Dave Anderson <anderson@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > ----- "Anirudh Srinivasan" <srianirudh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> hello friends, >> >> I was setting up netdump server in my workplace. I followed the >> following procedure: >> >> Server Configuration: >> >> 1. >> Verify that the netdump server is installed: rpm -q netdump-server . >> If it is not installed, install it by running the command: up2date >> netdump-server . >> 2. >> After the netdump server package is installed change the password for >> the "netdump" user to something that you know: passwd netdump >> 3. >> Enable the netdump server: chkconfig netdump-server on >> 4. >> Start the netdump server: service netdump-server start >> >> Client Configuration: >> >> 1. >> Verify that the netdump client is installed: rpm -q netdump . If it is >> not installed, install it by running the command: up2date netdump . >> 2. >> Edit /etc/sysconfig/netdump and add the following line: >> NETDUMPADDR=192.168.0.5 **192.168.0.5 should be changed to the ip >> address of the netdump server. >> 3. >> Enter the following command and give the netdump password when >> prompted: service netdump propagate >> 4. >> Enable the netdump client: chkconfig netdump on >> 5. >> Start the netdump client: service netdump start >> >> Now after doing this i get the following message: >> >> # service netdump start >> netdump: cannot arp <ipaddress> >> netdump: cannot find <ipaddress>in arp cache >> netdump: can't resolve <ipaddress> MAC address >> netdump server address resolution [FAILED] >> >> >> What could be the reason for this ? How could i solve this? > > > There's a couple other netdump masters on this list who can > hopefully help you out, but I'd start by taking a look at the > "print_address_info()" function in the /etc/rc.d/init.d/netdump > script. It does a traceroute of your configured netdump-server > IP to get the MAC address of the gateway if needed: > > # the needed MAC address is directly associated with the host > # IP address only if client and server are on the same subnet > # if not, the needed MAC address is that of the gateway; > # either way, this will be the first IP address from traceroute > trc_output="$(traceroute -i $DEV -n -m 1 $host_ip 2> /dev/null)" > if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then > trc_output="$(echo $trc_output | grep '^1 ' | awk '{print $2}')" > > for line in $trc_output; do mac_ip=$line; done > else > echo "$prog: cannot traceroute $host_ip on interface $DEV" 1>&2 > mac_ip=$host_ip > fi > > And then based upon what it got back, the subsequent arping error > message that you're seeing is generated: > > # If the server is on the same subnet as the client, but is currently > # offline, then the first hop will show up as our local address. This > # would not be a working setup, so we set mac_ip to the server ip. > localaddr=$(ip_of_device $DEV) > [ "mac_ip" = "$localaddr" ] && mac_ip=$host_ip > > arping -c 1 -I $DEV $mac_ip &> /dev/null > [ $? -ne 0 ] && echo "$prog: cannot arp $mac_ip on $DEV" 1>&2 > > So you can do the traceroute and arping commands above yourself to find out > exactly where it's having a problem. A common problem is not specifying the DEV= line in /etc/sysconfig/netdump. We need to know which interface netdump is configured for. Cheers, Jeff -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility