Try it anyway?

On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 3:44 PM, Kurt Buff <[email protected]> wrote:

> They're trunked...
>
> Kurt
>
> On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 4:16 PM, Sean Martin <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > If you're uplinks aren't trunked, don't specify the VLAN ID within the
> port
> > group settings. Try leaving the VLAN type set to none.
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 12:39 PM, Kurt Buff <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> All,
> >>
> >> My search-fu is failing, so I turn to you for help...
> >>
> >> I have a small ESXi 5.5 host, about to go into production.
> >>
> >> The three VMs (2008R2 for all of them, a DC, Exchange 2010 and a PRTG
> >> box) on it can communicate with machines not on the ESXi host - ping,
> >> RDP, etc. - and vice versa. No problems.
> >>
> >> However, the three VMs on this host cannot talk with each other. No
> >> ping, no RDP. When pinging from one of the VMs to another, I get a mix
> >> of unreachables from the VMs own address and straight timeouts.
> >>
> >> There is only one vSwitch, which has two NICs bound to it, and the
> >> vswitch is set up to route based on IP hash. The physical switch to
> >> which they are connect (and this shouldn't matter, but...) is an HP
> >> 2510G-48, and the ports for the host are in a simple trunk - no LACP.
> >>
> >> I've turned off the Domain profile of the firewall on one of the
> >> machine, which seems to make no difference.
> >>
> >> I've examined the VMware host security settings to no avail. I've
> >> turned off the Windows firewall.
> >>
> >> I've got 3 ESXi hosts in a vSphere Standard cluster that doesn't have
> >> this problem.
> >>
> >> Kurt
> >>
> >>
> >
>
>
>

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