3. Creating fence devices. Refer to
Section 4, “Configuring Fence Devices”
.
4. Creating cluster members. Refer to
Section 5, “Adding and Deleting Members”
.
5. Creating failover domains. Refer to
Section 6, “Configuring a Failover Domain”
.
6. Creating resources. Refer to
Section 7, “Adding Cluster Resources”
.
7. Creating cluster services.
Refer to
Section 8, “Adding a Cluster Service to the Cluster”
.
8. Propagating the configuration file to the other nodes in the cluster.
Refer to
Section 9, “Propagating The Configuration File: New Cluster”
.
9. Starting the cluster software. Refer to
Section 10, “Starting the Cluster Software”
.
2. Starting the Cluster Configuration Tool
You can start the Cluster Configuration Tool by logging in to a cluster node as root with the
ssh -Y
command and issuing the
system-config-cluster
command. For example, to start
the Cluster Configuration Tool on cluster node nano-01, do the following:
1. Log in to a cluster node and run
system-config-cluster
. For example:
$
ssh -Y root@nano-01
.
.
.
# system-config-cluster
2. If this is the first time you have started the Cluster Configuration Tool, the program prompts
you to either open an existing configuration or create a new one. Click Create New
Configuration to start a new configuration file (refer to
Figure 5.1, “Starting a New
Configuration File”
).
Chapter 5. Configuring Red Hat Cluster With
system-config-cluster
54
Summary of Contents for CLUSTER FOR ENTERPRISE LINUX 5.0
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