> Hi,
> I think CMAN expect that the names of the cluster nodes be the same returned
> by the command "uname -n".
> For what you write your nodes hostnames are: test01.gdao.ucsc.edu and
> test02.gdao.ucsc.edu, but in cluster.conf you have declared only "test01" and
> "test02".
I haven't found t
Hi,I think CMAN expect that the names of the cluster nodes be the same returned by the command "uname -n".For what you write your nodes hostnames are: test01.gdao.ucsc.edu and test02.gdao.ucsc.edu, but in cluster.conf you have declared only "test01" and "test02".
These servers are currently on the same host, but may not be in the
future. They are in a vm cluster (though honestly, I'm not sure what
this means yet).
SElinux is on, but disabled.
Firewalling through iptables is turned off via system-config-securitylevel
There is no line currently in the clus
Hi,
This servers is on VMware? At the same host?
SElinux is disable? iptables have something?
In my environment I had a problem to start GFS2 with servers in differents
hosts.
To clustering servers, was need migrate one server to the same host of the
other, and restart this.
I think, one of the
Hi, Steven.
I've tried just about every possible combination of hostname and
cluster.conf.
ping to test01 resolves to 128.114.31.112
ping to test01.gdao.ucsc.edu resolves to 128.114.31.112
It feels like the right thing is being returned. This feels like it
might be a quirk (or bug possibly) of
Hi,
On Thu, 2012-01-05 at 13:54 -0800, Wes Modes wrote:
> Howdy, y'all. I'm trying to set up GFS in a cluster on CentOS systems
> running on vmWare. The GFS FS is on a Dell Equilogic SAN.
>
> I keep running into the same problem despite many differently-flavored
> attempts to set up GFS. The prob