Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "ericwhite".
2013 Aug 09
2
Bridging Wireless Cards for KVM
...right place to ask this question. I was wondering if
there is a way to set up a KVM VM using an XML document as input into Virsh
that uses bridged networking over a wireless card.
I understand that wireless cards to not natively support, but I was able to
find a working solution here:
http://blog.ericwhite.ca/articles/2011/04/creating-a-wireless-bridge/.
The issue is, I can use this bridge by calling KVM directly. However, I
cannot figure out how to get this same configuration on an XML file that I
input into Virsh for the creation of a VM.
My understanding is that libvirt calls KVM/QEMU at some po...
2013 Aug 11
2
Re: Bridging Wireless Cards for KVM
...is a way to set up a KVM VM using an XML document as input into
> Virsh
> > that uses bridged networking over a wireless card.
> >
> > I understand that wireless cards to not natively support, but I was able
> to
> > find a working solution here:
> > http://blog.ericwhite.ca/articles/2011/04/creating-a-wireless-bridge/.
>
> Ok, that's slightly different. The traditional integration with Linux
> bridge devices is doing ethernet layer bridging - so all protocols
> like IPv4, IPv6, etc, etc will "just work".
>
> What that blog describes...
2013 Aug 09
0
Re: Bridging Wireless Cards for KVM
...ion. I was wondering if
> there is a way to set up a KVM VM using an XML document as input into Virsh
> that uses bridged networking over a wireless card.
>
> I understand that wireless cards to not natively support, but I was able to
> find a working solution here:
> http://blog.ericwhite.ca/articles/2011/04/creating-a-wireless-bridge/.
Ok, that's slightly different. The traditional integration with Linux
bridge devices is doing ethernet layer bridging - so all protocols
like IPv4, IPv6, etc, etc will "just work".
What that blog describes is protocol layer bridging,...
2013 Aug 11
0
Re: Bridging Wireless Cards for KVM
...using an XML document as input into
>> Virsh
>> > that uses bridged networking over a wireless card.
>> >
>> > I understand that wireless cards to not natively support, but I was
>> able to
>> > find a working solution here:
>> > http://blog.ericwhite.ca/articles/2011/04/creating-a-wireless-bridge/.
>>
>> Ok, that's slightly different. The traditional integration with Linux
>> bridge devices is doing ethernet layer bridging - so all protocols
>> like IPv4, IPv6, etc, etc will "just work".
>>
>> W...