Today, lemmy.amxl.com suffered an outage because the rootful Lemmy podman container crashed out, and wouldn’t restart.

Fixing it turned out to be more complicated than I expected, so I’m documenting the steps here in case anyone else has a similar issue with a podman container.

I tried restarting it, but got an unexpected error the internal IP address (which I hand assign to containers) was already in use, despite the fact it wasn’t running.

I create my Lemmy services with podman-compose, so I deleted the Lemmy services with podman-compose down, and then re-created them with podman-compose up - that usually fixes things when they are really broken. But this time, I got a message like:

level=error msg=“"IPAM error: requested ip address 172.19.10.11 is already allocated to container ID 36e1a622f261862d592b7ceb05db776051003a4422d6502ea483f275b5c390f2"”

The only problem is that the referenced container actually didn’t exist at all in the output of podman ps -a - in other words, podman thought the IP address was in use by a container that it didn’t know anything about! The IP address has effectively been ‘leaked’.

After digging into the internals, and a few false starts trying to track down where the leaked info was kept, I found it was kept in a BoltDB file at /run/containers/networks/ipam.db - that’s apparently the ‘IP allocation’ database. Now, the good thing about /run is it is wiped on system restart - although I didn’t really want to restart all my containers just to fix Lemmy.

BoltDB doesn’t come with a lot of tools, but you can install a TUI editor like this: go install github.com/br0xen/boltbrowser@latest.

I made a backup of /run/containers/networks/ipam.db just in case I screwed it up.

Then I ran sudo ~/go/bin/boltbrowser /run/containers/networks/ipam.db to open the DB (this will lock the DB and stop any containers starting or otherwise changing IP statuses until you exit).

I found the networks that were impacted, and expanded the bucket (BoltDB has a hierarchy of buckets, and eventually you get key/value pairs) for those networks, and then for the CIDR ranges the leaked IP was in. In that list, I found a record with a value equal to the container that didn’t actually exist. I used D to tell boltbrowser to delete that key/value pair. I also cleaned up under ids - where this time the key was the container ID that no longer existed - and repeated for both networks my container was in.

I then exited out of boltbrowser with q.

After that, I brought my Lemmy containers back up with podman-compose up -d - and everything then worked cleanly.

    • Possibly linux
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      3 hours ago

      Kubernetes is a mixed bag. It is extremely powerful but its complexity tends to scare people away. The biggest issue with Kubernetes is that it can become the source of failure when done incorrectly.

      I don’t really have a good alternative. I have investigated pacemaker but it has its own challenges.

      For now it is probably best to just setup shared storage and then manually start containers on a host. The idea is that having multiple hosts allows for faster recovery. You still can have health checking per host so that containers get restarted as needed.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 hours ago

        To simply running Kubernetes at least at home. Take a look at Talos OS. It is build for Kubernetes. But I totally agree it still isn’t for the faint of hard.