(instances-routed-nic-vm)= # How to add a routed NIC device to a virtual machine When adding a {ref}`routed NIC device ` to an instance, you must configure the instance to use the link-local gateway IPs as default routes. For containers, this is configured for you automatically. For virtual machines, the gateways must be configured manually or via a mechanism like `cloud-init`. To configure the gateways with `cloud-init`, firstly initialize an instance: incus init images:ubuntu/22.04 jammy --vm Then add the routed NIC device: incus config device add jammy eth0 nic nictype=routed parent=my-parent-network ipv4.address=192.0.2.2 ipv6.address=2001:db8::2 In this command, `my-parent-network` is your parent network, and the IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are within the subnet of the parent. Next we will add some `netplan` configuration to the instance using the `cloud-init.network-config` configuration key: cat <` (`169.254.0.1` and `fe80::1`) that are required. For each of these routes we set `on-link` to `true`, which specifies that the route is directly connected to the interface. We also add the addresses that we configured in our routed NIC device. For more information on `netplan`, see [their documentation](https://netplan.readthedocs.io/en/latest/). ```{note} This `netplan` configuration does not include a name server. To enable DNS within the instance, you must set a valid DNS IP address. If there is a `incusbr0` network on the host, the name server can be set to that IP instead. ``` You can then start your instance with: incus start jammy ```{note} Before you start your instance, make sure that you have {ref}`configured the parent network ` to enable proxy ARP/NDP. ```