In 5a3cf85391 the trailing empty line
following the "show ip(v6) route" header was removed. Restore it for
consistency.
Signed-off-by: Duncan Eastoe <duncan.eastoe@att.com>
gcc-10 is complaining:
lib/frrscript.c:42:14: error: cast between incompatible function types from ‘const char * (*)(lua_State *, const char *)’ to ‘void (*)(lua_State *, const void *)’ [-Werror=cast-function-type]
42 | .encoder = (encoder_func)lua_pushstring,
| ^
Wrapper it to make it happy. Not sure what else to do.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
fname is MAXPATHLEN and scriptdir and fs->name are less then
MAXPATHLEN but the combination of those two + the `.lua` are
greater than the MAXPATHLEN. Just give us more room to prevent
a coding boo boo.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
```
exit1-debian-9(config-route-map)# set community
AA:NN Community number in AA:NN format (where AA and NN are (0-65535)) or local-AS|no-advertise|no-export|internet|graceful-shutdown|accept-own-nexthop|accept-own|route-filter-translated-v4|route-filter-v4|route-filter-translated-v6|route-filter-v6|llgr-stale|no-llgr|blackhole|no-peer or additive
none No community attribute
```
Signed-off-by: Donatas Abraitis <donatas.abraitis@gmail.com>
The raw zapi apis to encode and decode NHGs don't need to be
public; also add a little more validity-checking.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
When the routemap code was rewritten for performance the
code to track the number of times a particular section of
a route-map was applied was not correctly updated. In
this case I found another sequence of events where the
number of times a section was invoked was not being correctly
kept.
Effectively in this case when route_map_get_index is called
and returns an index the route map has been applied( see that
skip_match_clause is set to true and then in the for loop
below the skip_match_clause is tested and index->applied is
incremented.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
The re->flags and re->status in debugs were being dumped as hex values.
I can never quickly decode this. Here is an idea. Let's let FRR do
it for me.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Add an API that allows IGP client daemons to register/unregister
RLFAs with ldpd.
IGP daemons need to be able to query the LDP labels needed by RLFAs
and monitor label updates that might affect those RLFAs. This is
similar to the NHT mechanism used by bgpd to resolve and monitor
recursive nexthops.
This API is based on the following ZAPI opaque messages:
* LDP_RLFA_REGISTER: used by IGP daemons to register an RLFA with ldpd.
* LDP_RLFA_UNREGISTER_ALL: used by IGP daemons to unregister all of
their RLFAs with ldpd.
* LDP_RLFA_LABELS: used by ldpd to send RLFA labels to the registered
clients.
For each RLFA, ldpd needs to return the following labels:
* Outer label(s): the labels advertised by the adjacent routers to
reach the PQ node;
* Inner label: the label advertised by the PQ node to reach the RLFA
destination.
For the inner label, ldpd automatically establishes a targeted
neighborship with the PQ node if one doesn't already exist. For that
to work, the PQ node needs to be configured to accept targeted hello
messages. If that doesn't happen, ldpd doesn't send a response to
the IGP client daemon which in turn won't be able to activate the
previously computed RLFA.
Signed-off-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
Define new models for Link State Database a.k.a TED
and functions to manipulate the new database as well as exchange Link State
information through ZAPI Opaque message.
Signed-off-by: Olivier Dugeon <olivier.dugeon@orange.com>
There exists a possibilty that route map dependencies
have gotten wrong. Prevent the crash and warn the user
that we may be in trouble.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Route-maps contain a hash of hash's that contain the
container type name ( say community or access list or whatever )
and then it has a hash of route-maps that this maps too
Suppose you have this:
!
frr version 7.3.1
frr defaults traditional
hostname eva
log stdout
!
debug route-map
!
router bgp 239
neighbor 192.168.161.2 remote-as external
!
address-family ipv4 unicast
neighbor 192.168.161.2 route-map foo in
exit-address-family
!
bgp community-list standard 7000:40002 permit 7000:40002
bgp community-list standard 7000:40002 permit 7000:40003
!
route-map foo deny 20
match community 7000:40002
!
route-map foo permit 10
!
line vty
!
end
You have a community hash which has an
7000:40002 entry
This entry has a hash of routemaps that are referencing it. In this above
example it would have `foo` as the single entry.
