Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-25 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/25/2015 07:18 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

Are you talking bearing in mind VirtualBox?



Actually, no.  I'd either missed that detail or forgotten it by that 
time in the conversation.  This might be the wrong list for VirtualBox 
questions, since it's not distributed with CentOS.  I've worked with 
VirtualBox only a little bit, and I'm not sure what you're trying to do 
is possible.  I think it is, but I can only really describe how to 
accomplish what you're trying to do with respect to libvirt/KVM (the 
virtualization platform that's distributed with CentOS).


Anyway, the first thing you'd want to do is create a bridge interface 
with no slaves, and then create two VMs.  They should be attached to 
that bridge device.  (In virtualbox you might be able to do that with 
"bridged networking" to br0, or you might be able to skip the virt host 
bridge and use "internal networking".  Try the former first.)  The two 
VMs will not be attached to the real network, but should be able to 
reach each other.  Now your topology looks like this:


 ---| Network |---| (eth0)-VM Host-(br0) |--+| (eth0)-VM1 |
\| (eth0)-VM2 |

...your virtualization host is connected to the real network on eth0. 
The two VMs are attached to its br0 interface.  They each have one 
"ethernet" interface and can communicate with each other.


Once you've set that up and verified that it works, set up a new bridge 
interface, br1.  Move the IP configuration from eth0 to br1, and make 
eth0 a slave of br1.  Make sure the virtualization host has network 
connectivity.  Your network topology looks exactly like it did before, 
except that the virt host uses br1 (with eth0 as a slave) to connect to 
the real network.


 ---| Network |---| (br1)-VM Host-(br0) |--+| (eth0)-VM1 |
   \| (eth0)-VM2 |

Next, you can add a second interface to VM1.  This one will be connected 
to br1.  (again, in virtualbox, you might be able to do this with 
bridged networking.)  Give VM1's new interface (it's eth1) an IP 
configuration appropriate for your real network, and verify that it has 
full internet connectivity.  Now your network looks like this:


 /--| (eth1)\
 ---| Network |---| (br1)-VM Host-(br0) |--+| (eth0)-VM1 |
   \| (eth0)-VM2 |


So, now VM2 can reach VM1, but not the real network, and VM1 can reach 
the real network.


Finally, you'll create a bridge interface in VM1, and make both of its 
"ethernet" interfaces slaves.  Move its IP configuration from eth1 to 
its new br0, and drop the IP configuration from eth0.  This will give 
VM2 connectivity to the real network, so update its IP configuration to 
be compatible with the real network.  Now your network looks like this:


/--| (eth1)\
---| Network |---| (br1)-VM Host-(br0) |--+| (eth0)-(br0)-VM1 |
  \| (eth0)-VM2 |

When VM2 transmits a packet, it will be sent out VM2-eth0, across VM 
Host br0 to VM1-eth0, across VM1-br0 to VM Host-br1, to the real network.


And most importantly, no bridge connects two interfaces to the same 
broadcast domain.  VM Host's br0 creates a collision domain spanning the 
two VMs.  VM Host's br1 creates a collision domain spanning the physical 
network and VM1's eth1 interface.  And VM1's br0 bridges those two 
collision domains.  No loops.


I don't know what performance will look like under VirtualBox, since I 
don't use it for this sort of thing.  However, under KVM/libvirt, 
performance should be fairly good.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-25 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-14 16:43 GMT-03:00 Gordon Messmer :

> On 11/14/2015 09:20 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
>> I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via the
>> "Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
>> with only one laptop.
>>
>
> You don't actually need to attach *any* ethernet interfaces to do that.
> If you create a bridge with no Ethernet slaves, and then create two VMs,
> those VMs will get virtual network interfaces that will then be slaved to
> the bridge.  So, you'll see the bridge with two network devices as slaves,
> and those network devices will be attached to the two VMs.
>
> If you create a bridge device with one Ethernet interface attached, then
> you'll end up with a bridge that spans two VMs and the Ethernet interface.
> That way the VMs will be connected to each other and to the Ethernet
> network.
>
> ___
>

Are you talking bearing in mind VirtualBox?

