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-.. _neighbors:
-
-Neighbours
-^^^^^^^^^^^
-
-.. figure:: /_images/ip-neighbor.png
-
-Figure 1: Neighbour data model
-
-Figure 1 shows the data model for IP neighbours. An IP neighbour contains the mapping
-between a peer, identified by an IPv4 or IPv6 address, and its MAC address on a given
-interface. An IP-table (VRF) is not part of the neighbour's
-data/identity. This is because the virtualisation of a router into
-different tables (VRFs) is performed at the interface level, i.e. an
-IP-table is bound to a particular interface. A neighbour, which is
-attached to an interface, is thus implicitly in that table, and
-only in that table. It is also worth noting that IP neighbours
-contribute forwarding for the egress direction, whereas an IP-table
-is an ingress only function.
-
-The *ip_neighbor_t* represents the control-plane addition of the
-neighbour. The *ip_adjacency_t* contains the data derived from the *ip_neighbor_t* that is needed to
-forward packets to the peer. The additional data in the adjacency are the *rewrite*
-and the *link_type*. The *link_type* is a description of the protocol of the packets
-that will be forwarded with this adjacency; e.g. IPv4, IPv6 or MPLS. The *link_type*
-maps directly to the ether-type in an Ethernet header, or the protocol filed in a
-GRE header. The rewrite is a byte string representation of the header that will be
-prepended to the packet when it is sent to that peer. For Ethernet interfaces this
-is be the src,dst MAC and the ether-type. For LISP tunnels, the IP src,dst pair
-and the LISP header.
-
-The *ip_neighbor_t* for an IPv4 peer (learned e.g. over ARP) will
-install a *link_type=IPv4* when the entry is created and a
-link_type=MPLS on demand (i.e. when a route with output labels resolves via the peer).
-
-Adjacency
----------
-
-There are three sub-types of adjacencies. Purists would argue that some
-of these sub-types are not really adjacencies but are instead other
-forms of DPOs, and it would be hard to argue against that, but
-historically (not just in VPP, but in the FIB implementations from
-which VPP draws on for some of its concepts), these have been modelled
-as adjacency types, the one thing they have in common is that they
-have an associated interface and are terminal. The [sub] sub-types are:
-
-* A Neighbour Adjacency (key={interface, next-hop, link-type}). A
- representation of a peer on a link (as described above). A neighbour adjacency itself has
- two sub-types; terminal and mid-chain. When one speak of 'an
- adjacency' one is usually referring to a terminal neighbour
- sub-type. A mid-chain adjacency represents a neighbor on a virtual
- interface which relies on the FIB to perform further forwarding. This
- adjacency is thus not terminal for the FIB object graph but instead
- appears in the 'middle' (the term chain is a synonym for graph in
- some contexts).
- A neighbour adjacency can be in one of two states; complete and
- incomplete. A complete adjacency knows the rewrite string that
- should be used to reach the peer, an incomplete adjacency does
- not. If the adjacency was added as a result of the addition of an
- *ip_neighbor_t* then the adjacency will be complete (because the
- *ip_neighbor_t* knows the peer's MAC address). An incomplete
- adjacency is created on demand by the FIB when a route's path
- requires to resolve through such an adjacency. It is thus created in
- order to resolve the missing dependency, it will become complete
- once the *ip_neighbor_t* is discovered.
- In the forwarding path a complete adjacency will prepend the rewrite
- string and transmit on the egress interface, an incomplete adjacency
- will construct a ARP/ND request to resolve the peer's IP address.
-
-* A Glean Adjacency (key={interface}). This is a representation of the need to discover
- a peer on the given interface. It is used when it is known that the
- packet is destined to an undiscoverd peer on that interface. The
- difference between the glean adjacency and an
- incomplete neighbour adjacency is that in the forwarding path the
- glean adjacency will construct an ARP/ND request for the peer as
- determined from the packet's destination address. The glean
- adjacency is used to resolve connected prefixes on multi-access
- interfaces.
-
-* A Multicast Adjacency (key={interface}). This represents the need to send an IP
- multicast packet out of the adjacency's associated interface. Since
- IP multicast constructs the destination MAC address from the IP
- packet's destination/group address, the rewrite is always known and
- hence the adjacency is always complete.
-
-
-All adjacency types can be shared between routes, hence each type is
-stored in a DB whose key is appropriate for the type.