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- The interface names used in the following section are for illustrative purposes only. Please familiarize yourself with the interface naming conventions used in your cloud environment.
The sample configuration assumes a CentOS 7 system and that the interface is configured outside the control of the NetworkManager.
To make the second interface usable for the Charon guest system, perform the following steps:
- Add a second interface to your instance as described in the cloud-specific Getting Started guide and your cloud provider's documentation.
- Log into the instance and become the root user (use:
sudo -i
) - Identify the names of the two Ethernet interfaces:
# ip link show
- Create an interface configuration file for the second interface (the file for the first one should exist). Example (use correct interface name for your configuration):
# cp /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth1
- Edit this file to match the characteristics of eth1 (use correct interface name for your configuration). The private IP address used for this interface will be assigned to the Solaris guest. Therefore, configure the Linux Interface without IP address, similar to the example below.
Please note:
a) On Charon-SSP instances based on cloud-specific marketplace images (CentOS 7), the NetworkManager is normally disabled. However, if the NetworkManager is enabled on such systems, the line NM_CONTROLLED=no prevents the NetworkManager from changing the configuration of the interface. If using a RHEL/CentOS 8 host system, see the important information section above (NetworkManagercontrol is required).
b) On some cloud platforms, the automatic cloud-specific configuration prevents the entries in the ifcfg-file to take effect (for example on GCP). Please refer to your cloud-provider's documentation and the Network Management section in the Getting Started Guide of your version for additional information.BOOTPROTO=none
DEVICE=eth1
NAME=eth1
ONBOOT=yes
TYPE=Ethernet
USERCTL=no
(see note a above)
NM_CONTROLLED=no - Restart the network:
# systemctl restart network
Please note: Should there be an error when executing this command, kill the DHCP client process and retry the command.
Expected result of the example:
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