Paul Brook wrote:
I immediately reproduced the problem locally. It turns out that
kvm reflects packets coming from one guest NIC on another guest
NIC, and since both are connected to the same bridge we're getting
endless packet storm. To a level when kvm process becomes 100%
busy and does not
I immediately reproduced the problem locally. It turns out that
kvm reflects packets coming from one guest NIC on another guest
NIC, and since both are connected to the same bridge we're getting
endless packet storm. To a level when kvm process becomes 100%
busy and does not respond to
Mark McLoughlin wrote:
On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 20:25 +0400, Michael Tokarev wrote:
I've two questions:
o what's the intended usage of all-vlan-equal case, when kvm (or qemu)
reflects packets from one interface to another? It's what bridge
in linux is for, I think.
I don't think
list
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] net packet storms with multiple NICs
On 10/23/2009 06:43 PM, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 20:25 +0400, Michael Tokarev wrote:
I've two questions:
o what's the intended usage of all-vlan-equal case, when
kvm (or qemu)
reflects
On 10/26/2009 03:40 PM, Krumme, Chris wrote:
Well, it is. vlan=x really means the ethernet segment named x. If
you connect all your guest nics to one vlan, you are
connecting them all
to one ethernet segment, so any packet transmitted on one will be
reflected on others.
Whether this is a
On 10/23/2009 06:43 PM, Mark McLoughlin wrote:
On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 20:25 +0400, Michael Tokarev wrote:
I've two questions:
o what's the intended usage of all-vlan-equal case, when kvm (or qemu)
reflects packets from one interface to another? It's what bridge
in linux is for, I
On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 20:25 +0400, Michael Tokarev wrote:
I've two questions:
o what's the intended usage of all-vlan-equal case, when kvm (or qemu)
reflects packets from one interface to another? It's what bridge
in linux is for, I think.
I don't think it's necessarily an intended