Hi Sarath,

In hypervisor you no need to do any configuration on eth1.
When you add hypervisor to the cloudstack, it will configure the bridge 
interface.

When you create guest network, guest vlan id is picked by cloudstack from the 
pool.

Thanks,
Jayapal
On 06-Aug-2013, at 10:04 PM, Sarath Chandra 
<sarath.cloudst...@gmail.com<mailto:sarath.cloudst...@gmail.com>> wrote:

Hi All,

I am new to Cloudstack and am trying to figure out how to setup it up in my 
office lab network. Am attaching a figure of the setup with the layout to this 
mail.

Setup:

Cloudstack Server <---------> Switch 1 <------------------> Switch 2 
<------------------> KVM Hypervisor

The Server and Hypervisor are connected on eth1 to the switches and on eth0 
they are connected to the corporate lab network. All the ports on the switch 
are trunked to allow all vlan traffic.

I am planning my networks as follows:


  *   172.16.10.0/24<http://172.16.10.0/24>  --- Management/Storage 
Network/Private Network (for System Vms)
  *   172.16.20.0/24<http://172.16.20.0/24>  -- Public Network (Some dummy 
range, I don't need internet access)
  *   10.1.1.0/24<http://10.1.1.0/24>       -- Guest Network

The server has the following on it:

  *   NFS server with /mnt/secondary [Local storage option is enabled for 
primary]
  *   SystemVm templates are installed on the secondary storage



On the Hypervisor, I am trying to do the following:

  *   create sub-interfaces on eth1 and assign some vlan to them
  *   Add the sub-interfaces to bridges

  *   eth1.3100 -- management/storage/Private network [ip assigned 172.16.10.10]
  *   eth1.3200 -- added to cloudbr0 [Public network]

  *   eth1.3300 -- added to cloudbr1 [Guest network]

Will this configuration work? Am I missing out anything?

regards,

Sarath










Reply via email to