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- see draft-ietf-bier-mpls-encapsulation-10
- midpoint, head and tail functions
- supported payload protocols; IPv4 and IPv6 only.
Change-Id: I59d7363bb6fdfdce8e4016a68a9c8f5a5e5791cb
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I5d5d4f22b6369d504455a644f73076d772fbcfb4
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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[support for VPWS/VPLS]
- switch to using dpo_proto_t rather than fib_protocol_t in fib_paths so that we can describe L2 paths
- VLIB nodes to handle pop/push of MPLS labels to L2
Change-Id: Id050d06a11fd2c9c1c81ce5a0654e6c5ae6afa6e
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Paths are given a preference, lowest value is 'best'. Only paths that are up are up contribute to fprwarding - that's unchanged. What's new is that of the path's that re up only those that have the best preference contribute. A poor man's primary and backup. It's not true primary/backup function because the FIB must converge before the lower preference paths are used.
Change-Id: Ie4453c4a7b1094c6c2b51fe1594b8302103bb68e
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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there are, intentionally, no validation checks in the ARP/ND code to prevent an ARP/ND entry from being installed for an address that is not local to the interface's sub-net. This is ok, since the adjacency/FIB code is designed to handle this case using the 'refinement' criteria - i.e. only installing a FIB entry for the address if the address 'refines' (i.e. is more specific than) the interface's sub-net.
However, the refinement criteria currently operates on the FIB entry's prefix (which is a /32, so on the address) and not on the next-hop in the path.
So, enter multiple ARP entries for the same address on different links, and this refinement criteria uses only the last added path, and so will remove the FIB entry should the ARP entries be added in the 'wrong' order.
This fix updates the refinement criteria to work on each path of the FIB entry. The entry is installed if one of the paths refines the covers and only paths refining the cover contribute forwarding.
Per-path refinement checks are stored in path-extensions. The patch is rather large as path-extension, which were previously used only for out-going MPLS labels, have been generalized.
Change-Id: I00be359148cb948c32c52109e832a70537a7920a
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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- only build them for popular path-lists (where popular means more than 64 children)
the reason to have a map is to improve convergence speed for recursive prefixes - if there are only a few this technique is not needed
- only build them when there is at least one path that has recursive constraints, i.e. a path that can 'fail' in a PIC scenario.
- Use the MAPS in the switch path.
- PIC test cases for functionality (not convergence performance)
Change-Id: I70705444c8469d22b07ae34be82cfb6a01358e10
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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1 - interface-DPO
Used in the Data-plane to change a packet's input interface
2 - MPLS multicast FIB entry
Same as a unicast entry but it links to a replicate not a load-balance DPO
3 - Multicast MPLS tunnel
Update MPLS tunnels to use a FIB path-list to describe the endpoint[s]. Use the path-list to generate the forwarding chain (DPOs) to link to .
4 - Resolve a path via a local label (of an mLDP LSP)
For IP multicast entries to use an LSP in the replication list, we need to decribe the 'resolve-via-label' where the label is that of a multicast LSP.
5 - MPLS disposition path sets RPF-ID
For a interface-less LSP (i.e. mLDP not RSVP-TE) at the tail of the LSP we still need to perform an RPF check. An MPLS disposition DPO performs the MPLS pop validation checks and sets the RPF-ID in the packet.
6 - RPF check with per-entry RPF-ID
An RPF-ID is used instead of a real interface SW if index in the case the IP traffic arrives from an LSP that does not have an associated interface.
Change-Id: Ib92e177be919147bafeb599729abf3d1abc2f4b3
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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allow this config to function:
set int ip address loop0 169.254.1.1/32 (the default GW address for attached hosts)
set int unnumbered af_packet0 use loop0 ('enable' IP on the host interface)
ip route add 192.168.1.1/32 via af_packet0 (where to find the host)
repeat for each host and host interface.
Inter-host communication is throught the /32 routes.
To allow this:
1 - attached host routes have the ATTACHED flag set, so the ARP code accepts then as legitimate sources
2 - unnumbered interfaces inherit the source address from the IP interface
Change-Id: Ib66c5f0e848c528f79372813adc3a0c11b50717f
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7b51f88292e057c6443b12224486f2d0c9f8ae23
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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