19.16. Laptop Configurations
The task of configuring your RHEL 5.0 loaded laptop for use
on a network environment, presents a number of potential
challenges. Most WiFi and wired connections switch
constantly during any given day, and Red Hat Virtualization
assumes it has access to the same interface
consistently. This results in the system performing
ifup/ifdown calls to the network interface in use by Red Hat
Virtualization. WiFi cards are not the ideal network
connection method since Red Hat Virtualization uses the
default network interface.
The idea here is to create a 'dummy' network interface for
Red Hat Virtualization to use.
This technique allows you to use a hidden IP address space
for your guests and Virtual Machines. To do this operation
successfully, you must use static IP addresses as DHCP does
not listen for IP addresses on the dummy network. You also
must configure NAT/IP masquerading to enable network access
for your guests and Virtual Machines. You should attach a
static IP when you create the 'dummy' network interface.
For this example, the interface is called dummy0 and the IP
used is 10.1.1. The script is called ifcfg-dummy0 and
resides in the /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ directory:
DEVICE =dummy0
BOOTPROTO=none
ONBOOT=yes
USERCTL=no
IPV6INIT=no
PEERDNS=yes
TYPE=Ethernet
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
IPADDR=10.1.1.1
ARP=yes
You should bind xenbr0 to dummy0 to allow network connection
even when disconnected from the physical network.
You will need to make additional modifications to the
xend-config.sxp file. You must locate the ( network-script
'network-bridge bridge=xenbr0 ) section and add include this
in the end of the line:
netdev=dummy0
You must also make some modifications to your guest's domU
networking configuration to enable the default gateway to
point to dummy0. You must edit the DomU 'network' file that
resides in the /etc/sysconfig/ directory to reflect the
example below:
NETWORKING=yes
HOSTNAME=localhost.localdomain
GATEWAY=10.1.1.1
IPADDR=10.1.1.10
NETMASK=255.255.255.0
It is a good idea to enable NAT in domain0 so that domU can
access the public net. This way, even wireless users can
work around the Red Hat Virtualization wireless
limitations. To do this, you must modify the S99XenLaptopNAT
file that resides in the /etc/rc3.d directory to reflect the
example below:
#!/bin/bash/
PATH=/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr:/sbin
export PATH
GATEWAYDEV= "ip route | grep default | awk {print $5'}'
iptables -F
case "$1" in
start)
if test -z "$GATEWAYDEV"; then
echo "No gateway device found"
else
echo "Masquerading using $GATEWAYDEV"
/sbin/iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o $GATEWAYDEV -j
MASQUERADE
fi
echo "Enabling IP forwarding"
echo 1 . /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
echo "IP forwarding set to 'cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward'"
echo "done"
..
''
*)
echo "Usage: $0 {start | restart | status}"
..
,,
esac
If you want to automatically have the network setup at boot
time, you must create a softlink to
/etc/rc3.d/S99XenLaptopNAT
When modifying the modprobe.conf file, you must include these
lines:
alias dummy0 dummy
options dummy numdummies=1