter", indicating an attribute to be listed in the output, or it may be "parameter==value", indicating that only objects matching "parameter=value" are to be displayed. -i- Valid only with
-C. When creating something (node or cluster), it will also install it in the live cluster. If the parameter is not specified, then only update the /etc/ocfs2/cluster.conf. -nobject- object is usually the node name or cluster name. In the /etc/ocfs2/cluster.conf file, it would be the value of the name parameter for any of the sections (cluster or node).
-o- Valid only with
-I. Using this parameter, if one asks o2cb_ctl to list all nodes, it will output it in a format suitable for shell parsing. -ttype- type can be cluster, node or heartbeat.
-u- Valid only with
-D. When deleting something (node or cluster), it will also remove it from the live cluster. If the parameter is not specified, then only update the /etc/ocfs2/cluster.conf. -z- Valid only with
-I. This is the default. If one asks o2cb_ctl to list all nodes, it will give a verbose listing.
Examples
- Add node5 to an offline cluster: $ o2cb_ctl -C -n node5 -t node -a number=5
-a ip_address=192.168.0.5 -a ip_port=7777 -a cluster=mycluster - Add node10 to an online cluster:
- $ o2cb_ctl -C -i -n node10 -t node -a number=10
-a ip_address=192.168.1.10 -a ip_port=7777 -a cluster=mycluster
Note the -i argument. - Query the IP address of node5:
- $ o2cb_ctl -I -n node5 -a ip_address
- Change the IP address of node5:
- $ o2cb_ctl -H -n node5 -a ip_address=192.168.1.5
See Also
mkfs.ocfs2(8)fsck.ocfs2(8)tunefs.ocfs2(8)mounted.ocfs2(8)ocfs2console(8)o2cb(7)Authors
Oracle Corporation
Copyright
Copyright © 2004, 2009 Oracle. All rights reserved.