I've created a bridge on the host machine, and 2 VM's but br0 has no slaves:

[sergio@hope share]$ sudo brctl show  br0
bridge name bridge id   STP enabled interfaces
br0 8000.   no


Greets

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-25 Thread Sergio Belkin
Perhaps I don't explain myself enough.

I don't want to "bridge" physical machine with virtual machine, my idea was
create a transparent bridge in  a VM for example to demonstrate a proxy
with no need of topology change.

Greets

2015-11-16 5:58 GMT-03:00 Paul Knox-Kennedy :

> On 11/14/2015 09:20 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
> >
> > I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via
> the
> > "Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
> > with only one laptop.
>
> The libvirt wiki covers this here [0]. These instructions create a
> bridge (br0), connect
> the physical ethernet interface to that bridge, then you can attach
> virtual machines to
> the same bridge.
>
> [0] http://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Networking#Fedora.2FRHEL_Bridging
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-16 Thread Paul Knox-Kennedy
On 11/14/2015 09:20 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
> I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via the
> "Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
> with only one laptop.

The libvirt wiki covers this here [0]. These instructions create a
bridge (br0), connect
the physical ethernet interface to that bridge, then you can attach
virtual machines to
the same bridge.

[0] http://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Networking#Fedora.2FRHEL_Bridging
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-14 Thread James A. Peltier
- Original Message -
| On 11/14/2015 09:20 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
| > I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via the
| > "Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
| > with only one laptop.

If the purpose of this is to demonstrate VMs you just want to bridge the 
physical interface so that the guest can access the network.  To do this you 
only need one physical interface.  If you have two interfaces on the same LAN 
than you want device teaming or LACP.  You would create a team or bond 
interface using the two interfaces and then create a bridge to that team or 
bond device.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-14 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/14/2015 09:20 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via the
"Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
with only one laptop.


You don't actually need to attach *any* ethernet interfaces to do that.  
If you create a bridge with no Ethernet slaves, and then create two VMs, 
those VMs will get virtual network interfaces that will then be slaved 
to the bridge.  So, you'll see the bridge with two network devices as 
slaves, and those network devices will be attached to the two VMs.


If you create a bridge device with one Ethernet interface attached, then 
you'll end up with a bridge that spans two VMs and the Ethernet 
interface.  That way the VMs will be connected to each other and to the 
Ethernet network.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-14 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-13 16:43 GMT-03:00 Gordon Messmer :

> On 11/13/2015 09:15 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
>> But AFAIK, routers divide broadcast domains, and switches (and
>> therefore bridges) divide collision domains.
>>
>
> Oh good, Cisco terminology.  :)
>


Oh yeah,



>
> I'll be more specific than I was earlier, then.
>
> It's possible to unify two collision domains into a single broadcast
> domain with a router, but it's also possible to use a bridge to link
> collision domains to create a larger broadcast domain.  Don't get hung up
> on that.
>
> The comparison of a Linux bridge to a switch is apt.  You could,
> conceptually, connect two PCs to each other using a Linux bridge. You
> wouldn't, however, connect two ports on one switch (here, the Linux bridge)
> to two ports on another switch.  Doing that creates a loop in your network.
>
> Linux Ethernet bridges have several uses, so it's not clear what you're
> really trying to do.  That is, you've said that you're trying to create a
> virtualized Linux bridge, but a bridge is a tool, not a goal in itself.
> What do you expect the bridge to do when you've set it up?
>
>
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I'd want to connect a VM to another VM (or eventually to the host) via the
"Linux bridge" so that I can demonstrate that capability in a classroom
with only one laptop.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-14 Thread Mark Milhollan
On Fri, 13 Nov 2015, Ulf Volmer wrote:
>On 11/13/2015 12:57 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

>>When I enable stp:
>>
>> [root@localhost ~]# brctl show br0
>> bridge name bridge id   STP enabled interfaces
>> br0 8000.080027a398e6   yes enp0s3
>>  enp0s8
>
>As Gordon said, i recommend to remove one of the physical interfaces from the
>bridge.