Given the above config if you do this:
eva# conf
eva(config)# route-map foo deny 20
eva(config-route-map)# match community 7000:4003
eva(config-route-map)#
We would expect the `7000:40002` community hash to no longer have
a reference to the `foo` routemap. Instead we see the code doing this:
2020/12/18 13:47:12 BGP: bgpd 7.3.1 starting: vty@2605, bgp@<all>:179
2020/12/18 13:47:47 BGP: Add route-map foo
2020/12/18 13:47:47 BGP: Route-map foo add sequence 10, type: permit
2020/12/18 13:47:57 BGP: Route-map foo add sequence 20, type: deny
2020/12/18 13:48:05 BGP: Adding dependency for filter 7000:40002 in route-map foo
2020/12/18 13:48:05 BGP: route_map_print_dependency: Dependency for 7000:40002: foo
2020/12/18 13:48:41 BGP: bgp_update_receive: rcvd End-of-RIB for IPv4 Unicast from 192.168.161.2 in vrf default
2020/12/18 13:49:19 BGP: Deleting dependency for filter 7000:4003 in route-map foo
2020/12/18 13:49:19 BGP: Adding dependency for filter 7000:4003 in route-map foo
2020/12/18 13:49:19 BGP: route_map_print_dependency: Dependency for 7000:4003: foo
Note how the code attempts to remove the dependency for `7000:4003` instead of the
dependency for `7000:40002`. Then we create a new hash for `7000:4003` and then
install the routemap name in it.
This is wrong. We should remove the `7000:40002` dependency and then install
a dependency for `7000:4003`.
Fix the code to do the right thing.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
This new dynamic module makes pathd behave as a PCC for dynamic candidate path
using the external library pcpelib https://github.com/volta-networks/pceplib .
The candidate paths defined as dynamic will trigger computation requests to the
configured PCE, and the PCE response will be used to update the policy.
It supports multiple PCE. The one with smaller precedence will be elected
as the master PCE, and only if the connection repeatedly fails, the PCC will
switch to another PCE.
Example of configuration:
segment-routing
traffic-eng
pcep
pce-config CONF
source-address ip 10.10.10.10
sr-draft07
!
pce PCE1
config CONF
address ip 1.1.1.1
!
pce PCE2
config CONF
address ip 2.2.2.2
!
pcc
peer PCE1 precedence 10
peer PCE2 precedence 20
!
!
!
!
Co-authored-by: Brady Johnson <brady@voltanet.io>
Co-authored-by: Emanuele Di Pascale <emanuele@voltanet.io>
Co-authored-by: GalaxyGorilla <sascha@netdef.org>
Co-authored-by: Javier Garcia <javier.garcia@voltanet.io>
Co-authored-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
Co-authored-by: Sebastien Merle <sebastien@netdef.org>
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Merle <sebastien@netdef.org>
This new daemon manages Segment-Routing Traffic-Engineering
(SR-TE) Policies and installs them into zebra. It provides
the usual yang support and vtysh commands to define or change
SR-TE Policies.
In a nutshell SR-TE Policies provide the possibility to steer
traffic through a (possibly dynamic) list of Segment Routing
segments to the endpoint of the policy. This list of segments
is part of a Candidate Path which again belongs to the SR-TE
Policy. SR-TE Policies are uniquely identified by their color
and endpoint. The color can be used to e.g. match BGP
communities on incoming traffic.
There can be multiple Candidate Paths for a single
policy, the active Candidate Path is chosen according to
certain conditions of which the most important is its
preference. Candidate Paths can be explicit (fixed list of
segments) or dynamic (list of segment comes from e.g. PCEP, see
below).
