On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 2:43 PM, Peter Harman <pharman@homeyertool.com> wrote:

Ovirt Community,

 

First off: thank you – these emails have helped me to get Ovirt running. I barely know what I am doing but learning quickly.

 

I am trying to do a network separation and confusing myself. I have two physical networks (10.10.x.x/16 and 192.168.1.x/24) my ovirt management is bridged on 10.10.x.x. My (currently single) Hosts have at least one physical NIC connecting to each network. I am trying to get to the point there the VMs are on the 192.168.1.x network and the 10.10.x.x network. The goal is to join the VMs to a AD domain on 192.168.1.x but keep access as limited as possible to the 10.10.x.x network.

 

I’ve been on a googlethon over the past few days and still don’t understand the best practice – or even a working practice – to accomplish this goal.

 

Peter Harman – Systems and Safety Cordinator  | Homeyer Precision Manufacturing

 

Description: C:\Users\gruether\AppData\Local\Temp\Temp1_Homeyer Logo (2).zip\Homeyer Logo\Homeyer Logo.jpg

 

16051 State Hwy 47, Marthasville, MO 63357| E pharman@homeyertool.com | P 636.433.2244 | F 636.433.5257

 


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Hi Peter,

if I understand this correctly you can achieve that by marking the 192.168.1.x network as VM network via UI: Networks -> Desired network -> Edit -> Check VM network and save. Then in any VM that you want to be on this network set NICs VNIC profile that is connected to 192.168.1.x via UI: Virtual Machines -> Desired VM -> Network Interfaces -> nicX -> Edit -> Profile -> Select profile that is connected to 192.168.1.x -> Save. If the VM is up and running you need to first unplug the interface save it and then change profile and plug it in again. Hopefully this helps. 

Regards,
Ales

--

ALES MUSIL

INTERN - rhv network

Red Hat EMEA


amusil@redhat.com   IM: amusil