There should be no need to do that ... that is after all the purpose of 
STP (in effect, what STP would do is prevent one link from being used by 
putting it into blocking state leaving the other in forwarding state).  
Nominally one would prefer bonding (AKA trunking or a LAG) where both 
can be actively used.


/mark
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/13/2015 09:15 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

But AFAIK, routers divide broadcast domains, and switches (and
therefore bridges) divide collision domains.


Oh good, Cisco terminology.  :)

I'll be more specific than I was earlier, then.

It's possible to unify two collision domains into a single broadcast 
domain with a router, but it's also possible to use a bridge to link 
collision domains to create a larger broadcast domain.  Don't get hung 
up on that.


The comparison of a Linux bridge to a switch is apt.  You could, 
conceptually, connect two PCs to each other using a Linux bridge. You 
wouldn't, however, connect two ports on one switch (here, the Linux 
bridge) to two ports on another switch.  Doing that creates a loop in 
your network.


Linux Ethernet bridges have several uses, so it's not clear what you're 
really trying to do.  That is, you've said that you're trying to create 
a virtualized Linux bridge, but a bridge is a tool, not a goal in 
itself.  What do you expect the bridge to do when you've set it up?


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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-13 13:52 GMT-03:00 Gordon Messmer :

> On 11/13/2015 03:22 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
>> I'm trying to create  virtualized linux bridge
>>
>
> Well, you can't do that by putting two interfaces on the same LAN. A
> bridge should be used to connect two separate LANs.
>
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But AFAIK, routers divide broadcast domains, and switches (and
therefore bridges) divide collision domains.  For example:

"A bridge is a piece of software used to unite two or more network
segments. A bridge behaves like a virtual network switch, working
transparently (the other machines do not need to know or care about its
existence). Any real devices (e.g. eth0) and virtual devices (e.g. tap0)
can be connected to it." https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Network_bridge

If I'm wrong please correct me.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/13/2015 03:22 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

I'm trying to create  virtualized linux bridge


Well, you can't do that by putting two interfaces on the same LAN. A 
bridge should be used to connect two separate LANs.

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-13 12:32 GMT-03:00 Ulf Volmer :

> On 11/13/2015 12:57 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
> When I enable stp:
>>
>> [root@localhost ~]# brctl show br0
>> bridge name bridge id   STP enabled interfaces
>> br0 8000.080027a398e6   yes enp0s3
>>  enp0s8
>>
>
> As Gordon said, i recommend to remove one of the physical interfaces from
> the bridge.
>
>
> best regards
> Ulf
> ___
>

I've found that setting virtual interfaces as NAT instead bridge, it works,
any ideas?

(Remember that it's a guest OS)

Thanks in advance!

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Ulf Volmer

On 11/13/2015 12:57 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:


When I enable stp:

[root@localhost ~]# brctl show br0
bridge name bridge id   STP enabled interfaces
br0 8000.080027a398e6   yes enp0s3
 enp0s8


As Gordon said, i recommend to remove one of the physical interfaces 
from the bridge.


best regards
Ulf
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-12 15:56 GMT-03:00 Ulf Volmer :

> On 11/12/2015 07:42 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
> I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
>> follows:
>>
>> nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
>> address as source address
>> nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
>> address as source address
>>
>
> sounds like a loop.
>
> What says 'brctl show'?
>


When I enable stp:

[root@localhost ~]# brctl show br0
bridge name bridge id   STP enabled interfaces
br0 8000.080027a398e6   yes enp0s3
enp0s8




>
> best regards
> Ulf
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-13 8:22 GMT-03:00 Sergio Belkin :

