This appendix explains the resident process in GLS and the monitoring target.
Resident Process in GLS
Process name | Function | Resident |
---|---|---|
/opt/FJSVhanet/etc/sbin/hanetctld | GLS control daemon | Resident |
/opt/FJSVhanet/etc/sbin/hanetmond | Monitors the status of the GLS control daemon and the sha driver. | Non-resident |
/opt/FJSVhanet/etc/sbin/hanetpathmd | Monitors the network in the Virtual NIC mode. | Non-resident |
/opt/FJSVhanet/etc/sbin/hanetselect | Monitors the transfer path in the NIC switching mode and the GS linkage mode. | Non-resident |
GLS: Global Link Services
Note
The following are not resident processes because the processes stop if an error is detected when a virtual interface is stopped.
hanetmond
hanetpathmd
hanetselect
Monitoring Target
Process name | Function | Number of processes |
---|---|---|
/opt/FJSVhanet/etc/sbin/hanetctld | GLS control daemon | 1 to 3 |
GLS: Global Link Services
Note
In the following cases, the GLS control daemon is restarted, so the process may not temporarily exist.
Restarting GLS by using the resethanet -s command
Restarting GLS service (fjsvhanet.service)
The number of processes of the GLS control daemon is usually one. However, it may be temporarily two or three when a child process is started.