InfoScale™ 9.0 Cluster Server Agent Developer's Guide - AIX, Linux, Solaris, Windows
- Introduction
- Agent entry point overview
- About agent entry points
- Agent entry points described
- About the action entry point
- About the info entry point
- Considerations for using C++ or script entry points
- About the agent information file
- About the ArgList and ArgListValues attributes
- Creating entry points in C++
- About creating entry points in C++
- Syntax for C++ entry points
- Agent framework primitives
- Agent Framework primitives for container support
- Creating entry points in scripts
- About creating entry points in scripts
- Syntax for script entry points
- Agent framework primitives
- VCSAG_GET_ATTR_VALUE
- Agent Framework primitives with container support
- Example script entry points
- Logging agent messages
- Building a custom agent
- Building a script based IMF-aware custom agent
- Creating XML file required for AMF plugins to do resource registration for online and offline state monitoring
- Testing agents
- Static type attributes
- About static attributes
- Static type attribute definitions
- AdvDbg
- ArgList
- State transition diagram
- Internationalized messages
- Troubleshooting VCS resource's unexpected behavior using First Failure Data Capture (FFDC)
- Appendix A. Using pre-5.0 VCS agents
About creating entry points in scripts
On UNIX, script agents use one of the different agent binaries that are shipped with VCS. The agent binaries are located at:
$VCS_HOME/bin/
See Script based agent binaries.
You can implement entry points using C++ or scripts. If you are implementing even one entry point in c++ then you must implement the VCSAgStartup function. If you do not implement any entry points in C++, then you do not need to implement the VCSAgStartup function since the default implementation of VCSAgStartup is present in the script agent binary provided by VCS as mentioned above.
See About the VCSAgStartup routine.
You can use script-based entry points to develop agents for monitoring applications that run in containers, including non-global zones. VCS provides APIs for container support. You can use Perl, shell, or Python scripts to develop entry points.