On Wed, 2021-02-17 at 16:28 -0500, Steve Litt wrote: > Hi Gabe, > On your guest VM, what does it say your default route is when > youperform the ip route command?
results of ip route: default via 192.168.1.1 dev eth0 192.168.1.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.1.75 > Did you need to do something special to get that default > route(gateway)? > Thanks, > SteveT I believe I used the below from here, as well as the 'set up a bridge' link and maybe the 'QEMU' page linked. I thought I had started keeping better notes about what I do... I must have started that after I installed this VM lol. source url (same as above label'd "here"): https://wiki.debian.org/KVM?highlight=%28%5CbCategoryVirtualization%5Cb%29#Setting_up_bridge_networking Between VM host, guests and the world In order to let communications between host, guests and outside world, you may set up a bridge and as described at QEMU page. For example, you can modify the network configuration file /etc/network/interfaces to setup the ethernet interface eth0 to a bridge interface br0 similar as below. After the configuration, you can set using Bridge Interface br0 as the network connection in VM guest configuration. auto lo iface lo inet loopback # The primary network interface auto eth0 #make sure we don't get addresses on our raw device iface eth0 inet manual iface eth0 inet6 manual #set up bridge and give it a static ip auto br0 iface br0 inet static address 192.168.1.2 netmask 255.255.255.0 network 192.168.1.0 broadcast 192.168.1.255 gateway 192.168.1.1 bridge_ports eth0 bridge_stp off bridge_fd 0 bridge_maxwait 0 dns-nameservers 8.8.8.8 #allow autoconf for ipv6 iface br0 inet6 auto accept_ra 1Once that is correctly configured, you should be able to use the bridge on new VM deployments with: virt-install --network bridge=br0 [...] Gabe
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