30 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
30 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
# Leave USE_LXC_BRIDGE as "true" if you want to use lxcbr0 for your
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# containers. Set to "false" if you'll use virbr0 or another existing
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# bridge, or macvlan to your host's NIC.
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USE_LXC_BRIDGE="true"
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# If you change the LXC_BRIDGE to something other than lxcbr0, then
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# you will also need to update your /etc/lxc/default.conf as well as the
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# configuration (/var/lib/lxc/<container>/config) for any containers
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# already created using the default config to reflect the new bridge
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# name.
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# If you have the dnsmasq daemon installed, you'll also have to update
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# /etc/dnsmasq.d/lxc and restart the system wide dnsmasq daemon.
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#LXC_BRIDGE="lxcbr0"
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#LXC_BRIDGE_MAC="00:16:3e:00:00:00"
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#LXC_ADDR="10.0.3.1"
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#LXC_NETMASK="255.255.255.0"
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#LXC_NETWORK="10.0.3.0/24"
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#LXC_DHCP_RANGE="10.0.3.2,10.0.3.254"
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#LXC_DHCP_MAX="253"
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# Uncomment the next line if you'd like to use a conf-file for the lxcbr0
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# dnsmasq. For instance, you can use 'dhcp-host=mail1,10.0.3.100' to have
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# container 'mail1' always get ip address 10.0.3.100.
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#LXC_DHCP_CONFILE=/etc/lxc/dnsmasq.conf
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# Uncomment the next line if you want lxcbr0's dnsmasq to resolve the .lxc
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# domain. You can then add "server=/lxc/10.0.3.1' (or your actual $LXC_ADDR)
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# to /etc/dnsmasq.conf, after which 'container1.lxc' will resolve on your
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# host.
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#LXC_DOMAIN="lxc"
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