Explanation | Every Network Deployment process requires one discovery MBean. The discovery MBean could not be activated. |
Action | Check that the remote process is running with the correct discovery port and, if necessary, start the remote process. |
Explanation | The multicast socket could not be opened because the IP address supplied was not a multicast address. Multicast group addresses are in the range of 224.0.0.0 through 239.255.255.255 |
Action | Check the multicast IP address in the serverindex.xml file to verify that the IP address provided is in the valid range. Some multicast IP conflicts might exist in your network. Consult your network administrator. |
Explanation | The multicast socket cannot be opened to join the specified multicast group because the router does not have multicasting capability. |
Action | Consult the network administrator to make sure that the router supports multicasting. |
Explanation | The specified Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) socket cannot be opened. The socket is not listening, the remote socket is not listening, or a network failure has occured. The TCP-based discovery needs to open a TCP socket before sending a discovery message. The socket might be the CELL_DISCOVERY_ADDRESS port for your deployment manager or the NODE_DISCOVERY_ADDRESS port for a node agent. If this message is from your deployment manger, then verify that node agents are open for e-business. If the message is from a node agent, then verify that the deployment manager is open for e-business. |
Action | Check that the remote process is running with the correct discovery port and, if necessary, start the remote process. |
Explanation | The specified User Datagram Protocol (UDP) socket cannot be opened. The UDP-based discovery needs to open a UDP socket before sending out discovery message. The socket is not listening, the remote socket is not listening, or a network failure has occured. |
Action | Check that the remote process is running with the correct discovery port and, if necessary, start the remote process. |
Explanation | The destination endpoint is not specified. The discovery needs to know the destination endpoint before sending out the discovery message. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The discovery query message could not be constructed because of the specified exception. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The discovery response message could not be constructed because of the specified exception. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The discovery query message could not be send out because of the specified exception. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | Incorrect discovery endpoint address was used. |
Action | Make sure the discovery endpoint address specified is valid. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | Unsupported transport protocol was used. |
Action | Make sure the transport protocol such as User Datagram Protocol (UDP), Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) or Multicast specified is valid. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The specified transport cannot be initialized. The discovery service is built on top of a specific transport, such as User Datagram Protocol (UDP), Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) or Multicasting. |
Action | Check the serverindex.xml file to make sure there is no port conflict with the discovery port in your local system. For multicasting discovery, make sure your LAN router supports the multicasting. |
Explanation | The discovery message used inside the Java code is not valid. |
Action | Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | A failure occurred while initializing the transport that receives the multicast requests. |
Action | Verify that multicasting is supported in your local area network and that no port conflict exists. |
Explanation | A certain type of discovery requires multicasting support. Either multicasting is not supported within the local area network, or the target multicast group rejects join requests. |
Action | Make sure that multicasting is supported in your local area network and that the right multicast group is specified for discovery. |
Explanation | Unable to shutdown the multicast server. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | Socket may have been timeout. Two possibilities to consider are multicast server may not working or nodeagent process is down. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The discovery fails to initialize the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) transport to receive the incoming discovery message. |
Action | Resolve any port conflicts that might exist. Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The discovery fails to initialize the User Datagram Protocol (UDP) transport to receive the incoming discovery message. |
Action | Resolve any port conflicts that might exist. Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | An I/O error occurs when waiting for a connection. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The connection failed to get initialized. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The host in question cannot be resolved from the domain name server (DNS). Several causes are possible: the host to resolve might not exist, or runs on a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) machine, or has a short host name that cannot be resolved without appending an appropriate DNS suffix. |
Action | Check whether the host to resolve does exist in the network or runs on a DHCP machine. If it has a short host name, check the default DNS suffix in the local machine where discovery occurs. |
Explanation | This informational message indicates the system status. The pid indicates the Process ID for Distributed platforms while on z/OS it represents the Server token(stoken). |
Action | No user action is required. |
Explanation | Failed to send out discovery message. Nodeagent process may be down. |
Action | Examine the exception in this message for problem determination. Check the logs, trace, and the First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to find the most relevant root cause for this error. |
Explanation | The 127.0.0.1 IP address, or local host, is known as the loopback IP address, which is only valid in a stand-alone environment. Hosts cannot be recognized by others through this IP address over the network. |
Action | Verify that the host address and the domain name server configurations are set correctly. For Linux configurations, configure the /etc/nsswitch.conf file to search the Domain Name Server (DNS) before the /etc/hosts file. |
Explanation | A deployment manager version that is earlier than that of a node is an unsupported configuration. |
Action | Upgrade the deployment manager to the same or later version as that of the node. |