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| One will say it's Microsoft that does not follow RFC's One will say *BSD is just way to much strict. However, I need to "static arp" for a Microsoft multicast NLB cluster. I tried from Voyager - The entry is added to the web page, however an arp -a shows no entry... So I decided to add it manually and then : firewall[admin]# arp -s 10.20.13.73 3:bf:84:ab:d:49 writing to routing socket: Invalid argument firewall[admin]# arp -s 10.20.13.73 3:bf:84:ab:d:49 temp writing to routing socket: Invalid argument Jan 25 18:05:26 firewall [LOG_ERR] kernel: arp: ether address is broadcast or multicast for IP address 10.20.13.73! Since I'm running a pretty old IPSO 3.6 there, I wanted to know if some of you running more recent 3.[7-9] or 4.[0-1], manages to add a multicast mac@ to the static entries, for ex: arp -s you.r.sub.net 3:bf:84:ab:d:49 and/or if there is any way to override this..... or should we revert to MS Unicast NLB ? cheers PS : I know that Checkpoint or Cisco CSS loadbalancing is better than NLB. off-topic here please :)) |
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| Try going config -> ARP -> Accept multicast ARP replies "On" That should do the trick I think (Oh and I just checked that option is on IPSO 3.6) |
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| hey North ! I found the same in the same time. Works fine ! However, all members from the microsoft cluster responds to ping at the same time, creating a [Dup !] on the ping reply. Windows technotes says this is a normal behavior. I think multicast nlb implementation stinks. |
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| Great minds, and all that. Multicast is one way of solving a problem. Nokia uses multicast for one version of clustering. I think it's more elegant than forwarding mode, but the problem is that multicast support is still pretty patchy. |
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