In my understanding, "Guest Network" Sachin said is called "Shared
Network" in the document. [1]
The word "Guest Network" refers "Shared Network" and "Isolated
Network" in some cases.
Why don't we avoid using "Guest Network" to point "Shared Network" in GUI?

[1] 
http://cloudstack.apache.org/docs/en-US/Apache_CloudStack/4.0.2/html/Admin_Guide/about-virtual-networks.html



2014-02-12 22:53 GMT-07:00 Marcus <shadow...@gmail.com>:
> 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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