Configuration example:
segment-routing
traffic-eng
segment-list SL
index 10 mpls label 1111
index 20 mpls label 2222
!
policy color 4 endpoint 10.10.10.4
name POL4
binding-sid 104
candidate-path preference 100 name exp explicit segment-list SL
candidate-path preference 200 name dyn dynamic
!
!
!
There is an important connection between dynamic Candidate
Paths and the overall topic of Path Computation. Later on for
pathd a dynamic module will be introduced that is capable
of communicating via the PCEP protocol with a PCE (Path
Computation Element) which again is capable of calculating
paths according to its local TED (Traffic Engineering Database).
This dynamic module will be able to inject the mentioned
dynamic Candidate Paths into pathd based on calculated paths
from a PCE.
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-spring-segment-routing-policy-06
Co-authored-by: Sebastien Merle <sebastien@netdef.org>
Co-authored-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
Co-authored-by: GalaxyGorilla <sascha@netdef.org>
Co-authored-by: Emanuele Di Pascale <emanuele@voltanet.io>
Signed-off-by: Sebastien Merle <sebastien@netdef.org>
Currently when nhrp shortcuts are purged they will not be recreated. This
patch fixes that by ensuring the shortcut routes get purged correctly.
This situation can be reproduced by first allowing a shortcut to be created
then clearing the shortcut:
clear ip nhrp cache
clear ip nhrp shortcuts
Signed-off-by: Reuben Dowle <reuben.dowle@4rf.com>
There exists a world where some people have put `end` in their
configuration. Then vtysh will command search for it and find
it and then bad things happen.
Ticket: CM-32665
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Removing the obsolete ldp-sync periodic 'hello' message.
When ldp-sync is configured, IGPs take action if the LDP process goes down.
The IGPs have been updated to use the zapi client close callback to detect
the LDP process going down.
Signed-off-by: Karen Schoener <karen@voltanet.io>
Add a bit of code that allows for opaque data to be
sent from an upper level protocol to zebra. This is just
pass through data that will be used as part of displaying
useful data about a route in a `show ip route` command
in future commits.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Keep the previous CLI behavior of silently ignoring access lists which
contain the same value.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Don't allow users to create multiple entries in the same list with the
same value to keep the behavior previously to northbound migration.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Keep the previous CLI behavior of silently ignoring access lists which
contain the same value.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Don't allow users to create multiple rules in the same list with the
same value to keep the behavior previously to northbound migration.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Currently, IGPs are coded to receive a 'hello' message from LDP every second.
Intermittently, LDP Sync topotests are failing because the IGPs fail to
receive this 'hello' message every second.
When the LDP Sync topotests fail, LDP logs show that LDP is processing
zapi messages for 1-2 seconds.
This is a shortterm fix, in order to prevent CI pipeline failures.
The longterm fix is in progress.
Signed-off-by: Karen Schoener <karen@voltanet.io>
Specify default via --with-scriptdir at compile time, override default
with --scriptdir at runtime. If unspecified, it's {sysconfdir}/scripts
(usually /etc/frr/scripts)
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
This implements the ability to get results out from lua scripts after
they've run.
For each C type we support passing to Lua, there is a corresponding
`struct frrscript_codec`. This struct contains a typename field - just a
string identifying the type - and two function pointers. The first
function pointer, encode, takes a lua_State and a pointer to the C value
and pushes some corresponding Lua representation onto the stack. The
second, decode, assumes there is some Lua value on the stack and decodes
it into the corresponding C value.
Each supported type's `struct frrscript_codec` is registered with the
scripting stuff in the library, which creates a mapping between the type
name (string) and the `struct frrscript_codec`. When calling a script,
you specify arguments by passing an array of `struct frrscript_env`.
Each of these structs has a void *, a type name, and a desired binding
name. The type names are used to look up the appropriate function to
encode the pointed-at value onto the Lua stack, then bind the pushed
value to the provided binding name, so that the converted value is
accessible by that name within the script.
Results work in a similar way. After a script runs, call
frrscript_get_result() with the script and a `struct frrscript_env`.
