May be you mis-understand of this. The isolatedetnetwork you mention is on LocalIsolated network (guess network) , not the public IP . There is no classify on public IP.
If you need to differentiate the services by Public IP , but not Guest Nework , You may need to setup different zone, Cause Public IP is linked at Zone level. Alternatively , forgot about isolated network, and just use Shared GuestNetwork. and differenciate by VLAN that define at your switch/router On Fri, Sep 11, 2020 at 11:06 PM Rafael del Valle <[email protected]> wrote: > Sorry Andrija, > > I did not explain it correctly. I was trying to create 2 public physical > adapters so that I could create 2 different network offerings one for each. > > My use case is being able to select "type" of public IP address. > > Imagine creating an Isolated network been able to select: > IsolatedNetworkOfferingForPremiumFiberProvider > IsolatedNetworkOfferingForBackupConnectivityProvider > IsolatedNetworkOfferingForCompanyIntranet > > in each case the Virtual router would get an IP from different > vlan_ip_range. > > Or being able to acquire an IP with ansible module: with tag: PremiumFiber > or tag: BackupConnectivity. > > Non of the strategies do what I thought would be possible. > > The only strategy that seems viable is to pass on the knowledge of which > IP is from where and use explicit IP acquisition. > > I guess the Company Intranet could be modelled differently (as a shared > network on a well known VLAN?, or as an L2 Network...., not sure). > > Regards, > Rafael > > On Fri, 2020-09-11 03:16 PM, Andrija Panic <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > I'm not sure that I have got all your points (after a very quick read), > but I can advise on the following: > > > > " > But Cloudstack complaints if I try to create 2 public networks on the > same zone" > > > > This is only true of they are overlapping - or having the same gateway, > etc. > Make sure to have each Public network on a separate VLAN (even though not > required technically in the real world, it is required by ACS) > That would allow you to run multiple Public network ranges > > > > best, > > > > > > > On Mon, 7 Sep 2020 at 10:31, Rafael del Valle <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > Hi! > > > > > > We have multiple public networks, and we would like to model them in ACS. > > > > > > We find references in the Documentation that seem to suggest it is > possible: such as creating network offerings with a tag meant to identify > the physical network. > > > > > > There are several use cases for which we want this: fail tolerance > between different connectivity providers, creating instances/networks > accessible from corporate network hosting ACS only, etc. > > > > > > Currently the public networks are on different VLANs, accessible trough > the same network card (which ACS refers to as physical nets). > > > > > > I can see that the Physical Network has a TAG, and the docs seem to imply > that a tag can be used to identify the public network. But Cloudstack > complaints if I try to create 2 public networks on the same zone. > > > > > > The most intuitive solution would be to tag the vlan_ip_range and create > network offerings that pick IPs with a given tag, but they don't seem to > take tags. > > > > > > I can assign IPs from different providers to an account, and they can > manually create network/VMs using them. But there seems to be no way to > tell ACS that I want a VM/IP assignment on connectivity provider A/B, or > use affinity rules, etc. > > > > > > How is this done with ACS? Is it possible? > > > > > > Rafael > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > Andrija Panić > > > > > > -- Regards, Hean Seng
