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xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] Changing MTU of vif
AoE with Xen works perfectly for me. The only problem is that it is rather
challenging to set up. You should be a pretty experienced sysadmin to get it
going.
I have set up a website at http://xenaoe.org where I am documenting my whole
setup and promoting the idea. I still need to get my initrd up there (pretty
I'd like to have heard your thoughts on the various AOE target
implimentations (vblade, kernel-vblade, qaoed, etc...)
----
I did come up with a crude fix for your vif-bridge problem...
log debug "Successful vif-bridge $command for $vif, bridge $bridge."
if [ "$command" == "online" ]
then
success
fi
after the "success" command, I added the following
(sleep 10; ifconfig "$vif" mtu 5200) &
e.g.
log debug "Successful vif-bridge $command for $vif, bridge $bridge."
if [ "$command" == "online" ]
then
success
do_without_error ifconfig "$vif" mtu 5200
(sleep 10; ifconfig "$vif" mtu 5200) &
fi
If you're not familiar with the syntax, the parenthesis cause a
another shell to be forked with the enclosed commands, and the
ampersand puts it in the background, so the main vif-bridge
script basically forks a child to sleep and tweak the mtu after a
delay.
It is not pretty, it is not clean, but then having a script like
the following run every 60 seconds isn't clean or pretty either:
#!/bin/bash
#
cd /sys/class/net/xenbr0/brif/
for f in * ; do
echo ifconfig $f mtu 5200;
ifconfig $f mtu 5200;
done
(why did I pick 5200? Because I wanted the system to use 4096
byte aoe transfers. )
(Oh, and from what I have seen, the MTU on the bridge device doesn't need
to be set... it is automatically the smallest MTU of any of the interfaces
attached to the bridge.)
-Tom
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