6.3.3. Viewing District Information
This section describes how to view information about a district on your system. Note that the resulting output is in JSON format.
View all available districts with the
oo-admin-ctl-district
command, or use the -n
option with the district's name to view a single district.
Example 6.5. Viewing All Districts
# oo-admin-ctl-district
{ ...
"uuid"=>"7521a7801686477f8409e74f67b693f4",
...}
Example 6.6. Viewing a Single District
# oo-admin-ctl-district -n small_district
District Representation on the Broker
During district creation, the broker creates a new document in its MongoDB database. Run the following command to view these documents inside of the openshift_broker
database, replacing the login credentials from the /etc/openshift/broker.conf
file, if needed:
# mongo -u openshift -p password openshift_broker
From the
mongo
shell, you can perform commands against the broker database. Run the following command to list all of the available collections in the openshift_broker
database:
> db.getCollectionNames()
Observe the collections returned, noting the
districts
collection:
[ "applications", "auth_user", "cloud_users", "districts", "domains", "locks", "system.indexes", "system.users", "usage", "usage_records" ]
Query the
districts
collection to verify the creation of your districts. District information is output in JSON format:
> db.districts.find()
Exit the
mongo
shell using the exit
command:
> exit