Thanks for the response. On Fri, Jan 06, 2006 at 02:44:35PM -0800, Atom Powers wrote: > Maybe: > ---- > defaultroute: > 128_32_183.!169_229_58:: > 128.32.183.254 > > 169_229_58.!128_32_183.:: > 169.229.58.1
I don't understand what the extra "." is supposed to be doing, but it does seem to make a difference. This stops the error messages, because the host with dual NICs is now not in either of those classes. However, if I add it back explicitly, the errors come back, so the problem isn't solved. What does the trailing . on the class mean? > use cfagent -qv to see which classes are getting defined. Yes, I always do that in testing mode, and I can see that both 128_32_183 and 169_229_58 are defined for that host. Thanks. Steve -- Steve Sizemore <steve (at) ls.berkeley.edu>, (510) 642-8570 Unix System Manager Dept. of Mathematics and College of Letters and Science University of California, Berkeley _______________________________________________ Help-cfengine mailing list Help-cfengine@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-cfengine