
Chapter 1: HP Clustered File System Commands 13
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-e entity
The type of message that you are adding. entity can be
USER1, USER2,
USER3, USER4, USER5, USER6, USER7, or USER8. You will need to
determine how you want to use these entities.
-l level
The severity of the message. level can be
ERROR, WARN, INFO, EVENT,
FATAL, STATE, TRACE, or DEBUG
.
-G|L
-G specifies that the message to be added is global; -L specifies that it
is local. The default is local.
log-text
The text of the message. If log-text contains special characters or
spaces, it must be enclosed in quotation marks.
The following command adds a local message to the matrix.log file:
mxlogger -l info -e User2 “hello, world.”
The message appears like this in the log file:
Server Level Date/time Facility Entity Message
192.168.0.1 [Info] [2001-10-07 14:16:27] User USER2 hello, world
mxmpconf – manage membership partitions
Synopsis
/opt/hpcfs/bin/mxmpconf
NOTE:
HP Clustered File System cannot be running when you use
mxmpconf. To stop the cluster, use the following command:
# /etc/init.d/pmxs stop
Description
The mxmpconf utility starts an ASCII interface that can be used to create
a new set of membership partitions or to repair the existing partitions
Membership partitions control access to the SAN and store the device
naming database, which includes the global device names for SAN disks
imported into the cluster. Each server in the cluster has a membership
partition file, which is called the “local MP list.”
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