You use different credentials to install and set up the cluster and to manage the cluster. This section describes the tasks performed and rights needed for those roles.
Typically, a tree administrator user installs and sets up the first cluster in a tree, which allows the schema to be extended. However, the tree administrator can extend the schema separately, and then set up the necessary permissions for a container administrator to install and configure the cluster.
NOTE:If the eDirectory administrator user name or password contains special characters (such as $, #, and so on), some interfaces in iManager and YaST might not handle the special characters. If you encounter problems, try escaping each special character by preceding it with a backslash (\) when you enter credentials.
A tree administrator user with credentials to do so can extend the eDirectory schema before a cluster is installed anywhere in a tree. Extending the schema separately allows a container administrator to install a cluster in a container in that same tree without needing full administrator rights for the tree.
For instructions, see Section 5.2, Extending the eDirectory Schema to Add Cluster Objects.
IMPORTANT:It is not necessary to extend the schema separately if the installer of the first cluster server in the tree has the eDirectory rights necessary to extend the schema.
After the schema has been extended, the container administrator (or non-administrator user) needs the following eDirectory rights to install Cluster Services:
Attribute Modify rights on the NCP Server object of each node in the cluster.
Object Create rights on the container where the NCP Server objects are.
Object Create rights where the cluster container will be.
For instructions, see Section 5.3, Assigning Install Rights for Container Administrators or Non-Administrator Users.
During the cluster configuration, you must specify an NCS Proxy User. This is the user name and password that Cluster Services uses when the cluster management tools exchange information with eDirectory.
Cluster Services supports the OES Common Proxy User enablement feature of eDirectory. The proxy user is represented in eDirectory as a User object named OESCommonProxy_<server_name>.<context>. If the OES Common Proxy user is enabled in eDirectory when you configure a node for the cluster, the default NCS Proxy User is set to use the server’s OES Common Proxy User. You can alternatively specify the LDAP Admin user or another administrator user.
The specified NCS Proxy User for the node is automatically assigned as a member in the <cluster_name>_MGT_GRP.<context> group that resides in the Cluster object container. The group accommodates the server-specific NCS Proxy Users that you assign when you configure each node for the cluster. Members are added to the group as you configure each node for a cluster. Each member of the group has the necessary rights for configuring the cluster and cluster resources and for exchanging information with eDirectory.
IMPORTANT:You can modify this default administrator user name or password for the user name assigned as the NCS Proxy User after the install by following the procedure in Section 8.13, Moving a Cluster, or Changing the Node IP Addresses, LDAP Servers, or Administrator Credentials for a Cluster.
Consider the following caveats for the three proxy user options:
If you specify the OES Common Proxy user for a cluster and later disable the Common Proxy user feature in eDirectory, the LDAP Admin user is automatically assigned to the <cluster_name>_MGT_GRP.<context> group, and the OES Common Proxy user is automatically removed from the group.
If an OES Common Proxy User is renamed, moved, or deleted in eDirectory, eDirectory takes care of the changes needed to modify the user information in the <cluster_name>_MGT_GRP.<context> group.
If a cluster node is removed from the tree, the OES Common Proxy User for that server is one of the cluster objects that needs to be deleted from eDirectory.
For information about enabling or disabling the OES Common Proxy User, see the Installation Guide. For caveats and troubleshooting information for the OES Common Proxy user, see the Planning and Implementation Guide.
If you specify the LDAP Admin user as the NCS Proxy User, you typically continue using this identity while you set up the cluster and cluster resources. After the cluster configuration is completed, you create another user identity to use for NCS Proxy User, and grant that user sufficient administrator rights as specified in Cluster Administrator or Administrator-Equivalent User.
You can specify an existing user name and password to use for the NCS Proxy User. Cluster Services adds this user name to the <cluster_name>_MGT_GRP.<context> group.
After the install, you can add other users (such as the tree administrator) as administrator equivalent accounts for the cluster by configuring the following for the user account:
Give the user the Supervisor right to the Server object of each of the servers in the cluster.
Linux-enable the user account with Linux User Management (LUM).
Make the user a member of a LUM-enabled administrator group that is associated with the servers in the cluster.