Syed, 

You can get this info from the network offering of your network.

http://localhost:8096/?command=listNetworkOfferings&id=


Š.
<capability>
<name>ElasticLb</name>
<value>false</value>


ŠŠ.

-Alena.

On 12/18/13, 11:19 AM, "Syed Ahmed" <sah...@cloudops.com> wrote:

>Thanks for the reply Alena,
>
>I have an isolated network which has Netscaler as the LB provider. Does
>that enable elastic LB? I was looking at the other default network
>offering for elastic LB and did not find anything like "elastic LB" or
>"elastic IP" in the service capabilities. How Do I know if elastic LB is
>enabled or not?
>
>-Syed
>
>On 12/18/2013 02:05 PM, Alena Prokharchyk wrote:
>> Syed, is ElasticLB support enabled in your network? If yes, then its ok
>>to
>> see 2 tabs.
>>
>> When you go 1) Network->Add LB, the ip address for your lb rule will get
>> allocated on the fly as a part of LB rule creation as a part of elastic
>>Lb
>> functionality.
>>
>> You can add more lb rules for the public ip address associated on the
>> previous step; for that you have to go 2) path, select the IP and
>>create a
>> rule for it.
>>
>> If elastic LB is not enabled on the network, seeing 1) path in the UI
>>is a
>> UI bug.
>>
>> -Alena.
>>
>> On 12/18/13, 8:48 AM, "Syed Ahmed" <sah...@cloudops.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi All,
>>>
>>> In the UI there are two places where we can add a loadbalancer rule.
>>>
>>> 1) Network-> myNetwork -> Add Load Balancer tab
>>> 2) Network -> myNetwork -> View IP Addresses -> [IP] -> Configuration
>>>->
>>> LoadBalancing ( View All )
>>>
>>>
>>> What is the difference between those two? Adding a rule on (2) seems to
>>> work but when I try to add it on (1) it fails saying cannot allocate
>>> source IP.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> -Syed
>

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