Hey Christopher,
On Tue, Feb 23, 2016 at 8:29 PM, Christopher Young
<mexigabacho(a)gmail.com> wrote:
So, I have what I think should be a standard setup where I have
dedicated NICs (to be bonded via LACP for storage) and well are NICs
for various VLANS, etc.
As typical, I have the main system interfaces for the usual system IPs
(em1 in this case).
A couple of observations (and a "chicken and the egg problem"):
#1. The RHEV-H/Ovirt-Node interface doesn't allow you to configure
more than one interface. Why is this?
This is by design. The idea is that you use the TUI to configure the
initial NIC, all subsequent configuration will be done trough Engine.
#2. This prevents me from bringing up an interface for access to my
Netapp SAN (which I keep on separate networking/VLANs for
best-practices purposes)
If I'm unable to bring up a regular system interface AND an interface
for my storage, then how am I going to be able to install a RHEV-M
(engine) hosted-engine VM since I would be either unable to have an
interface for this VM's IP AND be able to connect to my storage
network.
In short, I'm confused. I see this as a very standard enterprise
setup so I feel like I must be missing something obvious. If someone
could educate me, I'd really appreciate it.
This is a valid point - you can not configure Ndoe from the TUI to
connect to more than two networks.
What you can do however is to temporarily setup a route between the
two networks to bootstrap Node. After setup you can use Engine to
configure another nic on Node to access the storage network.
The other option I see is to drop to shell and manually configure the
second NIC by creating an ifcfg file.
Note: In future we plan that you can use Cockpit to configure
networking - this will also allow you to configure multiple NICs.
Greetings
- fabian
Thanks,
CHris
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Fabian Deutsch <fdeutsch(a)redhat.com>
RHEV Hypervisor
Red Hat