(For future questions such as this, you may find you get a better
response (and lower signal-noise ratio) by asking on the recently
-created libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx list, as libvir-list has a very
large volume of patches and discussion about the internals of
libvirt) On 02/08/2011 12:05 PM, Marcela Castro León wrote: Hello So are you saying that you're attempting to give each guest the *same* IP address? There's no way that can possibly work, even if each is connected to a separate virtual network or bridge. Since the host's IP stack can "see" all of the guests' network traffic, regardless of the connection mode you choose, each must have a unique IP address even if they can't see each other.
There must be a mixup in the explanation - I'm understanding that you put the same config file in each guest, but each guest, when it starts, shows a different ethernet interface in its ifconfig. That doesn't seem right, because none of the guests know about each other. Or are you saying something different? Where are you seeing the "eth6", "eth7", ... "eth12"? In the guest XML config maybe? So, it doesn't get the manual configuration I've done on the /etc/network/interfaces. Why are you doing a manual/static definition on the guest at all? It's simpler to just leave the guest to automatically configure its eth0, and if you really want a particular IP address for a particular guest, handle that with a <host> element in the <dhcp> section of the virtual network the guest is connected to (or, if you're using a pure bridging setup, then in the static hosts config of the dhcp server on that network).
The guest xml interface configuration cannot be used to setup the IP address, route, etc config of the guest. It is only used for two things: 1) configuring what kind of hardware appears on the guest (but not what name the guest gives to it!) 2) configuring how that hardware is connected to the physical network (usually either via an existing bridge interface on the host (in order for the guest to appear as if its directly connected to the physical network), or via a "virtual network" created by libvirt (which is really just a bridge that's not directly connected to any physical interface, relying instead on the host's IP stack to route packets from the guest out to the physical network.) but the operation "define" on virsh accepted without error the xml i've done, but the dumpxml doesn't show them, so, it doesn't work at all. That document is targeted towards software developers writing applications to manage virtual guests using the libvirt API, not for system administrators who are configuring virtual guests manually (or, more likely, by using software that uses the libvirt API, eg virsh or virt-manager). It likely contains more detail and less overview than what you need, which is probably what led to the confusion. I've included a pointer to a wiki page below that is more the appropriate level of information (Justin, if the docs you were working on are somewhere easily accessible, you can point to those instead.)
You are confusing the guest interface config (that is part of the guest's XML config, and described above), and host physical interface config (that is not in any way associated with guest config, but instead used to configure the host's physical network interfaces, bridges, bonds, and vlan interfaces; and nearly as important, is not supported on Ubuntu anyway). Actual guest interface config is *much* simpler than that.
That's because everything else you've put in your guest config is not actually a part of a valid guest interface config, and so is ignored.
In this case I think it may be useful to start over. You've somehow been tricked into misunderstanding the way that network configuration in libvirt works, confusing host interface config with guest interface config, and the resulting config bears little resemblance to what would actually work. == The first step is to read this page: http://wiki.libvirt.org/page/Networking to get a basic overview. == Second step: you should decide which of the three methods of connecting to guests to the physical network you want to use: 1) NATed 2) routed 3) bridged The simplest is (1), and that will probably work just fine as long as 1) you don't need incoming connections to the guests, and 2) you're not concerned about getting the last fraction of an ounce of performance out of the network. Depending on which of those 3 you decide to use: == Third step: follow the instructions to either create a bridge interface on the host connected to a physical network interface (for (3)), or to create a libvirt virtual network using one of the two modes ((1) or (2) - actually the stock libvirt config already has a "default" network that is probably adequate for (1), and unless you understand IP routing very well, you'll likely want to avoid (2)). Once the physical network is setup: == Fourth step: define your guests. In each guest, you'll have an <interface> element, but it will be much simpler than what you've previously tried. For bridged mode, the interface section would look like this: <interface type='bridge'> <source bridge='br0'/> </interface> Depending on the guest, you may want to specify what type of hardware is presented to the guest (default is rtl, which almost always works, but is not the best perfrorming), in particular, if the guest supports virtio-net, you'll want to add this into the <interface> element: <model type='virtio'/> For NATed or routed mode, the guest's interface definition would look like this: <interface type='network'> <source network='default'/> </interface>(replace "default" with the name of the network you've defined, if you've defined your own). In this case also, you can add a <model type='...'/> if appropriate. Note that I don't put anything in the <interface> element about MAC address, target device, or bus address. Those are all setup automatically by libvirt the first time you start the guest, and it will make sure that the guests don't interfere with each other. == Fifth step: only if you need a particular guest to have a particular fixed IP address, either 1) edit the network config file on the guest, 2) add a static host to the libvirt virtual network definition (giving the MAC address provided to the guest by libvirt during the initial guest startup) with a <host> element added to the <dhcp> element of the network; details are here: http://www.libvirt.org/formatnetwork.html or 3) if you're using the bridged method to connect to the physical network, again either configure the guest's own config file, or add a static host definition to the dhcp server running on your physical network. If you still have problems don't hesitate to send another mail (although, as I said at the top, sending to libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx may yield better results than libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx). |
-- libvir-list mailing list libvir-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvir-list