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Message-ID: <1564097836.11887.16.camel@alliedtelesis.co.nz>
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 2019 23:37:16 +0000
From: Chris Packham <Chris.Packham@...iedtelesis.co.nz>
To: "tipc-discussion@...ts.sourceforge.net"
<tipc-discussion@...ts.sourceforge.net>
CC: "netdev@...r.kernel.org" <netdev@...r.kernel.org>,
"linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org" <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Slowness forming TIPC cluster with explicit node addresses
Hi,
I'm having problems forming a TIPC cluster between 2 nodes.
This is the basic steps I'm going through on each node.
modprobe tipc
ip link set eth2 up
tipc node set addr 1.1.5 # or 1.1.6
tipc bearer enable media eth dev eth0
Then to confirm if the cluster is formed I use tipc link list
[root@...e-5 ~]# tipc link list
broadcast-link: up
...
Looking at tcpdump the two nodes are sending packets
22:30:05.782320 TIPC v2.0 1.1.5 > 0.0.0, headerlength 60 bytes,
MessageSize 76 bytes, Neighbor Detection Protocol internal, messageType
Link request
22:30:05.863555 TIPC v2.0 1.1.6 > 0.0.0, headerlength 60 bytes,
MessageSize 76 bytes, Neighbor Detection Protocol internal, messageType
Link request
Eventually (after a few minutes) the link does come up
[root@...e-6 ~]# tipc link list
broadcast-link: up
1001006:eth2-1001005:eth2: up
[root@...e-5 ~]# tipc link list
broadcast-link: up
1001005:eth2-1001006:eth2: up
When I remove the "tipc node set addr" things seem to kick into life
straight away
[root@...e-5 ~]# tipc link list
broadcast-link: up
0050b61bd2aa:eth2-0050b61e6dfa:eth2: up
So there appears to be some difference in behaviour between having an
explicit node address and using the default. Unfortunately our
application relies on setting the node addresses.
[root@...e-5 ~]# uname -a
Linux linuxbox 5.2.0-at1+ #8 SMP Thu Jul 25 23:22:41 UTC 2019 ppc
GNU/Linux
Any thoughts on the problem?
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