On 9/27/20 9:10 AM, Baptiste Jonglez wrote: > On 27-09-20, Baptiste Jonglez wrote: >> 1) failing IPv6 neighbours, what Alarig reported. We are seeing this >> on a full-view BGP router with rather low amount of IPv6 traffic >> (around 10-20 Mbps) > > Ok, I found a quick way to reproduce this issue: > > # for net in {1..9999}; do ip -6 route add 2001:db8:ffff:${net}::/64 via > fe80::4242 dev lo; done > > and then: > > # for net in {1..9999}; do ping -c1 2001:db8:ffff:${net}::1; done > > This quickly gets to a situation where ping fails early with: > > ping: connect: Network is unreachable > > At this point, IPv6 connectivity is broken. The kernel is no longer > replying to IPv6 neighbor solicitation from other hosts on local > networks. > > When this happens, the "fib_rt_alloc" field from /proc/net/rt6_stats > is roughly equal to net.ipv6.route.max_size (a bit more in my tests). > > Interestingly, the system appears to stay in this broken state > indefinitely, even without trying to send new IPv6 traffic. The > fib_rt_alloc statistics does not decrease. >
fib_rt_alloc is incremented by calls to ip6_dst_alloc. Each of your 9,999 pings is to a unique address and hence causes a dst to be allocated and the counter to be incremented. It is never decremented. That is standard operating procedure.