NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO
Use the stop-domain command to stop all the instances in the domain specified.
The stop-domain command can be run both locally and remotely. The domain must exist on the local machine to run this command locally.
administrative user associated for the instance.
administrative password corresponding to the administrative user.
host name of the machine hosting the administrative instance.
administrative port number associated with the administrative host.
determines if the command should delegate the request to administrative instance or run locally.
name of the domain; must be a unique name. If not specified, and there is only one domain, all instances in that domain are stopped.
determines if the administrative instance should be stopped along with other instances.
file containing passwords appropriate for the command (e.g., administrative instance).
if set to true, uses SSL/TLS to communicate with the administrative instance.
asadmin> stop-domain --domain domain1 --adminserv=true Instance domain1:admin-server stopped Instance domain1:server1 stopped Domain domain1 stopped |
Where: the domain1 domain is stopped. By stopping the domain the admin-server and server1 instance in the domain are also stopped.
asadmin> stop-domain --user admin --passwordfile passwords.txt --host bluestar --port 6886 Domain stopped remotely |
Where: the domain identified with the user, host, and port specified is stopped on the remote server. All instances in the domain are also stopped.
asadmin-create-domain(1AS), asadmin-delete-domain(1AS), asadmin-start-domain(1AS), asadmin-list-domains(1AS), asadmin-start-appserv(1AS),.asadmin-stop-appserv(1AS), asadmin-start-instance(1AS), asadmin-stop-instance(1AS), asadmin-multimode(1AS)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO