On 05/15/2012 07:33 PM, Randy Zagar wrote: > <resources> > <ip address="192.168.1.1" monitor_link="1"/> > <ip address="192.168.1.2" monitor_link="1"/> > <ip address="192.168.1.3" monitor_link="1"/> > <fs device="/dev/cvg00/volume01" force_fsck="0" force_unmount="1" fsid="49388" fstype="ext3" mountpoint="/lvm/volume01" name="volume01" self_fence="0"/> > <fs device="/dev/cvg00/volume02" force_fsck="0" force_unmount="1" fsid="58665" fstype="ext3" mountpoint="/lvm/volume01" name="volume01" self_fence="0"/> > <fs device="/dev/cvg00/volume03" force_fsck="0" force_unmount="1" fsid="61028" fstype="ext3" mountpoint="/lvm/volume01" name="volume01" self_fence="0"/> > <nfsclient allow_recover="1" name="local-subnet" options="rw,insecure" target="192.168.1.0/24"/> > </resources> For the <fs resources you want nfslock="1" option too. > <service autostart="1" domain="nfs1-domain" exclusive="0" name="nfs1" nfslock="1" recovery="relocate"> > <ip ref="192.168.1.1"> > <fs __independent_subtree="1" ref="volume01"> > <nfsexport name="nfs-volume01"> > <nfsclient name=" " ref="local-subnet"/> > </nfsexport> > </fs> > </ip> For all services you need to change the order. <fs.. <nfsexport.. <nfsclient.. <ip.. </nfsclient.. </nfsexport.. </fs This solves different issues at startup, relocation and recovery Also note that there is known limitation in nfsd (both rhel5/6) that could cause some problems in some conditions in your current configuration. A permanent fix is being worked on atm. Without extreme details, you might have 2 of those services running on the same node and attempting to relocate one of them can fail because the fs cannot be unmounted. This is due to nfsd holding a lock (at kernel level) to the FS. Changing config to the suggested one, mask the problem pretty well, but more testing for a real fix is in progress. Fabio -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster