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Operating Systems Solaris Guest LDOMS on same subnet cant ping eachother Post 302938293 by Peasant on Saturday 14th of March 2015 01:55:17 AM
Old 03-14-2015
This should not happen if everything is configured properly.

I checked your initial output more carefully (sorry for that Smilie )

What looks wrong to me is that you are using L2 aggregation (aggro0 interface), and you have created from that interface two virtual switches, then you used those interfaces to create ipmp group inside ldom.

I don't think that is supported configuration, looks kinda silly Smilie

Since you have aggregated two interfaces (net0 and net1) which must be connected to the same physical switch, there is no need to use IPMP inside LDOM (guest domain, i don't think this is supported configuration at all, possibly why you are having mac collisions) or create multiple virtual switches over one interface (aggr0).

This schematic should be more illuminating :

Primary domain (hypervisor - bare metal)
---> net0 <> net1 [aggr0 L2] ---> primary-vsw50 (on primary, created using aggr0, add vsw command) ---> vnet0 for guest ldom1, ldom2 (add-vnet command)

Only one vnet is enough, since if net0 fails, all you will loose is bandwidth from one interface.

No need to tag the interfaces on the hypervisor os level (aggr5000, dladm create-vnet), since this is done for LDOMS on the vsw/vnet level (PVID,VID).
This should work, but it is a legacy way to implement vlan tagging in LDOMS.

As for bare metal domains (primary,secondary), let me offer a short explanation of domains as i understand it...
For instance, you have sparc t4-2 with two sockets, two 4 port network cards and two 2 port FC card.

You can create two hardware domains - primary and secondary, in which the actual I/O hardware is splited between those two domains (each has one PCI card and one FC card and one CPU socket and memory ).

Now you have a situation that you have one t4-2 sparc which is actually two machines separated on hardware level. So all LDOMS created on primary domain will use its resources (CPU,PCI - half of them) and ldoms on secondary will use its resources (other half)

Basically, if one socket fails due to hardware failure, only the primary domain and guest ldoms on them will fail, while secondary and guest ldoms on it will continue to run.
Those setups complicate things considerably and are done on machines which have more resources in redundant matter (like 4 cards or 4 sockets, 2 phys cards per domain for redundancy etc.)

For your setup i guess you need (keep it simple - as per scheme in the begining) :

One primary domain (bare metal)
One vsw created on top of the aggr0 interface in primary domain.
One vnet interface added to LDOM from primary-vsw on primary domain.
One VDS (virtual disk service) in primary domain per guest ldom (sneezy-vds@primary, otherguestldom-vds@primary etc.) in which you add disks for ldoms.

Hope that clears things out.

Regards
Peasant.
 

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smtpdcheck(1)							Mail Avenger 0.8.3						     smtpdcheck(1)

NAME
smtpdcheck - check SMTP servers SYNOPSIS
smtpdcheck [--stop {ip-addr|name}] [--timeout seconds] [prio:]server [[prio:]server] DESCRIPTION
smtpdcheck checks to see if SMTP servers are available. The intent is for use on secondary mail servers, which have no reason to accept mail when the primary server is available. The argument consists of a list of server names, each of which may optionally be prefixed by a numeric MX priority and a colon. (This is exactly the format for MX records returned by the avenger dns command.) smtpdcheck will attempt to connect to each server in succession. If one of the servers specified on the command line is available, smtpdcheck will print its name to standard output and exit with status 1. If smtpdcheck cannot connect to any of the servers, it will exit with status 0. If a system error occurs, smtpdcheck will exit with status 2. OPTIONS --stop {ip-addr|name} Tells smtpdcheck to stop before checking a server with IP address ip-addr or hostname name. If such a host is encountered in the list of servers and prio is specified, then smtpdcheck will consider it acceptable for other servers with the same priority to be available, even if those servers were first in the list. In other words, given the following arguments: smtpdcheck --stop s2.domain.com 10:s1.domain.com 10:s2.domain.com 20:s3.domain.com This command will always succeed, regardless of whether "s1.domain.com" is up, because "s2.domain.com" has the same priority. On the other hand, the following command will fail and output "s1.domain.com" if "s1.domain.com" is up: smtpdcheck --stop s2.domain.com 10:s1.domain.com 20:s2.domain.com 30:s3.domain.com If a gethostbyname lookup for the argument name fails, smtpdcheck will exit immediately with status 2. --timeout {seconds] By default, smtpdcheck spends 10 seconds probing each server. This includes the time to do a DNS lookup, to establish a TCP connection to port 25 of the server, and to read the "220" SMTP code from the server's SMTP greeting message. To use a different value, specify it with the --timeout option. The value 0 disables the timeout completely, which is dangerous since smtpdcheck might then end up waiting forever to read the "220" string. EXAMPLES
To refuse to relay mail at a secondary MX server when the primary server is not down, you might place the following in /etc/avenger/secondary (assuming MxLocalRcpt is 1): dns RECIP_MXES mx "$RECIPIENT_HOST" setvars server=`smtpdcheck --stop $MYIP $RECIP_MXES` test -n "$server" && defer "Please use server $server" SEE ALSO
avenger(1) dbutil(1) asmtpd.conf(5), The Mail Avenger home page: <http://www.mailavenger.org/>. BUGS
smtpdcheck could achieve much lower latency by probing all the servers simultaneously. It should also include some kind of caching, to avoid repeatedly trying to contact an unavailable server. Finally, hosts with multiple IP addresses could be handled more cleanly, though what smtpdcheck does should probably work in most cases. AUTHOR
David Mazieres Mail Avenger 0.8.3 2012-04-05 smtpdcheck(1)
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