STATE_DISABLEDSTATE_ENABLEDFEATURE_ASM_CONFIGURATIONFEATURE_CLUSTER_MEMBERFEATURE_CLUSTER_MIN_UP_MEMBERSFEATURE_CLUSTER_TIME_SYNCFEATURE_DAEMONFEATURE_DAEMON_HEARTBEATFEATURE_FIPSFEATURE_FORCED_OFFLINEFEATURE_GROUP_SCOREFEATURE_HARDWARE_FAILOVERFEATURE_HSBFEATURE_LICENSEFEATURE_MPIFEATURE_MYSQLFEATURE_NETWORK_FAILOVERFEATURE_OVERDOGFEATURE_PEER_GROUP_SCOREFEATURE_POOL_MIN_UP_MEMBERSFEATURE_REBOOTFEATURE_SECONDARY_SODFEATURE_SOD_CONFIGURATIONFEATURE_SOFTWARE_UPDATEFEATURE_SWITCHBOARDFEATURE_TMM_DETECTEDFEATURE_TMM_READYFEATURE_UNKNOWNFEATURE_VLANFEATURE_HYPERVISOR_OFFLINEFEATURE_COMPRESSION_FAILSAFEFEATURE_CRYPTO_FAILSAFEHA_ACTION_NONEHA_ACTION_REBOOTHA_ACTION_RESTARTHA_ACTION_FAILOVERHA_ACTION_FAILOVER_RESTARTHA_ACTION_GO_ACTIVEHA_ACTION_RESTART_ALLHA_ACTION_FAILOVER_ABORT_TRAFFIC_MGTHA_ACTION_GO_OFFLINEHA_ACTION_GO_OFFLINE_RESTARTHA_ACTION_GO_OFFLINE_ABORT_TMHA_ACTION_GO_OFFLINE_DOWNLINKSHA_ACTION_GO_OFFLINE_DOWNLINKS_RESTART
Gets the identifiers of all table entries for a set of High
Availability status tables
Gets the action that should be taken when the "action required"
state is set for a set of table entries.
Gets the state to take action to resolve the high availability
feature failure for a set of table entries.
For example, if the VLAN failsafe feature determined that the VLAN
had failed, it would set this to yes, which would cause the daemon
to execute the action assigned to the feature, such as rebooting
the system.
Gets the feature-specific data for a set of table entries.
The meaning of this value varies according to the feature. For
daemon heartbeats, for example, this value shows the daemon's
current heartbeat value. This is documented with the feature
enumeration values.
Gets the state to enable the high availability feature for a set of
table entries.
Gets the state to signal a high availability failure for a set of
table entries.
For a properly fully functioning system, no feature should set
"failure". Thus retrieving a list of features with this flag set
will quickly show any high availability problems on the system.
Gets the timeout for a set of table entries.
The precise meaning of this value varies according to the feature,
but in general, it is the elapsed time between when the feature's
error state is detected and when the corresponding action is taken.
Gets the version information for this interface.
Gets the identifiers of all table entries for a set of High
Availability status tables
Gets the action that should be taken when the "action required"
state is set for a set of table entries.
Gets the state to take action to resolve the high availability
feature failure for a set of table entries.
For example, if the VLAN failsafe feature determined that the VLAN
had failed, it would set this to yes, which would cause the daemon
to execute the action assigned to the feature, such as rebooting
the system.
Gets the feature-specific data for a set of table entries.
The meaning of this value varies according to the feature. For
daemon heartbeats, for example, this value shows the daemon's
current heartbeat value. This is documented with the feature
enumeration values.
Gets the state to enable the high availability feature for a set of
table entries.
Gets the state to signal a high availability failure for a set of
table entries.
For a properly fully functioning system, no feature should set
"failure". Thus retrieving a list of features with this flag set
will quickly show any high availability problems on the system.
Gets the timeout for a set of table entries.
The precise meaning of this value varies according to the feature,
but in general, it is the elapsed time between when the feature's
error state is detected and when the corresponding action is taken.
Gets the version information for this interface.
The High Availability (HA) status table is a one-stop destination to
retrieve the current status of the high availability features on either
the current system or its redundant peer system. The table holds an
entry for each feature active on the system.
It is important to note that this table can only be read. Enabling and
controlling these features is possible through other interfaces, as
documented in the Feature enumeration values.