Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-09 Thread John Skinner
So to put the management network on a VLAN on VMware would I just specify a 
management network label for example if I wanted VLAN 96: vSwitch0,96 ? 

- Original Message -

From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 1:27:12 PM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Also, is it possible to put the management network on a tagged VLAN? It doesn't 
look like it is through the UI, but could I make some database changes to get 
cloud to create the nics on the host with a vlan similar to guest networks? 

John Skinner 
Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 

Office +1.800.735.7104 
Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 
john.skin...@appcore.com | www.appcore.com 
-- 
The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise protected 
from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified 
that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this e-mail in error, do not print it or disseminate it or its 
contents. In such event, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete 
the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 


- Original Message -

From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 8:23:40 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

So it's expected that it uses an IP address from the management network on the 
domain router? I typically only set aside 10 or so IP addresses from the 
management network for CloudStack usage for things like SSVM and console proxy. 
Am I going to have to allocate a lot more of my management IP addresses now? 
Also, I believe I did use the 5.1 SDK. Thanks for the replies guys! 


- Original Message - 

From: Kirk Kosinski kirkkosin...@gmail.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 2:37:37 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host 
to communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and 
not even possible by default. 

Best regards, 
Kirk 

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote: 
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address. 
 
 Thanks, 
 Jayapal 
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote: 
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 




RE: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-09 Thread Musayev, Ilya
Yes only works for vmware and it worked for me in ACS 4.1

-Original Message-
From: John Skinner [mailto:john.skin...@appcore.com] 
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2013 10:29 AM
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter

So to put the management network on a VLAN on VMware would I just specify a 
management network label for example if I wanted VLAN 96: vSwitch0,96 ? 

- Original Message -

From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 1:27:12 PM
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Also, is it possible to put the management network on a tagged VLAN? It doesn't 
look like it is through the UI, but could I make some database changes to get 
cloud to create the nics on the host with a vlan similar to guest networks? 

John Skinner
Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 

Office +1.800.735.7104
Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 john.skin...@appcore.com | 
www.appcore.com
--
The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise protected 
from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified 
that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this e-mail in error, do not print it or disseminate it or its 
contents. In such event, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete 
the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 


- Original Message -

From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 8:23:40 AM
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

So it's expected that it uses an IP address from the management network on the 
domain router? I typically only set aside 10 or so IP addresses from the 
management network for CloudStack usage for things like SSVM and console proxy. 
Am I going to have to allocate a lot more of my management IP addresses now? 
Also, I believe I did use the 5.1 SDK. Thanks for the replies guys! 


- Original Message - 

From: Kirk Kosinski kirkkosin...@gmail.com
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 2:37:37 AM
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host to 
communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and not even 
possible by default. 

Best regards,
Kirk 

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote: 
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address. 
 
 Thanks,
 Jayapal
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote: 
 
 Hello list,
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 




Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-09 Thread John Skinner
Awesome. Thank you. 


- Original Message -

From: Ilya Musayev imusa...@webmd.net 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 1:20:09 PM 
Subject: RE: VMware DomainRouter 

Yes only works for vmware and it worked for me in ACS 4.1 

-Original Message- 
From: John Skinner [mailto:john.skin...@appcore.com] 
Sent: Monday, September 09, 2013 10:29 AM 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

So to put the management network on a VLAN on VMware would I just specify a 
management network label for example if I wanted VLAN 96: vSwitch0,96 ? 

- Original Message -


From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 1:27:12 PM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Also, is it possible to put the management network on a tagged VLAN? It doesn't 
look like it is through the UI, but could I make some database changes to get 
cloud to create the nics on the host with a vlan similar to guest networks? 

John Skinner 
Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 

Office +1.800.735.7104 
Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 john.skin...@appcore.com | 
www.appcore.com 
-- 
The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise protected 
from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified 
that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this e-mail in error, do not print it or disseminate it or its 
contents. In such event, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete 
the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 


- Original Message - 

From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 8:23:40 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

So it's expected that it uses an IP address from the management network on the 
domain router? I typically only set aside 10 or so IP addresses from the 
management network for CloudStack usage for things like SSVM and console proxy. 
Am I going to have to allocate a lot more of my management IP addresses now? 
Also, I believe I did use the 5.1 SDK. Thanks for the replies guys! 


