I can see how that is confusing, because 'guest' traffic type is where
isolated networks are created. They are largely synonymous in many
areas of cloudstack.

On Wed, Feb 12, 2014 at 8:08 PM, Yitao Jiang <willier...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Guest network is same as public ip, which vm's traffic go through switch
> directly.
> Isolated Network is a virtual network, all traffic go through VRouter.
> And if you assigned tag on Physical Network, if so you should set same tag
> on n/w offering.
> The
> effective way is compare your new n/w offering with existed n/w offering
> DefaultIsolatedNetworkOffering
> .
>
> Thanks,
>
> Yitao
>
>
> 2014-02-13 10:40 GMT+08:00 Sachchidanand Vaidya <vaidy...@juniper.net>:
>
>> Hi,
>>     Under "Networks" Tab in UI for Admin user, Cloudstack provides 2
>> options to create networks
>>     1) Add guest network 2) Add Isolated Network.
>>      - What is the difference between these 2 networks.
>>
>>     Also, I created and Enabled a new "Network Offering". But when I
>> create an Isolated Network,
>>     I don't see the newly created Network offering in the drop-down menu.
>> Are there additional steps
>>    to be followed to make new n/w offering visible during Virtual Network
>> creation.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Sachin
>>
>>

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