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    DNS/DHCP stop working suddenly

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • M
      michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @stephenw10
      last edited by

      @stephenw10
      I have uninstalled Tailscale.
      I’m glad I got some more data on this so thanks for the assistance.

      If this is a bug - let’s say it might be for sake of conversation - I don’t have much data to prove this isn’t just environmental to my setup. Any other data points I can gather?
      Losing a WAN ip address does make Tailscale chatty but i can’t find the link to why dns breaks for local resolution.

      Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
      Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
      Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
      Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
      JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

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      • stephenw10S
        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
        last edited by

        It looks like whatever is using that CPU core is preventing anything sending/receiving traffic or possible opening states. Causing problem for numerous services.

        M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • M
          michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @stephenw10
          last edited by michmoor

          @stephenw10
          Interesting and i love that theory. Seems very logical.
          Would explain why almost all functionality related to the firewall is broken - web-configurator , dns , dhcp...
          Considering the 6100 has 4x cores, its not odd that a single core choking the firewall breaks connectivity?

          edit: So whatever is using that core is related to traffic? High throughput? This 6100 can for sure push well over 10G from my testing but looking at the monitoring i see pretty low WAN throughput considering.
          Tailscale seems like the smoking gun but checking my historical syslog it seems that once ix3 (WAN) goes down and cant renew a dhcp address, tailscale becomes very verbose. As i discovered today i am unable to reboot the router because it gets stuck on the tailscale process. High level but the trigger is losing the WAN.
          If we're stable this weekend, i will install tailscale again and unplug the wan..see if i can reproduce.

          ba19cfa2-0b4b-4faf-870e-18fe8195b2d3-image.png

          Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
          Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
          Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
          Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
          JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

          stephenw10S 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • stephenw10S
            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator @michmoor
            last edited by

            @michmoor said in DNS/DHCP stop working suddenly:

            Considering the 6100 has 4x cores, its not odd that a single core choking the firewall breaks connectivity?

            It is I agree. Though I'm assuming it's choking something in the network stack so it doesn't matter than then other cores are still available.

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            • tinfoilmattT
              tinfoilmatt @michmoor
              last edited by

              @michmoor said in DNS/DHCP stop working suddenly:

              I went ahead and went for the reboot through console. It could not stop the Tailscale package. This forced me to pull the plug and plug it back in.

              what's the longest you waited for the system to shutdown gracefully when it appeared to be 'stuck" stopping Tailscale package? conservative estimate in minutes...

              M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • M
                michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @tinfoilmatt
                last edited by

                @cyberconsultants
                maybe 5mins or so.
                Reboots generally do not take long

                @stephenw10 so far since the TS package removal things have been stable since. I’ll add the package tomorrow and let you know how things go.

                Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
                Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
                JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

                tinfoilmattT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • tinfoilmattT
                  tinfoilmatt @michmoor
                  last edited by

                  @michmoor five minutes doesn't seem reasonable given documented precaution:

                  https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/diagnostics/system-halt.html

                  ...and what you seemed to be dealing with more specifically.

                  abrupt and repeated power losses over time might be closer in line with your 'root cause' than any particular package. i personally think it'd be advisable to make not cutting the power until you've waited at least an unreasonable period of time given the specific reboot context (sysem updates, maintenance, system crash, etc.) a more regular practice.

                  pfSense is a software firewall that doesn't load its config strictly out of NVRAM like typical consumer devices often do. despite filesystem and backup/recovery/snapshot improvements over time, OS corruption is still a real concern with abrupt loss of system power.

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                  • stephenw10S
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    In reality I don't think I've ever seen a correctly functioning install take more than 5 mins to shutdown.

                    tinfoilmattT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • tinfoilmattT
                      tinfoilmatt @stephenw10
                      last edited by

                      @stephenw10 said in DNS/DHCP stop working suddenly:

                      In reality I don't think I've ever seen a correctly functioning install take more than 5 mins to shutdown.

                      so you would pull the physical power after five minutes of Stopping package Tailscale... in some kind of unstable system state?

