wiki:centos_bonding_interfaces

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CentOS Bonding Interfaces

Jun 2017


Introduction

For network redundancy, we can bond interface pairs on the G6/G7 servers. For this example I am using CentOS 6.x, so luckily still have the ethx naming convention.

Two bond a pair of interfaces requires three files (four if you want to do some multicast routing). first we will look at bonding a pair of interfaces for management, then we can look at bonding a pair of interfaces for ingest/egress.


Management Interface Bonding

For bonding the management interfaces, we will require three files. I am making the assumption that we are using the first two interfaces (eth0 and eth1) for management, and that this is our first bond on this device (so bond0):

ifcfg-eth0
ifcfg-eth1
ifcfg-bond0

For this to work, you will need the UUID of each interface, if you don't have this, look here for instructions on how to generate the UUIDs.

ifcfg-eth0

DEVICE=eth0
HWADDR=00:1E:67:EB:6D:F2
TYPE=Ethernet
UUID=cceda895-dd2b-4096-9d9c-5985dd0872d7
ONBOOT=yes
MASTER=bond0
SLAVE=yes

Notice that there is no addressing information in the interface configuration file(s)

ifcfg-eth1

DEVICE=eth1
HWADDR=00:1E:67:EB:6D:F3
TYPE=Ethernet
UUID=7ecc849f-eefb-43a0-9796-99d368bbb28a
ONBOOT=yes
MASTER=bond0
SLAVE=yes


ifcfg-bond0

InDEVICE=bond0
ONBOOT=yes
BOOTPROTO=static
USERCTL=no
BONDING_OPTS="mode=1 miimon=100"
IPADDR=192.168.27.100
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
GATEWAY=192.168.27.254
DNS1=172.16.178.100
DNS2=8.8.8.8



wiki/centos_bonding_interfaces.1498473313.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/03/09 22:35 (external edit)