Hello,
did you test the case that you use native IPs?
I changed the hostname to debianvm1, I added an entry debianvm1       10.10.8.2 
to the /etc/hosts and I used the debianvm1 alias for the I/O server, but again 
the same error... It cannot bind to this address!

Thanks.



> Le Mon, 23 Jan 2012 16:33:39 +0200
> Dimokritos Stamatakis <[email protected]> écrivait:
> 
>> Yes, I edited the /etc/hosts file before, as a possible solution, but
>> nothing happened.
>> 
>> I actually wrote :
>> 10.10.8.2      debianvm1
> 
> That's fine, but now you need to set your hostname accordingly:
> 
> hostname debianvm1
> 
> then:
> 
> hostname > /etc/hostname
> 
> And if you have several VM, you should do the same on all of them,
> insert all of their IPs in the /etc/hosts file, then copy
> the /etc/hosts file to all vms.
> 
>> and then I used debianvm1 as an alias...
>> Do I have to provide the actual IP of the physical machine??
>> 10.10.8.2 is the IP of the virtual machine.
> 
> No, it's the virtual machine IP that counts.
> 
> 
> -- 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Emmanuel Florac     |   Direction technique
>                    |   Intellique
>                    |  <[email protected]>
>                    |   +33 1 78 94 84 02
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