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LEARNING OPENSTACK NETWORKING (NEUTRON)

You're reading from   LEARNING OPENSTACK NETWORKING (NEUTRON) Architect and build a network infrastructure for your cloud using OpenStack Neutron networking

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783983308
Length 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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James Denton James Denton
Author Profile Icon James Denton
James Denton
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Preparing the Network for OpenStack FREE CHAPTER 2. Installing OpenStack 3. Installing Neutron 4. Building a Virtual Switching Infrastructure 5. Creating Networks with Neutron 6. Creating Routers with Neutron 7. Load Balancing Traffic in Neutron 8. Protecting Instances on the Network A. Additional Neutron Commands B. ML2 Configuration Index

Providing layer 2 connectivity to instances

Neutron and Nova work in tandem to configure networking on physical servers in the cloud. The LinuxBridge and Open vSwitch plugins provide both Neutron and Nova with the methods to provide connectivity to instances and other network resources.

Virtual network interfaces

By default, OpenStack leverages KVM, a kernel-based virtual machine, to provide a virtualization infrastructure to the Linux kernel that utilizes the hardware virtualization features of various processors.

When an instance is booted for the first time, a virtual network interface is created on the host that is referred to as a tap interface. The tap interface corresponds directly to a network interface within the guest instance. This action results in the host exposing the guest instance to the physical network.

In OpenStack, the name of the tap interface corresponds to the Neutron port UUID, or unique identifier, that the instance is plugged in to. The correlation of the tap interface...

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