A good thing to do before you add all nodes to all pools is to add each node to a single test or management pool to confirm that each node is accessible on the network.
I would take a more systematic approach and add one node to one pool at a time, confirm from a client that the addresses assigned are available, then move onto the next one.
Some things to look at if you add a node's interface into a pool and the IP(s) for its interface is not accessible: Did you add the correct interface: 1gige vs 10gige vs 40gige vs aggregates? Are you using VLAN tagging and are all of the necessary VLANs trunked into the interface on the switch for the nodes? Are you using LACP, is this set up properly on the switch, did you add the aggregate interface and not the individual interfaces, did you choose the correct aggregation type? Physical connectivity: switch port enabled, cables plugged in, etc.
mtaormina
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April 24th, 2019 12:00
A good thing to do before you add all nodes to all pools is to add each node to a single test or management pool to confirm that each node is accessible on the network.
I would take a more systematic approach and add one node to one pool at a time, confirm from a client that the addresses assigned are available, then move onto the next one.
Some things to look at if you add a node's interface into a pool and the IP(s) for its interface is not accessible: Did you add the correct interface: 1gige vs 10gige vs 40gige vs aggregates? Are you using VLAN tagging and are all of the necessary VLANs trunked into the interface on the switch for the nodes? Are you using LACP, is this set up properly on the switch, did you add the aggregate interface and not the individual interfaces, did you choose the correct aggregation type? Physical connectivity: switch port enabled, cables plugged in, etc.