[Devel] Re: [RFC] network namespaces
Herbert Poetzl
herbert at 13thfloor.at
Sun Sep 10 12:19:00 PDT 2006
On Sat, Sep 09, 2006 at 09:41:35PM -0600, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Herbert Poetzl <herbert at 13thfloor.at> writes:
>
> > On Sat, Sep 09, 2006 at 11:57:24AM +0400, Dmitry Mishin wrote:
> >> On Friday 08 September 2006 22:11, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> >> > actually the light-weight ip isolation runs perfectly
> >> > fine _without_ CAP_NET_ADMIN, as you do not want the
> >> > guest to be able to mess with the 'configured' ips at
> >> > all (not to speak of interfaces here)
> >
> >> It was only an example. I'm thinking about how to implement flexible
> >> solution, which permits light-weight ip isolation as well as
> >> full-fledged netwrok virtualization. Another solution is to split
> >> CONFIG_NET_NAMESPACE. Is it good for you?
> >
> > well, I think it would be best to have both, as
> > they are complementary to some degree, and IMHO
> > both, the full virtualization _and_ the isolation
> > will require a separate namespace to work, I also
> > think that limiting the isolation to something
> > very simple (like one IP + network or so) would
> > be acceptable for a start, because especially
> > multi IP or network range checks require a little
> > more efford to get them right ...
> >
> > I do not think that folks would want to recompile
> > their kernel just to get a light-weight guest or
> > a fully virtualized one
>
> I certainly agree that we are not at a point where a final decision
> can be made. A major piece of that is that a layer 2 approach has
> not shown to be without a performance penalty.
>
> A practical question. Do the IPs assigned to guests ever get used
> by anything besides the guest?
only in special setups and for testing routing and
general operation of course, i.e. one typical
failure scenario is this:
- 'provider' has a bunch of ips assigned
- 'host' ip works perfectly
- 'guest' ip is not routed (by the external router)
in this case, for example, I always suggest to test
on the host with a guest ip, simplest example:
ping -I <guest-ip> google.com
but for 'normal' operation, the guest ip is reserved
for the guests, unless some service like named is
shared between guests ...
HTH,
Herbert
> Eric
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