The typename and name fields are used to fetch the Lua value from the
script's environment and use the registered decoder for the typename to
convert the Lua value back into a C value, which is returned from the
function. The caller is responsible for freeing these.
frrscript_call()'s macro foo has been stripped, as the underlying
function now takes fixed arrays. varargs have awful performance
characteristics, they're hard to read, and structs are more defined than
an order sensitive list.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
None of the core lua_push* functions return anything, and it helps to
not have to wrap those when using them as function pointers for our
encoder system, so change the type of our custom encoders to return void
as well.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
Add:
- log.warn()
- log.error()
- log.notice()
- log.info()
- log.debug()
to the global namespace for each script
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
Update the two test functions that encode a prefix and an interface to
match the encoder_func signature expected by the scripting infra.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
Rather than let Luaisms propagate from the start, this is some generic
wrapper stuff that defines some semantics for interacting with scripts
that aren't specific to the underlying language.
The concept I have in mind for FRR's idea of a script is:
- has a name
- has some inputs, which have types
- has some outputs, which have types
I don't want to even say they have to be files; maybe we can embed
scripts in frr.conf, for example. Similarly the types of inputs and
outputs are probably going to end up being some language-specific setup.
For now, we will stick to this simple model, but the plan is to add full
object support (ie calling back into C).
This shouldn't be misconstrued as prepping for multilingual scripting
support, which is a bad idea for the following reasons:
- Each language would require different FFI methods, and specifically
different object encoders; a lot of code
- Languages have different capabilities that would have to be brought to
parity with each other; a lot of work
- Languages have *vastly* different performance characteristics; bad
impressions, lots of issues we can't do anything about
- Each language would need a dedicated maintainer for the above reasons;
pragmatically difficult
- Supporting multiple languages fractures the community and limits the
audience with which a given script can be shared
The only pro for multilingual support would be ease of use for users not
familiar with Lua but familiar with one of the other supported
languages. This is not enough to outweigh the cons.
In order to get rich scripting capabilities, we need to be able to pass
representations of internal objects to the scripts. For example, a
script that performs some computation based on information about a peer
needs access to some equivalent of `struct peer` for the peer in
question. To transfer these objects from C-space into Lua-space we need
to encode them onto the Lua stack. This patch adds a mapping from
arbitrary type names to the functions that encode objects of that type.
For example, the function that encodes `struct peer` into a Lua table
could be registered with:
bgp_peer_encoder_func(struct frrscript *fs, struct peer *peer)
{
// encode peer to Lua table, push to stack in fs->scriptinfo->L
}
frrscript_register_type_encoder("peer", bgp_peer_encoder_func);
Later on when calling a script that wants a peer, the plan is to be able
to specify the type name like so:
frrscript_call(script, "peer", peer);
Using C-style types for the type names would have been nice, it might be
possible to do this with preprocessor magic or possibly python
preprocessing later on.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
mergeme no stdlib
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
This was toy code used for testing purposes. Code calling Lua should be
very explicit about what is loaded into the Lua state. Also, the
allocator used is exactly the same allocator used by default w/
luaL_newstate().
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@cumulusnetworks.com>
Add a function that will export FRR's logging functions into a Lua
table, and add that table to the table of your choice (usually _ENV).
For instance, to add logging to the global environment:
lua_gettable(L, LUA_REGISTRYINDEX);
lua_gettable(L, LUA_RIDX_GLOBALS);
frrlua_export_logging(L);
Then the following functions are globally accessible to any Lua scripts
running with state L:
- log.debug()
- log.info()
- log.notice()
- log.warn()
- log.error()
These are bound to zlog_debug, zlog_info, etc. They only take one string
argument for now but this shouldn't be an issue given Lua's builtin
facilities for formatting strings.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@cumulusnetworks.com>
* Use frrlua_* prefix to differentiate from Lua builtins
* Allow frrlua_initialize to pass an empty script
* Fixup naming of table accessors
* Fixup naming of prefix -> table encoder
* Fixup BGP routemap code to new function names
* Fix includes for frrlua.h
* Clean up doc comments
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@cumulusnetworks.com>
As code comment states, 1 count of MTYPE_COMPLETION is leaked for each
autocompleted token. Let's manually decrement the counter before passing
the pointer to readline.
