Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server Cookbook

By : Jakub Gaj, William Leemans
Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server Cookbook

By: Jakub Gaj, William Leemans

Overview of this book

Dominating the server market, the Red Hat Enterprise Linux operating system gives you the support you need to modernize your infrastructure and boost your organization’s efficiency. Combining both stability and flexibility, RHEL helps you meet the challenges of today and adapt to the demands of tomorrow. This practical Cookbook guide will help you get to grips with RHEL 7 Server and automating its installation. Designed to provide targeted assistance through hands-on recipe guidance, it will introduce you to everything you need to know about KVM guests and deploying multiple standardized RHEL systems effortlessly. Get practical reference advice that will make complex networks setups look like child’s play, and dive into in-depth coverage of configuring a RHEL system. Also including full recipe coverage of how to set up, configuring, and troubleshoot SELinux, you’ll also discover how secure your operating system, as well as how to monitor it.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating a VLAN interface


VLANs are isolated broadcast domains that run over a single physical network. They allow you to segment a local network and also to "stretch" a LAN over multiple physical locations. Most enterprises implement this on their network switching environment, but in some cases, the tagged VLANs reach your server.

Getting ready

In order to configure a VLAN, we need an established network connection on the local network interface.

How to do it…

For the sake of ease, our physical network interface is called eth0. The VLAN's ID is 1, and the IPv4 address is 10.0.0.2, with a subnet mask of 255.0.0.0 and a default gateway of 10.0.0.1.

Creating the VLAN connection with nmcli

With nmcli, we need to first create the connection and then activate it. Perform the following steps:

  1. Create a VLAN interface using the following command:

    ~]# nmcli connection add type vlan dev eth0 id 1 ip4 10.0.0.2/8 gw4 10.0.0.1
    Connection 'vlan' (4473572d-26c0-49b8-a1a4-c20b485dad0d) successfully added.
    ~]...