A cluster address can be reached from other computers on the same subnet as
the cluster, but computers on remote subnets cannot ping the cluster
address.
To resolve these issues, use the corresponding resolutions below:
- Verify that you can PING the dedicated IP addresses for the cluster
hosts from a system outside the router. If this test fails and you are
using multiple NICs, the cluster is unreachable because of a problem
unrelated to Windows NT Load Balancing Service (WLBS). If you are using a single NIC for both the dedicated
and cluster IP addresses, go to the next step.
- Verify that you can PING the cluster from a client on the cluster's subnet
and that you can ping the cluster hosts' dedicated IP addresses from a system
outside the router. If these tests work properly, the router is probably at
fault. You should be able to add a static ARP entry for the cluster address to the router to
circumvent the problem. You can also turn off WLBS's multicast support and
use a unicast network address without a switch.
- Either switch to a different cluster adapter card, or use WLBS's
multicast support.