Signed-off-by: Igor Ryzhov <iryzhov@nfware.com>
The function was originally implemented for zebra data plane FPM plugin,
but another code places could use it.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
start_config and end_config are already used as function names in DEFUN,
so the current naming is a little bit confusing. Let's use different
names for arguments.
Signed-off-by: Igor Ryzhov <iryzhov@nfware.com>
Add a startup-time option to limit the number of fds used
by the thread/event infrastructure. If nothing is configured,
the system ulimit is used.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
The return from sockunion2hostprefix tells us if the conversion
succeeded or not. There are places in the code where we
always assume that it just `works`, since it can fail
notice and try to do the right thing.
Please note that failure of this function for most cases
of sockunion2hostprefix is highly highly unlikely as that
the sockunion was already created and tested elsewhere
it's just that this function can fail.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Modify the code to change from zlog_debug to zlog_err.
vtysh was not outputting the vtysh doc string issues
after a change a couple of months back. By changing
to error level we start seeing them on vtysh start up
again. This will allow us to catch these issues
in the CI runs again.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
When a FRR process dies due to SIGILL/SIGABORT/etc attempt
to drain the log buffer. This code change is capturing
some missing logs that were not part of the log file on
a crash.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
The `enum zclient_send_status` enum needs to be extended
throughout the code base to use the new states and
to fix up places where we tested against the return
value being non zero.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Add a `enum zclient_send_status` for appropriate handling
of return codes from zclient_send_message. Touch all the places
where we handle this.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
When FRR sends data over the ZAPI protocol from the upper levels to zebra, indicate
to the calling functions that we have started buffering data to be sent if the
socket is full underneath it.
Also add a call back function `zebra_buffer_write_ready` that we can call
when an upper level protocol's socket buffer has been drained.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
The linux kernel is getting RTM_F_OFFLOAD_FAILED for kernel routes
that have failed to offload. Write the code
to receive these notifications from the linux kernel
and store that data for display about the routes.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
Move the FOREACH_AFI_SAFI macro from bgpd.h to zebra.h( GLOBAL's YOUALL )
Then convert all the places that have the two level for loop to
iterate over all afi/safis
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
The route_map_object_t was being used to track what protocol we were
being called against. But each protocol was only ever calling itself.
So we had a variable that was only ever being passed in from route_map_apply
that had to be carried against and everyone was testing if that variable
was for their own stack.
Clean up this route_map_object_t from the entire system. We should
speed some stuff up. Yes I know not a bunch but this will add up.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
As part of normal processing we allow bgp commands to walk
up the command node chain. We are experiencing this crash:
Thread 1 "bgpd" received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
__GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:50
50 ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c: No such file or directory.
(gdb) bt
assertion=0x7ffff7f3ba4f "set", file=0x7ffff7f3ba44 "lib/yang.c", line=413, function=<optimized out>)
at assert.c:92
line=413, function=0x7ffff7f3bc50 <__PRETTY_FUNCTION__.9> "yang_dnode_get") at assert.c:101
vty=0x5555561715a0, argc=3, argv=0x555558601620) at bgpd/bgp_vty.c:9568
cmd=0x0) at lib/command.c:937
at lib/command.c:997
matched=0x0, vtysh=0) at lib/command.c:1161
at lib/vty.c:517
(gdb)
9582 bgp_glb_dnode = yang_dnode_get(vty->candidate_config->dnode,
(gdb) p vty->xpath
$8 = {
"/frr-routing:routing/control-plane-protocols/control-plane-protocol[type='frr-bgp:bgp'][name='bgp'][vrf='default']/frr-bgp:bgp", '\000' <repeats 897 times>, '\000' <repeats 1023 times>, '\000' <repeats 1023 times>,
'\000' <repeats 1023 times>, '\000' <repeats 1023 times>, '\000' <repeats 1023 times>, '\000' <repeats 1023 times>,
'\000' <repeats 1023 times>}
(gdb) p vty->xpath_index
$9 = 0
(gdb)
We are effectively sending in an array index based upon vty->xpath_index( which is zero) but
the VTY_CURR_XPATH macro subtracts 1 from that value to find the appropriate xpath to use.
