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This section describes how to manage networks in virtual datacenters |
Display virtual datacenter networks
To display the networks available to a virtual datacenter:
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Privileges: Manage virtual network elements, Access external networks tab, Access public networks tab |
Go to Virtual datacenters → select virtual datacenter → Network.
The default network is highlighted with a star symbol
A network with an internet gateway is highlighted with a globe symbol
In public cloud, to synchronize networks and IP addresses, click the round arrows synchronize button
In AWS, you can filter the list of private networks by Availability Zone
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API Features Virtual datacenter networks are available in the Abiquo API. For example, see VirtualDatacentersResource and PrivateNetworksResource. |
Screenshot: Private networks in private cloud
Screenshot: Private networks in public cloud (AWS)
You can display an inventory of your cloud networks easily in Virtual datacenters view...
In the Networks list, to view the pool and allocation of IPs:
To display all the IPs in the virtual datacenter, click the All button at the top of the list
To display the IPs in a network, click the Network name
You can then:
Use the slider at the bottom of the list to move through the pages
Filter the list by entering text in the Search box. The filter works with all the columns of the table including:
IP Address
MAC address
Network name
Virtual appliance using the IP
VM using the IP
Provider ID of the entity using the IP (for example, a load balancer)
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Create a private network
Private networks are only available within a virtual datacenter. However, your cloud provider may configure an external gateway for your virtual datacenter.
To create a private network:
Go to Virtual datacenters → select virtual datacenter → Network → Private
Click the + add button and complete the dialog
Create private network
Create private network Amazon
Button
Action
Name
Name of the network (VLAN). The name can contain up to 128 characters
IPv6
Select checkbox for IPv6 network
The Abiquo NSX-T integration does not support IPv6
Network Address
Private address range of the network
Netmask
For IPv4 a network mask with an integer value of between 16 and 30
Gateway
Gateway of the VLAN. Must be an IP within the range of the network address and mask
Internet gateway
In AWS, select this option to create a public subnet with a route to an internet gateway
Availability zone
In AWS, optionally select an Availability zone for high availability. To deploy a group of VMs separately, use a different availability zone for each VM. To assign a VM to an availability zone, assign a private IP address in the network belonging to the required availability zone
Primary DNS
The primary DNS.
Secondary DNS
The secondary DNS
DNS suffix
The DNS suffix. The Abiquo NSX-T integration does not use this attribute but you can enter it for information purposes.
Excluded from firewall
Select Excluded from firewall to define a network where VM firewalls will not apply
Static Routes
In supported providers, optionally select Define to create static routes. See Configure Static Routes using DHCP
Default network
Select to make this network the default network, replacing the existing default network
You can configure static routes when you create or edit a network. However, you should check with your systems administrator about when your VM will receive changes to static routes.
Field
Description
Example
Netmask
Destination network mask
255.255.255.0
Network ID
Destination network or host
1.1.1.0
Gateway IP
Next hop (on your network)
10.10.100.1
IPv6 Strict network
IPv6 Non-strict network
Field
Description
Name
Name of the VLAN. The name can contain up to 128 characters
IPv6
Select checkbox for IPv6 network
Strict
IPv6 only. If you select Strict, Abiquo will automatically generate the network address (ULA) and also the IP addresses. If you do not select strict, you can enter the network address and IP addresses.
Netmask
Network mask of 48, 56 or 64.
Network Address
Private address range of the network. Only for non-strict networks
Primary DNS
The primary DNS
Secondary DNS
The secondary DNS
DNS suffix
The DNS suffix
Default network
Make this network the default network. In a datacenter, this will override the existing default network
Create IP addresses in private networks
To create new IP addresses in a private network do these steps.
Go to Virtual datacenters → optionally select a virtual datacenter
Go to Networks → Private → select a private network
On the Private IPs page, click the add + button and enter details
Or you can add an IP directly to a VM. To do this:
Go to Virtual datacenters → Edit VM → Network
Click the add + button and enter details (or drag the Auto-generated IP label into the Network pane)
Enter the Number of IPs to create and the From IP address (the first in the range). The From IP address must be a new address that does not already exist in the network. After creating the first IP address, the platform will try to create the other IPs and it will skip any existing IP addresses.
