Hi  Toshihiro,

I don't want to use a tunnelling protocol like GRE or VXLAN.

>Or, you can set up route entries in s1 and s2 so that packets between
>h1 and h3 are correctly routed at s1 and s2.

Regarding setting up route entries, can you pls share some working example.

Thanks
Hadem



On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 8:12 AM IWAMOTO Toshihiro <iwam...@valinux.co.jp>
wrote:

> On Wed, 03 Oct 2018 21:38:26 +0900,
> Pynbiang Hadem wrote:
> >
> > [1  <multipart/alternative (7bit)>]
> > [1.1  <text/plain; UTF-8 (7bit)>]
> > Hi,
> >
> > I want to setup two mininet topologies in two VMs(Ubuntu 16LTS) within
> the
> > same physical system using VirtualBox as below.
> >
> > VM1:                                         VM2:
> > h1 ------------s1  ------------------  s2-------------h3
> >                     |                            |
> >                     h2                        h4
> >
> > N.B: The topologies are created using python mininet scripts.
> >
> > How can i establish a connection from *h1 to h3* so that i can have a
> ping
> > connectivity from *host h1 to host h3*?.
> > I have tried with GRE tunnel its working fine. However i want to do it
> > without GRE tunnel. Is this possible?
>
> If another tunnelling protocol such as VXLAN could be used, that would
> be a easy solution.
>
> Or, you can set up route entries in s1 and s2 so that packets between
> h1 and h3 are correctly routed at s1 and s2.
>
> --
> IWAMOTO Toshihiro
>
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