Date: Fri, 17 Oct 2008 22:38:04 -0400 From: "Alexandre \"Sunny\" Kovalenko" <gaijin.k@gmail.com> To: "Marc G. Fournier" <freebsd@hub.org> Cc: freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Software for virtualisation for FreeBSD needed Message-ID: <1224297484.1118.28.camel@RabbitsDen> In-Reply-To: <E2733F3DCE938E271E7AD42F@ganymede.hub.org> References: <48F88B2B.1080700@web.de> <1224245114.75001.7.camel@RabbitsDen> <E2733F3DCE938E271E7AD42F@ganymede.hub.org>
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On Fri, 2008-10-17 at 21:28 -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > > > - --On Friday, October 17, 2008 08:05:14 -0400 "Alexandre \"Sunny\" Kovalenko" > <gaijin.k@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I am using VMware extensively on Linux and Windows hosts and QEMU on > > FreeBSD host (with Windows, Linux and OpenSolaris guests) > > Can you run multiple guest QEMU environments simultaneously? With networking? Yes. <tentative>Yes.</tentative> ;) I can definitely run multiple QEMU guests simultaneously. Did you have any problems doing that? Now, networking part is slightly trickier to answer. Let me try to map this into VMware experience: -- assigning IP addresses. I am doing static configurations. It Should Not Be Hard (sm) to beat isc-dhcp into serving different address ranges to different tapX, but I have not done it. -- guest-to-guest internal networking. Easy: you have separate tapX with their separate IP addresses, as long as you have net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 set, it "just works". -- nat-to-outside-world. Slightly harder, but doable: sunny:RabbitsDen>cat pf.nat.conf # Internal interfaces (for QEMU and or Bluetooth clients) int_if_0 = "tap0" int_if_1 = "tap1" # Private network for QEMU and Bluetooth clients private_network_0 = $int_if_0:network private_network_1 = $int_if_1:network # External interface (if we are providing NAT for the clients above) ext_if = "ath0" # Provide NAT services for private clients nat on $ext_if from $private_network_0 to any -> ($ext_if) nat on $ext_if from $private_network_1 to any -> ($ext_if) pass from { lo0, $private_network_0 } to any pass from { lo0, $private_network_1 } to any sunny:RabbitsDen>sudo pfctl -F nat sunny:RabbitsDen>sudo pfctl -f pf.nat.conf We are done. Admittedly, if you have many clients which flicker in and out of existence, this gets very messy very quickly. Some scripting is advised. -- bridging-to-outside world. Have not tried it for the lack of need. HTH, -- Alexandre "Sunny" Kovalenko (Олександр Коваленко)
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