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    |   xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] How to setup my Xen network? 
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lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
 
Hi all,
I have several servers I'd like to consolidate to Xen 3.2 and I am having a bit 
of trouble with firewalls and the best network environment to chose from.  I 
have read documentation here and there but I am a bit confused now and after 
some advice or specific documentation.
1/ I'd like the following but have had problems getting ut to work with a 
firewall on Dom0
                                |-> Dom1 (10.0.0.10) - Mail
WAN <-----> eth0 Dom0 <---------|-> Dom2 (10.0.0.10) - Web
        (87.98.252.205)         |-> Dom3 (10.0.0.10) - Web
Where Dom0 is the firewall and DomUs are natted.  Dom0 would have a web proxy 
to redirect http to the right server.  I tried getting this to work with 
shorewall but it's a no go.  Has someone managed this setup with a proper 
firewall in place?
2/ Second option would be to use a bridge but I'm not sure the following would 
work
          |-> Dom0 87.98.252.205 - (Restricted)
          |-> Dom1 98.12.113.200 - Mail
WAN <-----|-> Dom2 99.130.15.200 - Web
          |-> Dom3 85.99.120.113 - Web
Can I have a bridge with public IPs in completely different ranges?
3/ Last but not least is a theory I found about putting the Dom1 as the 
firewall, locking out Dom0 for security reason and have the whole environment 
natted.  If this would work for me, is there any documentation?  I see threads 
and attempts but no real documentation on how this is done.
Many thanks for any help you can provide.  Like I said, pointers to good 
documentation is more than welcome!
 
Hi, eco!
Here is a link to a setup I built back in '06. I don't claim that it's 
*good* documentation. 
  http://www.hostisimo.com/xen-howto.html
It uses xen-3.0.2 so some things have certainly changed but this may 
serve as a basis for your efforts. 
Because it is in a controlled access environment and at times I need to 
hang physical boxes onto the various bridges I used three physical NICs. 
 In your case you would only need the WAN to be physical; the DMZ would 
use a tap device for the bridge. 
Chop off what you don't need and use what you do.
I hope you have as much fun as I did getting all the pieces to work 
together. 
nb: this doc resides on a low bandwith adsl connection so access may not 
be too zippy. 
hth,
Mike Wright :m)
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