For example, if you have IP addresses in network 30.30.30.30, which are 30, 33, and 34 and then you request 3 new IPs from 30.30.30.31. The new IPs created should be as follows: 31, 32, 35.
30.30.30.30
30.30.30.31
30.30.30.32
30.30.30.33
30.30.30.34
30.30.30.35
When you add IPv6 addresses on strict networks, you don't need to set the starting address. On non-strict IPv6 networks, Abiquo recommends that you create an automatic IP address, or you can enter a From IP address manually.
Edit a private network
To edit a private network
Go to Virtual datacenters → select a virtual datacenter → See Create a private networkAdd IPs to private networks
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Edit a private network
To edit a private network
Go to Virtual datacenters and select a virtual datacenter, then go to Network
Select Private and select the network
Click the pencil edit button below the Networks list
If there are no VMs deployed in the network, you can change the Name, Gateway, Static routes, and make the network the new default for the virtual datacenter
The gateway must be an IP address inside the range defined by the network address and the network mask
Optionally, change the DNS settings. The new settings will apply to all VMs deployed after you save the network
Click Save
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Delete a private network
You can delete a private network if no VMs are using its IPs and it is not the default network for the virtual datacenter.
To delete a private network:
Go to Virtual datacenters
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and select a virtual datacenter
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Go to Network → Private
Select the network and click the delete button below the networks list.
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Display onboarded external networks
The platform automatically onboards external networks when you onboard virtual datacenters from vCloud Director.
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Privileges: Manage virtual network elements, Access external networks tab, Manage external network elements |
To display onboarded external networks
Go to Virtual datacenters → Network
Select a vCloud VDC
Go to External
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Delete an onboarded external network
If an onboarded network has been deleted in the provider, its name will display in light gray text. If a VM is using an IP from this network, then you cannot deploy the VM.
If there are no VMs using the IPs of an external network that was already deleted in the provider, to delete the network in the platform, select it and click the delete button.
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Set the default network for a virtual datacenter
Each virtual datacenter requires a default network. If you deploy a VM without assigning a NIC, the platform will add one from the default network. You cannot unselect the default network, instead you must assign a new default network to replace it.
To set a network as the default, you will require privileges to access this network in the virtual infrastructure.
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Privileges: Manage virtual datacenter network elements, Access public network tab, Manage public network elements, Access external network tab, Manage external network elements |
To assign a network as the default for a virtual datacenter do these steps:
Go to Virtual datacenters → select virtual datacenter → Network → network type, e.g. Private
Create or edit a network
Select the Default network checkbox
This default will override the platform default network and any network set for the enterprise in the datacenter
The new default network will apply to all VMs deployed after you set it
For a public network that is the virtual datacenter default, obtain IP addresses for your VMs before you deploy
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Obtain IP addresses from public networks
In public networks you can reserve or purchase public IP addresses for your VMs. Reserved IPs may be charged while they are reserved, even if they are not used in VMs.
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Privileges: Manage public IPs, Access public networks tab, Manage public network elements |
To add new public IP addresses to your virtual datacenter:
Click the + Add button on the Public IPs page to display the list of available public IPs
To move between pages, use pagination controls such as arrows and page numbers
To filter your search, enter an IP address or Network name in the Search filter box
Select IP addresses to add them to your virtual datacenter
Click Add to reserve the IPs
The platform will add the IPs to your VDC
You can also reserve public IPs directly from the Edit VM dialog.
Obtain public IP addresses in public cloud
During onboarding from public cloud, the platform will onboard existing public IP addresses in providers that support them, such as AWS and Azure. You can obtain them from the provider and assign them to your virtual datacenters and VMs.
