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Re: [Xen-users] Specific vif-route or vif-bridge in DomU config file?

To: Shannon <slafferty@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Xen-users] Specific vif-route or vif-bridge in DomU config file?
From: "Christopher Isip" <cmisip@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 19 May 2008 18:30:15 -0400
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On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 4:54 PM, Shannon <slafferty@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
  Is there any way to specific on the vif = [] line of a DomU config if an interface should be routed or bridged?

  Have a situation that I believe calls for wanting to use both methods at the same time.  (Bridging for almost everything, but routing for a few special use case DomUs)... I thought I saw mention in a man file someplace that this could be specified, but no ideal where I saw it now...

  Basically, we have a physical box with two ethernet ports, one goes to our internal private LAN, the other connects to the outside world.. want to fullfill three needs:

     - Every DomU needs to be able to access the private network that hangs off eth0, but doesn't need to be accessible FROM the private network (bridging at use).
     - Every DomU needs to be able to access the internet (hanging off Dom0's eth1), and *some* need to be accessible from the rest of the internet (routing at play).
     - Every DomU needs to be able to communicate with *each other*, freely, on the 192.168.x.x network that was created by libvirtd (or where-ever that was started)..

The first two I have working fine, using vif-route network-route, and some manual manipulation of the routing tables on the DomUs... the last one is driving me insane, as traffic from one DomU to another is showing up (for instance, in nfs, and even tcpdumps) as coming from the Dom0's IP address instead...   If I use brctl manually and add the appropriate vif#.0 to the bridge, it works okay, but if I can't automate it, it's not going to work out.  (ie: having to run brctl every time a DomU is restarted != fun).

If I switch xend-config over to bridging, I can make the third thing work, but lose the first two. :(   So I'm wondering if there's any way to specify in more detail how a specific vif should be built?   Or am I chasing this in entirely the wrong direction?  I'm assuming someone out there has wanted to do something similar before, I just can't seem to find mention anywhere online of *how* anyone has accomplished it. :)

- Shannon

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This sounds like my setup.  One physical box with two interfaces : eth0 to the switch, and eth1 to the cable modem.  There are multiple domU's in the box. 

I bridge eth0 and hide eth1 from the dom0, then have these domU's

DomU1-Firewall
  This domU has two interfaces, a real nic (eth1 hidden from domU, now eth0 in the domU), and a vif eth1 (bridged with dom0's eth0).  It is the gateway to the internet for all the DomU's and lan machines, doing ip masquerading .  It can port forward to each of the other domU's services that you want to be available to the outside world.  Here are configs for eth0:
DEVICE=eth0
>BOOTPROTO=dhcp
 and eth1:
DEVICE=eth1
>BOOTPROTO=static
IPADDR=192.168.0.1
NETMASK=255.255.255.0


Using shorewall:
  -> interfaces:
    net eth0
    loc eth1
  -> zones
    fw      firewall
    loc     ipv4
    net     ipv4
 -> masq
    eth0 eth1
 -> policy
   fw all ACCEPT
   loc all ACCEPT
   net all DROP
  -> rules
      #here is where you put the DNAT rules for the services you want available on the net.
      #example
     DNAT net loc:192.168.0.205:5001 tcp 5001


DomU2-DomuN
 The rest of the DomU's only need eth0 ( the vif from dom0's bridged eth0).   They can see the internet through eth0 and the rest of the lan through eth0 as well and can see each other and Dom0 as well.  Make sure their default routes point to Dom1-Firewall.  You can do this with use of a dhcp server or use static address in ifcfg-eth0: Ex:
# Xen Virtual Ethernet
DEVICE=eth0
BOOTPROTO=static
IPADDR=192.168.0.7
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
GATEWAY=192.168.0.1
>
Configure shorewall:
-> interfaces:
    loc eth0
  -> zones
    fw      firewall
    loc     ipv4
 -> policy (no DNAT'd service to this domU)
   fw loc ACCEPT
   loc fw ACCEPT
-> policy (DNAT'd service to this domU)
   all all DROP
      ** and then create a rule to accept the DNAT'd service
   ex:
   ACCEPT loc fw tcp 80

I speculate on the policy for the case of the DNAT'd service to the domU.  I think it will work though.

Chris





 
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