Thread: [SSI-users] OpenSSI 0.8 and rsh
Brought to you by:
brucewalker,
rogertsang
From: Samir P. <sp...@la...> - 2003-01-24 15:47:21
|
I just install RH 7.3 and openssi (10.0.0.1), added another node with etherboot floppy through dhcp (10.0.0.2). Best clustering tool I have ever encounter. when I run rsh (rsh 10.0.0.1 echo "Hello World!"), it work from both master node and node 2, but when I run rsh (rsh 10.0.0.2 echo "Hello World!"), it did not run from either machine. - Samir |
From: Brian J. W. <Bri...@hp...> - 2003-01-29 21:49:26
|
Samir Patel wrote: > > I just install RH 7.3 and openssi (10.0.0.1), added another node with > etherboot floppy through dhcp (10.0.0.2). Best clustering tool I have ever > encounter. Thanks! > when I run rsh (rsh 10.0.0.1 echo "Hello World!"), it work from both master > node and node 2, but when I run rsh (rsh 10.0.0.2 echo "Hello World!"), it > did not run from either machine. The xinetd daemon is only running on node 1, so rsh requests can only be honored there. Theoretically, it's possible to get xinetd running in parallel on all nodes, but there may be conflicts between the multiple daemons trying to use the same resources (i.e., files, semaphores, fifos, etc.). In an SSI cluster, you can do effectively the same thing with the following commands: onnode 1 echo "Hello World!" onnode 2 echo "Hello World!" The first example executes the command on node 1. The second does it on node 2. In both cases, the echo is done to the console you use to enter the command (same as your rsh example). Hope this helps, Brian |