- Original Message - 

From: Kirk Kosinski kirkkosin...@gmail.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 2:37:37 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host to 
communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and not even 
possible by default. 

Best regards, 
Kirk 

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote: 
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address. 
 
 Thanks, 
 Jayapal 
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote: 
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 





Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-06 Thread Kirk Kosinski
Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host
to communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and
not even possible by default.

Best regards,
Kirk

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote:
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address.
 
 Thanks,
 Jayapal
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote:
 
 Hello list, 

 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 

 


Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-06 Thread John Skinner
So it's expected that it uses an IP address from the management network on the 
domain router? I typically only set aside 10 or so IP addresses from the 
management network for CloudStack usage for things like SSVM and console proxy. 
Am I going to have to allocate a lot more of my management IP addresses now? 
Also, I believe I did use the 5.1 SDK. Thanks for the replies guys! 


- Original Message -

From: Kirk Kosinski kirkkosin...@gmail.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 2:37:37 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host 
to communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and 
not even possible by default. 

Best regards, 
Kirk 

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote: 
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address. 
 
 Thanks, 
 Jayapal 
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote: 
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 



Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-06 Thread John Skinner
Also, is it possible to put the management network on a tagged VLAN? It doesn't 
look like it is through the UI, but could I make some database changes to get 
cloud to create the nics on the host with a vlan similar to guest networks?

John Skinner 
Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 

Office +1.800.735.7104 
Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 
john.skin...@appcore.com | www.appcore.com 
-- 
The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise protected 
from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified 
that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this e-mail in error, do not print it or disseminate it or its 
contents. In such event, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete 
the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 


- Original Message -
From: John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 8:23:40 AM
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter

So it's expected that it uses an IP address from the management network on the 
domain router? I typically only set aside 10 or so IP addresses from the 
management network for CloudStack usage for things like SSVM and console proxy. 
Am I going to have to allocate a lot more of my management IP addresses now? 
Also, I believe I did use the 5.1 SDK. Thanks for the replies guys! 


- Original Message -

From: Kirk Kosinski kirkkosin...@gmail.com 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Cc: Jayapal Reddy Uradi jayapalreddy.ur...@citrix.com 
Sent: Friday, September 6, 2013 2:37:37 AM 
Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter 

Right, since on KVM and XS hosts we can run scripts directly on the host 
to communicate with system VMs, whereas on ESXi this is discouraged and 
not even possible by default. 

Best regards, 
Kirk 

On 09/05/2013 10:07 PM, Jayapal Reddy Uradi wrote: 
 This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address. 
 
 Thanks, 
 Jayapal 
 
 On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote: 
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 



RE: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread Musayev, Ilya
Is your eth1 -  guest network and eth2 - mgmt. network?

 -Original Message-
 From: John Skinner [mailto:john.skin...@appcore.com]
 Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2013 6:16 PM
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
 Subject: VMware DomainRouter
 
 Hello list,
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything
 seems to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my
 domain routers are getting created with a management IP address for the
 control network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP
 addresses). Is this expected behavior?



RE: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread Michael Phillips
Hey QQ, since you are using vmware you obviously built from source. Did you use 
the vim25.jar from the 5.1SDK?

 Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2013 17:16:25 -0500
 From: john.skin...@appcore.com
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
 Subject: VMware DomainRouter
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
  

RE: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread Musayev, Ilya
Michael,

If I'm not mistaken, the convenience RPMs provided on apt-get.eu are containing 
nonoss as well, so no need to build from source :)

Regards
ilya

 -Original Message-
 From: Michael Phillips [mailto:mphilli7...@hotmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2013 6:24 PM
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
 Subject: RE: VMware DomainRouter
 
 Hey QQ, since you are using vmware you obviously built from source. Did you
 use the vim25.jar from the 5.1SDK?
 
  Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2013 17:16:25 -0500
  From: john.skin...@appcore.com
  To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
  Subject: VMware DomainRouter
 
  Hello list,
 
  I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything
 seems to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my
 domain routers are getting created with a management IP address for the
 control network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP
 addresses). Is this expected behavior?
 
 



Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread John Skinner
I did build from source, and did include the vim25.jar. I have 2 interfaces 
that are bonded for all networks with 2 standard vSwitches. I have vSwitch0 for 
management and storage, and vSwitch2 for public and guest. 

John Skinner 
Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 

Office +1.800.735.7104 
Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 
john.skin...@appcore.com | www.appcore.com 
-- 
The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise protected 
from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified 
that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of any action in 
reliance on the contents of this message is strictly prohibited. If you have 
received this e-mail in error, do not print it or disseminate it or its 
contents. In such event, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete 
the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 


- Original Message -

From: Ilya Musayev imusa...@webmd.net 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
Sent: Thursday, September 5, 2013 5:22:30 PM 
Subject: RE: VMware DomainRouter 

Is your eth1 - guest network and eth2 - mgmt. network? 

 -Original Message- 
 From: John Skinner [mailto:john.skin...@appcore.com] 
 Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2013 6:16 PM 
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
 Subject: VMware DomainRouter 
 
 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything 
 seems to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my 
 domain routers are getting created with a management IP address for the 
 control network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior? 




RE: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread Michael Phillips
I am curious as to which vim25.jar you included..the one from the 4.1 or 5.1 
SDK?

 Date: Thu, 5 Sep 2013 18:31:02 -0500
 From: john.skin...@appcore.com
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org
 Subject: Re: VMware DomainRouter
 
 I did build from source, and did include the vim25.jar. I have 2 interfaces 
 that are bonded for all networks with 2 standard vSwitches. I have vSwitch0 
 for management and storage, and vSwitch2 for public and guest. 
 
 John Skinner 
 Senior Systems Administrator | Appcore - the business of cloud computing® 
 
 Office +1.800.735.7104 
 Direct +1.515.612.7783 | Mobile +1.515.745.0248 
 john.skin...@appcore.com | www.appcore.com 
 -- 
 The information in this message is intended for the named recipients only. It 
 may contain information that is privileged, confidential or otherwise 
 protected from disclosure. If you are not the intended recipient, you are 
 hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or the taking of 
 any action in reliance on the contents of this message is strictly 
 prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, do not print it or 
 disseminate it or its contents. In such event, please notify the sender by 
 return e-mail and delete the e-mail file immediately thereafter. Thank you. 
 
 
 - Original Message -
 
 From: Ilya Musayev imusa...@webmd.net 
 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
 Sent: Thursday, September 5, 2013 5:22:30 PM 
 Subject: RE: VMware DomainRouter 
 
 Is your eth1 - guest network and eth2 - mgmt. network? 
 
  -Original Message- 
  From: John Skinner [mailto:john.skin...@appcore.com] 
  Sent: Thursday, September 05, 2013 6:16 PM 
  To: users@cloudstack.apache.org 
  Subject: VMware DomainRouter 
  
  Hello list, 
  
  I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything 
  seems to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my 
  domain routers are getting created with a management IP address for the 
  control network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
  addresses). Is this expected behavior? 
 
 
  

Re: VMware DomainRouter

2013-09-05 Thread Jayapal Reddy Uradi
This is expected in vmware. In Xen and KVM we have link local IP address.

Thanks,
Jayapal

On 06-Sep-2013, at 3:46 AM, John Skinner john.skin...@appcore.com wrote:

 Hello list, 
 
 I just setup a CloudStack 4.1 environment with vSphere 5.1. Everything seems 
 to be working ok for the most part. However, I have noticed that my domain 
 routers are getting created with a management IP address for the control 
 network instead of a control network IP address (the link local IP 
 addresses). Is this expected behavior?