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Host table tips – Grass Valley K2 Storage System Instruction Manual v.3.3 User Manual

Page 323

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June 25, 2009

K2 Storage System Instruction Manual

323

Setting up host tables

Server operating system computers. If you include the names and addresses of all the
devices on the network, then you can copy the same file onto all the other K2 devices
instead of editing the hosts file on each K2 device.

For FTP transfers on a K2 Storage System, transfers go to/from K2 Media Servers that
have the role of FTP server. No transfers go directly to/from the shared storage K2
Media Clients that are on the K2 Storage System. So in the hosts file, you must add
the “he_0” extension to a K2 Media Server hostname and associate that hostname
with the K2 Media Server’s FTP/streaming network IP address.

Refer to the K2 Media Client System Guide for more information.

To edit the hosts file manually:

1. Open the following file using Notepad or some other text editing application:

C:\Windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts

2. Enter all IP addresses with machine names. The text format is simple. First type the

Ethernet IP address, then use the TAB key or Space bar to insert a few spaces. Then
type the machine name.

Here is an example:

192.168.100.11

root-server-1

192.168.101.11

root-server-1_he0

192.168.100.21

root-server-2

192.168.101.21

root-server-2_he0

192.168.100.31

root-server-3

192.168.101.31

root-server-3_he0

192.168.100.51

root-raid-1

192.168.100.61

root-gige-1

3. Save the file and exit the text editor.

4. Copy the new hosts file onto all the other machines. This is easier than editing the

file on each machine.

Host table tips

• If transferring to or from a Profile XP or Open SAN system via UIM, the hosts file

must also follow UIM naming conventions for those systems. Refer to the UIM
Instruction Manual.

• Do not enter media (iSCSI) network IP addresses in the host table, as hostname

resolution is not required for the media network.

• Use the following tip with care. While it can solve a problem, it also introduces a

name resolution “anomaly” that might be confusing if not considered in future
troubleshooting activities.

For each SAN (shared storage) K2 Media Client, add the “_he0” suffix to the
hostname but then associate that hostname with the K2 Media Server’s FTP/
streaming network IP address, not the K2 Media Client’s IP address. Aliasing K2
Media Client hostnames in this way would not be required if the transfer source/
destination was always correctly specified as the K2 Media Server. However, a