Listing Virtual Networks
To list the virtual networks existing on the Parallels server, you can use either the
vznetcfg
or
prlsrvctl
utility.
Listing virtual networks with vznetcfg
To list the virtual networks on your server using the
vznetcfg
utility, execute the following command:
# vznetcfg net list
Network ID Status Master Interface Slave Interfaces
Host-Only active
Bridged active eth0
pcsnet1 active eth1
In the example above, three virtual networks —
pcsnet1
and two default virtual networks — exist on the Parallels server. The information on these virtual networks is presented in the table with the following columns:
Column
|
Description
|
Network ID
|
The ID assigned to the virtual network.
|
Status
|
Indicates the status of the virtual network. It can be one of the following:
-
active
: the virtual network is up and running.
-
configured
: the information on the virtual network is present in the
/etc/vz/vznet.conf
file on the server, but the bridge to which the virtual network is bound is down or does not exist.
Note:
Detailed information on the
vznet.conf
file is given in the
Parallels Cloud Server 6.0 Command Line Reference Guide
.
|
Master Interface
|
Displays the adapter on the server connected to the virtual network, if any.
|
Slave Interfaces
|
Lists the adapters in virtual machines and Containers joined to the virtual network, if any.
|
Listing virtual networks with prlsrvctl
You can also use the
prlsrvctl
utility to list the virtual networks existing on your server. To do this, run the following command:
# prlsrvctl net list
Network ID Type Bound To
Host-Only host-only
Bridged bridged eth0
pcsnet1 bridged eth1
This utility displays the following information on virtual networks:
Column
|
Description
|
Network ID
|
The name assigned to the virtual network.
|
Type
|
The networking mode set for the virtual network.
|
Bound To
|
The adapter on the Parallels server connected to the virtual networks, if any.
|
|