Difference between revisions of "Using private IPs for Hardware Nodes"
(New page: This article describes how to assign public IPs to VEs running on OVZ Hardware Nodes in case you have a following network topology: [[Image:PrivateIPs_fig1.gif|An initial network topology]...) |
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Revision as of 15:25, 15 July 2007
This article describes how to assign public IPs to VEs running on OVZ Hardware Nodes in case you have a following network topology:
Contents
Prerequisites
This article assumes you have already installed OpenVZ, prepared the OS template cache(s) and have VE(s) created. If not, follow the links to perform the steps needed.
Note: don't assign an IP after VE creation. |
(1) An OVZ Hardware Node has the only one ethernet interface
(assume eth0)
Hardware Node configuration
Create a bridge device
[HN]# brctl addbr br0
Remove an IP from eth0 interface
[HN]# ifconfig eth0 0
Add eth0 interface into the bridge
[HN]# brctl addif br0 eth0
Assign the IP to the bridge
(the same that was assigned on eth0 earlier)
[HN]# ifconfig br0 10.0.0.2/24
Resurrect the default routing
[HN]# ip route add default via 10.0.0.1 dev br0
Note: if you are configuring the node remotely you must prepare a script with the above commands and run it in background with the redirected output or you'll lose the access to the Node. |
A script example
[HN]# cat /tmp/br_add #!/bin/bash brctl addbr br0 ifconfig eth0 0 brctl addif br0 eth0 ifconfig br0 10.0.0.2/24 ip route add default via 10.0.0.1 dev br0
[HN]# /tmp/br_add >/dev/null 2>&1 &
VE configuration
Start a VE
[HN]# vzctl start 101
Add a veth interface to the VE
[HN]# vzctl set 101 --netif_add eth0 –save
Set up an IP to the newly created VE's veth interface
[HN]# vzctl exec 101 ifconfig eth0 85.86.87.194/26
Set up the default route for the VE
[HN]# vzctl exec 101 ip route change default via 85.86.87.192 dev eth0
Add the VE's veth interface to the bridge
[HN]# brctl addif br0 veth101.0
(Optional) Make HN(s) to be accessible from a VE
The configuration above provides following connections available:
VE X <-> VE Y (where VE X and VE Y can locate on any OVZ HN) VE <-> Internet HN -> VE
If you really need a VE to have an access to the HN(s) add an additional route rule:
[HN]# vzctl exec 101 ip route add 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0
The resulted OVZ Node configuration
Making the configuration persistent (TODO)
A Nardware Node configuration can be done with help of ordinary initscripts configuration i suppose,
while VEs configuration will require creating additional script based on Making a veth-device persistent scheme.
(2) An OVZ Hardware Node has two ethernet interfaces (TODO)
(assume eth0 and eth1)