Remote Console
Grant Peel
gpeel at thenetnow.com
Sun Oct 16 05:57:58 PDT 2005
Thanks again Andrew,
I will do a search on COM Hubs and see whats out there. I assume, the HUB
would connect to one controll terminal, then to each COM port on the
servers.
I have been reading (pouring over and over) the man and handbook pages to
see if more than one console can be specified at a time.
If all goes well, it looks like we should be able to do anything from the
serial port, short of physicaly pushing the power button!
-Grant
----- Original Message -----
From: "Andrew P." <infofarmer at gmail.com>
To: "Grant Peel" <gpeel at thenetnow.com>
Cc: <freebsd-questions at freebsd.org>
Sent: Sunday, October 16, 2005 8:44 AM
Subject: Re: Remote Console
On 10/16/05, Grant Peel <gpeel at thenetnow.com> wrote:
> Thanks Andrew,
>
> So If I understand your reply, a setup like this should always give me
> access to any of the servers by SSHing to one server, then CUing to get to
> the console of the 'broken' one, regardless of its state (assuming the
> disks
> are OK, and boot stage 1 worked):
>
> (WAN Shown, LAN Same, using seperate nics on Servers and Switch)
>
>
> ISP's router
> |
> My Switch
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> | | | |
> |
> Serv1 Serv2 Serv3 Serv4
> Serv5
>
> Serial1--------->Serial2
> Serial1------------->Serial2
> Serial1------------>Serial2
>
> Serial1---------->Serial2
>
> Can more than 1 console access type be specified in loader.conf ?
> i.e.
> console='serialconsole'
> console='videoconsole'
>
> When using 'serial console, does anything have to be specified to use
> serial
> 2?
>
> What is the default local console, how is it specified?
> i.e. the one you use when you plug a keyboard and monitor directly
> into
> the machine?
>
> Would I need to install any other software other than the client (CU)?
>
> -GRant
>
I haven't configured comconsoles myself, I just happen
to work at a place where they are used heavily (Sun
ALOM mostly, but built-in LOMs and FreeBSD software
comsonsoles also). Please consult the Handbook and
google, I'm sure there's nothing difficult to it.
I would not support your chaining idea, though. It's
the only one that requires $0.00 budget, but COM
hubs are cheap today. If you rent rackspace, I'm
sure your colocation provider can offer you some
kind of non-expensive remote management. If
rackspace is free, consider buying some hardware
(like a COM hub).
The matter is, that you'll want 9600 bps speeds
for max compatibility. While it is usable for
occasional failure recovery, chaining it would
make it lag too much.
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