Virtual machine interfaces behave similarly to device interfaces: They can be assigned to VRFs, may have IP addresses, VLANs, and services attached to them, and so on. However, given their virtual nature, they lack properties pertaining to physical attributes. For example, VM interfaces do not have a physical type and cannot have cables attached to them.
The virtual machine to which this interface is assigned.
The interface's name. Must be unique to the assigned VM.
Identifies the parent interface of a subinterface (e.g. used to employ encapsulation).
An interface on the same VM with which this interface is bridged.
If not selected, this interface will be treated as disabled/inoperative.
The 48-bit MAC address (for Ethernet interfaces).
The interface's configured maximum transmissible unit (MTU).
For switched Ethernet interfaces, this identifies the 802.1Q encapsulation strategy in effect. Options include:
This field must be left blank for routed interfaces which do employ 802.1Q encapsulation.
The "native" (untagged) VLAN for the interface. Valid only when one of the above 802.1Q mode is selected.
The tagged VLANs which are configured to be carried by this interface. Valid only for the "tagged" 802.1Q mode above.
The virtual routing and forwarding instance to which this interface is assigned.