>
>
> 2015-11-12 18:07 GMT-03:00 James A. Peltier :
>
>> - Original Message -
>> | Hi,
>> |
>> | I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
>> | follows:
>> |
>> | nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with
>> own
>> | address as source address
>> | nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with
>> own
>> | address as source address
>> |
>> | And the operating systems is extremely slow
>> |
>> | Interfaces files :
>> |
>> | [root@localhost ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-*
>> | DEVICE=br0
>> | TYPE=Bridge
>> | BOOTPROTO=dhcp
>> | ONBOOT=yes
>> | #STP=on
>> | #DELAY=0
>> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> | DEVICE=enp0s3
>> | #HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
>> | BOOTPROTO=none
>> | ONBOOT=yes
>> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> | BRIDGE=br0
>> |
>> | DEVICE=enp0s8
>> | HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
>> | BOOTPROTO=none
>> | ONBOOT=yes
>> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> | BRIDGE=br0
>> | DEVICE=lo
>> | TYPE=loopback
>> | IPADDR=127.0.0.1
>> | NETMASK=255.0.0.0
>> | NETWORK=127.0.0.0
>> | # If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
>> | # you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
>> | BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
>> | ONBOOT=yes
>> | NAME=loopback
>> |
>> | I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.
>> |
>> | System is:
>> |
>> | [root@localhost ~]# uname -a
>> | Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC
>> 2014
>> | x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
>> |
>> | And is virtualized on VirtualBox
>> |
>> | Please could you help me to fix it?
>> |
>> | Thanks in advance!
>> |
>> | --
>> | --
>> | Sergio Belkin
>> | LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
>>
>> You have a bridge with two interfaces on the same lan?  You're likely
>> creating the topology loop with this configuration.  What is it that you're
>> attempting to do here?
>>
>>
>> --
>> James A. Peltier
>> IT Services - Research Computing Group
>> Simon Fraser University - Burnaby Campus
>> Phone   : 604-365-6432
>> Fax : 778-782-3045
>> E-Mail  : jpelt...@sfu.ca
>> Website : http://www.sfu.ca/itservices
>> Twitter : @sfu_rcg
>> Powering Engagement Through Technology
>> ___
>>
>
>
> I'm trying to create  virtualized linux bridge, I've enabled STP and even
> with a forward delay with 300 but no luck...
>
>
> --
> --
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> LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
>

I get an IP via dhcp but cannot ping only at host machine

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-12 18:07 GMT-03:00 James A. Peltier :

> - Original Message -
> | Hi,
> |
> | I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
> | follows:
> |
> | nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
> | address as source address
> | nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
> | address as source address
> |
> | And the operating systems is extremely slow
> |
> | Interfaces files :
> |
> | [root@localhost ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-*
> | DEVICE=br0
> | TYPE=Bridge
> | BOOTPROTO=dhcp
> | ONBOOT=yes
> | #STP=on
> | #DELAY=0
> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
> | DEVICE=enp0s3
> | #HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
> | BOOTPROTO=none
> | ONBOOT=yes
> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
> | BRIDGE=br0
> |
> | DEVICE=enp0s8
> | HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
> | BOOTPROTO=none
> | ONBOOT=yes
> | NM_CONTROLLED=no
> | BRIDGE=br0
> | DEVICE=lo
> | TYPE=loopback
> | IPADDR=127.0.0.1
> | NETMASK=255.0.0.0
> | NETWORK=127.0.0.0
> | # If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
> | # you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
> | BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
> | ONBOOT=yes
> | NAME=loopback
> |
> | I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.
> |
> | System is:
> |
> | [root@localhost ~]# uname -a
> | Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC 2014
> | x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
> |
> | And is virtualized on VirtualBox
> |
> | Please could you help me to fix it?
> |
> | Thanks in advance!
> |
> | --
> | --
> | Sergio Belkin
> | LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
>
> You have a bridge with two interfaces on the same lan?  You're likely
> creating the topology loop with this configuration.  What is it that you're
> attempting to do here?
>
>
> --
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> Simon Fraser University - Burnaby Campus
> Phone   : 604-365-6432
> Fax : 778-782-3045
> E-Mail  : jpelt...@sfu.ca
> Website : http://www.sfu.ca/itservices
> Twitter : @sfu_rcg
> Powering Engagement Through Technology
> ___
>


I'm trying to create  virtualized linux bridge, I've enabled STP and even
with a forward delay with 300 but no luck...


