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Hello my dears,
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8.3. Comparison of Network Teaming to Bonding - Red Hat Customer Portal.
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HI Forum,
i was trying to configure ipv6 on my centos box with 2 physical interface bonded as bond0.
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Regards,
Ben (0 Replies)
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Hello,
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I think it should be fine but I would like to hear out your comments. (1 Reply)
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Hello,
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8. Linux
Hi All,
I want to configure static IP4 address in my Linux system. I just found sit0 is enabled in my system. ifconfig -a returns sit0 Link encap:IPv6-in-IPv4, but there is no eth0.
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BOND2TEAM(1) Bonding to Team conversion tool BOND2TEAM(1)
NAME
bond2team -- Converts bonding configuration to team
SYNOPSIS
bond2team [options]
DESCRIPTION
bond2team is a tool to convert bonding options to team trying as much as possible to keep the original functionality.
The resulting files are saved in a temporary directory using ifcfg style by default. In the case of converting an ifcfg file, it translates
the bonding options to team, preserving all other options. In that case, it converts the respective slave ifcfg files to team port, pre-
serving all their other options too. In case of converting from given bonding options in the command line, the tool can use the specified
ports as team ports.
OPTIONS
--master <interface>
Specify the interface name or ifcfg file to convert. If the interface name is specified, the tool will look at
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ for the respective ifcfg file.
--rename <interface>
This is a convenient option to replace the original interface name by the specified name. For instance, if --master specifies bond0,
it is possible to use --rename team0 to change the final interface name to team0.
--ifcfg
Set the output format to ifcfg config style. [default]
--json Set the output format to JSON style. See teamd.conf(5) for further details.
--bonding_opts '<bonding options>'
Specify the bonding options to be converted instead of reading them from the ifcfg file.
--port <interface>
Set the specified interface as a team port.
--configdir <directory>
Change the ifcfg configuration path from /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts to the specified <directory>.
--outputdir <directory>
Set the output directory to <directory>.
--stdout
Print the result to the screen instead of writing to files.
--debug
Increase the debugging level.
--quiet
Disallow any messages to be printed to console.
--version
Print tool version to console and exit.
--help Print help text to console and exit.
--examples
Print common usage examples to console and exit.
EXAMPLES
To convert the current 'bond0' ifcfg configuration to team ifcfg:
# bond2team --master bond0
To convert the current 'bond0' ifcfg configuration to team ifcfg renaming the interface name to 'team0'. Caution : firewall rules, alias
interfaces, etc., that might be tied to the original interface name can break after the renaming because the tool will only change the
ifcfg file, nothing else.
# bond2team --master bond0 --rename team0
To convert given bonding parameters with ports without any ifcfg:
# bond2team --bonding_opts 'mode=1 miimon=500 primary=eth1 primary_reselect=0' --port eth1 --port eth2 --port eth3 --port eth4
For more examples, see the option --examples.
CAVEATS
The tool will not convert any other configuration which might be tied to the current setup. For instance, firewall rules, alias interfaces,
bridges, and so on.
AUTHOR
Flavio Leitner is the original author of the tool. Jiri Pirko is the original author and current maintainer of libteam.
SEE ALSO
teamd(8), teamdctl(8), teamd.conf(5), teamnl(8)
libteam 2013-07-18 BOND2TEAM(1)