Hi Scott

I have OVS. I did took a look to this document some time ago, the problem is that right now there is a mess in documention and you really don't know what's current and what's obsolete.

I will take a look again and post if any doubts.

Thank you for the reference.




El 10/12/13 18:47, Scott Devoid escribió:
Which driver are you using?

For OVS and Linux Bridge, there was decent documentation (including diagrams) in the Grizzly-era Networking Administration Guide, the "Under the Hood" section:
http://docs.openstack.org/grizzly/openstack-network/admin/content/under_the_hood_openvswitch.html

That guide is missing from the Havana release and from trunk. It seems to be replaced by a unified "Cloud Administration Guide" but the networking section in there is missing anything that resembles this section.


On Tue, Dec 10, 2013 at 11:08 AM, Gangur, Hrushikesh (R & D HP Cloud) <hrushikesh.gan...@hp.com <mailto:hrushikesh.gan...@hp.com>> wrote:

    
http://techbackground.blogspot.com/2013/05/debugging-quantum-dhcp-and-open-vswitch.html


    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gonzalo Aguilar Delgado [mailto:gagui...@aguilardelgado.com
    <mailto:gagui...@aguilardelgado.com>]
    Sent: Tuesday, December 10, 2013 3:35 AM
    To: openstack@lists.openstack.org
    <mailto:openstack@lists.openstack.org>
    Subject: [Openstack] OpenStack networking and disks...

    Hi,

    Is there any document that explains inner workings of neutron
    networking?

    I have an internal NAS that does not have support for openstack,
    and until we have resources to replace I want to use it to server
    iscsi disks.

    I can create disks by hand and associate to instances. But first I
    have to configure how will it connect to the network.


    For now it's serving disks on a network that's accessible to the
    floating ip network. That's not the best way but I cannot change it
    because other instances that are not part of the openstack network are
    using it. For example maas server.

    So I can add it another ip for each private network so it can serve
    disks on the private/management net. But how do I configure virtual
    routers so this NAS is accessible from private range (for ex.
    192.168.10.0/24 <http://192.168.10.0/24>).

    Is this the best way to do it?

    What's the best way to add servers that are not part of the openstack
    deployment to the net, for example a nagios monitoring set for each
    tenant so they have monitoring of their instances but they have not to
    install.

    Best regards,

    _______________________________________________
    Mailing list:
    http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
    Post to     : openstack@lists.openstack.org
    <mailto:openstack@lists.openstack.org>
    Unsubscribe :
    http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack

    _______________________________________________
    Mailing list:
    http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
    Post to     : openstack@lists.openstack.org
    <mailto:openstack@lists.openstack.org>
    Unsubscribe :
    http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack



_______________________________________________
Mailing list: http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack
Post to     : openstack@lists.openstack.org
Unsubscribe : http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack

Reply via email to