Also includes a few minor spelling and wording fixes. Change-Id: Ic5a301d062b58087086149c262cd691ad1c71cb5
3.6 KiB
Home OpenStack-Ansible Installation Guide
Troubleshooting
Container networking issues
All LXC containers on the host have two virtual Ethernet interfaces:
- eth0 in the container connects to lxcbr0 on the host
- eth1 in the container connects to br-mgmt on the host
Note
Some containers, such as cinder, glance, neutron_agents, and swift_proxy, have more than two interfaces to support their functions.
Predictable interface naming
On the host, all virtual Ethernet devices are named based on their container as well as the name of the interface inside the container:
${CONTAINER_UNIQUE_ID}_${NETWORK_DEVICE_NAME}
As an example, an all-in-one (AIO) build might provide a utility container called aio1_utility_container-d13b7132. That container will have two network interfaces: d13b7132_eth0 and d13b7132_eth1.
Another option would be to use the LXC tools to retrieve information about the utility container:
# lxc-info -n aio1_utility_container-d13b7132 Name: aio1_utility_container-d13b7132 State: RUNNING PID: 8245 IP: 10.0.3.201 IP: 172.29.237.204 CPU use: 79.18 seconds BlkIO use: 678.26 MiB Memory use: 613.33 MiB KMem use: 0 bytes Link: d13b7132_eth0 TX bytes: 743.48 KiB RX bytes: 88.78 MiB Total bytes: 89.51 MiB Link: d13b7132_eth1 TX bytes: 412.42 KiB RX bytes: 17.32 MiB Total bytes: 17.73 MiB
The Link:
lines will show the network interfaces that
are attached to the utility container.
Reviewing container networking traffic
To dump traffic on the br-mgmt
bridge, use
tcpdump
to see all communications between the various
containers. To narrow the focus, run tcpdump
only on the
desired network interface of the containers.
Cached Ansible facts issues
At the beginning of a playbook run, information about each host, such as its Linux distribution, kernel version, and network interfaces, is gathered. To improve performance, particularly in larger deployments, these facts can be cached.
OpenStack-Ansible enables fact caching by default. The facts are
cached in JSON files within
/etc/openstack_deploy/ansible_facts
.
Fact caching can be disabled by commenting out the
fact_caching
parameter in
playbooks/ansible.cfg
. Refer to the Ansible documentation
on fact
caching for more details.
Forcing regeneration of cached facts
If a host's kernel is upgraded or additional network interfaces or bridges are created on the host, its cached facts may be incorrect. This can lead to unexpected errors while running playbooks, and require that the cached facts be regenerated.
Run the following command to remove all currently cached facts for all hosts:
# rm /etc/openstack_deploy/ansible_facts/*
New facts will be gathered and cached during the next playbook run.
To clear facts for a single host, find its file within
/etc/openstack_deploy/ansible_facts/
and remove it. Each
host has a JSON file that is named after its hostname. The facts for
that host will be regenerated on the next playbook run.