MAAS configuration for using autopilot later
Sacha Yunusic
sacha at penta-sec.com
Mon Mar 30 13:03:10 UTC 2015
Excellent. I'll do it with MAAS server routing.
Thanks!
Sacha
-------- Original message --------
From: Andreas Hasenack <andreas at canonical.com>
Date:30/03/2015 09:37 (GMT-04:00)
To: Sacha Yunusic <sacha at penta-sec.com>
Cc: ubuntu-openstack-installer at lists.ubuntu.com
Subject: Re: MAAS configuration for using autopilot later
On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 10:21 PM, Sacha Yunusic <sacha at penta-sec.com> wrote:
Hi there,
I’m studying about how to correctly configure and wire MAAS, and I’m reading https://askubuntu.com/questions/595558/how-should-i-setup-maas-so-that-it-can-be-used-by-the-canonical-openstack-autopi/595559#595559.
I want to do what there is called split network (public 192.168.30.0/24m private 10.222.221.0/24). I have some questions and due I don’t have enough points, I can’t ask there, so I’ll do it here:
The split network diagram shows a router that connects both, private and public networks, is that correct? An actual router has to do the routing between the private and the public networks? Is not MAAS who does that (I thought MAAS routed the traffic from the private network, em2 or eth1 to the public network, em1 or eth0)?.
In the same page, talks about the Router IP (private network) you’ve to configure in MAAS. Supposing I’ve this split network, that IP should be this router I’m asking’s IP? Or MAAS em2 (eth1)’s IP?
That IP needs to be whatever will route the traffic. You can have MAAS do the routing and not have that explicit router device, just don't forget to enable ip_forwarding on the box. The diagram is meant to show how to insert that layout into an existing network so people know which pieces do what.
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