lspartnershipcandidate

Use the lspartnershipcandidate command to list the clustered systems available for setting up a partnership with the local system. This is a prerequisite for creating inter-system Metro or Global Mirror relationships.

Syntax

 lspartnershipcandidate    [  -nohdr  ]   [  -delim   delimiter  ]

Parameters

-nohdr
(Optional) By default, headings are displayed for each column of data in a concise style view, and for each item of data in a detailed style view. The -nohdr parameter suppresses the display of these headings.
Note: If there is no data to be displayed, headings are not displayed.
-delimdelimiter
(Optional) By default in a concise view, all columns of data are space-separated. The width of each column is set to the maximum possible width of each item of data. In a detailed view, each item of data has its own row, and if the headers are displayed, the data is separated from the header by a space. The -delim parameter overrides this behavior. Valid input for the -delim parameter is a one-byte character. If you enter -delim : on the command line, the colon character (:) separates all items of data in a concise view; for example, the spacing of columns does not occur. In a detailed view, the data is separated from its header by the specified delimiter.

Description

This command displays a list of systems that are available as candidate partner systems to form a Metro Mirror or Global Mirror partnership between two systems.

Output from the command shows the system ID, name, and configured status of the remote candidate system. The remote candidate system forms a partnership with the local system when you use the mkippartnership or mkfcpartnership command. The remote system shows the partnership status as partially_configured_local_stopped or partially_configured_local when you use the lssystem command. The lspartnershipcandidate command displays the configured status of those remote systems that have formed a partnership with the local system.

An invocation example

lspartnershipcandidate

The resulting output:

id               configured     system_name
0000010034E0F430 no             ldsystem26