Network Bond – One Port Goes Down From Time To Time
Hi,
may be someone has an idea:
We have three supermicron servers with two 10Gb Ports each, connected to a cisco switch stack 1Gb ports. All are on auto speed.
I configured a LACP bond on both sides on all servers, first with citrix xen server. On one server eth0 goes down from time to time … maybe within minutes, someday it is up for some hours.
Two server are fine; the bond is up for 24 days(!) now without any problem.
Recently I installed CentOS 7.2 on that server in question and – bam – eth0 is going down from time to time …
I checked patch cables, tried an other switch port channel, reconfigured the ports, reinstalled the os. Same behavior.
And: We got a replacement server. Same behavior …. :)
Currently the cisco tech guys don’t see a problem on the switch (which is up for 3 Years now with 10+ servers connected … no problem so far), from the citrix side I don’t get much more hints.
In the logs i just have a Nic Link is Down … Nic Link is Up. It is always eth0.
Question:
Any idea ? One suggestion was Disable all power saving features in the server bios. Did not do that yet.
Is there any chance to set some sort of higher debug level for that nic/kernel/whatever to get some server os side feedback why the port goes down?
Regards and thanks for any hint! . Götz
9 thoughts on - Network Bond – One Port Goes Down From Time To Time
Am 28.03.2016 um 11:27 schrieb G
Em 28-03-2016 06:27, Götz Reinicke escreveu:
If you are seeing NIC Link is Down as in:
[710442.668059] e1000e: enp0s25 NIC Link is Down then the NIC lost its link and bond is just protecting you as you probably didn’t have any downtime due to that. IOW bonding is not the issue.
Which NIC do you have on those servers?
Marcelo
Am 28.03.16 um 12:12 schrieb Leon Fauster:
TYPE=Bond #Interface type set to bond BOOTPROTO=static BONDING_MASTER=yes BONDING_OPTS=”mode=4″ #i set mode to active-backup DEFROUTE=yes IPADDR=”192.168.xxx.xxx”
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
GATEWAY=”192.168.xxx.xxx”
IPV4_FAILURE_FATAL=no IPV6INIT=no NAME=bond0
DEVICE=bond0
ONBOOT=yes
TYPE=”Ethernet”
MASTER=bond0
SLAVE=yes NAME=”enp4s0f0″
UUID=”xxx”
DEVICE=”enp4s0f0″
ONBOOT=”yes”
TYPE=”Ethernet”
MASTER=bond0
SLAVE=yes NAME=”enp4s0f0″
UUID=”xxx”
DEVICE=”enp4s0f1″
ONBOOT=”yes”
/G
Am 28.03.16 um 16:23 schrieb Marcelo Ricardo Leitner:
The mainbord is a supermicro X10DRI-T with Intel X540 Dual port 10GBase-T.
regards . Götz
should both those ‘ethernet’ devices have the same NAME ?
—
john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz
Am 29.03.16 um 11:12 schrieb John R Pierce:
Copy and Past error, they dont have the same name.
/Götz
Em 29-03-2016 03:46, G
Am 29.03.16 um 13:57 schrieb Marcelo Ricardo Leitner:
Hm,, could you give me a hint, how to enable that (at runtime) for CentOS 7.2? I cant figure that out.
Would be nice. cheers . G
Em 30-03-2016 06:46, G