25.01.2013 Views

Oracle Database Oracle Clusterware Installation Guide for HP-UX

Oracle Database Oracle Clusterware Installation Guide for HP-UX

Oracle Database Oracle Clusterware Installation Guide for HP-UX

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Confirming <strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> Function<br />

Note that you must have the passphrase used to set up SSH. If you are not the<br />

person who set up SSH, then obtain the passphrase. Note also that the .ssh folder<br />

in the user home that is per<strong>for</strong>ming the installation must be set with 600<br />

permissions.<br />

In addition, confirm group membership by entering the id command, and entering<br />

ID username. For example:<br />

$ id<br />

$ id oracle<br />

Incorrect permissions on partitions used <strong>for</strong> OCR or Voting Disks<br />

Cause: The user account per<strong>for</strong>ming the installation (oracle or crs) does not have<br />

permission to write to these partitions<br />

Action: Make the partitions writable by the user per<strong>for</strong>ming installation. For<br />

example, use the command chown user to make the selected partitions writable by<br />

the user (oracle or crs) per<strong>for</strong>ming the installation. During installation, these<br />

permissions are changed to root ownership.<br />

6.4 Confirming <strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> Function<br />

After installation, log in as root, and use the following command syntax to confirm<br />

that your <strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> installation is installed and running correctly:<br />

CRS_home/bin/crs_stat -t -v<br />

For example:<br />

[root@node1 /]:/u01/app/crs/bin/crs_stat -t -v<br />

Name a Type R/RA F/FT Target State Host<br />

crs....ac3.gsd application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node1<br />

crs....ac3.ons application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node1<br />

crs....ac3.vip application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node1<br />

crs....ac3.gsd application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node2<br />

crs....ac3.ons application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node2<br />

crs....ac3.vip application 0/5 0/0 Online Online node2<br />

You can also use the command crsctl check crs <strong>for</strong> a less detailed system check. <strong>for</strong><br />

example:<br />

[root@node1 bin] $ ./crsctl check crs<br />

Cluster Synchronization Services appears healthy<br />

Cluster Ready Services appears healthy<br />

Event Manager appears healthy<br />

Caution: After installation is complete, do not remove manually or<br />

run cron jobs that remove /tmp/.oracle or /var/tmp/.oracle or<br />

its files while <strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> is up. If you remove these files, then<br />

<strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> could encounter intermittent hangs, and you will<br />

encounter error CRS-0184: Cannot communicate with the CRS<br />

daemon.<br />

Installing <strong>Oracle</strong> <strong>Clusterware</strong> 6-9

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!