Seon-ID
The so-called "Seon-ID" is an installation and hardware dependant hash of your system running Seon. Seon needs a valid license which is based on this ID. In order to receive a license, the Seon-ID is the basis for this encrypted file.
At least, the following parameters are the basis for the Seon-ID:
- local hostname
- resolved IP address of the local hostname
- MAC address of device which is uses the resolved IP address of the local hostname, or (if not resolvable) the device of the kernel presented as first device, based on TCP/IP, which offers a MAC address
- CPU-ID where applicable
Contents
retrieving Seon-ID via web interface
In the administrative web interface, click in the left menu on "Tools". The Seon-ID will be displayed in the main screen right under the "backup" options:
If the license file is writable by the web server user, an upload of a valid license is possible via the "choose file" and "upload license" buttons. A pre-check of validity is done before exchanging the license file.
retrieving Seon-ID via command line
The program "seonlic" is used for commandline interaction.
My Seon-ID changed, why?
Please check the following circumstances:
- The hostname of the system (obtainable via the commandline program "
hostname
") is stable. - Verify that the IP address of the hostname (obtained in step #1) is stable.
- Verify that the host running Seon has a device with exactly that IP address of step #2.
- Verify that the device obtained in step #3 has a static MAC address.
constantly changing Seon-ID
If your Seon-ID is changing sometimes and you're really sure you didn't change the machine configuration, you should check that the name resolving works constantly. This can be done by editing the file
/etc/nsswitch.conf
on most Unix systems and the file
/etc/netsvc.conf
on AIX systems.
In order to obtain the same information every time, you should configure the first host name resolving method as "local" and add a static IP address and hostname for your machine to "/etc/hosts". This should fix your problem.
An example for a working entry in the file
/etc/nsswitch.conf
is:
hosts: files dns
A working AIX configuration file
/etc/netsvc.conf
is:
hosts = local, bind
In both cases, the local file "/etc/hosts" is asked first, then the configured DNS server. This also speeds up the name resolving mechanism.
AIX licensing
The Seon ID is obtained in AIX using the following list of devices (first available will be used for MAC address calculation):
- ent0
- ent1
- ent2
- first available other device
If you need a special handling, please contact us.