Nope, I specified Anonymous in the install so that I wouldn't have to do
all of the Kerberos stuff.

I've checked SPNs and they're fine, I've got the BackConnectionHostNames
registry value defined anyway - just wondering what else I can try...


On 10 February 2014 14:22, Miller Bonnie L. <[email protected]>wrote:

>  Does your site require Kerberos for authentication?
>
>
>
> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:
> [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *James Rankin
> *Sent:* Monday, February 10, 2014 3:49 AM
>
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* Re: [NTSysADM] NLB on Server 2012 R2
>
>
>
> Thanks all for help on this. After taking in all the info, I started again
> and now seem to have it working.
>
>
> Except for one thing - I can only connect to the NLB cluster through my
> web application by IP address. If I connect to
> http://10.10.10.10/ManagementServer it works fine. If I go to
> http://lb1/ManagementServer, I get a "401 Unauthorized" error. Same goes
> if I use FQDN.
>
>  Obviously there is a DNS entry set up, I can ping lb1.foo.com fine, etc.
>
>
>
> Anyone got any tips as to where to start looking at this? I'm assuming it
> may be some IIS setting needs checking - I can't begin to think where
> though....
>
> Cheers,
>
>
>  JR
>
>
>
> On 7 February 2014 16:05, Brian Desmond <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> *I'd a search on HyperV NLB - there's a bunch of stuff you have to do to
> make this work.*
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *Thanks,*
>
> *Brian Desmond*
>
> *[email protected] <[email protected]>*
>
>
>
> *w - 312.625.1438 <312.625.1438> | c - 312.731.3132 <312.731.3132>*
>
>
>
> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:
> [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *James Rankin
> *Sent:* Friday, February 7, 2014 2:51 AM
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* Re: [NTSysADM] NLB on Server 2012 R2
>
>
>
> It's on Hyper-V, I believe. I read that you need two NICs for unicast, so
> I've got the server admins to add a second NIC which I am now going to
> configure.
>
> I was stopping IIS and expecting it to failover, but that appears to be
> out of scope for NLB, as far as I can tell from this discourse. I will try
> disabling it in NLB Manager, as rebooting brings it back too quickly to
> tell if it's failed over or not, and I don't have access to Hyper-V to shut
> it down.
>
> I am assuming that although it can't do intelligent failover, it does do
> intelligent load balancing - i.e. it will route connections to the server
> with the least load?
>
> Cheers,
>
>  JR
>
>
>
>
>
> On 6 February 2014 23:54, Ken Schaefer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>  How are you "stopping the server"? If you're turning it off, or
> disabling in NLB manager, and everything stops working, then I don't think
> your cluster's working properly. Everything's just going to node 1
>
>
>
> Are you running this in VMs? If so, you may need to do some extra steps to
> get multicast to work.
>
>
>
> Cheers
>
> Ken
>
>
>
> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:
> [email protected]] *On Behalf Of *James Rankin
> *Sent:* Friday, 7 February 2014 1:54 AM
>
>
> *To:* [email protected]
> *Subject:* [NTSysADM] NLB on Server 2012 R2
>
>
>
> Anyone had any luck with configuring this? Must admit, I am an NLB-noob,
> so I've probably done something wrong....
>
> Trying to configure an NLB cluster for an IIS-based app on Server 2012 R2.
>
> Got two servers with the IIS app, Server1 and Server2
>
> Configured an NLB cluster to load balance these called Cluster1
>
> When both servers are up, everything seems to work fine. However, when I
> stop IIS on Server1, connecting to the Cluster1 DNS name just returns "page
> cannot be found". It's as if it always tries to connect to the original one
> it connected to.
>
> I can connect to http://Server1/app and http://Server2/app just fine.
>
> I can connect to http://Cluster1/app fine as long as both servers are up.
>
> If I shut down Server1, I can no longer connect to http://Cluster1/app
>
> What obvious thing should I be checking? There's not an awful lot of
> options to try with NLB - switching to Multicast seems to stop it working
> altogether :-(
>
> I've also messed with various bits of IIS but given that both servers
> accept connections I don't really think it's related to that.
>
> Give me a NetScaler any day over NLB!
>
> TIA,
>
>
>
> JRR
>
>
> --
>
> *James Rankin*
> ---------------------
> RCL - Senior Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS) | The Virtualization
> Practice Analyst - Desktop Virtualization
> http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> *James Rankin*
> ---------------------
> RCL - Senior Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS) | The Virtualization
> Practice Analyst - Desktop Virtualization
> http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk
>
>
>
>
> --
>
> *James Rankin*
> ---------------------
> RCL - Senior Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS) | The Virtualization
> Practice Analyst - Desktop Virtualization
> http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk
>



-- 
*James Rankin*
---------------------
RCL - Senior Technical Consultant (ACA, CCA, MCTS) | The Virtualization
Practice Analyst - Desktop Virtualization
http://appsensebigot.blogspot.co.uk

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