Hello! I (tried, at least) converted an old laptop to a Debian home server, and I was trying to set up duckdns.org and to enable port forwarding on my router. internet connection was working, I installed packages, docker, immich, etc, and then suddenly (I don’t know exactly when) it refuses to connect to the internet. It does connect to local addresses (I can ssh into it) but ping google.com and any other internet-involving command fail. I had set up a rule on the router to forward port 80 to the device’s port 80, but I then removed the rule and it still does not connect to the internet. I rebooted the router but nothing changed. Any idea what could be? the router is a Vodafone router.

I changed the hostname to debianserver but on the router it is still written debian. Also, it’s the only device with unknown ipv6

thanks in advance!

EDIT: I rebooted again the server, and now ipv6 is not unknown anymore, and the hostname is correct. however, it still does not connect to the internet

EDIT 2:

only one device (debianserver) has this problem, other devices work as before

EDIT 3:

I don’t know if it’s useful or not, but if I boot a live debian USB in the server internet works

SOLUTION: aaaaand no it does not work, after restarting docker it seems to work because all the brodges are yet to be created and it takes some time, after like 30 seconds it does not work as before :(

  • edit the file /lib/systemd/system/docker.service
  • append the flag --bip=192.168.3.1/24 to ExecStart=....
  • systemctl daemon-reload
  • systemctl restart docker

docker was the fucker that messed everything up and made me lose a few hours!

EDIT 4:

it seems that ip route flush 0/0 restores the internet connectivity until reboot… I don’t know what does this means but can be a temporary workaround I guess? I really have no idea how to solve this

FINAL EDIT: I gave up. I removed debian and installed fedora, and now it all works like a charm

  • Aurix@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Go to the outer status page. The router should display whether it has an internet connection to your provider. If no, then your router/modem has no credentials or another issue preventing access.

    If it shows as working, then you can narrow it down to incorrect DNS and IP routing. Perhaps dynamic IP allocation is set to off or another configuration error or bug, in which case you might need to reset all the router settings. Then, is it only broken for a single end device?

    • tubbadu@lemmy.kde.socialOP
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      6 months ago

      thanks for the reply! Sorry it isn’t very clear from the post, but yes only one device (debianserver) has this problem (no internet connection, but yes local network connection), all other devices works as before. I’ll update the original post to clarify this