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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-9759?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Michael updated CLOUDSTACK-9759:
--------------------------------
    Comment: was deleted

(was: Really need help on this.. will send paypal donation.)

> VPC VR ips.json ethNone instead of eth1
> ---------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CLOUDSTACK-9759
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-9759
>             Project: CloudStack
>          Issue Type: Bug
>      Security Level: Public(Anyone can view this level - this is the 
> default.) 
>          Components: Virtual Router
>    Affects Versions: 4.9.2.0
>         Environment: Centos 6.8, CloudStack 4.9.2.0 advanced networking vlans 
> for guest and public
>            Reporter: Michael
>            Priority: Critical
>         Attachments: cloud.log, cloudstack.tar, messages
>
>
> Cloudstack deployment with advanced networking.
> My VPC VR is incorrectly be assigned ethNone inside 
> (/etc/cloudstack/ips.json) for my eth1 public network interface.  If I edit 
> /etc/cloudstack/ips.json and change both occurrences of ethNone to eth1 and 
> restart the VPC then the network works for isolated guest networks attached 
> to the VPC VR and the VR itself.  (note: this issue only occurs with the VPC 
> VR not with guest network or guest shared networks).
> Here is the contents of /etc/cloudstack/ips.json
> root@r31-VM# cat /etc/cloudstack/ips.json
> {
>     "eth0": [
>         {
>             "add": true,
>             "broadcast": "169.254.255.255",
>             "cidr": "169.254.1.203/16",
>             "device": "eth0",
>             "gateway": "None",
>             "netmask": "255.255.0.0",
>             "network": "169.254.0.0/16",
>             "nic_dev_id": "0",
>             "nw_type": "control",
>             "one_to_one_nat": false,
>             "public_ip": "169.254.1.203",
>             "size": "16",
>             "source_nat": false
>         }
>     ],
>     "eth2": [
>         {
>             "add": true,
>             "broadcast": "10.1.1.255",
>             "cidr": "10.1.1.1/24",
>             "device": "eth2",
>             "gateway": "10.1.1.1",
>             "netmask": "255.255.255.0",
>             "network": "10.1.1.0/24",
>             "nic_dev_id": "2",
>             "nw_type": "guest",
>             "one_to_one_nat": false,
>             "public_ip": "10.1.1.1",
>             "size": "24",
>             "source_nat": false
>         }
>     ],
>     "ethNone": [
>         {
>             "add": true,
>             "broadcast": "10.100.71.255",
>             "cidr": "10.100.66.3/21",
>             "device": "ethNone",
>             "first_i_p": false,
>             "gateway": "10.100.71.254",
>             "netmask": "255.255.248.0",
>             "network": "10.100.64.0/21",
>             "new_nic": false,
>             "nw_type": "public",
>             "one_to_one_nat": false,
>             "public_ip": "10.100.66.3",
>             "size": "21",
>             "source_nat": true,
>             "vif_mac_address": "06:56:74:00:06:2c"
>         }
>     ],
>     "id": "ips"
> }
> After modifying the file ethNone to eth1 then the VPC VR has internet via 
> Public network vlan 165 trunked that bridges to cloudbr1.
>     "eth1": [
>         {
>             "add": true,
>             "broadcast": "10.100.71.255",
>             "cidr": "10.100.66.3/21",
>             "device": "eth1",
>             "first_i_p": false,
>             "gateway": "10.100.71.254",
>             "netmask": "255.255.248.0",
>             "network": "10.100.64.0/21",
>             "new_nic": false,
>             "nw_type": "public",
>             "one_to_one_nat": false,
>             "public_ip": "10.100.66.3",
>             "size": "21",
>             "source_nat": true,
>             "vif_mac_address": "06:56:74:00:06:2c"
>         }
>     ],
> Public network details:
> gateway 10.100.71.254 
> ip range: 10.100.66.1 - 10.100.67.254
> Netmask: 255.255.248.0 /21
> eth1 on VPC VR is the Public network interface
> Guest network uses vlan's 300-500 that are trunked into cloudbr1 on the host 
> computer.
> I'm also attaching the /var/log/cloud.log from the VPC VR
> Note: I restarted the VR several times attempting other 
> /etc/network/interfaces changes before I read on how the VPC VR runs scripts 
> to configure the nics, but the final restart had the reflected changes that 
> causes things to work.
> Cloudstack is using KVM hypervisor.



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