> There's an argument that if your switch is down for 30 minutes, you > have bigger problems. If you have a 30 minute switch outage, the chances > are that you can live with the node power-up time on top of that. Point taken, but the problem is that if there is a switch outage and the nodes kill each other, then somebody has to come in, power the nodes back on and make sure everything comes up OK. It would be much easier if the nodes would just detect that the switch is down and wait patiently without doing anything (since there is really nothing wrong with the nodes at all, and if they just wait for the switch to come back, everything will be fine.) We do have a history of flaky network here because we're a college...we have a lot of machines on campus that we don't control (student-owned) and we get weird traffic, rogue machines, etc. more frequently than a locked-down corporate environment. I want to make sure that one of those network events doesn't needlessly bring down our mail service, which is what will be running on this cluster. -Andrew L -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster