On Mon January 23 2006 05:31, Raimund Specht wrote:
> Hi !
>
> We have a very strange problem here with virtual IP addresses (various
> up-to-date 2.6 kernels with vserver 2.0):
>
> Let eth0 have a normal IP address. Let v1 and v2 be two vservers with a
> virtual IP on eth0 each.
>
> # vserver v1 start
> # vserver v2 start
>
> ifconfig shows eth0, eth0:v1, and eth0:v2 as expected, everything works.
>
> # vserver v1 stop
>
> Now ifconfig shows that all virtual IPs have been removed although
> vserver-stat shows that v2 is still running. Networking with v2 doesn't
> work either. This only happens if the vserver, that was startet first, ist
> stopped. Other orderings work fine.
>
> This problem is not vserver related, we can reproduce it on non-vserver
> systems/kernels too. The following commands reproduce it on 90% of our
> systems (Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo, all with Linux 2.6):
>
> # ifconfig eth0:1 1.2.3.4
> # ifconfig eth0:2 1.2.3.5
> # ifconfig eth0:1 del 1.2.3.4
>
>
> Does anyone else have this problem?
> Any workaround except defining an eth0:dummy interface outside any vserver?
>
Stolen from the Linux-VServer mailing list:
<quote>
and recent kernels (means 2.6.14 and later) support
an actual workaround for this 'feature', which can
be easily activated via sysctl
?sysctl -w net.ipv4.conf.all.promote_secondaries=1
this will activate the so called secondary promotion
which means that the kernel will 'elect' a secondary
to become the new primary if the old one is taken
down ...
<quote/>
Say thank you Herbert.
Mike
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Received on Mon Jan 23 13:06:44 2006