Not sure. I'm not so well versed in the firewall/networking areas. I
can however do an scp pull from both machines :
scp a file from 192.168.111.13 while logged onto 192.168.111.11
and
scp a file from 192.168.111.11 while logged onto 192.168.111.13
Can you point me where to look for firewall/iptables/SE issues?
Thanks in advance
On Mar 28, 2008, at 10:45 AM, Jonathan Nalley wrote:
are you running any kind of firewall/iptables/SELinux where the
settings are perhaps not the same on the two machines?
From: pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pgsql-admin-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
] On Behalf Of kevin kempter
Sent: Friday, March 28, 2008 12:31
To: pgsql-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: weird network issue
Hi LIst;
I have 2 Linux servers:
192.168.111.11
192.168.111.13
Both are running postgres v 8.2.6
I can ping the .11 box from .13 and vice versa
I can connect remotely from the .11 box to the .13 box but I cannot
connect to the .11 box from the .13 box.
I can do this:
on the 192.168.111.11 box:
-bash-3.1$ psql -h 192.168.111.13
Welcome to psql 8.2.6, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal.
Type: \copyright for distribution terms
\h for help with SQL commands
\? for help with psql commands
\g or terminate with semicolon to execute query
\q to quit
postgres=#
However if I do this it fails:
on the 192.168.111.13 box:
-bash-3.1$ psql -h 192.168.111.11 postgres
psql: could not connect to server: No route to host
Is the server running on host "192.168.111.11" and accepting
TCP/IP connections on port 5432?
Both boxes have the same copy of the postgresql.conf file and the
pg_hba.conf file.
Here's the listen address setting (on the 192.168.111.11 box) from
the postgresql.conf file:
listen_addresses = '*'
I also checked (after a restart) that the listen address and port
was in fact as I thought
on 192.168.111.11 :
Welcome to psql 8.2.6, the PostgreSQL interactive terminal.
Type: \copyright for distribution terms
\h for help with SQL commands
\? for help with psql commands
\g or terminate with semicolon to execute query
\q to quit
postgres=# show listen_addresses;
listen_addresses
------------------
*
(1 row)
postgres=# show port
;
port
------
5432
(1 row)
postgres=#
Here's the current pg_hba.conf file on 192.168.111.11 :
# TYPE DATABASE USER CIDR-ADDRESS METHOD
# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only
local all all ident sameuser
# IPv4 local connections:
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 ident sameuser
# IPv6 local connections:
host all all ::1/128 ident sameuser
#DRW. This should be tighted up once the db instances are figured out
host all all 192.168.111.0/24 trust
I'm stumped..
Anyone have any thoughts ?
Thanks in advance.
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