Hi, Please don't drop ML from the thread. You have to go to the node where Your router is hosted and investigate there in the agent's logs. If ports are DOWN, I would start with checking in the L2 agent logs (neutron-ovs-agent or linuxbridge-agent, idk what You are using exactly). If there is no any errors there, You can also check neutron-server logs, why ports aren't set to be UP as well as checking neutron-l3-agent logs on the node where router is hosted. On czwartek, 28 października 2021 18:41:29 CET Jibsan Joel Rosa Toirac wrote:
Here I let you some screenshots of my Network Topology:
El jue, 28 oct 2021 a las 7:43, Jibsan Joel Rosa Toirac (<jibsan94@gmail.com>) escribió:
Yes it’s neutron router. Well the router is centralized. It is located between the subnets and the node, all the subnets will pass through the router to internet, but I don’t know what else check to set it up for. I’m using a friend’s Openstack instance on a server to check out if I’m missing something and both nodes are the same. I will send you a screenshot of my network Topology.
Greetings
On Thu, Oct 28, 2021 at 2:33 AM Slawek Kaplonski <skaplons@redhat.com>
wrote:
Hi,
On środa, 27 października 2021 21:39:55 CEST Jibsan Joel Rosa Toirac
wrote:
Hello, I'm trying to route all the requests from a private vlan to internet. I have a private network and all the Virtual Machines inside
the
subnet config can do everything between they, but if I ping to
Internet, it
doesn't work.
When I see the router_external it says all the interfaces are DOWN.
By router_external, You mean neutron router, right? If so, what kind of router it is, centralized HA or non-HA, or maybe DVR? Is router scheduled properly to some node? You can check that with command like "neutron l3-agent-list-hosting-router <router_id>".
I have search in everywhere but I can't find a solution for this.
Thank you for your time
-- Slawek Kaplonski Principal Software Engineer Red Hat
-- Slawek Kaplonski Principal Software Engineer Red Hat