Use the lsservicenodes command to display a list of all the nodes that can be serviced by using the service assistant CLI.
Attribute | Value |
---|---|
panel_name | Indicates the front panel name, enclosure IDs, or canister IDs that identify
the node. Note: You can find out the panel_name for each of your nodes by issuing
lsservicenodes.
|
cluster_id | Indicates the system ID. Blank if node is a candidate; otherwise, the value is determined from vpd_cluster. |
cluster_name | Indicates the system name. The value is blank if node is a candidate; otherwise, the value is determined from vpd_cluster. |
node_id | Indicates the node ID. The value is blank if node is a candidate; otherwise, the value is determined from vpd_cluster. |
node_name | Indicates the node name. The value is blank if node is a candidate; otherwise, the value is determined from vpd_cluster. |
relation | Indicates the relationship. The values are:
|
node_status | Indicates the node status.
|
error_data | Indicates the outstanding error and error data, by priority. |
sainfo lsservicenodes
The resulting output:
panel_name cluster_id cluster_name node_id node_name relation node_status error_data 01-1 0000020073C0A0D4 Cluster_9.180.28.82 1 node1 local Active 01-2 0000020073C0A0D4 Cluster_9.180.28.82 2 node2 partner Active