If you really want to hack it, a private interconnect possible. But
you'll have to do so by hand. Note that you'll have to create files
that don't exist on S11, and you'll have to manually setup DHCP.
Basically follow the utadm script, follow the -a case. Where it does
file checks, create those files if they don't exist. Populate those
files as the script would do. Manually configure DHCP, as the script
would do.
Just curious as to what benefit you'd get over just LAN based and a
manual DHCP config when the network wire itself is private?
I feel that anything but LAN on always results in more work down the
road. In this case, where they don't work on S11, results in more
upfront work and more work anytime you want to make a change to
something like firmware versions, barrier levels, etc. Remember that
the DHCP vendor class tags used in private interconnects will override
other configuration methods, so I'd at least give a bit of thought to
whether you really want to do this considering the struggles you've
faced thus far.
This will eventually all work, but only when we officially support S11.
On 8/22/12 9:38 AM, Dave Price wrote:
Dear Marcel,
Thanks for your detailed list of commands. There
are a few parameter choices I think I will pick differently.
I don't think I want to enable NSCM in my scenario for instance.
I see also that you use -A and -L on to utadm and
I wanted a private interconnect (-a) which Craig Bender
says does not work on Solaris 11. I think I will
have to hand craft things a bit ...
I think I may choose to not use utseup at all, but do things
"the old way" as you have done.
Thanks,
Dave Price
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