Sun Java System Application Server Enterprise Edition 8.2 Reference Manual
  Cerca solo questo libro
Scarica il manuale in formato PDF (1865 KB)

delete-instance(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO

NAME

    delete-instance – deletes the instance that is not running

SYNOPSIS

    delete-instance instance_name ––user admin_user [––passwordfile filename] [––host localhost] [––port 4849] [––secure|–s] [––terse=false] [––echo=false] [––interactive=true] [––help]

DESCRIPTION

    Use the delete-instance command to delete a server instance. The delete-instance command can be run both locally and remotely. If a standalone instance is deleted (i.e. the instance's configuration name is server–name–config and no other clusters or unclustered instances refer to this configuration), its standalone configuration will be automatically deleted as well.

    The Node Agent need not be running (or even installed or created) to delete a server instance. However, if the Node Agent is running, the command will delete the instance. If the Node Agent is not running, it will delete the instance the next time it is started. If a standalone instance is deleted, that is, the instance's configuration name is server—name-config and no other clusters or unclustered instances refer to this configuration, then its standalone configuration will be automatically deleted as well.

OPTIONS

    –u ––user

    The authorized domain administration server administrative username.

    –w ––password

    The ––password option is deprecated. Use ––passwordfile instead.

    ––passwordfile

    This option replaces the –– password option. Using the ––password option on the command line or through the environment is deprecated. The ––passwordfile option specifies the name of a file containing the password entries in a specified format. The entry for the password must have the AS_ADMIN_ prefix followed by the password name in capital letters. For example, to specify the domain administration server password, use an entry with the following format: AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=password, where password is the actual administrator password. Other passwords that can be specified include AS_ADMIN_MAPPEDPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_USERPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_MQPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_ALIASPASSWORD, and so on.

    –H ––host

    The machine name where the domain administration server is running. The default value is localhost.

    –p ––port

    The port number of the domain administration server listening for administration requests. The default port number for Enterprise Edition is 4849.

    –s ––secure

    If set to true, uses SSL/TLS to communicate with the domain administration server.

    –t ––terse

    Indicates that any output data must be very concise, typically avoiding human-friendly sentences and favoring well-formatted data for consumption by a script. Default is false.

    –e ––echo

    Setting to true will echo the command line statement on the standard output. Default is false.

    –I ––interactive

    If set to true (default), only the required password options are prompted.

    ––help

    Displays the help text for the command.

OPERANDS

    instance_name

    name of the instance to be deleted.

EXAMPLES


    Example 1 Using delete-instance in local mode


    asadmin> delete-instance --user admin1 --passwordfile passwords.txt instance1
    Command delete-instance executed successfully

    Where: instance1 is deleted on the local machine.



    Example 2 Using delete-instance in remote mode


    asadmin> delete-instance --user admin --passwordfile passwords.txt 
    --host pigeon --port 4849 instance2
    Command delete-instance executed successfully

    Where: instance2 is deleted on the remote machine.


EXIT STATUS

    0

    command executed successfully

    1

    error in executing the command

SEE ALSO

JavaEE 5  Last Revised 22 May 2006

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | EXAMPLES | EXIT STATUS | SEE ALSO