On Monday, 01/14/2008 at 12:07 EST, Karl Kingston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Maybe I need to research some more or something but we had the following: > > CHPID F0 has hipersockets 7100-710F defined > CHPID F1 has hipersockets 7200-720F defined. > > Just created a Linux system and assigned it hipersockets 7200-7202. Set up > the IP as 192.168.207.132. > > Other systems are using 7100-710E. > > My issue is this: Why can't the hipersocket on 7200-7202 see anything on the > others and vice versa? can't even ping a guest using 7100-7102 using > hipersockets. Am I missing something here?
Yes. Each HiperSocket chpid is a separate LAN segment. You can have up to 16 of them. Alan Altmark z/VM Development IBM Endicott