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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-13 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-12 18:17 GMT-03:00 John R Pierce :

> On 11/12/2015 10:42 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
>> DEVICE=enp0s8
>> HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
>> BOOTPROTO=none
>> ONBOOT=yes
>> NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> BRIDGE=br0
>> DEVICE=lo
>> TYPE=loopback
>> IPADDR=127.0.0.1
>> NETMASK=255.0.0.0
>> NETWORK=127.0.0.0
>> ...
>>
>
> I hope thats two seperate files, ifcfg-enp0s8 and ifcfg-lo ... otherwise,
> why is a bridged physical interface configured to be loopback?!?
>




Yes they are separate ones


>
> mine looks like...
>
>
> # cat ifcfg-br0
> DEVICE=br0
> TYPE=Bridge
> ONBOOT=yes
> NM_CONTROLLED=no
> BOOTPROTO=none
> NETWORK=
> NETMASK=255.255.255.240
> IPADDR=.  (its a static IP)
> GATEWAY=
>
> # cat ifcfg-eth0
> DEVICE=eth0
> HWADDR=D8:D3:85:B5:8C:6A
> TYPE=Ethernet
> ONBOOT=yes
> NM_CONTROLLED=no
> BRIDGE=br0
>
> # cat ifcfg-lo
> DEVICE=lo
> IPADDR=127.0.0.1
> NETMASK=255.0.0.0
> NETWORK=127.0.0.0
> # If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
> # you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
> BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
> ONBOOT=yes
> NAME=loopback
>
> --
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>
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Kahlil Hodgson
If you really need two bridges on the same LAN you will need to turn on STP
and give your interfaces a delay of say 10 seconds on start up. Sorry, cant
remember options to do that.


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means, do not use a hammer."  -- IBM maintenance manual, 1925

On 13 November 2015 at 08:09, Alexander Dalloz  wrote:

> Am 12.11.2015 um 19:42 schrieb Sergio Belkin:
>
>> [root@localhost ~]# uname -a
>> Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC 2014
>> x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
>>
>
> First of all: yum update to current!
>
> Alexander
>
>
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread John R Pierce

On 11/12/2015 10:42 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

DEVICE=enp0s8
HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0
DEVICE=lo
TYPE=loopback
IPADDR=127.0.0.1
NETMASK=255.0.0.0
NETWORK=127.0.0.0
...


I hope thats two seperate files, ifcfg-enp0s8 and ifcfg-lo ... otherwise,
why is a bridged physical interface configured to be loopback?!?

mine looks like...


# cat ifcfg-br0
DEVICE=br0
TYPE=Bridge
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BOOTPROTO=none
NETWORK=
NETMASK=255.255.255.240
IPADDR=.  (its a static IP)
GATEWAY=

# cat ifcfg-eth0
DEVICE=eth0
HWADDR=D8:D3:85:B5:8C:6A
TYPE=Ethernet
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0

# cat ifcfg-lo
DEVICE=lo
IPADDR=127.0.0.1
NETMASK=255.0.0.0
NETWORK=127.0.0.0
# If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
# you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
ONBOOT=yes
NAME=loopback

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Alexander Dalloz

Am 12.11.2015 um 19:42 schrieb Sergio Belkin:

[root@localhost ~]# uname -a
Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC 2014
x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux


First of all: yum update to current!

