[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Xen-users] Is this simplest path to subnets?



The way I do it these days is just to set up a bridge outside xen with an ip address. You don't need a network script in the xen config that way. Then you can just add your domU interfaces to the bridge, and route between the bridge device and the physical device.

   John


Valter Douglas Lisbôa Jr. wrote:
On Tuesday 19 February 2008 23:55:58 Stephan Seitz wrote:
I did a similar setup by

modprobe dummy
ifconfig dummy0 up

and using a wrapper script for network-bridge to setup bridges
for eth0 and dummy0 (i also wanted eth0 bridged)

I do this, in a very similar wrapping you use.
this generally works, but i suspect this bridge as reason for
dom0 freeze on heavy net-io... maybe someone can confirm problems
with dummy bridges?
But I don't find any freeze problems with high I/O, and believe me I have four on productions server with great load on network and I trying various benchmarking tests between VMs and copy huge amount of data between them. I already stop a low cost Encore switch in one of this tests ;-)

Tom Horsley schrieb:
I've been making my brain hurt by reading up on xen networking,
and I wonder if I finally understand the simplest path to getting
my virtual machines on a separate subnet:
I create a config similar a level 2 bastion firewall with a dmz. The two gateways to server the edges (one to LAN and other to WAN) has two separate bridges each like the diagram bellow

WAN---(Brdige WAN)---[VM1]---(Bridge DMZ)---[VM2]---(Bridge LAN)---LAN

The VMs side connected on physical interface (WAN and LAN) has the normal config. The side on bridge DMZ has any number of VMs limited by the hardware attached with dummy if. I have some delay here, but it's not noticiable.
In the physical world, if I hook two subnets to a linux box with
two ethernet cards, all I need is some routing commands on that
gateway box, and the subnets can talk to one another.
Yes I did this too.

In the virtual world, I'm thinking the simplest to understand
equivalent is to create a dummy ethernet interface in
/etc/network/interfaces so it gets brought up as soon as the
Dom0 boots.

Then tell the standard network-bridge script to use the dummy
interface as the "netdev", but other than that, use the default
bridge scripts (including the default vif-bridge).

If I'm even close to understanding this now, the original physical
eth0 on the Dom0 will be completely left alone by xen, and if I setup
static routes between it and the dummy ehternet, then my physical
and virtual subnets will be able to talk just like in the
two physical subnet case.

Does this make any sense at all? Am I pointing in a direction
that might work?

Thanks for any insight you can provide.

(I'm not interested in firewalls and NAT and that other brain
exploding nonsense yet, I just want to see the simplest case
working first :-).
You in the right way. I almost explode my brain in the first time, and I stay one week inside this problem. But now, its appear to be all right.

_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users



_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users


_______________________________________________
Xen-users mailing list
Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users


 


Rackspace

Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our
servers 24x7x365 and backed by RackSpace's Fanatical Support®.