[Freeipa-users] install IPA replica multi-hosts (ipa packages version 3.3.3-18)

Petr Spacek pspacek at redhat.com
Tue Mar 11 08:48:43 UTC 2014


On 10.3.2014 19:55, Dmitri Pal wrote:
> On 03/10/2014 11:16 AM, artjazz at free.fr wrote:
>> Selon Petr Spacek<pspacek at redhat.com>:
>>
>>> On 7.3.2014 16:57, Dmitri Pal wrote:
>>>> On 03/07/2014 10:29 AM, artjazz at free.fr wrote:
>>>>> Selon Petr Spacek<pspacek at redhat.com>:
>>>>>
>>>>>>>   On 7.3.2014 14:16,artjazz at free.fr  wrote:
>>>>>>>>   >   I want to install ipa server with a replica. The replica has 2
>>> NICs
>>>>>>> : the
>>>>>>>   ipa
>>>>>>>>   >   server is connected on the first interface and all the clients are
>>>>>>>   connected on
>>>>>>>>   >   the second interface. The two networks are completely separated, 2
>>>>>>> subnets
>>>>>>>   and
>>>>>>>>   >   not routed.
>>>>>>>   I'm curious - what is the reasoning behind this?:-)
>>>>> The goal is to separate the administration flux and the userland flux.
>>>>>
>>>> The problem is that it is not that clean.
>>>> One server can connect to another on different ports and using different
>>>> protocols for different purposes. And client can actually be a proxy that
>>> does
>>>> some admin tasks via LDAP or executes remote administrative commands.
>>>>
>>>> I think may be it is better to explore FW rules.
>>>> For example create a FW rule that would allow only Kerberos and LDAP
>>>> connections from a set of hosts that would be clients. Hm but that again
>>> would
>>>> prevent you from enrolling new systems since the ipa-client-install
>>> connects
>>>> to IPA via admin interface during the enrollment stage.
>>>>
>>>> May be there is some magic that can be done using DNS zones but I am not
>>> sure...
>>>
>>> Let me summarize this thread to:
>>> Sorry, this is not supported.
>> Thanks for your answer; It's clear for me now, I understand why my different
>> tests didn't work.
>>
>> Just for my information because it's a little bit confusing when I read in the
>> FreeIPA_Guide (Fedora18)  the following sentence:
>> 19.5. Setting DNS Entries for Multi-Homed Servers
>> Some server machines may support multiple network interface cards (NICs).
>> Multi-homed machines typically have multiple IPs, all assigned to the same
>> hostname. This works fine in FreeIPA most of the time because it listens on all
>> available interfaces, except localhost. For a server to be available through
>> any
>> NIC, edit the DNS zone file and add entries for each IP address. For example:
>> ipaserver  IN A  192.168.1.100
>> ipaserver  IN A  192.168.1.101
>> ipaserver  IN A  192.168.1.102
>>
>> What is the architecture of the Multi-Homed Servers in this case ?
>
> What do you mean "architecture" in this context?

The main difference between your setup and the example in docs is that you 
tried to use two different names for one server but the documentation shows an 
example where one name is associated with multiple IP addresses.

Multiple IP addresses for one name are supported as it is very basic 
requirement for IPv4 & IPv6 dual-stack configuration support.

Problems arise when you have multiple names for the same server.

Petr^2 Spacek




More information about the Freeipa-users mailing list