Configuring an Additional IP

Knowledge Base

Configuring an Additional IP


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Objective

This article is about Additional IPv4 configuration on a public interface. You can also configure IPv6 addresses on your Public Cloud instances using this guide.

Additional IP addresses can also be configured in a vRack (private network), which allows interconnection over a wide range of OVHcloud services, offering more flexibility.

You can find more information about configuring Additional IP addresses in a vRack for usage with Public Cloud instances in the following guides:

You may need to configure Additional IP addresses on your instances, for example if you are hosting multiple websites or international services. OVHcloud Additional IPs allow you to associate multiple IP addresses with a single network interface.

This guide explains how to add Additional IP addresses to your network configuration.

OVHcloud is providing you with services for which you are responsible, with regard to their configuration and management. You are therefore responsible for ensuring they function correctly.

This guide is designed to assist you in common tasks as much as possible. Nevertheless, we recommend that you contact a specialist service provider if you have difficulties or doubts concerning the administration, usage or implementation of services on a server.

Requirements

Instructions


OVHcloud Control Panel Access


The following sections contain the configurations for the most commonly used distributions/operating systems. The first step is always to log in to your instance via SSH or a GUI login session (VNC for a Windows instance). The examples below presume you are logged in as a user with elevated permissions (Administrator/sudo).

Concerning different distribution releases, the procedure to configure your network interface and the file names may have changed. We recommend consulting the manuals and knowledge resources of the respective OS versions if you experience any issues.

The following terminology is used in code examples and instructions below:

TermDescriptionExamples
ADDITIONAL_IPAn Additional IP address assigned to your service169.254.10.254
NETWORK_INTERFACEThe name of the network interfaceeth0, ens3
IDID of the IP alias, starting with 0 (depending on the number of additional IPs there are to configure)0, 1

When configuring an Additional IP on a Public Cloud instance, you do not need a gateway and subnet mask.

Select the tab corresponding to your operating system.

Debian 11

Step 1: Disable automatic network configuration

Open the following file path with a text editor:

sudo nano /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg.d/99-disable-network-config.cfg

Enter the following line, then save and exit the editor.

network: {config: disabled}

Creating this configuration file will prevent changes to your network configuration from being made automatically.

Step 2: Edit the network configuration file

You can verify your network interface name with this command:

ip a

Open the network configuration file for editing with the following command:

sudo nano /etc/network/interfaces.d/50-cloud-init

Then add the following lines:

auto NETWORK_INTERFACE:ID
iface NETWORK_INTERFACE:ID inet static
address ADDITIONAL_IP
netmask 255.255.255.255

Step 3: Restart the interface

Apply the changes with the following command:

sudo systemctl restart networking

Debian 12, Ubuntu 22.04 and following

The configuration file for your Additional IP addresses is located in /etc/netplan/. In this example it is called "50-cloud-init.yaml". Before making changes, verify the actual file name in this folder. Each Additional IP address will need its own line within the file.

Step 1: Disable automatic network configuration

Open the following file path with a text editor:

sudo nano /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg.d/99-disable-network-config.cfg

Enter the following line, then save and exit the editor.

network: {config: disabled}

Creating this configuration file will prevent changes to your network configuration from being made automatically.

Step 2: Edit the configuration file

You can verify your network interface name with this command:

ip a

Open the network configuration file for editing with the following command:

sudo nano /etc/netplan/50-cloud-init.yaml

Do not change the existing lines in the file; add your Additional IP address according to the example below:

network:
    version: 2
    ethernets:
        NETWORK_INTERFACE:
            dhcp4: true
            match:
                macaddress: fa:xx:xx:xx:xx:63
            set-name: NETWORK_INTERFACE
            addresses:
            - ADDITIONAL_IP/32

It is important to respect the alignment of each element in this file as represented in the example above. Do not use the tab key to create your spacing.

Save and close the file.

Step 3: Apply the new network configuration

You can test your configuration using this command:

sudo netplan try

If it is correct, apply it using the following command:

sudo netplan apply

Repeat this procedure for each Additional IP address.

