Hi Laine,
Ok. Got the point that how it will affect my network and NATed
functionality.
Thanks a lot for this description.
Regards,
Sagar
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 9:11 AM, Laine Stump <laine(a)laine.org> wrote:
On 11/12/2014 08:21 AM, Sagar Shedge wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I got this NOTE on most of the link. But I am not getting reason for
this.
> Why someone should not add physical NIC to virbr0.
Well, for a start, if you do that then the dhcp server that is running
on virbr0 will be exposed to the physical network and begin answering
DHCP requests from devices out in the real world. And then you will have
some people *very* angry with you (conversely, any DHCP server listening
on the physical network will also be responding to DHCP requests from
your guests).
Beyond that, why would you even want to do that? The entire point of the
NATed network is to isolate the guests from the physical network. That
is done by forcing all traffic to pass through the host's IP routing
stack in order to get beyond the host, and if you have a physical device
attached to the bridge, the host's IP stack can be bypassed - if a guest
gets configured with an IP address that is on the physical network, all
of its traffic will go directly via the attached physdev without ever
going through the host's IP stack, or being NATed by iptables.
If you really want your guests directly visible on the physical network,
separately create a host bridge in the host's network config using the
directions that are available in many places (including the libvirt
wiki), and connect the guest interfaces to that bridge, rather than to
libvirt's default network.
> I tried to add my eth1 to virbr0 and it get added.
Just because something can be done with no immediate error does not mean
that it should be done, nor that it is not going to cause a lot of other
problems that aren't immediately visible.
> So whether it affects to some functionality of NAT network?
See above.
--
Sagar Dilip Shedge,
Pune.
With Regards.