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diff --git a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/barnacles.rst b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/barnacles.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..b5b89a34b36 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/barnacles.rst @@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ +.. _barnacles: + +Barnacles +--------- + +Features that are stuck on the side of the FIB. Those that directly use +the services that the FIB provides. + +In the section on FIB fundamentals it was mentioned that there is a +separation between what to match and how to forward. In an IP FIB what +to match is the packet's destination address against a table of IP +prefixes, and how to forward is described by a list of paths (the +**fib_path_list_t**). + +ACL Based Forwarding +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +ACL Based Forwarding (ABF) is also know as policy based routing +(PBR). In ABF what to match is described by an ACL. + +ABF uses two VPP services; ACL as a service, as provided by the ACL +plugin and FIB path-lists. It just glues them together. + +An ABF policy is the combination of an ACL with the forwarding +description of a FIB path-list. An ABF attachment is the association +of [an ordered set of] ABF policies to an interface. The attachment is +consulted on the ingress path of the IP DP (as an input +feature). If the ACL matches then the associated forwarding is +followed, if not, the packet continues along the DP. Simples. + +Layer 3 Cross Connect +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +An L3 cross-connect (L3XC) matches all packets +that ingress the interface and then forwards using the supplied FIB +path-list. Naturally it runs as an input feature in the IP +path. Super simples. + +IP Punt +^^^^^^^ + +Matches all IP packets that VPP has punted. Why they are punted is not +relevant. All IP punted packets are sent by VPP to the punt feature +arc. This feature 'matches' all packets that it receives and forwards +using the FIB path-list. + + +Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Unicast Reverse Path Forwarding (uRPF) is the process of ensuring that +a packet has a conforming source address. It comes in two +flavours: + +- loose: The source address must be reachable, i.e. FIB must have a + route that will forward to the source address. The default route + counts as long as it does not drop. +- strict: The source address is reachable via the interface on which + the packet arrived, i.e. the FIB's route for the source address must + include the input interface as an output interface. + +The uRPF feature can run on either the input or output IP feature +arc. In both cases it serves as an anti-spoofing check, though the +semantics are slightly different. On the input arc it enforces that +peers on that link are only using source addresses that they should - +a network admin should employ at the access edge. On the output +arc it enforces that a packet is sourced from a prefix that belongs to +the network, i.e. that is has originated from within an SP's +network, a network admin could use at its peering points. + +To perform a uRPF check, the DP performs an IP FIB lookup on the +source address, this always results in a load-balance (LB) object. If +the LB has only 1 bucket and that bucket stacks on a drop DPO, then +both a loose and strict check will fail, otherwise a loose check +will pass. Each LB object has an associated uRPF list object. This +object holds the list of interfaces through which the prefix is +reachable. To pass the strict check, the input/output interface must +be in this list. |