By vds - are you meaning VMware Distributed Switches?
It sounds like you are not trunking VLANs between your physical hosts fully. 


Kind regards,

Paul Angus

[email protected] 
www.shapeblue.com
53 Chandos Place, Covent Garden, London  WC2N 4HSUK
@shapeblue
  
 


-----Original Message-----
From: Asanka Gunasekara [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 17 November 2017 10:21
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Unable to access guest

hammmmmmmmm, any one! Is it possible to create a working VPC across multiple 
clusters (Hypervisor is the same) or I am just stuck with rules and routing?

Thanks and Regards

Asanka

On 7 November 2017 at 16:28, Asanka Gunasekara <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi All, can a VPC span across two clusters?
>
>
> Above question is because, I just got it working by creating a seprat 
> VPC in the new clusre2.
>
> Thanks and Regards
>
> Asanka
>
> On 7 November 2017 at 14:34, Asanka Gunasekara <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Please note I am setting up a POC using trial vmware products
>>
>> On 7 November 2017 at 14:26, Asanka Gunasekara <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi All, I have a VMware environment managed by Cloudstack 4.10.
>>> Initially I had a single cluster <Cluster1> with two nodes and one VDS.
>>> This set-up works fine! Then I created a second cluster <Cluster2> 
>>> under same datacenter with just one node and the same VDS spans 
>>> across both
>>> cluster1 and cluster2.
>>>
>>> I can create guest VMs through CloudStack with out any issue and 
>>> CloudStack assigns IP address with out any issue. And still cluste1 
>>> works fine while cluster2 guests dont have network access (hence not 
>>> getting the ip that was assigned by CloudStack). I tried statically 
>>> configuring the IP to guest this did not helped either.
>>>
>>> I think it is something to do with VDS but I am not sure where to 
>>> start
>>>
>>> Thanks and Regards
>>>
>>> Asanka
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

Reply via email to