Symantec 10521146 Administration Guide - Page 281
Restarting sensors in a cluster, Setting a cluster-wide parameter, Setting QSP Port Number
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Advanced configuration 281 Managing node clusters 4 Add a new object. See "Adding nodes and objects" on page 83. 5 Assign a new synchronization passphrase. See "Synchronization passphrases" on page 78. Note: SuperUsers can change node passphrases; Administrators, StandardUsers, and RestrictedUsers cannot. See "User groups reference" on page 319 for more about permissions. Restarting sensors in a cluster Sensors are no longer restarted automatically, but you can restart sensors from the Network Security console at any time. See "Restarting or stopping sensors" on page 161. Note: SuperUsers can restart sensors in a cluster; Administrators, StandardUsers, and RestrictedUsers cannot. See "User groups reference" on page 319 for more about permissions. Setting a cluster-wide parameter Symantec Network Security provides one cluster parameter called QSP Port Number to ensure communication between all nodes in a cluster. Note: SuperUsers can set parameters; Administrators, StandardUsers, and RestrictedUsers cannot. See "User groups reference" on page 319 for more about permissions. Setting QSP Port Number QSP Port Number determines the port that all nodes in a cluster use to communicate with each other. It is set at the cluster level. The default value is 2600. The value must be a valid unused TCP port number between 1025 and 65535 that is not used by any other TCP service in the cluster. Do not use port numbers 1333, 1080, 6665-6669, 7000, and 8080, because software and appliance nodes monitor and analyze traffic on these ports. The QSP port number must be the same for all nodes in a cluster.