AlmaLinux (8/9) / Rocky Linux (8/9) / CloudLinux (8/9)

Step 1: Edit the network configuration file

You can verify your network interface name with this command:

ip a

Open the network configuration file for editing:

sudo nano /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-NETWORK_INTERFACE:ID

Then add these lines:

DEVICE=NETWORK_INTERFACE:ID
BOOTPROTO=static
IPADDR=ADDITIONAL_IP
NETMASK=255.255.255.255
BROADCAST=ADDITIONAL_IP
ONBOOT=yes

Step 2: Restart the interface

Apply the changes with the following command:

sudo systemctl restart networking

Fedora, AlmaLinux 10 & Rocky Linux 10

These systems use keyfiles. NetworkManager previously stored network profiles in ifcfg format in this directory: /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/. However, the ifcfg format is now deprecated. By default, NetworkManager no longer creates new profiles in this format. The configuration file is now found in /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/.

Step 1: Edit the config file

Please note that the name of the network file in our example may differ from yours. Please adapt the commands to your file name.

sudo nano /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/cloud-init-eno1.nmconnection

Do not modify the existing lines in the configuration file, add your Additional IP to the file as follows, replacing ADDITIONAL_IP/32 with your own values:

[ipv4]
method=auto
may-fail=false
address1=ADDITIONAL_IP/32

If you have two Additional IPs to configure, the configuration should look like this:

[ipv4]
method=auto
may-fail=false
address1=ADDITIONAL_IP1/32
address2=ADDITIONAL_IP2/32

Step 2: Restart the interface

Restart your interface:

sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager

Plesk

Step 1: Access the Plesk IP management section

In the Plesk control panel, choose Tools & Settings from the left-hand sidebar.

access to the IP addresses management

Click on IP Addresses under Tools & Resources.

Step 2: Add the additional IP information

In this section, click on the button Add IP Address.

add ip information

Enter your Additional IP in the form xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx/32 into the field "IP address and subnet mask", then click on OK.

add ip information

Step 3: Check the current IP configuration

Back in the section "IP Addresses", verify that the Additional IP address was added correctly.

current IP configuration

Windows Server

In your Public Cloud project, open Instances in the left-hand menu and click on the name of your instance. Navigate to the VNC Console tab.

Step 1: Verify the network configuration

Right-click on the Start Menu button and open Run.

Type cmd and click OK to open the command line application.

cmdprompt

To retrieve the current IP configuration, enter ipconfig at the command prompt.

check main IP configuration

Step 2: Change the IPv4 Properties

Change the IP properties to a static configuration.

Open the adapter settings in the Windows control panel and then open the Properties of Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4).

change the ip configuration

In the IPv4 Properties window, select Use the following IP address. Enter the IP address which you have retrieved in the first step, then click on Advanced.

Step 3: Add the Additional IP in the "Advanced TCP/IP Settings"

In the new window, click on Add... under "IP addresses". Enter your Additional IP address and the subnet mask (255.255.255.255).

advanced configuration section

Confirm by clicking on Add.

Additional IP configuration

Step 4: Restart the network interface

Back in the control panel (Network Connections), right-click on your network interface and then select Disable.

disabling network

To restart it, right-click on it again and then select Enable.

enabling network

Step 5: Check the new network configuration

Open the command prompt (cmd) and enter ipconfig. The configuration should now include the new Additional IP address.

check current network configuration

Troubleshooting

First, soft-reboot your instance via the instance's OS or from the OVHcloud Control Panel. If you are still unable to connect to your Additional IP from the public network and suspect a network problem, reboot the instance in rescue mode. Then you can set up the Additional IP address directly on the instance.

Once you are connected in rescue mode via SSH, enter the following command:

ifconfig ens3:0 ADDITIONAL_IP netmask 255.255.255.255 broadcast ADDITIONAL_IP up

To test the connection, simply ping your Additional IP from the outside. If it responds in rescue mode, that probably means that there is a configuration error. If, however, the IP is still not working, please inform our support teams by creating a support request in your OVHcloud Control Panel for further investigations.

Go further

Importing an Additional IP

Migrating an Additional IP

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