I finally figured it out and thought I
would share in case someone else stumbles upon this problem. After doing a lot of research I found
that I had to add the following line to my /etc/modules: bonding mode=1 miimon=100 downdelay=200
updelay=200 It seems to be working perfectly now. Chris Stackpole From: Stackpole, Chris
[mailto:CStackpole@barbnet.com] I seem to be having a problem with bonding under Debian
Lenny, but I am not sure exactly what the problem is. I have two servers and each server has two gigabit network
cards. We have two gigabit switches that we use so that we have failover should
one die. I matched both eth0’s to switch0 and both eth1’s to switch
one. I then bonded the eth’s together on both servers. I posted how I did
it below just in case I screwed something up. Once I did the bonding,
everything looks to be OK. I can ping out and I can ping the hosts from other
systems. I pulled the network plug from one of the cards and watched that the
failover worked as it should. Then I plugged it back in and removed the other.
Everything worked as I thought it should; I am not an expert at bonding but I
have used the same method a few times now without problem. Well I went on about my business and soon complaints began
to come in that one server was much slower then the other. :-/ I began investigating and sure enough, one system is slower.
Transferring a 1GB file across the network, I easily maintain ~38-40M/s on the
first host and I usually top out around 15-18MB/s on the other. Ifconfig shows
that both cards are set to the proper speed (txqueuelen:1000) but it
isn’t behaving like should be. Worse is when I do a watch or htop or
something else that updates I can notice the lag. For example, I have
ssh’d into the system and have htop running right now; it is supposed to
update every 2 seconds. It works like it should for a short time but then every
once in a while the screen freezes for about 10 seconds, then everything
updates all at once and continues its 2 second update interval. I thought it was the network cards, so I disabled the
bonding and tested each of them. I get gigabit speeds individually. Rebonded
the cards and I am back to the slow speeds. I turned off the system to see if
there was physical damage or something (found nothing) and when I brought it
back up I saw this in the logs: Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.167568]
bonding: bond0: Warning: failed to get speed and duplex from eth0, assumed to
be 100Mb/sec and Full. Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.167568]
bonding: bond0: enslaving eth0 as an active interface with an up link. Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.264691]
bonding: bond0: Warning: failed to get speed and duplex from eth1, assumed to
be 100Mb/sec and Full. Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.264691]
bonding: bond0: enslaving eth1 as an active interface with an up link. Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.578052]
NET: Registered protocol family 10 Oct 30 11:53:04 Hostname kernel: [ 10.579606]
lo: Disabled Privacy Extensions Oct 30 11:53:05 Hostname kernel: [ 12.884391]
tg3: eth0: Link is up at 1000 Mbps, full duplex. Oct 30 11:53:05 Hostname kernel: [ 12.884391]
tg3: eth0: Flow control is off for TX and off for RX. Oct 30 11:53:06 Hostname kernel: [ 13.012292]
tg3: eth1: Link is up at 1000 Mbps, full duplex. Oct 30 11:53:06 Hostname kernel: [ 13.012292]
tg3: eth1: Flow control is off for TX and off for RX. I see the tg3 messages in the first server, but I
don’t see the bonding warnings. My guess is that the bonding is somehow
screwed up and stuck on 100Mb/sec and doesn’t update when the cards go to
1000Mb/sec. I tried to find an answer via google but did not find anything that
seemed useful to me. I see others have had this problem, but I found no
solution that helped me. I don’t know why one works and the other
doesn’t. They should be pretty similar in setup and configuration as I
didn’t do anything drastically different when I built them. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! Chris Stackpole How I did the bonding: # apt-get install ifenslave # vi /etc/network/interfaces auto lo iface lo inet loopback auto bond0 iface bond0 inet static
address 10.3.45.3
netmask 255.255.255.0
network 10.3.45.0
broadcast 10.3.45.255
gateway 10.3.45.251
dns-nameservers 10.1.1.5 10.1.1.6
dns-search mydomain.com
up /sbin/ifenslave bond0 eth0 eth1
down /sbin/ifenslave -d bond0 eth0 eth1 Then I restarted (yeah I know I could have just reset the
network but I restarted). When it was back up ifconfig shows bond0, eth0, eth1, and lo
all correctly. |