Difference between revisions of "OPS235 Lab 6 - Fedora17"
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* [http://fedoraproject.org/get-fedora Fedora 12] Live CD or a classmate on the same pod | * [http://fedoraproject.org/get-fedora Fedora 12] Live CD or a classmate on the same pod | ||
* USB flash drive, 64 MB or more in size (Warning: the contents of this drive will be erased) | * USB flash drive, 64 MB or more in size (Warning: the contents of this drive will be erased) | ||
− | * One SATA hard disk in a removable drive tray with Fedora host and 3 Fedora Virtual Machines | + | * One SATA hard disk in a removable drive tray with Fedora host and 3 Fedora Virtual Machines installed |
+ | |||
+ | == Current Configuration == | ||
+ | Currently you should have the following network configuration: | ||
+ | * Fedora host has 1 active network interface (probably <code>eth0</code>)that receives IP configuration from the School's DHCP server. | ||
+ | * Fedora host has 1 active network interface (<code>virbr0</code>) that has a static default configuration of 192.168.122.1/255.255.255.0 | ||
+ | * Fedora1 VM has 1 active interface (<code>eth0</code>) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host | ||
+ | * Fedora2 VM has 1 active interface (<code>eth0</code>) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host | ||
+ | * Fedora3 VM has 1 active interface (<code>eth0</code>) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host |
Revision as of 10:08, 2 March 2010
Contents
Configuring a Network Using Virtual Machines
Objectives
- Use the Fedora GUI program to configure network interfaces with static IP configuration and host name resolution
- Use the
find
command to locate the configuration files modified by the GUI network configuration program - To examine some of the Linux's TCP/IP configuration files in the
/etc/
directory - To configure a Fedora host with static network configuration without a GUI tool
- To use and interpret the
netstat
command to troubleshoot and monitor network services - To configure the linux firewall
iptables
to allow/disallow/forward different types of network traffic using simple rules
Reference
- man pages for find, ifconfig, ping, netstat, NetworkManager, nslookup, iptables, arp
- Online reading material for week 8.
Required materials
- Fedora 12 Live CD or a classmate on the same pod
- USB flash drive, 64 MB or more in size (Warning: the contents of this drive will be erased)
- One SATA hard disk in a removable drive tray with Fedora host and 3 Fedora Virtual Machines installed
Current Configuration
Currently you should have the following network configuration:
- Fedora host has 1 active network interface (probably
eth0
)that receives IP configuration from the School's DHCP server. - Fedora host has 1 active network interface (
virbr0
) that has a static default configuration of 192.168.122.1/255.255.255.0 - Fedora1 VM has 1 active interface (
eth0
) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host - Fedora2 VM has 1 active interface (
eth0
) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host - Fedora3 VM has 1 active interface (
eth0
) that receives a dynamic configuration from your Fedora Host