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Operating Systems Solaris IPMP group failed on Solaris 9 Post 303038575 by hicksd8 on Friday 6th of September 2019 12:10:27 PM
Old 09-06-2019
I have read your post#1 countless times and I must confess that I am at a loss to understand your question. Sorry about that I cannot give you a specific answer as a result.

So what I will do is bash some keys a provide some general network interface information as it pertains to Solaris 9. I apologize if you already know all this but we have to start somewhere. This might be a long post before I'm finished, I don't know, it's just going to be as it comes (into my head).

Why are you seemingly just plumbing missing IP addresses that you can't ping onto another system? With IPMP the same IP address is aggregated across two or more NICs (on the same machine).

If you want to configure IPMP you would do that BEFORE you 'plumb'. For example if you have interfaces bge0 and bge1, you would create an aggregate interface 'aggr1' for example and after that you would plumb and configure only aggr1. You would not try to configure bge0 and bge1 individually any more.

Now Solaris 9 will look for files /etc/hostname.<interface> at boot time and try to plumb those interfaces. If this system was restored from a different hardware platform, then you might for example have a file /etc/hostname.ce0 existing causing Solaris to try to plumb ce0 at boot-time when ce0 doesn't actually exist on this hardware. To stop Solaris from trying to plumb ce0 simply delete the /etc/hostname.ceo file.

When Solaris finds a file /etc/hostname.<interface> at boot-time, it reads the hostname from this file and then (assuming the interface is not configured for DHCP of course) goes to /etc/hosts and looks up the IP address it should use on this interface.

If you aggregate bge0 and bge1 into aggr1, then a file /etc/hostname.aggr1 is created which Solaris will try to plumb at boot-time.

Now, you are trying to get a FAIL message for ce0 to disappear, yes? I can think of only two possibilities why a system would complain about ce0 FAIL:

1. File /etc/hostname.ce0 exists but actual interface ce0 does not exist on this hardware. Delete the file.
2. The interface ce0 does not exist on this platform but is included in an aggregate IPMP configuration that has been restored from a different hardware platform. Down the aggregate interface and delete the IPMP configuration, then recreate the aggregate with interfaces that do exist on this platform and exclude ce0 which doesn't.

Aggregating interfaces has nothing to do with other systems on the LAN. Provided the network cables from the aggregated interfaces go to network switch(es) that understand multi-pathing then all should be well.

I'm going to stop there. If I've completely misunderstood your question then please give us a clue what this is about please.

Hope that helps in some way.
 

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if_mpadm(1M)						  System Administration Commands					      if_mpadm(1M)

NAME
if_mpadm - administer interfaces in an IP multipathing group SYNOPSIS
if_mpadm -d | -r ifname DESCRIPTION
The if_mpadm utility administers IP interfaces that are part of an IP Multipathing (IPMP) group. Currently, administration is limited to offlining IP interfaces and undoing previous offline operations. When an IP interface is taken offline, all IP data traffic that was flowing over the IP interface is moved to another IP interface in the IPMP group. In addition, all UP IP addresses hosted on the IP interface are brought down, causing in.mpathd(1M) to stop probe-based failure detection on the IP interface. As a result, an offline IP interface will not be used for any inbound or outbound IP traffic. Only IP inter- faces that are in an IPMP group may be brought offline. If the IP interface is the last functioning interface in the IPMP group, the off- line operation will fail. When an offline operation is undone, any IP addresses hosted on that IP interface are brought UP and will be considered by in.mpathd for probe-based failure detection. In addition, provided the IP interface is otherwise active (see in.mpathd(1M)), it will again be used to send and receive IP data traffic for the IPMP group. Note that not all offline operations can be undone. For instance, in.mpathd may have offlined an IP interface because its hardware address was not unique within its IPMP group. The ipmpstat utility can be used to determine why an IP interface is offline, identify which IP interfaces in a group are being used for inbound and outbound IP traffic, and more; see ipmpstat(1M). OPTIONS
The if_mpadm utility supports the following options: -d ifname Offline the IP interface specified by ifname. If ifname is not in an IPMP group, or the offline would cause the IPMP group to lose network connectivity, the operation will fail. -r ifname Undo a previous offline of the IP interface specified by ifname. If ifname is not offline, the operation will fail. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Offlining an IP Interface The following command offlines the IP interface under0, causing any IP packets that were being sent and received through it to be handled by another IP interface in its group. example% if_mpadm -d under0 Example 2 Undoing a Previous Offline Operation Use the following command to undo the operation in the previous example: example% if_mpdadm -r under0 ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Unstable | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
ifconfig(1M), in.mpathd(1M), ipmpstat(1M), attributes(5) DIAGNOSTICS
cannot offline: no other functioning interfaces are in its IPMP group. Description: This message means that offlining the IP interface would leave the IPMP group without network connectivity. cannot offline: not a physical interface or not in an IPMP group Description: This means that the IP interface is not an underlying interface in an IPMP group, and therefore is not eligible to be offlined. SunOS 5.11 5 Jan 2009 if_mpadm(1M)
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