... hang on. Why does the *bridge* have an IP address? Think of a bridge
as being like a switch; it has no address of its own.
Cheers,
Peter
On Tue, 15 Feb 2022 at 20:21, Wolf <ort_libvirt(a)bergersen.no> wrote:
On 15 Feb 2022, at 20:04, Peter Crowther
<peter.crowther(a)melandra.com>
wrote:
And eno1 and eno2 are *both* connected to the same external switch, yes?
Correct, where each NIC has its ip access-list.
XX1.XX1.XX1.150 and XX2.XX2.XX2.100 are on separate NICs.
When I ping the VM, XX2.XX2.XX2.100, from the host, XX1.XX1.XX1.150, the
host pings itself.
Thanks!
Wolf
On Tue, 15 Feb 2022 at 17:17, Wolf <ort_libvirt(a)bergersen.no> wrote:
> Hi!
>
> 1) I have two network ports on my server.
> - eno1 has the IP: XX1.XX1.XX1.150
>
> - bridge0 has the IP: XX2.XX2.XX2.100
> and has the interface member: port eno2.
> eno2 is not set up with an IP address.
>
> 2) The host runs on IP: XX1.XX1.XX1.150
>
> 3) A VM uses the bridge: bridge0, and has the IP: XX2.XX2.XX2.100
>
> I have a problem with this setup:
> I can ssh the VM on XX2.XX2.XX2.100 from outside, but from the host,
> XX1.XX1.XX1.150, I can't ssh the VM on XX2.XX2.XX2.100.
>
> Have I set up this wrong or is it something I can do to solve this?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Wolf
>
>
>