diff --git a/docs/en-US/reserved-ip-addresses-non-csvms.xml b/docs/en-US/reserved-ip-addresses-non-csvms.xml index 18ba3ca0e42..0f20b634f11 100644 --- a/docs/en-US/reserved-ip-addresses-non-csvms.xml +++ b/docs/en-US/reserved-ip-addresses-non-csvms.xml @@ -28,8 +28,8 @@ of the IP address space that is primarily provided to the guest network. In an Advanced zone, an IP address range or a CIDR is assigned to a network when the network is defined. The &PRODUCT; virtual router acts as the DHCP server and uses CIDR for assigning IP - addresses to the guest VMs. If you decide to reserve IP ranges for non-&PRODUCT; purposes, you - can specify a part of the IP address range or the CIDR that should only be allocated by the DHCP + addresses to the guest VMs. If you decide to reserve CIDR for non-&PRODUCT; purposes, you can + specify a part of the IP address range or the CIDR that should only be allocated by the DHCP service of the virtual router to the guest VMs created in &PRODUCT;. The remaining IPs in that network are called Reserved IP Range. When IP reservation is configured, the administrator can add additional VMs or physical servers that are not part of &PRODUCT; to the same network and @@ -39,6 +39,9 @@ IP Reservation Considerations Consider the following before you reserve an IP range for non-&PRODUCT; machines: + + IP Reservation is supported only in Isolated networks. + IP Reservation can be applied only when the network is in Implemented state.