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                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        If the console was hung at that point then yes. I might try hitting ctl+t first to see what it's actually waiting for. That won't allow it to continue but might give a clue as to why it failed.

                        tinfoilmattT M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • tinfoilmattT
                          tinfoilmatt @stephenw10
                          last edited by

                          @stephenw10 said in DNS/DHCP stop working suddenly:

                          If the console was hung at that point then yes. I might try hitting ctl+t first to see what it's actually waiting for. That won't allow it to continue but might give a clue as to why it failed.

                          lol

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                          • M
                            michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @stephenw10
                            last edited by michmoor

                            @stephenw10
                            Hey Stephen,
                            It happened again. I collected some data to help diagnose

                            I initially SSH'd to my firewall and was able to run a top -aSH.

                            last pid: 37748;  load averages:  5.19,  5.30,  5.34                                                                                                         up 5+14:27:25  06:36:49
                            536 threads:   10 running, 488 sleeping, 38 waiting
                            CPU:  1.1% user,  0.0% nice, 26.6% system,  0.1% interrupt, 72.3% idle
                            Mem: 471M Active, 1981M Inact, 1400M Wired, 3937M Free
                            ARC: 341M Total, 106M MFU, 214M MRU, 2972K Anon, 2640K Header, 14M Other
                                 267M Compressed, 972M Uncompressed, 3.64:1 Ratio
                            Swap: 1024M Total, 1024M Free
                            
                              PID USERNAME    PRI NICE   SIZE    RES STATE    C   TIME    WCPU COMMAND
                                0 root        -60    -     0B  2160K CPU3     3 260:17  99.91% [kernel{if_io_tqg_3}]
                               11 root        187 ki31     0B    64K CPU0     0 127.5H  96.51% [idle{idle: cpu0}]
                               11 root        187 ki31     0B    64K CPU1     1 126.0H  95.49% [idle{idle: cpu1}]
                               11 root        187 ki31     0B    64K RUN      2 126.7H  95.47% [idle{idle: cpu2}]
                            98424 unbound      23    0   179M   139M kqread   1   0:06   3.65% /usr/local/sbin/unbound -c /var/unbound/unbound.conf{unbound}
                            98424 unbound      21    0   179M   139M kqread   2   0:05   2.39% /usr/local/sbin/unbound -c /var/unbound/unbound.conf{unbound}
                            

                            I noticed that my WAN IP has changed. Being on ATT fiber it has remained the same for over two years but its DHCP so now its time to change.

                            All logging stopped at the same time

                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       572K Mar  7 02:29 filter.log.1.bz2
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       534K Mar  7 02:35 filter.log.0.bz2
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       214K Mar  7 02:37 resolver.log.1.bz2
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       149K Mar  7 02:39 resolver.log.0.bz2
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       2.9M Mar  7 02:39 auth.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       938K Mar  7 02:39 dhcpd.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       3.1M Mar  7 02:39 gateways.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       544K Mar  7 02:39 ntpd.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       2.6M Mar  7 02:39 nginx.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       2.8M Mar  7 02:39 routing.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       2.5M Mar  7 02:39 ipsec.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       2.5M Mar  7 02:39 openvpn.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       6.5M Mar  7 02:39 system.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       8.4M Mar  7 02:39 filter.log
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel       426K Mar  7 02:39 resolver.log
                            -rw-------  1 freeradius freeradius  879K Mar  7 02:40 radius.log
                            -rw-r--r--  1 root       wheel       591B Mar  7 06:36 utx.lastlogin
                            -rw-------  1 root       wheel        22K Mar  7 06:36 utx.log
                            

                            I still couldn't get to the GUI on the LAN side as it was unresponsive so from SSH I went ahead with the reboot. It was stalling on stopping certain packages so I did ctrl t

                            Netgate pfSense Plus is rebooting now.
                             Stopping package arpwatch...done.
                             Stopping package freeradius3...done.
                             Stopping package lldpd...done.
                             Stopping package WireGuard...
                            load: 5.71  cmd: php_wg 65403 [nanslp] 10.49r 0.68u 0.07s 3% 53036k
                            done.
                             Stopping package haproxy...done.
                             Stopping package nut...done.
                             Stopping package syslog-ng...done.
                             Stopping package softflowd...done.
                             Stopping package suricata...
                            
