--sever-bind-address is used by to configure the NIC that the server uses
to accept client connections.  --bind-address is between peers.  Only
really useful in a multi-NIC system to channel traffic from clients and
peer separately.

On Wed, Nov 7, 2018 at 12:39 PM, Mike Stolz <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm a little confused about the difference in gfsh between
> server-bind-address and bind-address. Can anybody help me out on this?
>
> I started two locators one at 192.168.1.8 and another at 192.168.1.9 using
> --bind-address in both cases.
>
> Then I started a server like this:
> gfsh>start server --name=server1 
> --locators=192.168.1.8[10334],192.168.1.9[10334]
> --bind-address=192.168.1.8
>
> which results in this:
>
> gfsh>list members
>
>   Name   | Id
>
> -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------
>
> locator  | 192.168.1.8(locator:9796:locator)<ec><v0>:1024 [Coordinator]
>
> locator1 | 192.168.1.9(locator1:4784:locator)<ec><v5>:1024
> server1  | 192.168.1.8(server1:10180)<v7>:1025
>
> Then I started another server like this:
>
> gfsh>start server --name=server3 
> --locators=192.168.1.8[10334],192.168.1.9[10334]
> --server-bind-address=192.168.1.8 --server-port=40405
>
>
> which resulted in this:
>
>   Name   | Id
>
> -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------
>
> server3  | 192.168.1.4(server3:10312)<v10>:1024
>
> locator  | 192.168.1.8(locator:9796:locator)<ec><v0>:1024 [Coordinator]
>
> locator1 | 192.168.1.9(locator1:4784:locator)<ec><v5>:1024
>
> server1  | 192.168.1.8(server1:10180)<v7>:1025
>
>
> This shows that the server3 used the default address of the machine
> 192.168.1.4 as the bind-address, but what did the server-bind-address
> setting actually do?
>



-- 
-John
john.blum10101 (skype)

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