So my question is this, why DHCP? If you are trying to assign an IP at
boot time of a zone, you could zonecfg the IP before you boot the zone.
I take it that you have a couple zones that might change IP
occasionally (or frequently). If the zone changes IP as part of a zone
reboot, then
Bill Walker writes:
If you are really needing DHCP for some reason, I'll defer to others
with more experience in those realms.
The only supported way to do this today is to use exclusive stack
instance zones (set ip-type = exclusive). It would be nice to have
DHCP supported as an option for
Thanks!
I prefer DHCP since I don't care about the IP address that is assigned
to each zone. But willing to live with static IP as well.
Any guidelines on how to set the IP for each zone ?
-Arun
Bill Walker wrote:
So my question is this, why DHCP? If you are trying to assign an IP at
Hi James,
Can you explain what is exclusive stack instance mean in this context ?
Will creating zones in a Virtual Box image qualify as that ?
-Arun
James Carlson wrote:
Bill Walker writes:
If you are really needing DHCP for some reason, I'll defer to others
with more experience in those
Arun Gupta writes:
Can you explain what is exclusive stack instance mean in this context ?
See the ip-type parameter in zonecfg(1M).
Zones can be created using one of two different networking models. In
the default shared model, the zones are just given IP addresses on
links that are
Something like this should do the trick:
host# zonecfg -z my-zone
zonecfg:my-zone remove net physical=e1000g0
zonecfg:my-zone add net
zonecfg:my-zone:net set address=192.168.0.99/24
zonecfg:my-zone:net set physical=e1000g0
zonecfg:my-zone:net end
zonecfg:my-zone commit
zonecfg:my-zone exit
host#
Ok, this is helpful and I'm able to make progress.
I've installed the zone, configured the properties mentioned below and
now booting it. What Name service should I be using ?
I come from Windows/Mac world where all these are defaulted and
typically not required to be configured explicitly :)
Thanks James!
With an exclusive stack instance, the non-global zone is able to
control most of the IP configuration aspects of the interface,
including using DHCP to configure the address. (It's unable to supply
its own kernel modules, though, because there's still only one kernel
image on
Thanks Glenn, this helps in explanation!
For now, I'd like something that is simple and easy to configure. It
seems like static IP address is that route for now.
-Arun
Glenn Faden wrote:
Arun,
When running OpenSolaris as a VirtualBox guest, the DHCP service is
provided by the VirtualBox
Greetings all,
I have been trying to set up a X2200 with a global zone on an internal LAN
with bge0, and two zones for web servers each having a private IP address
on the nge interfaces.
While I was able to bring up both zones and ifconfig the interfaces, after
that nothing worked. Couldn't
I installed GlassFish in global zone in /usr directory. However this directory
does not seem to be visible in non global zone. Do I need to do something
special to make it visible ?
Bunch of other directories in /usr are visible.
What am I missing ?
--
This message posted from
Is it a sparse-root zone or a whole-root zone? It should be visible in
a sparse-root, but a whole-root zone has its own separate copy of
/usr.
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 6:50 PM, Arun Gupta arun.gu...@sun.com wrote:
I installed GlassFish in global zone in /usr directory. However this
directory
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