I see you are on AIX. You may use smit (or smitty) Communications --> TME 10
NetView --> Maintain --> Clear databases --> Clear topology database
(completely). Thus will shut down daemons and any EUI's until completed.
When you restart the EUI the topolgy will be rediscovered from scratch.
Blaine Owens
Eastman Chemical Company
Email - bowens@eastman.com
Phone - (423)229-3579
Fax - (423)229-1188
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Matt Ashfield [SMTP:mda@unb.ca]
> Sent: Tuesday, May 11, 1999 8:40 AM
> To: NV-L@UCSBVM.ucsb.edu
> Subject: Re: discovering a change in ip address??
>
> Sounds about right. How do I do it?
>
> Matt
> mda@unb.ca
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Todd E. Lewis <telewis@providentbankmd.com>
> To: NV-L@ucsbvm.ucsb.edu <NV-L@ucsbvm.ucsb.edu>
> Date: Tuesday, May 11, 1999 9:34 AM
> Subject: Re: discovering a change in ip address??
>
>
> I wonder if you may have to dump your discovery database and re-discover
> your network ip changes.
>
> >>> Matt Ashfield <mda@UNB.CA> 05/11 8:21 AM >>>
> Hi all,
>
> Recently a bunch of our servers changed ip addresses. Their new addresses
> are in a different subnet. These new addresses used to belong to other
> machines that were taken out of service at the same time the servers
> assumed
> their ip addresses. I have tried to discover the servers at the new
> address,
> but when I do a demand poll at the server address I get the message that a
> node already exists in the database for that name. I've deleted the
> server's
> objects at their old ip address? Shouldn't that have deleted them from the
> database as well?
>
> Any help would be appreciated!
>
> PS. Using Netview 5.1.1, AIX4.3.2
>
> Cheers
>
> Matt
> mda@unb.ca
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