On Thu, 16 Jan 2020 at 07:58, Asle Ommundsen aommundsen@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
Tonight I upgraded two CentOS 8 boxes to CentOS 8.1 (1911). Then after a reboot of the first server the network was unavailable. In IPMI console everything except the network was looking good. Network was unreachable. No errors in NetworkManager. I also restarted NetworkManager, but it did not help. Then I discovered that the default gateway suddenly was missing.
Then I rebooted the server one more time, but network was still down.
Then both myself and a technician in my datcenter was debugging this (I had to wake him up in the middle of the night, costing me a lot of money), without finding any reason for why the default gateway was missing after reboot.
Then we rebooted the server a third time, and all of a sudden the problem was gone and the default gateway was back.
Then, after this, I also upgraded my second CentOS 8 server to CentOS 8.1 and did a reboot. And the very same thing happened to this server after reboot! The default gateway was missing after reboot, and network was down. Then I did a extra reboot of this server also, and when it came back up everything was working correct and the default gateway was back.
So the first server I needed to reboot two extra times to have the default gateway back and network working. And the second server I needed to reboot only one extra time for the problem to be solved.
The two boxes is not VPSs or anything, but bare metal dedicated servers.
Also prior to upgrading to CentOS 8.1, these two boxes has been rebooted serveral times previously, without any problems at all. Only after upgrading to CentOS 8.1 this happened on both of them for the first time.
I can't believe I am the only one that experience this? My guess is that this is a unknown random intermittent bug in CentOS 8.1 that kicked in. I just hope this does not continue to happen in the future. If you experienced the same, please share it with a reply. Thank you!
In order to determine what is going on you need to give a lot more information.
1. How do these boxes get their network information? DHCP or static 2. If they are static, what controls the setting of ips: NetworkManager or network-scripts 3. If they are static, how are they set in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ 4. Do the files in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts list a GATEWAY= 5. If you are using network-manager, what does nmtui or the graphical tool say the gateway or default route is?
Kind regards, Asle Ommundsen _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos