Hi John.. re: "However, in F13 there is no "luci_admin" utility to set the password and Luci isn't accessible from a web browser." I found the same myself when trying to configure, using the luci_admin from RHEL 5 did not work either, I even went as far as e-mailing the dev from Redhat who compiled the FC13 version to try and get the default password but have had no reply (e-mail sent from work account and I do not have access to it at the moment) as for the Luci not being available, I believe that it is now running on a different port, from what I can remember it is now on 8080 ( a netstat -an| grep luci should get the port) When you load this up you get a demo version of Luci with systems populated, and it looks nice! I also tried the RHEL version of Luci against the FC13 cluster with mixed results (if you count it not working as a mixed result!) Jay On 12 July 2010 15:06, Virginian <virginian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi Gordon, > > It looks to me like things have changed quite a bit in F13 compared to RHEL > / Centos 5. I agree, cluster.conf looks the same but there is a new > component called Corosync and ccs seems to have gone. > > Traditionally I have used Conga to configure the Cluster (although not > without problems at times it has to be said). However, in F13 there is no > "luci_admin" utility to set the password and Luci isn't accessible from a > web browser. I don't mind configuring things by hand if that's the only way > to do it, I was just looking to be pointed in the right direction really. I > have received some help offline from a member of this list which has proved > invaluable. I have now managed to get a basic cluster up and running on F13. > Our fellow list member is working on a document which I think will be of > enormous help to others when completed (in fact it is already a useful doc). > > The old docs specified which ports / protocols needed to be opened up in > iptables but as I haven't sussed out what's needed under F13 I am running > with iptables stopped for now. If anybody has this information I would be > very grateful to receive it. > > Thanks & regards > > John > > ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gordan Bobic" <gordan@xxxxxxxxxx> > To: "linux clustering" <linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Monday, July 12, 2010 2:47 PM > Subject: Re: Fedora 13 Clustering > > >> Maybe I'm missing what exactly you guys are talking about, but >> everything I can think of in RHCS is configured via cluster.conf. My >> cluster.conf files from RHEL5 work just fine on RHEL6 beta, which is >> virtually identical to F12/F13. I don't see why you would have any >> problems getting RHCS to work on F13 using the same instructions you >> would follow for RHEL/CentOS 5. >> >> Gordan >> >> On Mon, 2010-07-12 at 14:37 +0100, Jason Fitzpatrick wrote: >>> >>> Hi John.. >>> >>> Normally I do not agree with replying to posts without anything >>> constructive to say but I thought that I should in this case. >>> >>> I have to admit that I ran into the same issues as you, I built a RHEL >>> 5.5 cluster and decided to give the FC13 path a try, Tried to use Luci >>> / Ricci to configure the nodes and had no luck even managing to log >>> into Luci, no documents / man pages included with the packages and the >>> readme file that was included was the same one that was included with >>> the old source files, and had not been updated since. >>> >>> In the end I gave up and went back to RHEL. >>> >>> (that said you can go the heartbeat route, this I got to work when >>> using oracles ocfs as a shared data store on drbd) >>> >>> Jay >>> >>> On 9 July 2010 21:43, Virginian <virginian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> > Hi All, >>> > >>> > I've played around with Red Hat Cluster Suite on Centos 5 and found > >>> > plenty >>> > of information on how to install and configure the cluster and nodes. I >>> > > have >>> > been trawling Google and other search engines trying to find accurate >>> > instructions for running Cluster Suite on Fedora 13. So far I have > >>> > pretty >>> > much drawn a blank. What I am looking for is instructions on how to >>> > configure a 2 node cluster with iSCSI shared storage for GFS2, the aim >>> > > being >>> > to run virtualised Linux guests under KVM and have the ability to > >>> > migrate >>> > the guests from one node to the other in the event of a node failure. > >>> > From >>> > what I have read, what I understood to be RHCS in RHEL 5 / Centos 5 has >>> > changed quite significantly. It looks like openais / corosync are new >>> > components and ccs has largely disappeared. If I could find some > >>> > information >>> > on how to configure corosync, openais, amf etc. to achieve a fairly > >>> > simple 2 >>> > node cluster as described I think I would be ok. I've tried googling > >>> > for >>> > this under Fedora 13 but so far drawn a blank. Has anybody else set up >>> > > a >>> > cluster similar to the above under Fedora 13? >>> > >>> > Regards >>> > >>> > John >>> > -- >>> > Linux-cluster mailing list >>> > Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx >>> > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster >>> > >>> >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> Linux-cluster mailing list >> Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx >> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster > > > -- > Linux-cluster mailing list > Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster > -- "The only difference between saints and sinners is that every saint has a past while every sinner has a future. " — Oscar Wilde -- Linux-cluster mailing list Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster