If you "disable" a service it won't start up again
without manual intervention, like with "clusvcadm -e...". If you "stop" a
service and let's say the node it was running on was rebooted, your service will
start up on another node in the cluster if it was configured to do
so.
Greg
Charles
gcharles@xxxxxxx
From: linux-cluster-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:linux-cluster-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jankowski, Chris
Sent: Sunday, December 05, 2010 8:24 PM
To: linux clustering
Subject: Difference between -d and -s options of clusvcadm
Hi,
What is the difference between –d and –s options of clusvcadm? When
would I prefer using one over the other?
The manual page for clusvcadm(8) says:
-d <service> Stops and disables
the user service named <service>
-s <service> Stops
the service named <service> until a member transition or until it is
enabled again.
I also read the manual page for rgmanager(8), but the usefulness of the
distinction between stopped and disabled states escapes me.
Thanks and regards,
Chris
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