Hi, I would like some help to troubleshoot the problem I have been having lately with my VM host, which contains 5 VMs, one of which is for pi-hole, unbound services. It has been a relatively common occurrence in the last few weeks for me to find that the host machine has lost its network when I get back home from work. Restoring the VM/VMs do not fix the problem, the host needs to be restarted for a fix, otherwise there is both loss of name resolution, as well as an internet connection; I cannot ping even IPs such as 8.8.8.8. Since I use the pi-hole VM as the DNS server for my LAN, this means that my whole LAN gets disconnected from internet, until the host machine is rebooted. The host machine has a little complicated network setup: the two gigabit connections are bonded and bridged to the VMs; however this set up has been serving me so well for several years now. The problem, on the other hand, appeared a few weeks ago. This doesn't happen every day but often enough to be annoying and disruptive for my family. My question is, how can I troubleshoot this problem and figure out whether it is truly due to network bridging somehow collapsing or not? I tried to find some log files but all I could find were the /var/log/libvirt/qemu/$VM files, and the particular log file for the pi-hole VM reported the following lines; however, I am not sure if they are associated with a real crash or just due to shutting down and restarting the host (please excuse the word-wrapping): char device redirected to /dev/pts/2 (label charserial0) qxl_send_events: spice-server bug: guest stopped, ignoring 2022-01-20T23:41:17.012445Z qemu-system-x86_64: terminating on signal 15 from pid 1 (/sbin/init) 2022-01-20 23:41:17.716+0000: shutting down, reason=crashed 2022-01-20 23:42:46.059+0000: starting up libvirt version: 7.10.0, qemu version: 6.2.0, kernel: 5.10.89-1-MANJARO, hostname: -redacted- Please excuse my ignorance but is there a way to restart the networking without rebooting the host machine? This will not solve my problem since I won't be able to reach to the host remotely if the networking is down. The real solution would be preventing these network crashes and the first step in that would be effective troubleshooting in my opinion. Any input/guidance will be greatly appreciated. I can provide more info about my host/VM(s) if the above is not adequate. Thanks, Hakan Duran
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