Sometimes however autodiscovery does not function as you would like,
for example a node might not see multicast traffic from other nodes.
This has occurred with some
PCMCIA ethernet drivers. One solution is to place the interface in
promiscuous and or multicast mode as detailed below:
Aug 31 20:45:58 localhost kernel: openMosix configuration changed: This is openMosix #98 (of 1 configured)
Aug 31 20:45:58 localhost kernel: openMosix #98 is at IP address 10.0.0.98Aug 31 20:45:58 localhost omdiscd[1627]: Notified kernel to activate
openMosix Aug 31 20:45:58 localhost kernel: Received an unauthorized information request from 10.0.0.99 |
What you should to then is try to force your NIC
into promiscuous and/
or multicast mode
manually.
ifconfig ethx promisc
or
ifconfig ethx multicast |
You might also want to run
tcpdump -i eth0 ether multicast |
which will have the same effect but you will now also be able to see the
packages yourself.
On some Layer 3 switches you other configs might be required.
An openMosix user
found out that on his Switch Summit48Si (Extreme Networks) he had to run
disable ipmcforwarding (to deactivate the routing of multicast paquets)
disable igmp snooping |
before he was the different omdiscd's were able to see eachother, other switches might require similar configs.
Aug 31 22:14:43 inspon omdiscd[1422]: Simulated notification to activate openMosix
[root@inspon root]# showmap
My Node-Id: 0x0063
Base Node-Id Address Count
------------ ---------------- -----
0x0063 10.0.0.99 1
[root@inspon root]# /etc/init.d/openmosix status
OpenMosix is currently disabled
[root@inspon root]# |
If you see the
simulated you have probably forgotten
to put the
in comment.
I have also noticed that autodiscovery does not work with FireWire
based network cards.