If you are able to delete the VR from UI, there is no need to do any clean
up in the DB, ssvm checks seems fine, I would like you to review your
networking settings, things like VLAN IDs, IP start / end range, also
subnet mask for your network offering.

System VMs gets a public IP, can you ping that IP from your local network?

Dean



On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 12:35 PM, Jonathan Gowar <[email protected]>wrote:

> On Tue, 2014-05-13 at 09:13 -0400, Dean Kamali wrote:
> > Try and login to system vm and run ssvm-check script located in
> > /usr/local/cloud/
>
> root@s-1-VM:~#  /usr/local/cloud/systemvm/ssvm-check.sh
> ================================================
> First DNS server is  8.8.8.8
> PING 8.8.8.8 (8.8.8.8): 48 data bytes
> 56 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_seq=0 ttl=63 time=0.867 ms
> 56 bytes from 8.8.8.8: icmp_seq=1 ttl=63 time=0.471 ms
> --- 8.8.8.8 ping statistics ---
> 2 packets transmitted, 2 packets received, 0% packet loss
> round-trip min/avg/max/stddev = 0.471/0.669/0.867/0.198 ms
> Good: Can ping DNS server
> ================================================
> Good: DNS resolves download.cloud.com
> ================================================
> nfs is currently mounted
> Mount point is /mnt/SecStorage/f0b86218-6365-36f5-bd82-3848f9c7c574
> Good: Can write to mount point
> ================================================
> Management server is 10.x.x.x. Checking connectivity.
> Good: Can connect to management server port 8250
> ================================================
> Good: Java process is running
> ================================================
> Tests Complete. Look for ERROR or WARNING above.
>
> > Have you tried to delete your virtual router and deploy it again?
>
> Define delete?  If from the UI then yes, more than once.  Is there
> anything in the DB that could do with flushing too?
>
> > Which hypervisors are you using?
>
> KVM.
>
>

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