Hi Thiago,
Thanks for your info and sharing scripts. I don't have similar config
in our firewall, are there other alternatives ?
Thanks,
Xin
On 10/9/2013 6:17 PM, Martinx - ジェームズ wrote:
Hi Xin,
I don't know if it can help you out but, I'm using "Name Resolution"
for all my OpenStack serv
Hi Xin,
I don't know if it can help you out but, I'm using "Name Resolution" for
all my OpenStack services, this means that doesn't matter the IP of the
endpoint, even if it is IPv4 or IPv6, it will work out-of-the-box (in most
of my tests)...
So, when people tries to resolve your Quantum endpoin
Thanks for all the reply.
One more question though: when defining endpoint for network service,
the IP should be for the network host, not the controller host (we have
them in separate hosts, as most doc suggest).
But the network host doesn't have a single out-facing IP assigned to it,
the doc
Yes, internal and adminurl are normally the same address.
---
JuanFra
2013/10/7 Razique Mahroua
> Hi,
> yes :)
> Internal and adminiurl should be the private network, and "public" the
> "out-facing" IP
>
> Razique
>
> Le 7 oct. 2013 à 17:30, Xin Zhao a écrit :
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > Our opensta
Hi,
yes :)
Internal and adminiurl should be the private network, and "public" the
"out-facing" IP
Razique
Le 7 oct. 2013 à 17:30, Xin Zhao a écrit :
> Hello,
>
> Our openstack controller has two IPs, one out-facing, the other is internal
> only (on the management network).
> When it comes
True.
-Original Message-
From: Xin Zhao [mailto:xz...@bnl.gov]
Sent: Monday, October 07, 2013 8:30 AM
To: openstack@lists.openstack.org
Subject: [Openstack] publicurl definition in keystone
Hello,
Our openstack controller has two IPs, one out-facing, the other is internal
only (on the
Hello,
Our openstack controller has two IPs, one out-facing, the other is
internal only (on the management network).
When it comes to define service endpoints in keystone, the publicurl
entry should be the out-facing IP, and the
internalurl and adminurl should be the internal IP, right?
Thank