FileWave Appliances and Networking
What
FileWave provides pre-built Appliances, quick to setup and peace of mind all should be well. These currently include:
- FileWave Server
- Booster
- IVS
Out of the box, FileWave Appliances are configured to use DHCP.
It is recommended that these are set to use static IPs, either from reconfiguring the Appliance or by way of DHCP reservations.
Why
FileWave cannot know in advance any network configuration, since each network will have its own unique setup. However, static IP addresses provide greater reliability of service and faster data exchange with the aim to guarantee uptime. As such, although the Appliances are built with DHCP configured, this should be addressed on initial configuration of the Appliance.
Information
The following articles offer details for configuring static addresses on FileWave Appliances:
https://kb.filewave.com/books/evaluation-guide/page/filewave-server-setupFileWave Server Setuphttps://kb.filewave.com/books/boosters/page/networking-assign-static-ip-address-for-a-filewave-booster-applianceNetworking - Assign static IP Address for a FileWave Booster Appliancehttps://kb.filewave.com/books/network-imaging-ivs/page/ivs-control-commandsIVS Control Commands
However, it is also possible to use DHCP IP reservations, forcing an IP address per MAC address; configured on the DHCP server instead.
Troubleshooting
Example customer report to the FileWave Support Team:
Report
“Despite having a DHCP IP reservation the Booster was not being assigned the defined IP.”
Resolution
In this instance, working with the customer, the FileWave Support team helped identify 2 DHCP servers offering addresses for this same subnet and only one was configured to assign the correct static IP.
Recommendation
The following considerations should be noted:
- Where multiple DHCP servers are considered necessary to server a subnet, ensure each DHCP server is configured for a unique addresses pool; multiple DHCP servers should not be configured to provide the same addresses in a given subnet.
- Since only one DHCP server should provide any one single IP for a subnet, when mixing DHCP with static reservations, only one server can be configured to offer an IP for any one MAC address in a given subnet.
- The consequence of the above: for static reservations, only add the MAC address for a device on one DHCP server for that subnet, which is handling the range of the desired IP.
Overlapping address pools and relying on DHCP synchronisation is not recommended.
The below table shows some commands that were useful during the troubleshooting of the described example issue:
Command | Description |
|
Show network interfaces, including IP, MAC addresses, etc. |
|
List just the names of the network interfaces |
|
Refresh the client lease of the provided network interface |
|
Display the network neighbour cache |
Examples:
'ip' command listing two defined interfaces. In the example, 'ens192' is the active network interface for all external traffic.
# ip a
1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 ::1/128 scope host noprefixroute
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
2: ens192: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP,LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 00:0c:29:1d:1c:75 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
altname enp11s0
inet 10.85.1.9/24 brd 10.85.1.255 scope global ens192
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
'lo' is the local loopback address
Assists in displaying the MAC address if required for DHCP static IP reservation
The below command more simplistically displays the names of the interfaces alone:
# ls /sys/class/net
ens192 lo
Were an appliance to pick up an 'incorrect' IP, it may be necessary to force the device to establish a new IP from the DHCP server. Using the above example, the network interface name is 'ens192'. Therefore the command would appear as:
# dhclient ens192
The dhclient command should be ran as root
The 'arp' command can be useful in identifying network conflicts. The below example shows the DHCP/DNS server, along with two devices that the FileWave Appliance is now aware.
# arp -a
Linksys38496.home (10.85.1.1) at d8:9f:80:4c:24:67 [ether] on ens192
FW1063.home (10.85.1.230) at 5c:96:cf:db:62:3b [ether] on ens192
ml1063.home (10.85.1.136) at ac:d0:74:68:23:6d [ether] on ens192