GitHub user weizhouapache added a comment to the discussion: Same network for
VMs as KVM hosts?
@dR3b
Is IP forwarding enabled?
The following command should return 1
cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
GitHub link:
GitHub user dR3b added a comment to the discussion: Same network for VMs as KVM
hosts?
@weizhouapache
Thanks! After several pages in the documentation[1], I was able to complete the
installation.
- [x] System-VM consoleproxy, Up and running
- [x] System-VM secondarystoragevm, Up and
Hi Rishi,
If you want to create a template manually, you can refer to
https://docs.cloudstack.apache.org/en/4.19.0.1/adminguide/templates/_create_linux.html
Some users use packer to build templates automatically, for example
https://github.com/PCextreme/packer-templates
-Wei
On Sun, Apr 28,
Thank you Wei - since I am testing it on a different architecture, is there
a way of creating my own templates (similar to Centos templates) ?
On Sun, Apr 28, 2024 at 2:08 PM Wei ZHOU wrote:
> Hi Rishi,
>
> The systemvm template is not used for user vms. As you have noticed,
> the network
Hi Rishi,
The systemvm template is not used for user vms. As you have noticed,
the network interfaces are configured by cloudstack , dhcp does not
work.
You can test with the built-in Centos 5 templates. You can also try
the templates on http://dl.openvm.eu/cloudstack/ (provided by NuxRo)
-Wei
Hi there,
I am trying to understand why a VM instance created by Cloudstack does not
get an IP address in "Basic network" configuration. Interestingly, unter
the "instances" page UI shows an IP assigned to my VM instance.
Furthermore, the router VM adds an entry for my VM/IP in its "/etc/hosts"
GitHub user weizhouapache added a comment to the discussion: Same network for
VMs as KVM hosts?
I think a shared network with vlan=untagged is what you need.
You can use an advanced zone or advanced zone with security groups, or even a
basic zone.
GitHub link: