one of the crazy tries:
backup your database, search for all IP addresses inside SQL file, map old
to new IP addresses (old1 --> new1, old2 -->new2...) and then do
search/replace each old one with new one.
This is for netowrking/ip addresses (guest, public,etc), same for NFS
serves, same for NFS host, etc...

Not sure if that is going to make you UP again, but...


On 28 October 2013 22:59, Adam <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> I know what I'm about to ask may seem like crazy talk, but I have a
> situation at work where our CloudStack "box" was moved to another network.
> This single server is a self-contained cloud with everything on one box.
> I'm running CS 4.1.1 on CentOS 6.4 x86_64 with KVM and NFS for primary and
> secondary storage mounts. It's a very basic configuration, but my company
> moved from one town to another, and the IT dept decided to move our server
> to a different switch and subnet without asking. So now literally every
> single IP address of any importance has been changed.
>
> I've been trying in vain to get this CS up and running again, but it seems
> like everything has changed including the guids, or at least that seems to
> be the case since I cannot match up guids from the database to guids on the
> primary/secondary NFS.
>
> I'm sure if each piece were separate and moved one piece at a time, it
> would be fairly straightforward, but since this box is self-contained and
> everything changed at the same time, it is proving to be very difficult.
>
> Does anyone have any suggestions for me to attempt to recover my CS?
>
> Best Regards,
>
>
>
> Adam Scarcella
>



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Andrija Panić
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