Tuesday, May 19, 2026

[Transparency Report #006][OPERATIONS] Full Environment Rebuild Scheduled (May 22–23)

What are Transparency Reports?
As a community‑operated and governed virtual internet exchange, FurrIX maintains
a commitment to open and honest communication with its members. From time to
time, operational work may occur that affects the exchange or its supporting infrastructure.
When this happens, the FurrIX operations team publishes a transparency report to
ensure all members remain informed. As a hobbyist‑rooted vIX, we aim to keep
communication clear, accessible and practical to the best of our ability.

What is happening?
FurrIX will be performing a full environment rebuild of its core infrastructure between
May 22nd and May 23rd. This maintenance window includes a comprehensive refresh
of the physical and virtual systems that support the exchange.
The following work is planned:
- Rebuilding the physical Proxmox host to ensure long‑term stability and alignment
with current operational standards
- Rebuilding all virtual routers, consolidating the routing layer down to three routers
for improved clarity and maintainability
- Transitioning the Games‑3P LXC container into a Games‑4P virtual machine, providing
better isolation and resource management
- Renumbering internal and service networks into FurrIX’s LIR‑assigned IPv6 ranges,
enabling the release of legacy datacenter‑provided address space
- General housekeeping tasks, including cleanup of unused resources, configuration
standardization and documentation updates

This work completes the post‑handoff cleanup following MFN’s network retirement and
removes legacy configurations that cannot be maintained in the current layout. It also
allow FurrIX the breathing room needed to ensure we can grow and control our operations
without legacy tooling getting in the way or having to rewrite large chunks of configuration.

Why this rebuild is needed
As FurrIX continues to mature into a vIX that tries to mimic the real world, several infrastructure
improvements are required to maintain operational clarity, reduce technical debt and ensure
long‑term sustainability:
- Infrastructure modernization: The current Proxmox host and routing layer have accumulated
legacy configurations from earlier phases of the project. A clean rebuild ensures consistency
and reliability.
- Routing simplification: Reducing to three routers improves manageability, reduces complexity
and aligns with the vIX’s current scale.
- Address space alignment: Moving fully into FurrIX’s LIR ranges allows the project to retire
datacenter‑assigned prefixes and operate with a clean, independent addressing plan.
- Service isolation: Migrating Games‑3P from an LXC container to a VM provides better performance
boundaries and operational flexibility.
- Operational hygiene: Housekeeping tasks ensure the environment remains maintainable and
well‑documented.

These changes support FurrIX’s goal of maintaining a clear governance boundary, a stable operational
footprint and a better run vIX while preserving its hobbyist openness.

What this means for members of the exchange
During the rebuild:
- Members may experience extended periods of routing instability or service unavailability during
the maintenance window. These interruptions will be minimized where possible, but the entire
vIX has to come offline for this work to be completed. We are aiming for no more than seven
hours of downtime, but have allotted two days in-case something unexpected happens.
- Member configuration changes will be required:
Member tunnel configurations, peering sessions and addressing assignments will require modification
and our volunteers will email new credentials and profiles soon as we are able to.
- No policy or governance changes:
This is strictly an infrastructure rebuild and does not affect membership, governance or peering policy.

Are exchange operations affected?

Yes — temporarily.
During the rebuild window, routing and service availability will be null as systems are rebuilt
and renumbered. Once the work is complete, normal operations will resume with improved
stability, ease of expansion, better rooted upkeep and clarity.