This of course subtracts 1 from 0 and we underflow the array.
The relevant section in a config file is this:
address-family ipv6 flowspec
bgp maxim...
Effectively we were trying to walk up the command chain for flowspec to see
if the command is entered correctly. There is a function vty_check_node_for_xpath_decrement
that was looking at bgp sub-modes to make the decision to allow us to decrement
the vty->xpath_index which did not have the v4 or v6 flowspec bgp sub modes in the
check.
Adding them in fixes the problem.
Signed-off-by: Donald Sharp <sharpd@nvidia.com>
calling "skiplist test" and then "skiplist debug",
there was a crash due to a freed pointer.
Agreed to remove static pointer (see PR #7474).
Signed-off-by: Emanuele Bovisio <emanuele.bovisio@eolo.it>
When a BFD integrated session already exists setting the profile
doesn't cause a session update (or vice versa): fix this issue by
handling the other cases.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Let the integration protocol always send the full configuration
instead of saving a few bytes. It will also allow protocols to specify
source address for IPv4 single hop connections and interface for multi
hop configuration.
Signed-off-by: Rafael Zalamena <rzalamena@opensourcerouting.org>
Issue:
The bgp routes learnt from peers which are not installed in kernel are
advertised to peers. This can cause routers to send traffic to these
destinations only to get dropped. The fix is to provide a configurable
option "bgp suppress-fib-pending". When the option is enabled, bgp will
advertise routes only if it these are successfully installed in kernel.
Fix (Part1) :
* Added message ZEBRA_ROUTE_NOTIFY_REQUEST used by client to request
FIB install status for routes
* Added AFI/SAFI to ZAPI messages
* Modified the functions zapi_route_notify_decode(), zsend_route_notify_owner()
and route_notify_internal() to include AFI, SAFI as parameters
Signed-off-by: kssoman <somanks@gmail.com>
gcc 10 complains about some of our format specs, fix them. Use
atomic size_t in thread stats, to work around platform
differences.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
Manage the main pthread's signal mask to avoid a signal-handling
race. Before entering poll, check for pending signals that the
application needs to handle. Use ppoll() to re-enable those
signals during the poll call.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
Add an api that blocks application-handled signals (SIGINT,
SIGTERM, e.g.) then tests whether any signals have been received.
This helps to manage a race between signal reception and the poll
call in the main event loop.
Signed-off-by: Mark Stapp <mjs@voltanet.io>
json_array_string_add is used to add a string entry into a JSON
list. This API is needed by zebra so moving it from bgpd to lib.
Signed-off-by: Anuradha Karuppiah <anuradhak@cumulusnetworks.com>
DF (Designated forwarder) election is used for picking a single
BUM-traffic forwarded per-ES. RFC7432 specifies a mechanism called
service carving for DF election. However that mechanism has many
disadvantages -
1. LBs poorly.
2. Doesn't allow for a controlled failover needed in upgrade
scenarios.
3. Not easy to hw accelerate.
To fix the poor performance of service carving alternate DF mechanisms
have been proposed via the following drafts -
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-df-election-framework
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-pref-df
This commit adds support for the pref-df election mechanism which
is used as the default. Other mechanisms including service-carving
may be added later.
In this mechanism one switch on an ES is elected as DF based on the
preference value; higher preference wins with IP address acting
as the tie-breaker (lower-IP wins if pref value is the same).
