[ovirt-users] oVirt Hosted Engine Deployment Issues (and fixed!)

Tom Gamull tgamull at redhat.com
Fri Dec 2 13:28:25 UTC 2016


I had some similar issues (also with IPV6 which I haven’t retried lately).  I ended up double checking /etc/resolv.conf and just dropping an entry there and also ensuring the name servers were present in the ifcfg files.  This did the trick.  Depending on how you configure LACP, sometimes the DNS seems to magically disappear when ovirt creates the ovirtmgmt bridge interface.  If you are having an issue, it’s likely that interface.

The other thing that “may” be occurring is IPv6 is being used for DNS and you don’t have an IPv6 DNS server (or it’s not routing correctly).  You can verify that by disabling IPv6 (you have to use sysctl, ifcfg options won’t completely do it). If that works, then IPv6 was the issue.

Tom

> On Dec 2, 2016, at 4:18 AM, Simone Tiraboschi <stirabos at redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 3:11 AM, Jonathan Woytek <woytek at dryrose.com <mailto:woytek at dryrose.com>> wrote:
> Hello all. I've been trying to get a hosted-engine style deployment up and running on a small three-hypervisor cluster for prototyping some things before they get moved into a production environment. My hypervisors each have a 802.3ad bonded interface with several VLANs trunked over the link. The network is not currently connected to the internet, but can be for updates and the like. There is DNS available and correctly configured. 
> 
> I struggled for a few days trying to get the hosted engine to deploy correctly. Some issues I encountered were minor documentation issues (and mostly just me misinterpreting something that was written). For example, when choosing an image source, I could choose cdrom, file, or something else, and I tried to choose file (thinking "image file", since I had an ISO to use for building the engine vm). Of course, it would bomb because it wanted me to give it a preconfigured engine file, NOT an ISO. I eventually figured I'd just get the appliance engine file, and went that route (and, in that case, that part worked!).
> 
> Then, it started to bomb consistently right after starting the network configuration step. It turned out that the motherboards I had (Supermicro) did not have UUIDs encoded on them--they were blank. As a result, the vdi step was failing to gather the information it needed, but it kept dying with error messages that were pretty difficult to decipher. I eventually stumbled across the UUID as "None" in the return block, which finally led me to dmidecode to verify that the UUID was blank. Then I had to figure out how to actually get the UUID set. I found an AMI utility that helped me get them set to something, though it didn't actually set them correctly. In the meantime, Supermicro helpfully replied to my support request with a link to a utility they provide to do the same thing (though I wish that had been documented somewhere on their site!). 
> 
> UUIDs finally set, I started to work through a few other issues, and finally came to the point where it was gathering some network information before going to do the next step, and now it kept dying saying that the hostname was not unique, then it listed every IP address configured on the system (and there were several). DNS was working, and pointed to the correct IP address for the hostname. The hostname was set correctly. I could not get this to resolve. I got frustrated and posted on twitter. A few nice people here saw it and recommended that I join the mailing list. That's why I'm here now. 
> 
> Before I posted here, though, I wanted to try again when I was fresh and not having dealt with all of the previous problems. My first attempt was to drop the hostname into /etc/hosts, thinking maybe the install wasn't consulting DNS or was confused because there were several IP addresses. 
> 
> BINGO. This fixed the "not unique" address problem! 
> 
> ... now I just had to go and clean up a botched installation because it also couldn't find the hostname for the hosted engine (also in DNS, but I just put it in /etc/hosts to hopefully get around whatever issue that is). 
> 
> So.. long story short.. Thanks for good software and for being so willing to support it, and thanks for putting up with reading this whole thing. Now, if someone can explain why DNS isn't being consulted for host names correctly, that would be super... :) 
> 
> 
> It should be, absolutely.
> Would you like to share a log from one of your failure attempts?
> 
>  
> jonathan
> 
> 
> -- 
> Jonathan Woytek
> http://www.dryrose.com <http://www.dryrose.com/>
> KB3HOZ
> PGP:  462C 5F50 144D 6B09 3B65  FCE8 C1DC DEC4 E8B6 AABC
> 
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