Hi Andrew, > globally-unique=false" means that :0 and :1 are actually the same resource. > its perfectly valid for entries for both to exist on the node, but the > PE should fold them together internally. > > in most ways it does, just not for failures (yet).
Thank you for comment. Some we were confused. In the first place, by setting of "globally-unique", what kind of difference is there? In addition, what kind of place do you use it in? Best Regards, Hideo Yamauchi. --- Andrew Beekhof <and...@beekhof.net> wrote: > 2010/3/24 <renayama19661...@ybb.ne.jp>: > > Hi Andrew, > > > >> Do you mean: why is the clone on srv01 always $clone:0 but on srv02 > >> its sometimes $clone:0 and sometimes $clone:1 ? > > > > yes. > > > > The replacement thought both nodes to be the same movement. > > Because it is "globally-unique=false"..... > > globally-unique=false" means that :0 and :1 are actually the same resource. > its perfectly valid for entries for both to exist on the node, but the > PE should fold them together internally. > > in most ways it does, just not for failures (yet). > > _______________________________________________ > Pacemaker mailing list > Pacemaker@oss.clusterlabs.org > http://oss.clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/pacemaker > _______________________________________________ Pacemaker mailing list Pacemaker@oss.clusterlabs.org http://oss.clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/pacemaker