On 8.5.2010 4.31, Kahlil Hodgson wrote: > Hmmm have you got more than one bridge on your network? If so you need > to make sure you have STP turned ON on all your bridges. > If you have any services that require network at start up (nfs), you'll > need set you network start up delay to more than 10 seconds > as well, so STP has some time to settle. > > I encountered similar problems when I plugged a _second_ virtualisation > host into my network. Turning on stp sounds promising (I have to confess that I never heard about stp before). Stp is indeed off for both bridges: [root@farm1 scripts]# brctl show bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces virbr0 8000.000000000000 yes xenbr0 8000.feffffffffff no vif5.0 vif4.0 peth0 vif0.0 xenbr1 8000.feffffffffff no vif5.1 vif3.0 vif2.0 peth1 vif0.1 How can I turn stp on? In my /etc/xen/scripts/xen-network-common.sh there is a section: # Don't create the bridge if it already exists. if [ ! -e "/sys/class/net/${bridge}/bridge" ]; then brctl addbr ${bridge} brctl stp ${bridge} off brctl setfd ${bridge} 0 sysctl -w "net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-arptables=0" sysctl -w "net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables=0" sysctl -w "net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables=0" ip link set ${bridge} arp off ip link set ${bridge} multicast off fi Is if safe to turn stp "on" there (instead of "off"? (Requires xend restart at least, I suppose.) Or is there a better way to turn stp on permanently? The box has 2 physical if cards, and both of them are used for bridges (xenbr0 and xenbr1). - Jussi -- Jussi Hirvi * Green Spot Topeliuksenkatu 15 C * 00250 Helsinki * Finland Tel. +358 9 493 981 * Mobile +358 40 771 2098 (only sms) jussi.hirvi@xxxxxxxxxxxx * http://www.greenspot.fi _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos