stoprpdomain Command

Purpose

Takes an online peer domain offline.

Syntax

stoprpdomain [-f] [-h] [-TV] peer_domain

Description

The stoprpdomain command takes all of the nodes that are currently online in the peer domain offline. The peer domain definition is not removed from the nodes.

The command must be run on a node that is online in the peer domain. If the command is run on a node that is offline to the peer domain, no action is performed.

If a Cluster-Aware AIX® (CAA) cluster is configured, no action is performed because a peer domain operation in a CAA environment exists and is online for the life of the CAA cluster.

The -f flag must be used to override a subsystems rejection of the request to take the peer domain offline. A subsystem may reject the request if a peer domain resource is busy, such as in the case of a shared disk. Specifying the -f flag in this situation indicates to the subsystems that the peer domain must be brought offline regardless of the resource state.

Flags

-f
Forces the subsystems to accept the stop request when it otherwise would not.
-h
Writes the command's usage statement to standard output.
-T
Writes the command's trace messages to standard error. For your software service organization's use only.
-V
Writes the command's verbose messages to standard output.

Parameters

peer_domain
Specifies the name of the online peer domain that is to be brought offline.

Security

The user of the stoprpdomain command needs write permission for the IBM.PeerDomain resource class on each node that is defined to the peer domain. By default, root on any node in the peer domain has read and write access to this resource class through the configuration resource manager.

Exit Status

0
The command ran successfully.
1
An error occurred with RMC.
2
An error occurred with a command-line interface script.
3
An incorrect flag was entered on the command line.
4
An incorrect parameter was entered on the command line.
5
An error occurred that was based on incorrect command-line input.
6
The peer domain definition does not exist.

Environment Variables

CT_CONTACT
Determines the system where the session with the resource monitoring and control (RMC) daemon occurs. When CT_CONTACT is set to a host name or IP address, the command contacts the RMC daemon on the specified host. If CT_CONTACT is not set, the command contacts the RMC daemon on the local system where the command is being run. The target of the RMC daemon session and the management scope determine the resource classes or resources that are processed.
CT_IP_AUTHENT
When the CT_IP_AUTHENT environment variable exists, the RMC daemon uses IP-based network authentication to contact the RMC daemon on the system that is specified by the IP address to which the CT_CONTACT environment variable is set. CT_IP_AUTHENT only has meaning if CT_CONTACT is set to an IP address; it does not rely on the domain name system (DNS) service.

Restrictions

This command must be run on a node that is online in the peer domain.

Implementation Specifics

This command is part of the rsct.basic.rte fileset for AIX®.

Standard Input

When the -f "-" or -F "-" flag is specified, this command reads one or more node names from standard input.

Standard Output

When the -h flag is specified, this command's usage statement is written to standard output. All verbose messages are written to standard output.

Standard Error

All trace messages are written to standard error.

Examples

In these examples, nodeA is one of the nodes defined and is online to ApplDomain.
  1. To take ApplDomain offline, run this command on nodeA:
    stoprpdomain ApplDomain
  2. To take ApplDomain offline while making sure the stop request will not be rejected by any subsystem, run this command on nodeA:
    stoprpdomain -f ApplDomain

Location

/usr/sbin/rsct/bin/stoprpdomain