On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 11:11 PM, Alex McWhirter <[email protected]>
wrote:

> I'm working on a private cloud using cloudstack and im stuck on which
> networking topology i should chose. Our network is segregated by VLANS and
> each department has it's own VLAN. I want to add each department into
> CloudStack as a project and then add users into each project. Each project
> should have it's own VLAN.
>
> So the KVM hosts have two physical NIC's. One dedicated purely for NFS and
> the other for the rest of the networking.
>
> eth0 - General networking, VLAN trunk enabled
>
> eth1 - NFS, no VLAN trunking enabled.
>
> In the Basic mode i should be able to setup a single physical network with
> management labeled to eth0, storage labeled to eth1, and guest labeled to
> br0 (which is attached to eth0).
>
> But in this scenario how can i tell each project to tag it's guests
> traffic to a different VLAN?
>
> Advanced mode seems way to complex for what i want to do. I don't need a
> public network. We have a hardware gateway for that. I don’t need any
> virtual routers or anything like that as well. I just need a guest to boot
> tagged to a specific VLAN and the gateway should handle the DHCP and
> routing.
>


Basic network doesn't support multiple isolated networks (AFAIK).

You would probably want to check out shared networks in advanced mode,
that'll let you use your hardware router etc.
I think you still need to provide a small public range for system vms and
such, but your tenants won't have to use that, they can rely on shared
networks.

-- 
Erik

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