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InfoScale™ Cluster Server 9.0 Bundled Agents Reference Guide - Solaris
Last Published:
2025-04-14
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (9.0)
Platform: Solaris
- Introducing bundled agents
- Storage agents
- DiskGroup agent
- DiskGroupSnap agent
- Notes for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Sample configurations for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Disk agent
- Volume agent
- VolumeSet agent
- Sample configurations for VolumeSet agent
- Mount agent
- Sample configurations for Mount agent
- Zpool agent
- VMwareDisks agent
- SFCache agent
- Network agents
- About the network agents
- IP agent
- NIC agent
- About the IPMultiNICB and MultiNICB agents
- IPMultiNICB agent
- Sample configurations for IPMultiNICB agent
- MultiNICB agent
- Sample configurations for MultiNICB agent
- DNS agent
- Agent notes for DNS agent
- About using the VCS DNS agent on UNIX with a secure Windows DNS server
- Sample configurations for DNS agent
- File share agents
- NFS agent
- NFSRestart agent
- Share agent
- About the Samba agents
- NetBios agent
- Service and application agents
- AlternateIO agent
- Apache HTTP server agent
- Application agent
- Notes for Application agent
- Sample configurations for Application agent
- CoordPoint agent
- LDom agent
- Dependencies
- Process agent
- Usage notes for Process agent
- Sample configurations for Process agent
- ProcessOnOnly agent
- Project agent
- RestServer agent
- Zone agent
- Infrastructure and support agents
- Testing agents
- Replication agents
Configuring Samba for non-standard configuration files or non-standard lock directories
Configure the PidFile attribute if you use a non-standard configuration file for Samba or if the lock directory (the directory where Samba pid file resides) for Samba is different than the default location. Use the following command to check the standard locations for the Samba configuration file and the lock directory:
To check for the default value of the Samba configuration file
- Enter the following command:
# smbd -b | grep CONFIGFILE
To check for the default location of the Samba pidfile
- Enter the following command:
# smbd -b | grep PIDDIR