Difference between revisions of "Set up an Oracle Cluster File System"
From Linuxintro
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Make the cluster services start at boot | Make the cluster services start at boot | ||
/etc/init.d/o2cb enable | /etc/init.d/o2cb enable | ||
+ | You get a message "cluster not known". That is okay. | ||
establish [[passwordless login]] between all nodes. | establish [[passwordless login]] between all nodes. | ||
Start ocfs2console, write the cluster nodes in with their local host names (what the command "hostname" return). | Start ocfs2console, write the cluster nodes in with their local host names (what the command "hostname" return). |
Revision as of 08:10, 30 April 2010
You want to start your clustering experiences with an Oracle Cluster File System. Here is how. This is an example using SUSE Linux 11.2. As shared storage we use an iscsi storage.
Configure your iscsi initiator, install everything that yast proposes:
yast2 iscsi-client
Install ocfs2 software
yast -i ocfs2-tools ocfsconsole ocfs2-tools-o2cb
Make the cluster services start at boot
/etc/init.d/o2cb enable
You get a message "cluster not known". That is okay.
establish passwordless login between all nodes.
Start ocfs2console, write the cluster nodes in with their local host names (what the command "hostname" return).