Changes a subserver definition in the subserver object class.
chserver -t OldSubserver [ -c CodePoint ] [ -s NewSubsystem ] [ -t NewSubserver ]
The chserver command modifies an existing subserver definition in the subserver object class. It can change subserver types, the owning subsystem, or the subserver code point.
Auditing Events: If the auditing subsystem has been properly configured and is enabled, the chserver command will generate the following audit record (event) every time the command is executed:
Event | Information |
---|---|
SRC_Chserver | Lists in an audit log the name of the subsystem and the fields that have been changed. |
See "Setting up Auditing" in AIX Version 4.3 System Management Guide: Operating System and Devices for more details about how to properly select and group audit events, and how to configure audit event data collection.
chserver -t old -t newThis changes the subserver type from the old subserver type to the new subserver type.
chserver -t old -s srctestThis changes the owning subsystem to srctest.
chserver -t old -t new -s srctest -c 1234This changes the subserver type from the old to the new subserver type, the owning subsystem to srctest, and the subserver code point to 1234.
/etc/objrepos/SRCsubsys | Specifies the SRC Subsystem Configuration object class. |
/etc/objrepos/SRCsubsvr | Specifies the SRC Subserver Configuration object class. |
The auditpr command, mkserver command, rmserver command, startsrc command, stopsrc command, traceson command, tracesoff command.
Auditing Overview in AIX Version 4.3 System Management Guide: Operating System and Devices.
System Resource Controller Overview in AIX Version 4.3 System Management Guide: Operating System and Devices.
Defining Your Subsystem to the SRC in AIX General Programming Concepts: Writing and Debugging Programs.
System Resource Controller (SRC) Overview for Programmers in AIX General Programming Concepts: Writing and Debugging Programs.