Hi Benjamin,

Take a look at a blog article I did a couple of years ago - it will give you a 
fair bit of background on how to configure KVM: 
https://www.shapeblue.com/networking-kvm-for-cloudstack/

A few pieces of advice:
- Unless you have some very specific networking requirements don't use a 
separate VLAN for storage - just run with the default which will run secondary 
storage traffic over the management network.
- Guest VLANs 2000-2699 - no problem - just make sure your top of rack switches 
can handle that amount of VLANs - most of them will do. Also keep in mind you 
need to run this on trunks - CloudStack manage the VLAN tagging for you.
- Public VLANs: unless you plan to run a large amount of public networks you 
don't need such a big range - most organisations start with 1 public VLAN 
- iSCSI primary storage traffic is not managed by CloudStack - so all you need 
to do is make sure the KVM hosts can speak to your storage.

Regards, 
Dag Sonstebo
Cloud Architect
ShapeBlue
 S: +44 20 3603 0540  | [email protected] | http://www.shapeblue.com 
<http://www.shapeblue.com/> | Twitter:@ShapeBlue 
<https://twitter.com/#!/shapeblue>

On 27/04/2018, 10:17, "Benjamin Naber" <[email protected]> wrote:

    Hi together,
    
    currently we have a cloudstack 4.10 environment with Xenserver and the 
following network configuration:
    
    Physical (Bond) Interfaces:
    
    1 management -> untagged vlan for management / tagged vlan 133 for 
secondary storage.
    2 guest -> tagged vlans 2000-2699
    3 public -> tagged vlans 200-250
    4 ISCSI -> untagged
    
    I am now on eval for using KVM in this environment.
    I am also new to KVM.
    My question is how do i have to setup the cloud bridges for using this 
network layout on KVM. And How do i have to name the cloudbridges in KVM ?
    
    Kind regards Ben
    


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