I just noticed that when rebooting a CentOS 7 server the firewall comes back up 
with both interfaces set to REJECT, instead of the eth1 interface set to ACCEPT 
as defined in 'permanent' firewalld configuration files.

All servers are up to date.

By "just noticed" I mean that I finally investigated why a newly rebooted VM 
failed to allow NFS connections.  Prior to doing that. I'd been stopping the 
firewall to get access, then restarting the firewall after setting the eth1 
interface to ACCEPT.  This time I took a look at iptables and found that eth1 
was set to REJECT, before I stopped the firewall.  Because it was obvious that 
firewalld had been started by systemd by noticing the output of iptabled -nvL 
had the same set of rules you can see when firewalld is restarted, except that 
after restart interface eth1 is set to ACCEPT.

I assume there must be a different set of configuration files that are accessed 
upon reboot than those accessed upon firewalld restart.

Note that all CentoOS 7 machines (VM and hardware) in our data center have this 
same issue.

Anyone know where and what those files are?

Emmett

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