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Re: default route on other subnet
Hello. Does your original e-mail show the addresses and their
relationships to each other? If not, if you want to elaborate, I can see
if I can think of a configuration that would work.
If you don't want to put that on the list, send me private mail.
What is the ffs log problem?
-Brian
On Sep 30, 11:03pm, Pierre-Philipp Braun wrote:
} Subject: Re: default route on other subnet
} Quoting Brian Buhrow 30/09/2011 21:34,
} > Hello. So unless I'm really not understanding what's going on, I
} > wouldn't expect your example to work. A bridge is not a router. What I
} > mean by that is that a bridge cannot move a packet from one IP subnet, i.e.
} > 10.1.1.0/24 to another, 10.2.2.0/24. Instead, what I suggest is something
}
} I'm not sure on what you understood either. It's a long thread, you
} probably didn't follow the first posts months ago. But I though I was
} clear enough in my last briefings. If that's unclear, it's actually
} possible to use a gateway outside the subnet when forcing the route. To
} me, the bridge doesn't prevent that from happening either. I'm able to
} make this work with Linux guests. And it's supposed to work with NetBSD
} (http://www.netbsd.org/docs/network/#nonsubnetgateway).
}
} The example your give with other IPs doesn't correspond to my
} configuration. I've got two public IPs which I can't change, one for
} the dom0 and one for the guest. Whether it's routing or bridging
} doesn't change the issue at all. The gateway is outside the subnet in
} both cases (respectively dom0's ip or the real gateway).
}
} I could try to attribute the wrong-subnet IP to the dom0 and give the
} previous dom0 IP to the guest. That's not even a dirty workaround tho,
} it's just plain leaking. But it could work in my situation as I only
} got *one* ok-subnet IP and only need *one* netbsd guest for the time being.
}
} I think it's a bug, which I should report. Is it netbsd's route, a
} linux or xen-tools issue? Maybe it's just between the two (netbsd and
} the latters). But it's like with pkgsrc. When linux distro's uname -p
} decides to print the cpu model instead of the plateform, pkgsrc needs to
} adapt, as an alternate package system for a foreign operating system.
} Here I'm using a NetBSD guest on a foreign XEN/dom0 configuration. It's
} almost working perfectly fine. Just ffs log and that
} default-route-on-other-subnet tickles. And if one of NetBSD's
} objectives is to work on linux dom0's too, I'm afraid we will have to
} fix those on NetBSD's side, unless they are caused by real flaws in
} linux, xen or xen-tools.
}
} Thanks,
} Pierre-Philipp
>-- End of excerpt from Pierre-Philipp Braun
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