On 02/16/2017 03:28 AM, James Hogarth wrote:
On 16 February 2017 at 10:42, Alice Wonder <alice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/16/2017 02:32 AM, James Hogarth wrote:
On 16 February 2017 at 10:17, Alice Wonder <alice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/16/2017 02:03 AM, James Hogarth wrote:
On 16 February 2017 at 09:09, Alice Wonder <alice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/16/2017 12:54 AM, Tony Mountifield wrote:
In article <4cbb9dc4-f063-3434-b7a1-d4d0e6581b5e@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Alice Wonder <alice@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
https://forum.linode.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=14570&p=72785
I can not figure out what I need to do.
Apparently according to linode support, the VM is trying to grab an
IPv6
address with some privacy stuff enabled by default causing it to not
grab the IPv6 address that is assigned to me.
Does the accepted answer at the following link give you any useful
hints?
http://superuser.com/questions/243669/how-to-avoid-exposing-my-mac-address-when-using-ipv6
Cheers
Tony
Not really - I tried
net.ipv6.conf.all.use_tempaddr = 0
and it still fails to grab the proper IPv6
-=-
Just in case, I did ask Linode support to verify that my hardware
address
is
what it is suppose to be. Still waiting to hear on that.
_______________________________________________
it still is key=value ... it uses the ifcfg- files (via the rh
plugin) and they are all key=value
It would be helpful if you could paste the journal output (journalctl
-u NetworkManager) from the time period of attempting to get an
address ...
also the nmcli conn sh <connection_name> information for the interface
along with your ifcfg- files
ifcfg-lo is the only one that exists on any of the servers - including
the
VMs that grab the correct IPv6 address.
from /sbin/ifconfig -a :
For a start stop using ifconfig ... it's broken at this point on
linux, especially on multi ip and ipv6 scenarios
Use `ip -6 addr sh` for ipv6 specfic stuff, or just ip addr sh to see
all IP address stuff regardless of family
eth0: flags=4163<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
inet 178.79.185.217 netmask 255.255.255.0 broadcast
178.79.185.255
inet6 fe80::a8ad:d312:4ef4:7272 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x20<link>
inet6 2a01:7e00::825f:e564:ad53:72fc prefixlen 64 scopeid
0x0<global>
ether f2:3c:91:18:8a:7e txqueuelen 1000 (Ethernet)
RX packets 9903 bytes 1088621 (1.0 MiB)
RX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 frame 0
TX packets 7786 bytes 1087223 (1.0 MiB)
TX errors 0 dropped 0 overruns 0 carrier 0 collisions 0
That hardware address - the 18:8a:7e corresponds with what the IPv6
address
is suppose to be. But that's not the address it is grabbing, despite the
fact that net.ipv6.conf.all.use_tempaddr = 0 is set.
I'm seriously wondering if the real issue is a mis-configured dhcp server
in
their London facility because nothing makes sense.
journalctl -u NetworkManager
reports no journal entries found.
So are you not using NetworkManager then? there should be some logs ...
I think the problem must be on their end.
It all was working fine until they migrated the VM because of a hardware
issue, and I suspect now all the hardware address privacy stuff being the
issue is barking up the wrong tree because all the reading I have done
seems
to indicate that with
net.ipv6.conf.all.use_tempaddr = 0
that a fake temporary hardware address would not be sent to their dhcp
server when obtaining the address, but the real one, that should be
fetching
my assigned address.
Only if the kernel is doing SLAAC ... if other things (eg NM) are
handling it directly they may act differently ... but then from the
lack of logs is NM actually handling this?
Does systemctl status NetworkManager show it running and does nmcli
show anything?
systemctl status NetworkManager
● NetworkManager.service - Network Manager
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/NetworkManager.service; enabled;
vendor preset: enabled)
Active: active (running) since Thu 2017-02-16 08:19:34 UTC; 2h 19min ago
* more stuff *
nmcli
eth0: connected to Wired connection 1
"Red Hat Virtio network device"
ethernet (virtio_net), F2:3C:91:18:8A:7E, hw, mtu 1500
ip4 default, ip6 default
inet4 178.79.185.217/24
route4 178.79.187.246/32
inet6 2a01:7e00::825f:e564:ad53:72fc/64
inet6 fe80::a8ad:d312:4ef4:7272/64
route6 2a01:7e00::/64
* more stuff for other interfaces *
-=-
The output of
sysctl -a | grep net.ipv6 :
https://librelamp.com/sysctl.txt
It looks from that like it should not be hiding the real MAC address.
do nmcli conn show "Wired connection 1"
the entries of interest are:
ipv6.ip6-privacy
ipv6.addr-gen-mode
man nm-settings to get what they mean
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ipv6.ip6-privacy: -1 (unknown)
ipv6.addr-gen-mode: stable-privacy
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