haltpoint list

Displays all halt points or only the active halt points that are currently set, as well as the halt point at which the system is currently paused. To interpret the list of halt points, contact Oracle Customer Support for instructions.

SYNOPSIS

haltpoint ‑list 
   [‑details]
   {‑active | ‑all}

   [{‑sessionKey | ‑u admin‑user ‑oracleFS oracle‑fs‑system}]
   [{‑outputformat | ‑o} { text | xml }]
   [{‑timeout timeout‑in‑seconds | ‑verify | ‑usage | ‑example | ‑help}] 

DESCRIPTION

Run the list ‑all command to display a list of the halt points that are defined on the Oracle FS System. Run the list ‑active command to display the halt points that are currently set on the Oracle FS System.

Note: Only administrators with primary administrator, admin1, admin2, or support roles are authorized to run the haltpoint list active option. Only administrators with primary administrator or support roles are authorized to run the haltpoint list all option.

OPTIONS

active

Displays the active halt points on the Oracle FS System. An active halt point is one that you set by issuing a haltpoint ‑add command. If the Oracle FS System is currently paused at any active halt point, the system will indicate that it is paused in the list of active halt points.

Note: Only administrators with primary administrator, admin1, admin2, or support roles are authorized to run the haltpoint ‑list ‑active option.
all

Displays all of the halt points that can be set on the Oracle FS System.

Note: Only administrators with primary administrator or support roles are authorized to run the haltpoint ‑list ‑all option.
details

Provides no additional information. This option is included for consistency across all subcommands.

GLOBAL OPTIONS FOR SUBCOMMANDS

The following global options can be used for fscli command-subcommand pairs that do not include other command-line options:
help

Returns the context-sensitive help for the specified subcommand.

usage

Returns the subcommand syntax for the given command, including all of the options that are available for the command-subcommand pair.

GLOBAL OPTIONS FOR COMMANDS

The following global options can be used for fully formed fscli commands:

example
Returns sample output from the specified command.
Note: To see the output in XML format, include the ‑o xml option.
timeout timeout-in-seconds
Specifies the length of time (timeout-in-seconds) that the command line interface waits before another command is allowed to run. If the command takes longer to run than the specified time limit, the system continues processing the command, but the command prompt is made available so that you can issue another command. If the -timeout option is omitted, the command line interface blocks until the one of the following conditions is met:
  • The command completes successfully.

  • The command returns with an error.

  • The session times out.

Note: Be sure to check the state of the system after initiating a long running command with the ‑timeout option. Many fscli commands run a series of underlying commands in sequence. When the timeout value is reached before all of the underlying commands have completed, the fscli command does not complete with the outstanding tasks reporting a failure status.
outputformat | ‑o { text | xml }
Controls the type of the output the system returns from a command. If the ‑outputformat option is not included, the format of the output defaults to simple text. If xml is provided, the output is a collection of XML elements.
Note: For XML output, if internal errors occur during command execution, each error is included in a separate <ErrorList> tag.
verify

Inspects the validity of the command syntax, not the semantics. Used to test the structure of a command without running the command. Does not determine whether errors would be produced if you issue a structurally correct command with the input provided.

sessionkey

Directs the CLI to prompt you to supply a session key when you issue the command. The CLI displays Sessionkey: as the prompt. To obtain a session key, log in with the ‑returnKey option specified. After the session is established, the session key is displayed in STDOUT. If you request a session key, the ‑sessionkey option is required syntax for all commands that are issued in a given session. In environments with more than one Oracle FS System, the session key is used to determine to which Oracle FS System to direct the command for validation. Session keys are also used to establish two or more CLI sessions when using a shared administrator account.

u admin-useroracleFS oracle‑fs-system
Routes the command to a particular Oracle FS System for execution. This option passes the name of the administrator account to use when opening the session on the specified system. Identify a specific Oracle FS System by its IP address or by the name that is recorded in the domain name system (DNS). When logging in to the Oracle FS System using the ‑u option and the ‑oracleFS option, the fscli application prompts you for a password on the command line interface for access. The Oracle FS System and the account login information are used to authenticate the current session. Establishing a login session by specifying an Oracle FS System and an account does not change the credentials that are associated with the active sessions that are running on other clients.
Caution
Oracle recommends that you not use the Cygwin command line interface to run the fscli application on Windows platforms. If you are running the Cygwin interface and include the ‑u option as a part of the ‑list subcommand, the password for the specified account is included in the results. Exposing the password can cause a breach in security.

EXAMPLE

Task

Using the instructions from your Oracle Customer Support representative, list the active halt points that are set on your system, and whether the system is currently paused on a halt point, save the output to a file.

Parameters
  • The name of the file: SAN_haltpoints_10‑23–2014

$ fscli haltpoint ‑list ‑active > SAN_haltpoints_10‑23–2014