Why I did it
The S6000 devices, the cold reboot is abrupt and it is likely to cause issues which will cause the device to land into EFI shell. Hence the platform reboot will happen after graceful unmount of all the filesystems as in S6100.
How I did it
Moved the platform_reboot to platform_reboot_override and hooked it to the systemd shutdown services as in S6100.
Fixed the "/host unmount failed" issue as well in 201811.
How to verify it
Issue "reboot" command to verify if the reboot is happening gracefully.
fixesAzure/sonic-utilities#1389
With the recent changes in sudoer files. The show commands fails for the read-only users.
The problem here is the 'docker ps' is failing in the function [get_routing_stack()](8a1109ed30/show/main.py (L54)) therefore all the CLI commands are failing.
Signed-off-by: Arvindsrinivasan Lakshmi Narasimhan <arlakshm@microsoft.com>
Why I did it
During upgrade, if config is loaded from minigraph, it would miss TACACS credentials. This leads to device losing remote user accessibility
- How I did it
During update graph, when config is loaded from minigraph, look for TACACS credentials back-up and load that if available
- How to verify it
Remove /etc/sonic/config-db.json, save TACACS credentials in /etc/sonic/tacacs.json and do a Image upgrade. Do image upgrade and boot into new image. Verify remote user access is available.
NOTE: This change is available in master via PR #6285
To address issue #5525
Explicitly control the grub installation requirement when it is needed.
We have scenario where configuration migration happened but grub
installation is not required.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>
The first partition starting point was changed to be 1M as part of this
commit: 6ba2f97f1e. On systems that are misaligned before conversion
(partition start is the first sector), the relica partition that is
left in the first MB can cause problems in Aboot and result in corruption
of the filesystem on the new aligned partition.
Zeroing this old relica makes sure that there is nothing left of the old
partition lying around. There won't be any risk of having Aboot corrupt
the new filesystem because of the old relica.
Signed-off-by: Baptiste Covolato <baptiste@arista.com>
While migrating to SONiC 20181130, identified a couple of issues:
1. union-mount needs /host/machine.conf parameters for vendor specific checks : however, in case of migration, the /host/machine.conf is extracted from ONIE only in https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/blob/master/files/image_config/platform/rc.local#L127.
2. Since grub.cfg is updated to have net.ifnames=0 biosdevname=0, 70-persistent-net.rules changes are no longer required.
Don't limit iptables connection tracking to TCP protocol; allow connection tracking for all protocols. This allows services like NTP, which is UDP-based, to receive replies from an NTP server even if the port is blocked, as long as it is in reply to a request sent from the device itself.
Found another syncd timing issue related to clock going backwards.
To be safe disable the ntp long jump.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>
I found that with IPv4Network types, calling list(ip_ntwrk.hosts()) is reliable. However, when doing the same with an IPv6Network, I found that the conversion to a list can hang indefinitely. This appears to me to be a bug in the ipaddress.IPv6Network implementation. However, I could not find any other reports on the web.
This patch changes the behavior to call next() on the ip_ntwrk.hosts() generator instead, which returns the IP address of the first host.
**- Why I did it**
When I tested auto-restart feature of swss container by manually killing one of critical processes in it, swss will be stopped. Then syncd container as the peer container should also be
stopped as expected. However, I found sometimes syncd container can be stopped, sometimes
it can not be stopped. The reason why syncd container can not be stopped is the process
(/usr/local/bin/syncd.sh stop) to execute the stop() function will be stuck between the lines 164 –167. Systemd will wait for 90 seconds and then kill this process.
