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4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ian Wienand
aee4fc0d35 simple-init: add configurable RA timeout with network-manager
This is a follow-on to I475a253091cbaf63687b91c748c31a6753bb0f57 as we
are still seeing issues on some clouds with unconfigured networking.

We increase the timeout, but also make it configurable so we can
fiddle it without a dib release in the gate.

To follow-on from the experimentation done by clarkb, I can confirm by
emperical testing on a Centos 7 image (from today, today being this
change's date) that setting

 net.ipv6.conf.all.autoconf=0

by itself is "fatal" and the interfaces do not come up; i.e. nm does
not by default seem to re-enable ipv6 for the interface.  However,
explicitly adding:

 IPV6INIT=yes
 IPV6_AUTOCONF=yes

to the interface file *does* seem to make it work, even if
"all.autoconf=0" is set (then again, there's also bugs about the
effect of this [1]).  However, no extant distribution (I can currently
find) does anything like this by default.

If this continues, this may be an option.  Another might be to avoid
the use of the nm-settings-ifcfg-rh profiles and move directly to nm
ini files with glean.

[1] https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11655

Change-Id: I869ebffc8cde3bbff573f6583fd9dd02a5598590
2019-08-20 17:07:17 +10:00
Clark Boylan
5b5b78bf59 Set router solicitation delay with using NM
The linux kernel and NetworkManager fight each other over control for
interface management when router advertisements are in use. Long story
short if the linux kernel configures a network interface for ipv6
before NetworkManager attempts to manage that interface then NM will
ignore the interface and not configure ipv4 on it.

This can happen because the kernel is configured to send router
advertisements solicitations which result in router advertisements which
the kernel uses to configure the interface(s). There is a default of a 1
second delay before sending the solicitation which in many cases is long
enough that NM has started before then. However, in slower environments
like those used for testing with qemu this isn't long enough.

Some testing by hand indicates that 15 seconds is about right so
increase the delay to 15 seconds via sysctl.conf.

Note this may increase boot times in ipv6 only environments (though it
is hard to be sure due to how systemd starts everything at once and does
socket activation and the like).

Change-Id: I475a253091cbaf63687b91c748c31a6753bb0f57
2019-07-10 08:33:17 -07:00
Ian Wienand
8ec3750dda simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support
This plumbs through an "--use-nm" flag to glean which instructs it to
setup interface bringup with NetworkManager rather than legacy network
enablement scripts.

In this case, install the NetworkManager package.  In the non-nm case,
also install the network-scripts for Fedora 29 -- this has stopped
being installed by default (it's been deprecated since forever).

As noted in the docs, this is currently really only relevant on the
supported rpm distros which are using the ifcfg-rh NetworkManager
plugin to effectively re-use old config files.  However,
NetworkManager has similar plugins for other platforms, so support can
be expanded if changes are proposed.

Depends-On: https://review.openstack.org/618964
Change-Id: I4d76e88ce25e5675fd5ef48924acd09915a62a4b
2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
Paul Belanger
87236af75c Have simple-init enable network.service
When a glean is running on centos with multiple NICs, it will try to
systemctl enable network.service multiple times for each interface.
Because of systemd magic, it is possible for the systemctl command to
fail in a race condition.

glean shouldn't be enabling network.service during boot in
pre-networking phases (Ib2b618dd975ca44e9c6b0a2c9027642ffc46b9b0).  I
have proposed I8319f1ed6498a9d447950c2b4b34bca59e7b97e4 to remove this
and document the behaviour.

This also bring across suse's version
(I20bffabd333ea290d8712ec2a467f2b2d5678f3a)

Change-Id: I89d9443cb61e287bd0d9da3f48315272218ee335
Signed-off-by: Paul Belanger <pabelanger@redhat.com>
2017-03-28 19:28:51 +11:00