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Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server Cookbook

You're reading from   Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server Cookbook Over 60 recipes to help you build, configure, and orchestrate RHEL 7 Server to make your everyday administration experience seamless

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784392017
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Jakub Gaj Jakub Gaj
Author Profile Icon Jakub Gaj
Jakub Gaj
William Leemans William Leemans
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William Leemans
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Working with KVM Guests FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying RHEL "En Masse" 3. Configuring Your Network 4. Configuring Your New System 5. Using SELinux 6. Orchestrating with Ansible 7. Puppet Configuration Management 8. Yum and Repositories 9. Securing RHEL 7 10. Monitoring and Performance Tuning Index

Creating a bridge

A network bridge is a logical device that forwards traffic between connected physical interfaces based on MAC addresses. This kind of bridge can be used to emulate a hardware bridge in virtualization applications, such as KVM, to share the NIC with multiple virtual NICs.

Getting ready

To bridge two physical networks, we need two network interfaces. Your physical interfaces should never be configured with any address as the bridge will be configured with the IP address(es).

How to do it…

For the sake of ease, the physical network interfaces we will bridge are eth1 and eth2. The IPv4 address will be 10.0.0.2 with a subnet mask of 255.0.0.0 and a default gateway of 10.0.0.1.

Creating a bridge using nmcli

Make sure that you activate the bridge after configuring the bridge and interfaces! Here are the steps that you need to perform for this:

  1. First, create the bridge connection via the following command:
    ~]# nmcli connection add type bridge ip4 10.0.0.2/8 gw4 10.0.0.1
    Connection...
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