                             Stopping package suricata...
                            load: 5.59  cmd: php-cgi 56784 [nanslp] 35.07r 0.54u 0.04s 0% 53360k
                            
                            

                            Waiting over an hour...........yes an hour...pfsense never came back from the reboot and within that hour I lost access to the shell. So I went in through the console and the console was flooded with the following logs.

                            arpresolve: can't allocate llinfo for 192.168.1.254 on ix3
                            

                            I couldn't access anything else via console. Just the flooding of the arpresolve log tied up anything. Even disconnecting the ix3 interface from the ATT modem didn't matter..arpresolve still kept flooding console.

                            Finally, a reboot fixed it. Back online..

                            Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
                            Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                            Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                            Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
                            JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

                            tinfoilmattT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • tinfoilmattT
                              tinfoilmatt @michmoor
                              last edited by

                              @michmoor sounds like a simple gateway alarm/action triggering a cascade of headache. you might review configuration of the packages whose services you're not allowing to stop, likely compounding the kludge each time you do. it'll only get longer and kludgier if you keep "resolving" it the way you are.

                              Suricata initialization (both start and stop) is what's causing those arpresolve kernel notices.

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                              • stephenw10S
                                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                last edited by

                                Do you have the service watchdog installed? That can cause problems with stopping services when incorrectly used. It should only really be used for debugging. You would see that logged though.

                                M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • M
                                  michmoor LAYER 8 Rebel Alliance @stephenw10
                                  last edited by michmoor

                                  @stephenw10
                                  When @cyberconsultants mentioned suricata i did immediately go to my service watchdog and I have the following enabled.

                                  2a81fa14-6f7f-47e7-94b9-1fb1f9ac5b1b-image.png

                                  This is a set up Ive had for years now. I don't mind removing these services from monitoring but i don't see how it prevented a reboot. Ive upgraded/rebooted many times with these enabled.

                                  edit: I would also say that its likely something environmentally changed here but I have no idea what it could be. Short of adding a firewall rule, the config is static. Goes down for an upgrade every few months. So whatever is causing a cascade of headaches for me (love the term) its proving difficult to isolate.

                                  Firewall: NetGate,Palo Alto-VM,Juniper SRX
                                  Routing: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                                  Switching: Juniper, Arista, Cisco
                                  Wireless: Unifi, Aruba IAP
                                  JNCIP,CCNP Enterprise

                                  bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • stephenw10S
                                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                    last edited by stephenw10

                                    Well the service watchdog should log if it restarts anything so I'd expect to see that in the system logs. Unless it's not logging anything of course.

                                    It's an easy test to remove those though. Unbound is the only thing I could imagine being an issue though.

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                                    • NollipfSenseN
                                      NollipfSense
                                      last edited by NollipfSense

                                      Very interesting diagnosing here, indeed and Steve is bad to the bone!

                                      pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                                      pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        Not sure about that. Come back to me if/when we find the root cause. 😉

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                                        • tinfoilmattT
                                          tinfoilmatt @stephenw10
                                          last edited by

                                          @stephenw10 it's pretty obviously, based on OP's detailed posts and a fair bit of 'reading between the lines,' triggered gateway monitoring action following either transiest latency/loss of connecitivty or DHCP lease renewal.

                                          the rest of it is just system tailspin—which in fairness would, in all likelihood, eventually recover given enough time to do so. BSD and pfSense be solid like that.

                                          M 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • stephenw10S
                                            stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                            last edited by

                                            Yes, exactly I don't expect to just get hung up in the interface/network like that. You certainly can end up with a lot of script 'churn' when an interface drops out. Especially if there are other interfaces on it like VPNs etc. But it will stop after a few minutes unless the interface changes again.

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