Sample output
=============
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
torm-11# sh bgp l2vpn evpn es 03:00:00:00:00:01:11:00:00:01
ESI: 03:00:00:00:00:01:11:00:00:01
Type: LR
RD: 27.0.0.15:6
Originator-IP: 27.0.0.15
Local ES DF preference: 100
VNI Count: 10
Remote VNI Count: 10
Inconsistent VNI VTEP Count: 0
Inconsistencies: -
VTEPs:
27.0.0.16 flags: EA df_alg: preference df_pref: 32767
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
torm-11# sh bgp l2vpn evpn route esi 03:00:00:00:00:01:11:00:00:01
*> [4]:[03:00:00:00:00:01:11:00:00:01]:[32]:[27.0.0.15]
27.0.0.15 32768 i
ET:8 ES-Import-Rt:00:00:00:00:01:11 DF: (alg: 2, pref: 100)
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Signed-off-by: Anuradha Karuppiah <anuradhak@cumulusnetworks.com>
In transactional cli mode, bgp address-family <afi> <afi>
node builds xpath on top of `router bgp` node's xpath.
When `exit` is applied under afi-safi commands, retain
xpath_index to 1 to keep using bgp global xpath.
Signed-off-by: Chirag Shah <chirag@nvidia.com>
Make it possible to load YANG modules outside the main northbound
initialization. The primary use case is to support YANG modules
that are specific to an FRR plugin. Example: only load the PCEP
YANG module when the corresponding FRR plugin is loaded. Other use
cases might arise in the future.
Signed-off-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
Combine yang_snodes_iterate_module() and yang_snodes_iterate_all()
into an unified yang_snodes_iterate() function, where the first
"module" parameter is optional. There's no point in having two
separate YANG schema iteration functions anymore now that they are
too similar.
Signed-off-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
The only safe way to iterate over all schema nodes of a given YANG
module is by iterating over all schema nodes of all YANG modules
and filter out the nodes that belong to other modules.
The original yang_snodes_iterate_module() code did the following:
1 - Iterate over all top-level schema nodes of the given module;
2 - Iterate over all augmentations of the given module.
While that iteration strategy is more efficient, it does't handle
well more complex YANG hierarchies containing nested augmentations
or self-augmenting modules. Any iteration that isn't done on the
resolved YANG data hierarchy is fragile and prone to errors.
Fixes regression introduced by commit 8a923b4851 where the
gen_northbound_callbacks tool was generating duplicate callbacks
for certain modules.
Signed-off-by: Renato Westphal <renato@opensourcerouting.org>
- tracepoint() -> frrtrace()
- tracelog() -> frrtracelog()
- tracepoint_enabled() -> frrtrace_enabled()
Also removes copypasta'd #ifdefs for those LTTng macros, those are
handled in lib/trace.h
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
Previous commits added LTTng tracepoints. This was primarily for testing
/ trial purposes; in practice we'd like to support arbitrary tracing
methods, and especially USDT probes, which SystemTap and dtrace expect,
and which are supported on at least one flavor of BSD (FreeBSD).
To that end this patch adds an frr-specific tracing macro, frrtrace(),
which proxies into either DTRACE_PROBEn() or tracepoint() macros
depending on whether --enable-usdt or --enable-lttng is passed at
compile time.
At some point this could be tweaked to allow compiling in both types of
probes. Ideally there should be some logic there to use LTTng's optional
support for generating USDT probes when both are requested.
No additional libraries are required to use USDT, since these probes are
a kernel feature and only need the <sys/sdt.h> header.
- add --enable-usdt to toggle use of LTTng tracepoints or USDT probes
- add new trace.h library header for use with tracepoint definition
headers
- add frrtrace() wrapper macro; this should be used to define
tracepoints instead of using tracepoint() or DTRACE_PROBEn()
Compilation with USDT does nothing as of this commit; the existing LTTng
tracepoints need to be converted to use the frrtrace*() macros in a
subsequent commit.
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>
hash_get is used for both lookup and insert; add a tracepoint for when
we insert something into the hash
Signed-off-by: Quentin Young <qlyoung@nvidia.com>