[Freeipa-devel] ipa-replica-prepare requests reverse zone on RHEL

Oleg Fayans ofayans at redhat.com
Thu Aug 20 10:37:29 UTC 2015



On 08/20/2015 12:01 PM, Martin Basti wrote:
>
>
> On 08/20/2015 11:52 AM, Martin Basti wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 08/20/2015 11:42 AM, Oleg Fayans wrote:
>>> Hi Martin
>>>
>>> On 08/20/2015 11:33 AM, Martin Basti wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 08/20/2015 10:18 AM, Oleg Fayans wrote:
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> I am trying to run integration tests for dnssec in RHEL-7.2
>>>>> The tests keep failing at the step of preparing the replica. I figured
>>>>> out, the ipa-replica-prepare with the standard parameters requests
>>>>> reverse zone info (does not do it in fedora) which causes the test to
>>>>> fail.
>>>>>
>>>>> Does anyone know why does it do it? We can, of course update our tests
>>>>> adding a --no-reverse option, but I'd like to know how come it behaves
>>>>> differently depending on the platform.
>>>>>
>>>>> The system is
>>>>> dell-pe1950-06.rhts.eng.brq.redhat.com
>>>>>
>>>>> The command looks like this:
>>>>>
>>>>> [root at dell-pe1950-06 ~]# ipa-replica-prepare -p '<password>'
>>>>> --ip-address 10.34.54.25 dell-pe1950-05.rhts.eng.brq.redhat.com
>>>>> Do you want to configure the reverse zone? [yes]:
>>>>>
>>>> Reverse zone is not needed for DNSSEC test, you can use --no-reverse
>>>> option.
>>>>
>>>> Did you test fedora on the same machine?
>>> No, it's a beaker-provisioned vm.
>>>
>>> I added a --no-reverse to the install_replica method in
>>> ipatests/test_integration/tasks.py. It fixed this particular issue.
>>> However, now the test fails at the step of ipa-replica-install:
>>>
>>> [root at dell-pe1950-05 ~]# ipa-replica-install -U -p '<password>' -w
>>> '<password>' --ip-address 10.34.54.25
>>> /var/lib/ipa/replica-info-dell-pe1950-05.rhts.eng.brq.redhat.com.gpg
>>> --setup-ca --setup-dns --forwarder 10.34.32.1
>>> WARNING: conflicting time&date synchronization service 'chronyd' will
>>> be disabled in favor of ntpd
>>>
>>> ipa         : ERROR    Unable to resolve the IP address
>>> 2620:52:0:2236:215:c5ff:fef3:e54f to a host name, check /etc/hosts
>>> and DNS name resolution
>>>
>>
>> Hmm, this is interesting, is 2620:52:0:2236:215:c5ff:fef3:e54f IP
>> address of replica or master.
>>
>>
> Does the resolv.conf point to master on replica?
It's an ip address of the replica. And yes, it does point to master's ip.

-- 
Oleg Fayans
Quality Engineer
FreeIPA team
RedHat.




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