Nice ! RTFM, shall never say it enough. Thank you. -- .`'`. GouNiNi : ': : `. ` .` GNU/Linux `'` http://www.geekarea.fr ----- Mail original ----- > De: "emmanuel segura" <emi2fast@xxxxxxxxx> > À: "linux clustering" <linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx> > Envoyé: Dimanche 12 Août 2012 22:34:23 > Objet: Re: How to see what node is the master for quorum disk? > > > The easy way ;-) > > mkqdisk -d -L > > > 2012/8/12 Arpit Tolani < arpittolani@xxxxxxxxx > > > > Hello > > > On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 3:18 PM, Gianluca Cecchi < > gianluca.cecchi@xxxxxxxxx > wrote: > > > Hello, > in qdiskd.log I get at cluster startup the node that becomes master > for quorum disk. > config is in fact something like > > <quorumd device="xxxx" ... log_facility="local4" log_level="7" ... > > > and in syslog.conf > # qdisk logging > local4.* /var/log/qdiskd.log > > The file is rotated so after some time I have only empty qdiskd.log.N > files. > Is there any command to get which node is the master at this moment? > > Thanks, > Gianluca > > > > One way is to search the group_tool output: $ group_tool | grep > "master node" | awk '{print $3 }' Did you added status_file option > in quorumd ? Try something like below. > <quorumd interval="1" tko="5" votes="2" log_level="7" > device="/dev/vg01/lv01" status_file="/var/log/qdisk-status.log"> > <heuristic program="ping 192.168.1.1 -c2 -t2 -w1" score="1" > interval="5"/> > </quorumd> > > > Regards > Arpit Tolani > > -- > Linux-cluster mailing list > Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster > > > > -- > esta es mi vida e me la vivo hasta que dios quiera > > -- > Linux-cluster mailing list > Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster