vlan10 would be on VLAN 10.
On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 01:42:12AM +0300, Göktuğ YILDIRIM wrote: > Thanks, I will read more carefully. > > I have a host IP by assigning one to br10. How is it different to assign to > vlan10 (as an internal type interface)? > > On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 1:29 AM, Ben Pfaff <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 01:20:58AM +0300, Göktuğ YILDIRIM wrote: > > > May I ask if I miss the documentation or is it undocumented? I'd like to > > > read more if there is... > > > > The database is documented in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5). > > The ovs-vsctl command is documented in ovs-vsctl(8). > > > > > For example there is one that I am curious of why need to use internal > > type > > > interface. > > > > You don't have to. > > > > > I am trying to setup a simple switch to vlan my VMs and as far > > > as I see it is possible to make subset of bridges as below. > > > ******************************** > > > ovs-vsctl add-br br0 > > > ovs-vsctl add-br br10 br0 10 > > > ovs-vsctl add-br br20 br0 20 > > > ******************************** > > > Then you add br10 or br20 to the related VM config. > > > > Sure, that works. > > > > > However there is seems to be another way that uses below example. In > > fact I > > > could not find a way to work with it (as in KVM). > > > > > *********************************************************************************** > > > ovs-vsctl add-port br0 vlan10 tag=10 -- set Interface vlan10 > > type=internal > > > ifconfig vlan10 192.168.0.123 > > > > > ********************************************************************************** > > > > That's how you'd put a host IP on the VLAN. See the FAQ: > > http://openvswitch.org/faq/ > > _______________________________________________ discuss mailing list [email protected] http://openvswitch.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
