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wipe (1)
>> wipe (1) ( Linux man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
NAME
wipe - Shutdown LAM.
SYNTAX
wipe [-bdhv] [-n <#>] [<bhost>]
OPTIONS
-b
Assume local and remote shell are the same. This means that only one
remote shell invocation is used to each node. If
-b
is not used, two remote shell invocations are used to each node.
-d
Turn on debugging mode. This implies -v.
-h
Print the command help menu.
-v
Be verbose.
-n <#>
Wipe only the first <#> nodes.
DESCRIPTION
This command has been deprecated in favor of the
lamhalt
command.
wipe
should only be necessary if
lamhalt
fails and is unable to clean up the LAM run-time environment properly.
The
wipe
tool terminates the LAM software on each of the machines specified in the
boot schema,
<bhost>.
wipe
is the topology tool that terminates LAM on the UNIX(tm) nodes of a
multicomputer system.
It invokes tkill(1) on each machine.
See tkill(1) for a description of how LAM is terminated on
each node.
The
<bhost>
file is a LAM boot schema written in the host file syntax. CPU counts
in the boot schema are ignored by
wipe.
See bhost(5). Instead of the command line, a boot schema can be
specified in the LAMBHOST environment variable. Otherwise a default
file, bhost.def, is used. LAM searches for
<bhost>
first in the local directory and then in the installation directory
under etc/.
wipe
does not quit if a particular remote node cannot be reached
or if tkill(1) fails on any node.
A message is printed if either of these failures occur, in which
case the user should investigate the cause of failure and,
if necessary, terminate LAM by manually executing tkill(1)
on the problem node(s).
In extreme cases, the user may have to terminate individual
LAM processes with kill(1).
wipe
will terminate after a limited number of nodes if the
-n
option is given.
This is mainly intended for use by lamboot(1), which invokes
wipe
when a boot does not successfully complete.
EXAMPLES
wipe -v mynodes
Shutdown LAM on the machines described in the boot schema,
mynodes.
Report about important steps as they are done.