UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Recently moved and updated my UniFi (5.9.29) controller. however - it doesn't seem to work unless I go to terminal and run
sudo unifi start
The terminal will just sit there,.. without returning the prompt.. and will work. But the moment I CLOSE the terminal window the controller shuts down.
Has anyone seen this behavior?
Have you tried updating unifi over it again?
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@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
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@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
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@dbeato said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
Yes -
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@dbeato said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
Yes -
Didn't know it worked there - last I heard was Ubuntu or Windows is what Unifi Supported.
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@dbeato said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
Yes -
Why?
https://help.ubnt.com/hc/en-us/articles/115009221227-UniFi-Recommended-Minimum-System-Requirements
Fedora isn't supported.
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@Dashrender said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@dbeato said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
Yes -
Didn't know it worked there - last I heard was Ubuntu or Windows is what Unifi Supported.
It works anywhere. But the vendor only supports Ubuntu and Windows.
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@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@Dashrender said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@dbeato said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@jmoore said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse Did you enable the service to make sure it restarts on its own?
In theory yes. but it doesn't seem to be working. And the Fedora commands I find are more than a year old
Wait,you have Unifi on Fedora?
Yes -
Didn't know it worked there - last I heard was Ubuntu or Windows is what Unifi Supported.
It works anywhere. But the vendor only supports Ubuntu and Windows.
Fair point.
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Since you are using Fedora confirm if SELinux isn't the one causing the issue.
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@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Since you are using Fedora confirm if SELinux isn't the one causing the issue.
It appears that yes indeed, it could be SELinux. I subsequently found a reference to using
audio2allow
to address this:https://community.ubnt.com/t5/UniFi-Routing-Switching/Fedora-28-UniFi-Controller/m-p/2340453#M88269
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Since you are using Fedora confirm if SELinux isn't the one causing the issue.
It appears that yes indeed, it could be SELinux. I subsequently found a reference to using
audio2allow
to address this:https://community.ubnt.com/t5/UniFi-Routing-Switching/Fedora-28-UniFi-Controller/m-p/2340453#M88269
I hate to say it but you might have better stability from future updates and any surprises by disabling SELinux.
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@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Since you are using Fedora confirm if SELinux isn't the one causing the issue.
It appears that yes indeed, it could be SELinux. I subsequently found a reference to using
audio2allow
to address this:https://community.ubnt.com/t5/UniFi-Routing-Switching/Fedora-28-UniFi-Controller/m-p/2340453#M88269
I hate to say it but you might have better stability from future updates and any surprises by disabling SELinux.
Definitely, considering that SELinux is not considered when they are designing it.
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@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Since you are using Fedora confirm if SELinux isn't the one causing the issue.
It appears that yes indeed, it could be SELinux. I subsequently found a reference to using
audio2allow
to address this:https://community.ubnt.com/t5/UniFi-Routing-Switching/Fedora-28-UniFi-Controller/m-p/2340453#M88269
I hate to say it but you might have better stability from future updates and any surprises by disabling SELinux.
$ sestatus SELinux status: disabled
Already was.
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Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
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@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
I run Fedora or Windows. I'm not going to get into multi-distros... I have no need or desire.
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
I run Fedora or Windows. I'm not going to get into multi-distros... I have no need or desire.
Then don't use one at all and manage the AP with their app.
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
I run Fedora or Windows. I'm not going to get into multi-distros... I have no need or desire.
That's not very logical. You have "no need or desire" for things to be simple? Saying you have no need or desire, on a thread of issues caused by it, doesn't add up.
It's fine to be passionate about homogenous deployments, but lacking desire makes no sense, and the "need" is to make your life easier.
Ask yourself... what purpose is the "single distro" requirement serving given that it doesn't make things easier, but rather harder?
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@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
I run Fedora or Windows. I'm not going to get into multi-distros... I have no need or desire.
Nothing wrong with having your go-to distro. But you should have an alternative distro for situations like this.
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@black3dynamite said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@gjacobse said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
@JaredBusch said in UBNT: UniFi Controller Issue:
Why is this on Fedora? There are zero benefits to this.
Migrate your install to Debian, or even Ubuntu if you hate yourself.
I run Fedora or Windows. I'm not going to get into multi-distros... I have no need or desire.
Nothing wrong with having your go-to distro. But you should have an alternative distro for situations like this.
I definitely wouldn't call this a go-to distro situation since it's pretty much Ubuntu or debian as JB said. This is more the - choose what the vendor supports situation.