Alexander

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread James A. Peltier
- Original Message -
| Hi,
| 
| I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
| follows:
| 
| nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
| address as source address
| nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
| address as source address
| 
| And the operating systems is extremely slow
| 
| Interfaces files :
| 
| [root@localhost ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-*
| DEVICE=br0
| TYPE=Bridge
| BOOTPROTO=dhcp
| ONBOOT=yes
| #STP=on
| #DELAY=0
| NM_CONTROLLED=no
| DEVICE=enp0s3
| #HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
| BOOTPROTO=none
| ONBOOT=yes
| NM_CONTROLLED=no
| BRIDGE=br0
| 
| DEVICE=enp0s8
| HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
| BOOTPROTO=none
| ONBOOT=yes
| NM_CONTROLLED=no
| BRIDGE=br0
| DEVICE=lo
| TYPE=loopback
| IPADDR=127.0.0.1
| NETMASK=255.0.0.0
| NETWORK=127.0.0.0
| # If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
| # you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
| BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
| ONBOOT=yes
| NAME=loopback
| 
| I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.
| 
| System is:
| 
| [root@localhost ~]# uname -a
| Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC 2014
| x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
| 
| And is virtualized on VirtualBox
| 
| Please could you help me to fix it?
| 
| Thanks in advance!
| 
| --
| --
| Sergio Belkin
| LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org

You have a bridge with two interfaces on the same lan?  You're likely creating 
the topology loop with this configuration.  What is it that you're attempting 
to do here?


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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/12/2015 12:00 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

2015-11-12 16:51 GMT-03:00 Gordon Messmer :
Do you have those two devices connected to the same LAN? 

Yes I have.


Well, that will create a switch loop and flood the LAN with broadcast 
traffic.


We can probably offer better advice if you tell us what you're trying to 
accomplish.  For now, just remove one of the two bridged interfaces.


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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Sergio Belkin
2015-11-12 16:51 GMT-03:00 Gordon Messmer :

> On 11/12/2015 10:42 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:
>
>> DEVICE=enp0s3
>> #HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
>> BOOTPROTO=none
>> ONBOOT=yes
>> NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> BRIDGE=br0
>>
>
> DEVICE=enp0s8
>> HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
>> BOOTPROTO=none
>> ONBOOT=yes
>> NM_CONTROLLED=no
>> BRIDGE=br0
>>
>
> Do you have those two devices connected to the same LAN?
>


Yes I have.


>
> I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.
>>
>
> Why would that matter, when all of your interfaces are NM_CONTROLLED=no?



Only as a last desesperate resource after hours of trying and not working :(


>
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-- 
--
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LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 11/12/2015 10:42 AM, Sergio Belkin wrote:

DEVICE=enp0s3
#HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0



DEVICE=enp0s8
HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0


Do you have those two devices connected to the same LAN?


I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.


Why would that matter, when all of your interfaces are NM_CONTROLLED=no?

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Re: [CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Ulf Volmer

On 11/12/2015 07:42 PM, Sergio Belkin wrote:


I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
follows:

nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
address as source address
nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
address as source address


sounds like a loop.

What says 'brctl show'?

best regards
Ulf
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[CentOS] Poor perfmance of bridged interfaces

2015-11-12 Thread Sergio Belkin
Hi,

I've created a bridge using 2 interfaces and have a lot of messages as
follows:

nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
address as source address
nov 12 15:30:22 localhost kernel: br0: received packet on enp0s3 with own
address as source address

And the operating systems is extremely slow

Interfaces files :

[root@localhost ~]# cat /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-*
DEVICE=br0
TYPE=Bridge
BOOTPROTO=dhcp
ONBOOT=yes
#STP=on
#DELAY=0
NM_CONTROLLED=no
DEVICE=enp0s3
#HWADDR=08:00:27:AB:1D:E6
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0

DEVICE=enp0s8
HWADDR=08:00:27:A3:98:E6
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
NM_CONTROLLED=no
BRIDGE=br0
DEVICE=lo
TYPE=loopback
IPADDR=127.0.0.1
NETMASK=255.0.0.0
NETWORK=127.0.0.0
# If you're having problems with gated making 127.0.0.0/8 a martian,
# you can change this to something else (255.255.255.255, for example)
BROADCAST=127.255.255.255
ONBOOT=yes
NAME=loopback

I've disabled NetworkManager, but problem persists.

System is:

[root@localhost ~]# uname -a
Linux localhost 3.10.0-123.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon Jun 30 12:09:22 UTC 2014
x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

And is virtualized on VirtualBox

Please could you help me to fix it?

Thanks in advance!

-- 
--
Sergio Belkin
LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
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