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Starting and Operating the SAE

Starting the SAE is the final step in the SRC software installation and basic configuration process. Before you configure and start the SAE, make sure that you have completed the following:

See Chapter 35, Setting Up an SAE on a Solaris Platform.

By default, the SAE sends log events to the system log. You can also enable file loggers to write logs to text files.

For more information, see SRC-PE Monitoring and Troubleshooting Guide, Chapter 2, Configuring Logging for SRC Components.

Starting the SAE for the First Time

Starting the SAE for the first time requires root permission and a special script to add the virtual IP address.

To start the SAE from its host for the first time:

  1. On the host on which the SAE is installed, log in as root or as an authorized nonroot admin user.
  2. Start the SAE from its installation directory
  3. /opt/UMC/sae/etc/saeroot start
    
    
    

Whenever the host subsequently reboots, the installed SRC server components are restarted automatically.

You can also start the SAE from the SRC CLI, see Chapter 21, Setting Up an SAE with the SRC CLI.

Starting the SAE After Initial Startup

Use this procedure to start the SAE anytime after its initial startup.

To start the SAE from its host after the first time:

  1. On the host on which the SAE is installed, log in as root or as an authorized nonroot admin user.
  2. Start the SAE from its installation directory
  3. /opt/UMC/sae/etc/sae start
    
    
    

You can also start the SAE from the SRC CLI, see Chapter 21, Setting Up an SAE with the SRC CLI.

Monitoring the SAE

To verify that the SAE is running:

  1. On the host on which the SAE is installed, log in as root or as an authorized nonroot admin user.
  2. Display the status of the SAE from its installation directory
  3. /opt/UMC/sae/etc/sae status
    
    
    

The system responds with a status message.

Stopping the SAE

To stop the SAE:

  1. On the host on which the SAE is installed, log in as root or as an authorized nonroot admin user.
  2. Stop the SAE from its installation directory
  3. /opt/UMC/sae/etc/sae stop
    
    
    

You can also stop the SAE from the SRC CLI, see Chapter 21, Setting Up an SAE with the SRC CLI.


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