config network name
Configure each host in the cluster as follows to ensure that all members can communicate with each other:
- Set the hostname to a unique name (not localhost).
sudo hostnamectl set-hostname foo-1.example.com
- Edit /etc/hosts with the IP address and fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of each host in the cluster. You can add the unqualified name as well.
1.1.1.1 foo-1.example.com foo-1 2.2.2.2 foo-2.example.com foo-2 3.3.3.3 foo-3.example.com foo-3 4.4.4.4 foo-4.example.com foo-4
Important:- The canonical name of each host in /etc/hosts must be the FQDN (for example myhost-1.example.com), not the unqualified hostname (for example myhost-1). The canonical name is the first entry after the IP address.
- Do not use aliases, either in /etc/hosts or in configuring DNS.
- Unqualified hostnames (short names) must be unique in a Cloudera Manager instance. For example, you cannot have both host01.example.com and host01.standby.example.com managed by the same Cloudera Manager Server.
- Edit /etc/sysconfig/network with the FQDN of this host only:
HOSTNAME=foo-1.example.com
- Verify that each host consistently identifies to the network:
- Run uname -a and check that the hostname matches the output of the hostname command.
- Run /sbin/ifconfig and note the value of inet addr in the eth0 (or bond0) entry, for example:
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:0C:29:A4:E8:97 inet addr:172.29.82.176 Bcast:172.29.87.255 Mask:255.255.248.0 ...
- Run host -v -t A $(hostname) and verify that the output matches the hostname command.
The IP address should be the same as reported by ifconfig for eth0 (or bond0):
Trying "foo-1.example.com" ... ;; ANSWER SECTION: foo-1.example.com. 60 IN A 172.29.82.176