164 # wait until syncd quit gracefully
165 while docker top syncd$DEV | grep -q /usr/bin/syncd; do
166 sleep 0.1
167 done
The first thing I did is to profile how long this while loop will spin if syncd container can be
normally stopped after swss container is stopped. The result is 5 seconds or 6 seconds. If syncd
container can be normally stopped, two messages will be written into syslog:
str-a7050-acs-3 NOTICE syncd#dsserve: child /usr/bin/syncd exited status: 134
str-a7050-acs-3 INFO syncd#supervisord: syncd [5] child /usr/bin/syncd exited status: 134
The second thing I did was to add a timer in the condition of while loop to ensure this while loop will be forced to exit after 20 seconds:
After that, the testing result is that syncd container can be normally stopped if swss is stopped
first. One more thing I want to mention is that if syncd container is stopped during 5 seconds or 6 seconds, then the two log messages can be still seen in syslog. However, if the execution
time of while loop is longer than 20 seconds and is forced to exit, although syncd container can be stopped, I did not see these two messages in syslog. Further, although I observed the auto-restart feature of swss container can work correctly right now, I can not make sure the issue which syncd container can not stopped will occur in future.
**- How I did it**
I added a timer around the while loop in stop() function. This while loop will exit after spinning
20 seconds.
Signed-off-by: Yong Zhao <yozhao@microsoft.com>
Since the introduction of VRF, interface-related tables in ConfigDB will have multiple entries, one of which only contains the interface name and no IP prefix. Thus, when iterating over the keys in the tables, we need to ignore the entries which do not contain IP prefixes.
Modified caclmgrd behavior to enhance control plane security as follows:
Upon starting or receiving notification of ACL table/rule changes in Config DB:
1. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming packets from established TCP sessions or new TCP sessions which are related to established TCP sessions
2. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow bidirectional ICMPv4 ping and traceroute
3. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow bidirectional ICMPv6 ping and traceroute
4. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP) NS/NA/RS/RA messages
5. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming IPv4 DHCP packets
6. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming IPv6 DHCP packets
7. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming BGP traffic
8. Add iptables/ip6tables commands for all ACL rules for recognized services (currently SSH, SNMP, NTP)
9. For all services which we did not find configured ACL rules, add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming packets for those services (allows the device to accept SSH connections before the device is configured)
10. Add iptables rules to drop all packets destined for loopback interface IP addresses
11. Add iptables rules to drop all packets destined for management interface IP addresses
12. Add iptables rules to drop all packets destined for point-to-point interface IP addresses
13. Add iptables rules to drop all packets destined for our VLAN interface gateway IP addresses
14. Add iptables/ip6tables commands to allow all incoming packets with TTL of 0 or 1 (This allows the device to respond to tools like tcptraceroute)
15. If we found control plane ACLs in the configuration and applied them, we lastly add iptables/ip6tables commands to drop all other incoming packets
Dynamic threshold setting changed to 0 and WRED profile green min threshold set to 250000 for Tomahawk devices
Changed the dynamic threshold settings in pg_profile_lookup.ini
Added a macro for WRED profiles in qos.json.j2 for Tomahawk devices
Necessary changes made in qos.config.j2 to use the macro if present
Signed-off-by: Neetha John <nejo@microsoft.com>
- What I did
Add configuration to avoid ntpd from panic and exit if the drift between new time and current system time is large.
- How I did it
Added "tinker panic 0" in ntp.conf file.
- How to verify it
[this assumes that there is a valid NTP server IP in config_db/ntp.conf]
Change the current system time to a bad time with a large drift from time in ntp server; drift should be greater than 1000s.
Reboot the device.
Before the fix:
3. upon reboot, ntp-config service comes up fine, ntp service goes to active(exited) state without any error message. This is because the offset between new time (from ntp server) and the current system time is very large, ntpd goes to panic mode and exits. The system continues to show the bad time.
After the fix:
3. Upon reboot, ntp-config comes up fine, ntp services comes up from and stays in active (running) state. The system clock gets synced with the ntp server time.
admin@sonic:~$ sudo hw-management-wd.sh
Usage: hw-management-wd.sh start [timeout] | stop | tleft | check_reset | help
start - start watchdog
timeout is optional. Default value will be used in case if it's omitted
timeout provided in seconds
stop - stop watchdog
tleft - check watchdog timeout left
check_reset - check if previous reset was caused by watchdog
Prints only in case of watchdog reset
help -this help
Signed-off-by: Stepan Blyschak <stepanb@mellanox.com>
* [interfaces-config.sh] Flush the loopback interface before configure it
Without this, you may end up with more and more ip addresses
on loopback interface after you change the loopback ip and do config reload
Signed-off-by: Zhenggen Xu <zxu@linkedin.com>
Fix the issue of incorrectly skipping the convertfs hook when fast-reboot from EOS, by adding an extra kernel cmdline param "prev_os" to differentiate fast-reboot from EOS and from SONiC.
