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Messages - ahenning

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541
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 21, 2014, 12:56:38 PM »
If you see the logs and after restarts they are gone and start from scratch again, then there is a disk related issue. This might also explain why you are having so much issues with the dd commands as well as explaining why no issues are seen in edge-edge mode. Perhaps start by replacing the B side, at least get the logs to persist during restarts. Check the overview page to see which drive the datastore is mounted on.

542
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 21, 2014, 12:36:04 PM »
Then something is not setup right, because you are supposed to see the logs entries before the restart.

543
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 21, 2014, 11:51:41 AM »
Anil, provide the full log please. e.g. I need to see what happened at B end and if this is related to the required restart.

544
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 21, 2014, 11:38:31 AM »
and B (where the issue is)?

545
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 19, 2014, 08:33:17 AM »
1) Please provide the switch port config of the L2 P2P link without Wanos
2) How does the router decide which traffic to route over the L2 P2P: e.g. static routes or pbr. And is the routing asymmetrical?

546
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 18, 2014, 09:26:37 PM »
Anil,

First get the network to work without installing Wanos. Then plot out the ip addresses as you have done here on the working topology.

Wanos is a bridge, like a switch, there is no need to make the addressing complicated. From one of the previous messages it sounded like the ISP link is a layer2 link? In this case I would expect the LAN on both ends to have the same addresses, so to see three different subnets without any layer3 devices is a bit confusing (or at a minimum not the complete picture).

547
Features / Re: Wanos Out of band management
« on: July 18, 2014, 09:19:43 PM »
Notes for anyone using this work around:

'sudo vi /opt/bootsync.sh':
### Out of band management
ifconfig eth2 192.168.2.200 netmask 255.255.255.0 broadcast 192.168.2.255 up


Wiki entry added with additional step to add a gateway as well: Wanos Out of Band Management

548
Installation / Re: loading image to Physical Hdd
« on: July 18, 2014, 09:08:34 PM »
Thanks Ram!


Anil, are the drives perhaps SCSI based? If so, as an alternative, boot from the flash drive as normal and mount the datastore on the physical disk.

Are the two drives that did not work perhaps SCSI based?

550
Installation / Re: loading image to Physical Hdd
« on: July 17, 2014, 08:48:33 PM »
Depending on the speed of the drive, with Win32 Imager it usually takes about 10-15 minutes, with dd about double.

551
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 17, 2014, 04:21:08 PM »
No, lan0 and wan0 are bridged in software and any ip addresses applied to them are not used.

552
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 17, 2014, 02:38:14 PM »
ToDevice(wan0): Message too long

Traffic is not flowing through B

553
If a 100 MB file is reduced to 10 MB, that would be 10X, as in reduced by a factor of 10. It can also be put as a 90% reduction.

Low is configured for speed over reduction rates. For example: Low-Low bypasses the disk based optimization for optimal speed.The best combination of speed vs peak reduction to a remote site is to use High->Low. For peak bidirectional optimization use High<->High, which would be used if the link is likely to be congested in both directions.


554
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 17, 2014, 11:31:00 AM »
Ok, a layer-2 setup is fine, there is no need for a router, but the wanos bridge needs to separate the ISP side from the lan side, either physically with the cabling or with separate inside/outside vlans.

555
Troubleshooting / Re: Lan0 & wan0 speed
« on: July 17, 2014, 10:44:25 AM »
I suspect that it is possible that both lan0 and wan0 might be in the same vlan and hence the 'peer detected on lan0'. The wanos bridge needs to separate the wan side from the lan side, either physically between the router and lan switch or using two different vlans for the wan and lan network.

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