Follow up post for Podman 4.0 and libvirt network mesh

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Peter 2022-04-05 10:30:16 +02:00
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{
"name": "libvirt",
"id": "0489e6e643b97003c47b27a9ce0a6f6a8dce7d5f08329603e79a0ba48ad5285f",
"driver": "bridge",
"network_interface": "conbr0",
"created": "2022-04-05T09:18:48.198960971+01:00",
"subnets": [
{
"subnet": "10.10.1.0/24",
"gateway": "10.10.1.42",
"lease_range": {
"start_ip": "10.10.1.1",
"end_ip": "10.10.1.10"
}
}
],
"ipv6_enabled": false,
"internal": false,
"dns_enabled": false,
"ipam_options": {
"driver": "host-local"
}
}

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author = "Peter Kurfer"
title = "Libvirt & Podman: follow up for Podman 4.0 and netavark"
date = "2022-02-24"
description = "Joining libvirt VMs and containers with Podman 4.0's new network stack netavark"
tags = [
"podman",
"libvirt",
"netavark"
]
+++
This is a follow up post to ["Joining libvirt {{<abbr short="VM" full="Virtual Machine" >}}s and Podman container in a common network"]({{<relref "libvirt-podman-network-mesh.md" >}}).
Therefore I won't cover all the basics again and how to configure libvirt because nothing's changed on that side.
## Podman 4.0
Podman 4.0 comes with a completely new network stack replacing the previous [{{<abbr short="CNI" full="Container Network Interface" >}}](https://www.cni.dev/) stack:
* [Netavark](https://github.com/containers/netavark)
* [Aardvark](https://github.com/containers/aardvark-dns)
There are [great resources](https://www.redhat.com/sysadmin/podman-new-network-stack) that explain the backgrounds of both tools and I don't think I could describe it better than the folks implementing it :smile: so if you're interested have a look at the aforementioned article or the [release post](https://podman.io/releases/2022/02/22/podman-release-v4.0.0.html).
## Netavark and libvirt
After reading the announcement I was most curious if I would be able to configure an equivalent setup for Netavark like I described it with Podman 3.x and CNI.
__Short answer:__ yes, it is possible! :tada:
_"But how?!"_ do you ask?
Well it's pretty much equivalent to the previous solution: you need to create a new Podman network I once more named it _'libvirt'_.
To get an idea how the config should look like and where it should placed.
I reused the CLI call from my previous article:
```bash
podman network create \
--disable-dns \
--internal \
--gateway 10.10.2.37 \
--ip-range 10.10.2.160/29 \
--subnet 10.10.2.0/24 \
libvirt
```
The configuration files are now obviously resided in `/etc/containers/networks/` and my (already modified) `libvirt.json` now looks like so:
```json
{
"name": "libvirt",
"id": "0489e6e643b97003c47b27a9ce0a6f6a8dce7d5f08329603e79a0ba48ad5285f",
"driver": "bridge",
"network_interface": "conbr0",
"created": "2022-04-05T09:18:48.198960971+01:00",
"subnets": [
{
"subnet": "10.10.1.0/24",
"gateway": "10.10.1.42",
"lease_range": {
"start_ip": "10.10.1.1",
"end_ip": "10.10.1.10"
}
}
],
"ipv6_enabled": false,
"internal": false,
"dns_enabled": false,
"ipam_options": {
"driver": "host-local"
}
}
```
_Side note: I'm really happy they dropped the `.conflist` extension because this way most editors offer really helpful syntax highlighting in the first place!_
Note that `"internal": false` is mandatory. Otherwise I wasn't able to establish communication between VM and container.
I also disabled the Aardvark {{<abbr short="DNS" full="Domain Name System">}} server and IPv6 support because I don't need it and I also don't expect much benefit of it due to the fact that it can't be aware of the VMs present in the network same as `dnsmasq` won't be able to resolve containers in the libvirt network.
Having this in place I was again able to reuse the CLI command from my previous article:
```bash
podman run \
--rm \
-d \
--name nginx \
--network libvirt \
--ip 10.10.1.151 \
docker.io/nginx:alpine
```
to create a Nginx container that can be reached from a VM.
## Troubleshooting
Sometimes the communication between container and VM fails - don't know if I restarted the libvirt network previously or somehow fucked up the container network configuration but a:
```bash
podman network reload <container ID/container name>
```
often resolved the problem.
## Final thoughts
I haven't used _Netavark_ and _Aardvark_ a lot, yet.
But I already noticed a few **really awesome** things:
- the `docker-compose` support seems to be a lot better now because containers are actually able to talk to each other by _service name_, something I wasn't able to configure properly in Podman 3.x - at least not rootless.
- with _Netavark_ all the Podman configuration is now unified within `/etc/containers` or `$HOME/.config/containers` respectively
- the new configuration format is a little bit cleaner the the previous one due to the fact that _Netavark_ does not support plugins and with a `.json` extension editors do help a lot more without requiring extra "configuration"

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]
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_Disclaimer: I tested all this with Podman 3.x even though Podman 4.0 is already announced but the CNI driver is still available with Podman 4.0 and as soon as I get my hands on 4.0 I'll give **Netavark** a try, too!_
_Disclaimer: I tested all this with Podman 3.x even though Podman 4.0 is already announced but the {{<abbr short="CNI" full="Container Network Interface" >}} driver is still available with Podman 4.0 and as soon as I get my hands on 4.0 I'll give **Netavark** a try, too!_
When playing around with containers and VMs one might ask if it's possible to bring VMs and containers into a common network segment.
When playing around with containers and {{<abbr short="VM" full="Virtual Machine" >}}s one might ask if it's possible to bring VMs and containers into a common network segment.
I see 'why the hell would I need a VM anyway when already having containers' or something similar I almost see on your face :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:
Well 1st of all, not everything can be solved with containers.
@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ For instance windows applications can be run in Windows containers but I'm not a
But also in pure Linux environments there are cases where a VM is probably a better fit for the problem.
As you might know I'm a bit of network :nerd: and I love playing around with 'weird' stuff almost no one else does even think about if not forced to.
So if you try to implement for example your own DHCP server you might want to isolate your experiments (especially at the beginning) to avoid discussion about "why's Netflix on the TV not working?!" :smile: or also if you try to implement your own 'firewall' with DNAT support (stay tuned - post's following!).
So if you try to implement for example your own DHCP server you might want to isolate your experiments (especially at the beginning) to avoid discussion about "why's Netflix on the TV not working?!" :smile: or also if you try to implement your own 'firewall' with {{<abbr short="DNAT" full="Destination network address translation" >}} support (stay tuned - post's following!).
## Part 1: Libvirt preparation

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<abbr title="{{ .Get "full" }}">{{ .Get "short" }}</abbr>