Hi Dave, Thanks for the update on that, it's good to see it's got easier since I last tested it.
Regards Geoff Higginbottom CTO / Cloud Architect D: +44(0)20 3603 0542<tel:+442036030542> | S: +44(0)20 3603 0540<tel:+442036030540> | M: +44(0)7968161581<tel:+447968161581> geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com> | www.shapeblue.com ShapeBlue Ltd, 53 Chandos Place, Covent Garden, London, WC2N 4HS On 26 Jun 2013, at 15:45, "Dave Dunaway" <dave.duna...@gmail.com<mailto:dave.duna...@gmail.com>> wrote: I've done testing on changing IPs with 3.0.4 CloudPlatform in advanced networking and never had to reboot the VR. Seems a bit silly to have to go that far just to re-ip a machine. When the machine is restarted from CloudPlatorm it will add its IP to the dhcp leases file correctly as expected on the VR. Perhaps it was requirement back then, but does not appear to be the case with more recent versions. On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 5:16 PM, Geoff Higginbottom < geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com>> wrote: @Dave: you are right about advanced networks but the original question was in relation to basic networking. @All: I did some testing over a year ago around changing IPs for guest. For a VM on and advanced network you can edit the IP directly in the database but restarting the VM is not enough, you have to also restart the virtual Router for that network. The new 4.1 add NIC API call Dave is referring to is great and to me one of the best new features of 4.1, but again it's only for advanced networking so no good for the original problem. The multiple IPs to a single NIC has been discussed a lot, but I believe it is still in development. Regards Geoff Higginbottom CTO / Cloud Architect D: +44 20 3603 0542<tel:+442036030542> | S: +44 20 3603 0540<tel: +442036030540>| M: +447968161581<tel:+447968161581> geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com><mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com> |www.shapeblue.com<http://www.shapeblue.com> | Twitter:@shapeblue<https://twitter.com/#!/shapeblue> ShapeBlue Ltd, 53 Chandos Place, Covent Garden, London, WC2N 4HS On 26 Jun 2013, at 11:22, "Dave Dunaway" <dave.duna...@gmail.com<mailto:dave.duna...@gmail.com><mailto: dave.duna...@gmail.com<mailto:dave.duna...@gmail.com>>> wrote: @Geoff: Of course we are talking advanced networking, and having consideration of what your networks are that you can use. If someone wants to put a 10.x.x.x ip on a VM that is on a 192.x.x.x network, then they can gladly shoot themselves in the foot. Ideally the person making such a change understands the 'basic's of advanced networking in CloudPlatform. Otherwise they should stick the UI.;) @Jason: Look in the cloud.nics table. The nics for VMs are defined here. Modify as needed. A restart of the VM to make sure it all works is highly recommended. In our testing environment I can move a VM from one network to another, add nics, change IP's etc quite easily. Some of the 4.1 API will add this functionality (add nics for example to an existing VM). But there's still a lot of immutable things in CloudPlatform that shouldn't be, and that maybe one day will be a feature. We just need to make the requests for those features. On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 1:30 PM, Jason Pavao <jason.pa...@oracle.com<mailto:jason.pa...@oracle.com> <mailto:jason.pa...@oracle.com>> wrote: Do you by chance have a sample sql query that would perform this? On 6/26/2013 8:51 AM, Dave Dunaway wrote: There should be a way to have the ability to reserve an IP and still have DHCP assign the IP by mac reservation. There's no technical reason this wouldn't work and likely a feature a lot of people would love to see. The only hold back is the UI not allowing you to do so. Ultimately, you can go to the DB and change the VM's IP in the nics table to what you want (reboot the VM and the IP change will occur). Which is not the preferred way to do so, but ultimately that functionality from the UI would be ideal. Even going as far as intergrating IPAM functionality into the product would be ideal. On Wed, Jun 26, 2013 at 11:44 AM, Geoff Higginbottom < geoff.higginbottom@shapeblue.**com <geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com> <mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com>>> wrote: Simple answer - you can't. In an advanced zone, you can specify the IP address when you create a new VM using the API, however in a basic zone, because the IP will depend on which POD your VM ends up in, and as a user you cannot influence this, there is no way to specific the IP, even if you are a root admin. The reason it still fails when you manually change the IP is that the security groups feature is expecting the VM to have the IP CloudStack allocated it via DHCP. Regards Geoff Higginbottom CTO / Cloud Architect D: +44(0)20 3603 0542<tel:+442036030542> | S: +44(0)20 3603 0540<tel: +442036030540> | M: +44(0)7968161581<tel:+447968161581> geoff.higginbottom@shapeblue.**com <geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com> <mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com>> <mailto:geoff.higginbottom@**shapeblue.com<http://shapeblue.com><http://shapeblue.com>< geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com<mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com><mailto:geoff.higginbot...@shapeblue.com>> | www.shapeblue.com<http://www.shapeblue.com><http://www.shapeblue.com> ShapeBlue Ltd, 53 Chandos Place, Covent Garden, London, WC2N 4HS On 26 Jun 2013, at 05:02, "WXR" <474745...@qq.com<http://qq.com><http://qq.com>< http://qq.**com<http://qq.com>>> wrote: cloudstack version: 4.1 network type: basic network When I create a new instance,the vm will get a random IP from the DHCP server on vrouter. If I want to: 1.allocate a specific ip to the vm. 2.allocate multiple ips to the vm. 3.change the vm ip from one to another. How can I achieve it? I try to bind the ip to the vm nic manually but the ip can not be accessed. This email and any attachments to it may be confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed. Any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Shape Blue Ltd or related companies. If you are not the intended recipient of this email, you must neither take any action based upon its contents, nor copy or show it to anyone. Please contact the sender if you believe you have received this email in error. Shape Blue Ltd is a company incorporated in England & Wales. ShapeBlue Services India LLP is operated under license from Shape Blue Ltd. ShapeBlue is a registered trademark. -- Thanks. -Jason This email and any attachments to it may be confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed. Any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Shape Blue Ltd or related companies. If you are not the intended recipient of this email, you must neither take any action based upon its contents, nor copy or show it to anyone. Please contact the sender if you believe you have received this email in error. Shape Blue Ltd is a company incorporated in England & Wales. ShapeBlue Services India LLP is operated under license from Shape Blue Ltd. ShapeBlue is a registered trademark. This email and any attachments to it may be confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual to whom it is addressed. Any views or opinions expressed are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Shape Blue Ltd or related companies. If you are not the intended recipient of this email, you must neither take any action based upon its contents, nor copy or show it to anyone. Please contact the sender if you believe you have received this email in error. Shape Blue Ltd is a company incorporated in England & Wales. ShapeBlue Services India LLP is operated under license from Shape Blue Ltd. ShapeBlue is a registered trademark.