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The provider may charge for public IP addresses as soon as you reserve them for your virtual datacenter. Therefore you should reserve your IP addresses just before you deploy and check they are deleted when you undeploy your VMs. Remember that your provider may also limit the number of public IP addresses that you can use per virtual datacenter. |
To add public IP addresses to your virtual datacenter, so that you can later assign them to your VMs:
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Privileges: Manage virtual network elements, Manage floating IPs, Access public networks tab, Manage public network elements |
Go to Virtual datacenters → Select a public cloud virtual datacenter → Network → Public
On the Allocated public IPs page, click the + add button
To add the public IP to a virtual datacenter, click the Add to VDC link near the IP address
Now when you edit a VM in the VDC and go to Network → Public, the platform will display the public IP address and you can add it to your VM.
To obtain a public IP directly for a VM, click Purchase public IPs.
See Obtain public IP addresses....
Synchronize public IP addresses with the cloud provider
To onboard any public IP addresses that were already created in your cloud provider, or update changes made directly in the provider:
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Privileges: Manage virtual network elements, Manage floating IPs, Access public networks tab, Manage public network elements |
Go to Virtual datacenters → select a public cloud virtual datacenter
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Go to Network → Public
Click the double arrow synchronize public IPs button (beside the + add button)
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Release a reserved public IP address
You can release a public IP if it is not assigned to a VM.
In private cloud, to release a public IP that belongs to a public network, select the IP in the IP list and click the delete button.
In public cloud, click the link to Remove from VDC and then click the delete button.
In private cloud with NSX-T, you can delete network resources by deleting the virtual datacenters. The platform will automatically remove VMs, virtual appliances, load balancers, public IPs, and firewalls from the virtual datacenter. The firewalls will remain in the enterprise and you can reuse them. When you delete a virtual datacenter, public IPs that are not used by VMs will remain in the provider and the synchronization process will delete them.
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Limit
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network bandwith with QoS
You can use Quality of Service (QoS) traffic shaping parameters to limit the bandwidth for each public IP in a virtual datacenter.
This feature applies to public IPs in infrastructure and managed by NSX in vCenter and vCenter clusters.
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Privileges: Manage public bandwidth limit |
When you upgrade the platform or create a virtual datacenter, the public IPs bandwidth limit is disabled. To enable the limit for the public IPs of the VDC, edit the bandwidth limit.
To edit the bandwidth limit and enable it in the platform:
Select the virtual datacenter and go to Network → QoS
Click the pencil edit button
To set the bandwidth limit in a specific direction, select the Enabled checkbox for that direction
Set QoS values to apply to each public IP in virtual datacenter. This bandwidth will be set for each public IP in the virtual datacenter.
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Enabled
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To enable traffic shaping in a specific direction, select this checkbox
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Average
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The average amount of bandwidth, in bits per second, that each public IP in the virtual datacenter can use
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Peak
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The maximum bandwidth in bits per second that each public IP in the virtual datacenter can use
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Burst size
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The amount of data that can be transmitted at the peak bandwidth rate in bytes. A burst bonus accumulates when traffic is below the Average value and this bandwidth can be used for bursts
For more details see:
To register changes that were made outside the platform, save existing public IP bandwidth values. In the API, to register changes, send a POST request with the existing values.
Reserve private IPs
The private IP reservation feature will prevent users from assigning reserved IPs to VMs within the platform. The platform does not display reserved IPs to allow users to select them for VMs. You can only assign reserved IPs to VMs from outside of Abiquo, for example, using a script. If you onboard a VM with a reserved IP, the platform logs a warning message.
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Privileges: Manage private IP reservation |
To reserve private IPs:
Go to Virtual datacenters → Networks → Private
Select the IPs and click the lock button
Enter the reason for the reservation
The platform will list the VMs in the virtual datacenter. Optionally select VMs to indicate where the IPs might be used. Note that you must check that the VMs are able to use these IPs. This selection does not assign the IPs to VMs.
The platform will display a padlock symbol and the reason beside the IP reserved addresses.
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limit network bandwidth of public IPs and for VDCs with NAT networks. For more details see the following documentation.
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Reserve private IPs
Administrators can reserve private IP addresses so that users cannot work with them in the platform.
See Reserve private IPs.
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Pages related to virtual datacenter networks
Administer virtual resources
Administer and troubleshoot VMsManage persistent storage and VMs
Work with VMs, see the Related pages list in myCloud view
Manage and configure datacenter networks, see Networks
Configure network infrastructure, see Network