
On Fri, 2015-10-16 at 17:47 -0300, Daniel Henrique Barboza wrote:
On 10/16/2015 05:25 PM, Ramon Medeiros wrote:
Hi,
to create a bridge on Fedora and Debian systems, it's possible to use brctl (who work in both), but it's not persistent. So, to create a persistent bridge, files must be create in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts on Fedora and /etc/network/interfaces on debian based.
Does not exist a tool that handle this issues? If not, how kimchi are dealing when working with this differences between distros?
Today, AFAIK, Kimchi does not deal with creating vlan and bridges and so on. What kimchi does is check if they exist. This is done by reading and parsing /sys/class/net files, which I believe are the same across distros.
But don't take only my work for it - check out /plugins/kimchi/netinfo.py and see by yourself.
As for "Does not exist a tool that handle this issues ", I believe this is a question that the network guys from Ginger can answer. I'll let them come here and answer ...... but I can say in advance that this kind of operation will be done in Ginger via ifup and ifdown scripts and parsing of the network config files. We considered using Network Manager to help us with these tasks, but decided not to because we can't enforce the user to have NManager installed.
Right Ramon, Daniel. Last friday i was discussing the same with Walter, how to handle different distros specially Ubuntu(/etc/network/interface) which is different in file handling as compared to Fedora/RHEL/SUSE(/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts). If we were using network manager , we would have been in better off with the distors, as network manager would take care of all these internally. But since we are not free to use it currently, by configuring the ifcfg files which is persistent way in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts and using ifup/ifdown seems the better option. Similarly we have to take care to add to ubuntu in /etc/network/interfaces, which is a special case but currently we were thinking of targeting Fedora/RHEL/Suse which are of same type and later add ubuntu support. ifup/ifdown commands exist in Ubuntu, but configuring is different. With respect to bridge, we can create a ifcfg-<bridge> file in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts. Ex :- /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-br0 DEVICE=br0 TYPE=Bridge IPADDR=192.168.1.1 PREFIX=24 BOOTPROTO=none ONBOOT=yes DELAY=0 In the interfaces which need to be part of bridge, we can add BRIDGE=br0 Ex :- /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ethX DEVICE=ethX TYPE=Ethernet HWADDR=AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF BOOTPROTO=none ONBOOT=yes BRIDGE=br0 Bring up the bridge, ifup ifcfg-br0 If network manager is enabed, ifup will internally use nmcli utilities, else it will use ip commands to bring the interface up. Even i am not network expert here :) Please let us know your feedback.
Hope it helps,
Daniel
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