Nortel Networks Sun Fire V100 User Manual

Page 176

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NN10287-301 MCS 5100 3.5 Standard 5.0 December 2006

176

Copyright © 2006 Nortel Networks

address 192.168.14.22, its subnet mask is ffffff00, which
translates to 255.255.255.0, and the interface is UP (active).

4

Look for the entry which starts ‘dmfe1.’ The parameters that
follow show the IP address, subnet mask, and whether the
interface is ‘UP.’ This example output shows that dmfe1 is
assigned to IP address 192.168.14.23, its subnet mask is ffffff00
which translates to 255.255.255.0, and the interface is UP
(active).

5

Look for the entry which starts ‘dmfe0:1.’ This is the machine
logical interface. Notice that the machine logical has ‘attached’
itself to dmfe0 and added a suffix of ‘:1’ creating dmfe0:1. When
a machine logical (or service logical) interface is created, the
v100 will always attempt to ‘attach’ to the first interface, dmfe0.
If dmfe0 were unavailable, or out of service, the machine logical
would then ‘attach’ itself to dmfe1 creating dmfe1:1. The
parameters which follow show the IP address, subnet mask, and
whether the interface is ‘UP.’

This example output shows that dmfe0:1 is assigned to IP
address 192.168.14.21, its subnet mask is ffffff00, which
translates to 255.255.255.0, and the interface is UP (active).

6

Verify that the host file is correct:

[@mcsdb]/export/home/nortel:=> cat /etc/hosts

#

# Internet host table

#

127.0.0.1 localhost

192.168.14.21 mcsdb loghost

192.168.14.22 mcsdbdmfe0
192.168.14.23 mcsdbdmfe1

The first 192 address should reflect your machine logical IP
address in addition to the hostname and the ‘loghost’ tag.

The second 192 address should reflect the dmfe0 interface
followed by the hostname concatenated with ‘dmfe0.’

The third 192 address should reflect the dmfe1 interface followed
by the hostname concatenated with ‘dmfe1.’

7

Verify the defaultroutefile:

[@mcsdb]/export/home/nortel:=> cat /etc/defaultrouter

192.168.14.1

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