xcat-core/xCAT-client/pods/man1/lsdef.1.pod

163 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

=head1 NAME
B<lsdef> - Use this command to list xCAT data object definitions.
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<lsdef> [B<-h>|B<--help>] [B<-t> I<object-types>]
B<lsdef> [B<-V>|B<--verbose>] [B<-l>|B<--long>] [B<-a>|B<--all>] [B<-t> I<object-types>]
[B<-o> I<object-names>] [B<-z>|B<--stanza>] [B<-i> I<attr-list>]
[[B<-w> I<attr>==I<val>] [B<-w> I<attr>=~I<val>] ...] [I<noderange>]
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This command is used to display xCAT object definitions which are stored
in the xCAT database.
=head1 OPTIONS
=over 10
=item B<-a|--all>
Display all definitions.
=item B<-h|--help>
Display usage message.
=item B<-i> I<attr-list>
Comma separated list of attribute names to display.
=item B<-l|--long>
List the complete object definition. (The default for some options is to give only a list of object names.)
=item I<noderange>
A set of comma delimited node names and/or group names.
See the "noderange" man page for details on supported formats.
=item B<-o> I<object-names>
A set of comma delimited object names.
=item B<-t> I<object-types>
A set of comma delimited object types. Use the help option to get a list of valid objects.
=item B<-V|--verbose>
Verbose mode.
=item B<-w> I<attr==val> B<-w> I<attr=~val> ...
Use one or multiple -w flags to specify the selection string that can be used to select objects. The operators ==, !=, =~ and !~ are available. Use the help option to get a list of valid attributes for each object type.
Note: if the "val" fields includes spaces or any other characters that will be parsed by shell, the "attr<operator>val" needs to be quoted. If the operator is "!~", the "attr<operator>val" needs to be quoted using single quote.
=item B<-z|--stanza>
Display output in stanza format. See the xcatstanzafile man page for details on using xCAT stanza files.
=back
=head1 RETURN VALUE
0 The command completed successfully.
1 An error has occurred.
=head1 EXAMPLES
=over 4
=item 1.
To display a description of all the valid attributes that could be used
when defining an xCAT node.
lsdef -t node -h
=item 2.
To get a list of all the objects that have been defined.
lsdef -a
=item 3.
To get a list of all the network definitions.
lsdef -t network
=item 4.
To get a complete listing of all network definitions.
lsdef -l -t network
=item 5.
To list the whole xCAT database and write it to a stanza file. (backup database)
lsdef -a -l -z > mydbstanzafile
=item 6.
To list the MAC and install adapter name for each node.
lsdef -t node -i mac,installnic
=item 7.
To list an osimage definition named "aix53J".
lsdef -t osimage -l -o aix53J
=item 8.
To list all node definitions that have a status value of "booting".
lsdef -t node -w status==booting
=item 9.
To list all the attributes of the group "service".
lsdef -l -t group -o service
=item 10.
To list all the attributes of the nodes that are members of the group "service".
lsdef -t node -l service
=item 11.
To get a listing of object definitions that includes information about
what xCAT database tables are used to store the data.
lsdef -V -l -t node -o node01
=back
=head1 FILES
/opt/xcat/bin/lsdef
=head1 NOTES
This command is part of the xCAT software product.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<mkdef(1)|mkdef.1>, L<chdef(1)|chdef.1>, L<rmdef(1)|rmdef.1>, L<xcatstanzafile(5)|xcatstanzafile.5>