Thread: [SSI-users] problems on reboot
Brought to you by:
brucewalker,
rogertsang
From: Ewald G. <ege...@gm...> - 2006-02-25 12:05:37
|
I have installed a development version on debian I do apt-get install openssi All works as expected. But on reboot the system hangs with the following message: WARNING: Could not find a NIC with a static node configuration. Dynamically allocating an IP address and node number. WARNING: Could not find the NIC used to add this node to the cluster. Unable to continue. Halting. The I rebooted with my standard sarge 2.6 kernel And the file /etc/network/interfaces WAS EMPTY. I have edited the file before the reboot and it looked good and I had internet access from the LAN nic and I could ping the cluster NIC. Does anyone know the problem? -- Ewald Geschwinde |
From: Robert W. <no...@ro...> - 2006-02-25 16:49:10
|
Hi, On Sat, Feb 25, 2006 at 01:05:32PM +0100, Ewald Geschwinde wrote: > I have installed a development version on debian > > I do apt-get install openssi > All works as expected. You did follow the description in the installation manual <http://www.openssi.org/cgi-bin/view?page=docs2/1.9/debian/INSTALL.html>? Esp.assigning a clustenode number for your initnode and choosing an interface as cluster-interconnect? What is the content of your /etc/clustertab ? Was the openSSI-initrd generated correctly? > But on reboot the system hangs with the following message: > > WARNING: Could not find a NIC with a static node configuration. > Dynamically allocating an IP address and node number. > WARNING: Could not find the NIC used to add this node to the cluster. > Unable to continue. Halting. > > > The I rebooted with my standard sarge 2.6 kernel > > And the file /etc/network/interfaces WAS EMPTY. You really do not need more than: auto lo iface lo inet loopback in this file, because the Cluster-interconnect will be established during boot. /etc/network/interfaces is only needed for additional network interfaces. > I have edited the file before the reboot and it looked good and I had > internet access from the LAN nic and I could ping the cluster NIC. BTW: /etc/network is a "local link" > Does anyone know the problem? I didn't have that problem, when I set up my cluster. Regards, Robert |
From: Ewald G. <ege...@gm...> - 2006-02-25 17:29:10
|
On 2/25/06, Robert Wachinger <no...@ro...> wrote: > > Hi, > > On Sat, Feb 25, 2006 at 01:05:32PM +0100, Ewald Geschwinde wrote: > > I have installed a development version on debian > > > > I do apt-get install openssi > > All works as expected. > > You did follow the description in the installation manual > <http://www.openssi.org/cgi-bin/view?page=3Ddocs2/1.9/debian/INSTALL.html= >? > Esp.assigning a clustenode number for your initnode and choosing > an interface as cluster-interconnect? yes I have one with 192.168.0.20 for LAN and the ip from the docs 172.... I have done nothing other than in the docs - it was running nuder vmware but there I had problems with packet loss but this was a system problem What is the content of your /etc/clustertab I have the problems in the first node 1 172.16.0.200 00:02:44:A6:03:D4 P 1 /dev/hda1 Was the openSSI-initrd generated correctly? where do I find this file ? > > But on reboot the system hangs with the following message: > > > > WARNING: Could not find a NIC with a static node configuration. > > Dynamically allocating an IP address and node number. > > WARNING: Could not find the NIC used to add this node to the cluster. > > Unable to continue. Halting. > > > > > > The I rebooted with my standard sarge 2.6 kernel > > > > And the file /etc/network/interfaces WAS EMPTY. > > You really do not need more than: > > auto lo > iface lo inet loopback > > in this file, because the Cluster-interconnect will be established > during boot. /etc/network/interfaces is only needed for additional > network interfaces. the network adresses are ok in the /cluster/node1/etc/network/interfaces I think this was the dir > I have edited the file before the reboot and it looked good and I had > > internet access from the LAN nic and I could ping the cluster NIC. > > BTW: /etc/network is a "local link" > I have to think in cluster env - my first cluster ;) -- Ewald Geschwinde |