Re: REGRESSION: relocating a Debian/bullseye guest is losing network connection

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On 29.10.21 15:52, Martin Grimm wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> I'm a collegue of Waldemar and I'd like to respond on his behalf.
> 
> Am 29.10.21 um 13:05 schrieb Julian Wiedmann:
>> On 28.10.21 19:28, Waldemar Brodkorb wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> we use z/VM's Live Guest Relocation for our Debian/GNU Linux
>>> servers. Since following commit this is broken:
>>>
>>> d4560150cb47daba50b0d080550ca4bbe80cf3c3 is the first bad commit
>>> commit d4560150cb47daba50b0d080550ca4bbe80cf3c3
>>> Author: Julian Wiedmann <jwi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>> Date:   Thu Feb 28 18:59:39 2019 +0100
>>>
>>>       s390/qeth: call dev_close() during recovery
>>>
>>>
>>> With Debian/buster and Linux 4.18.x this works fine.
>>> With Debian/bullseye and Linux 5.10.x this does not work anymore.
>>> The reason for that is that all configured routes are lost after
>>> relocating the guest.
>>> This looks to me like a major regression.
>>>
>>> The network is configured via /etc/network/interfaces and executing
>>> systemctl restart networking fixes the issue. This can be done via a
>>> udev rule, but this looks like a rather incomplete workaround to us.
>>>
>>
>> Can you show an example of how your /etc/network/interfaces configures
>> the routes? A quick search [1] points to using 'post-up' statements,
>> is that what you're using or have you tried that already?
>>
>>
>> [1] https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/321687/what-is-the-best-way-to-add-a-permanent-route
>>
> 
> Yes, we use "up ip route add ..." commands to set static routes.
> 

Ok, I trust you are debugging why that doesn't work then ...?

> 
>>> All manually added routing information will be lost anyway.
>>>
>>> And I might not imagine what happens to any firewall connection
>>> tables or ipvs connection tracking information in case of a Live
>>> Guest Relocation.
>>>
>>> So is there any kernel level solution for this you can think of?
>>>
>>
>> As discussed off-list, a plain "ip link set dev eth0 down" gives you
>> the same result. Hence I would recommend to improve your configuration,
>> so that the needed routes are restored when the interface comes up
>> again.
>>
> 
> I'd like to disagree. From my point of view the state after a "real"
> device outage is irrelevant regarding "Live Guest Relocation".
> 
> LGR is meant to provide seamless migration of zLinux guests from
> one z/VM to the other during production workloads.
> So the linux guest has to be in exactly the same state after migration
> to the new z/VM as it was before. That also includes IMHO dynamic
> routes added e.g. by a service like keepalived or even by hand.
> 

Sorry, unfortunately that doesn't match up with reality. LGR still requires
a full re-establish of the HW context (ie. you're losing whatever packets
are in the RX and TX queues at that moment), and then needs activity by the
Linux network core to establish itself in the new network environment.

Bypassing the corresponding NETDEV_UP event etc (as the old code did) means
that we eg. don't get fresh GARPs, and traffic is then forwarded to stale
switch ports.

So no, we can't go back to the mode of doing things behind the network
stack's back. It sort-of worked for a while, but we reached its limits.

> Before Kernel v5 this was the observed behavior.
> 
> Starting with Kernel v5 LGR now triggers a network outage that makes
> it unusable for many kinds of production systems.
> Before version 5 there where device failure and recovery messages
> in the kernel log but the network configuration stayed intact.
> 
> Just to be sure I compared this with the behavior of VMWare Live Migration
> and there all dynamic routes stay in place as it was with LGR
> before Kernel v5. Not a single error message in kernel log there.
> 
> So if the new behavior is correct for a real device outage, maybe LGR
> should be handled differently?
> 
>>> Thanks for any advice and comments,
>>>
>>> best regards
>>>   Waldemar
>>>
>>
> 
> Greetings
> Martin




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