What guide are you following?
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 5:26 PM, Mario Giammarco wrote:
> Marty Sweet writes:
>
> >
> > What have you configured VLAN 200 and 300 for in Cloudstack?
> >
> Because official documentation says to do it.
> Anyway I tried also without creating them and it does not work.
Marty Sweet writes:
>
> What have you configured VLAN 200 and 300 for in Cloudstack?
>
Because official documentation says to do it.
Anyway I tried also without creating them and it does not work...
What have you configured VLAN 200 and 300 for in Cloudstack?
Marty
On Tue, Nov 5, 2013 at 12:26 PM, Mario Giammarco wrote:
> Marty Sweet writes:
>
> >
> > Hi Mario,
> >
> > Are you tagging VLANS to this host?
> > If so, is the switch connected to a Layer 3 switch, which you can then
> > config
Marty Sweet writes:
>
> Hi Mario,
>
> Are you tagging VLANS to this host?
> If so, is the switch connected to a Layer 3 switch, which you can then
> configure as a router to route the traffic from your cloud VLANS to your
> local working network.
>
> Vlan bridges are added when network/vms are
Hi Mario,
Are you tagging VLANS to this host?
If so, is the switch connected to a Layer 3 switch, which you can then
configure as a router to route the traffic from your cloud VLANS to your
local working network.
Vlan bridges are added when network/vms are created.
I hope that makes sense,
Mart
Marty Sweet writes:
>
> Ok, is that IP a gateway? It would need to be able to route traffic.
> If you haven't specified VLANS then VLANS will not be used (as far as I'm
> aware), and it will just use the interfaces of your server. Example:
> bridging eth0 for VM traffic
>
First I repeat the con
Ok, is that IP a gateway? It would need to be able to route traffic.
If you haven't specified VLANS then VLANS will not be used (as far as I'm
aware), and it will just use the interfaces of your server. Example:
bridging eth0 for VM traffic
Marty
On Monday, November 4, 2013, Mario Giammarco wrote
Marty Sweet writes:
>
> Hi Mario,
>
> What is the IP address of the machine you are using to access your VMs?
> Does the gateway of 10.1.1.1 exist as a physical device?
>
Until two minutes ago I had no physical device with 10.1.1.1.
Now I added a real device 10.1.1.1. But I cannot reach 10.1.
Hi Mario,
What is the IP address of the machine you are using to access your VMs?
Does the gateway of 10.1.1.1 exist as a physical device?
Marty
On Mon, Nov 4, 2013 at 7:57 PM, Mario Giammarco wrote:
> Mario Giammarco writes:
>
>
> >
> > I choose "basic networking" type.
> > I have a network
Mario Giammarco writes:
>
> I choose "basic networking" type.
> I have a network 10.1.0.0/24 with dns/gw 10.1.0.1. I have dhcp from
> 10.1.0.100-10.1.0.200 (I can change the range).
> I have one manager/host server at ip 10.1.0.13.
>
I have followed the installation wizard and I used the subne
Hello,
I have read cloudstack documentation many times, regarding ip addresses.
I am not able to understand it because it is to complex and detailed. I do
not understand if there is a systemvm that also gives ip addresses via dhcp
and cover the gw role.
I need a simple tutorial.
I choose "basic
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