... So I thought this was very obvious, but this is a 100% VMware cluster. Libvirt can communicate with esx.
I get the feeling nobody does this. Morgan On Sunday, June 30, 2013, Jorge Fábregas wrote: > On 06/29/2013 03:22 AM, Morgan McLean wrote: > > Does anybody have the great tip that is going to set me free? I hope? > > Hi, > > Distributed Port Groups come from the "vNetwork Distributed Switch" > (vDS); a feature of VMware vCenter. You just can't throw a non-ESXi > hypervisor into your vCenter datacenter and expect it to work with their > proprietary technology. The same way you just can't throw an ESXi into > oVirt (the open-source equivalent to vCenter) and expect it to have > access to all the defined networks at the datacenter level > (automatically). AFAIK, we're not there yet. > > I know VMware recently came out with their "vCenter Multi-Hypervisor > Manager" but it only supports Hyper-V and I don't think it integrates > with their vDS. > > > Everything we use is on the vSwitches, as we run 60-80 VLAN's to each > > cluster member. > > You could use Linux as the hypervisor but you'll have to manually > configure those VLANs and assign them to your VMs to be able to connect > to the VMs running on your vCenter (assuming they'll be sharing the same > layer-2 switch). > > Since obviously you're using vCenter, isn't it more easier to add > another ESXi ? > > HTH, > Jorge > > _______________________________________________ > libvirt-users mailing list > [email protected] <javascript:;> > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users > -- Thanks, Morgan
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