Hello, My actions and questions relate to a RHEL 5 RHCS cluster. Though I studied carefully the official RHEL 5 Cluster Admin Guide with special emphasis on the chapter "HA Resource Behavior" there remain certain things unclear to me. First of all, I have to mention that my cluster.conf´s parent-child-sibling hierarchies whithin the service scopes could successfully be checked in as valid cluster configuration (i.e. "ccs_tool update /etc/cluster/cluster.conf" succeeded). My first question is whether it is feasible to use the <resources> tag, which originally is meant to map inheritance, and populate such a block although I don't make any use of inheritance in my configuration? I simply find that its use makes the appearance of the <rm> block much more readable an tidier. Now to my main concern. Would such a <service> block be valid and start and stop resources in the proper order (i.e. according to my intention)? e.g. <rm> <failoverdomains> ... </failoverdomains> <resources> ... </resources> <service name="srv-a" ...> <ip ref="10.20.30.40"> <lvm ref="vg-a" ...> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-a_lv-a"/> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-a_lv-b"/> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-a_lv-c"/> </lvm> <lvm ref="vg_b" ...> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-b_lv-a"/> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-b_lv-b"/> <fs ref="fs_srv-a_vg-b_lv-c"/> </lvm> </ip> <oracledb ref="SID-A"> <script ref="oracle_em" __independent_subtree="1" __max_restarts="2" __restart_expire_time="0"/> </oracledb> </script ref="sid-a_statechg_notify" __independent_subtree="1" __max_restarts="2" __restart_expire_time="0"/> </service> <service name="srv-b" ...> ... </service> </rm> I am asking because I read in the mentioned doc above that for a typed resource (such as ip, lvm, fs,...) there exists a strict start and stop sequence for siblings. In my parent-child hierarchy above I am reversing this start order by making the ip resource a parent of the lvm resource which in sibling context would have a higher starting precedence than the ip resource. Of course I had a second thought in mind when rigging up this seemingly oblique hierarchy of typed resources. Because there are scheduled maintenance downtimes I wanted to ease the activation of a whole bunch of a service's resources like LVM LVs, mountpoints and IP addresses with a single rg_test invocation when a service has previously been disabled. I then could issue according to the above config snippet just a e.g. rg_test test /etc/cluster/cluster.conf start ip 10.20.30.40 and have all resources activated apart from the Oracle DB instance. There is yet another issue that puzzles me. If I look at the starting sequence by issuing rg_test noop /etc/cluster/cluster.conf start service srv-a then the resource script:sid-a_statechg_notify gets executed before the resources oracledb:SID-A and script:oracle_em. This would imply to me that any resource of type script has a higher starting precedence than any resource of type oracledb because in my config above they are siblings. I actually would have thought it to be the other way round, i.e. that script resources have the lowest starting precedence of all. Unfortunately, in Table D.1. "Child Resource Type Start and Stop Order" on page 112 of the cluster administration guide the typed resource oracledb does not appear. Many thanks for your patience having read this far. Regards, Ralph -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster