Mark,
As soon as I update the /etc/sysconfig.conf with your suggestion and run
"sysctl -p /etc/sysconfig.conf", my additional 12 network interfaces respond to
ping command immediately.
Thanks for you hint.
Ray
-Original Message-
From: Chu, Raymond
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2015 1:14
Mark,
I have the same issue. After having rebooted the image, leave it alone
overnight and I can ping all interfaces.
I do use the sysctl command to investigate those setting that you have
specified.
Only this parameter is set to "0" as shown:
grep net.ipv4.conf.all.rp /tmp/sysctl
net.ipv4.co
>From a SUSE internal mailing list:
FYI, online migration to SLES11 SP4 is available since yesterday evening.
Here's the TID:
https://www.suse.com/support/kb/doc.php?id=7016711
The workflow didn't change, so it looks pretty similar to the SP3 one.
Mark Post
-
>>> On 7/29/2015 at 12:27 PM, "Mehdi H." wrote:
> Hey Guys,
>
> I've installed RHEL 6.6 on a standalone LPAR, everything looks fine but
> can't add, actually ping the second network interface!
>
> The strange thing is that each interface works fine if the other one is
> down but don't work when
You have the both on the same subnet.
What's your goal here? Is this for different traffic or are you looking for
availability?
Maybe you want to set up a channel bonded interface instead for availability?
What do your routes look like? (netstat -ror cat
/etc/sysconfig/network/routes )
Hey Guys,
I've installed RHEL 6.6 on a standalone LPAR, everything looks fine but
can't add, actually ping the second network interface!
The strange thing is that each interface works fine if the other one is
down but don't work when both are up.
Here is some commands output for you review and h