This is because we still do disk conversion for fast reboot from eos to sonic, like format the disk.
Force "lo" interface down in interfaces-config.sh to prevent interface-config.service from failing with the following error:
```
-- The result is failed.
systemd[1]: networking.service: Unit entered failed state.
systemd[1]: networking.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
interfaces-config.sh[29232]: Job for networking.service failed because the control process exited with error code.
interfaces-config.sh[29232]: See "systemctl status networking.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.
interfaces-config.sh[29232]: ifdown: interface lo not configured
interfaces-config.sh[29232]: RTNETLINK answers: File exists
interfaces-config.sh[29232]: ifup: failed to bring up lo
systemd[1]: interfaces-config.service: Main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE
systemd[1]: Failed to start Update interfaces configuration.
-- Subject: Unit interfaces-config.service has failed
```
Failure to bring down the interface will result in a failure to subsequently bring the interface back up.
* [Monit] Change the monitoring period of monit from 120 seconds to 60
seconds and also at the same time double the interval for existing sonic monit config file in
host.
Signed-off-by: Yong Zhao <yozhao@microsoft.com>
* [201811][monit] address build issue: hard code ARCH to amd64
- also hard code the debian package path as in 201811 branch.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>
* Updates per review comments
1) core_uploader service waits for syslog.service
2) core_uploader service enabled for restart on failure
3) Use mtime instead of file size + ample time to be robust.
* Avoid reloading already uploaded file, by marking the names with a prefix.
* Updated failing path.
1) If rc file is missing or required data missing, it periodically logs error in forever loop.
2) If upload fails, retry every hour with a error log, forever.
* Fix few bugs
* The binary update_json.py will come from sonic-utilities.
* Corefile uploader service
1) A service is added to watch /var/core and upload to Azure storage
2) The service is disabled on boot. One may enable explicitly.
3) The .rc file to be updated with acct credentials and http proxy to use.
4) If service is enabled with no credentials, it would sleep, with periodic log messages
5) For any update in .rc, the service has to be restarted to take effect.
* Remove rw permission for .rc file for group & others.
* Changes per review comments.
Re-ordered .rc file per JSON.dump order.
Added a script to enable partial update of .rc, which HWProxy would use to add acct key.
* Azure storage upload requires python module futures, hence added it to install list.
* Removed trailing spaces.
* A mistake in name corrected.
Copy the .rc updater script to /usr/bin.
Rely on platform= and sid= on the command line to detect the platform rather than the eeprom
The platform will now properly initialize even if the system eeprom died or is unreachable.
Add support for the 7260CX3-64E
This is a variant of the 7260CX3-64 with no real difference for software.
If we need to stop swss during fast-reboot procedure on the boot up path,
it means that something went wrong, like syncd/orchagent crashed already,
we are stopping and restarting swss/syncd to re-initialize. In this case,
we should proceed as if it is a cold reboot.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>
* [process-reboot-cause]Address the issue: Incorrect reboot cause returned when warm reboot follows a hardware caused reboot
1. check whether /proc/cmdline indicates warm/fast reboot.
if yes the software reboot cause file will be treated as the reboot cause.
finish
2. check whether platform api returns a reboot cause.
if yes it is treated as the reboot cause.
finish.
3. check whether /hosts/reboot-cause contains a cause.
if yes it is treated as the cause otherwise return unknown.
* [process-reboot-cause]Fix review comments
* [process-reboot-cause]address comments
1. use "with" statement
2. update fast/warm reboot BOOT_ARG
* [process-reboot-cause]address comments
* refactor the code flow
* Remove escape
* Remove extra ':'
In place editing (sed -i) seems having some issues with filesystem
interaction. It could leave 0 size file or corrupted file behind.
It would be safer to sed the file contents into a new file and switch
new file with the old file.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>