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When an mfib entry was created with both paths and entry_flags then
the entry flags were being ignored. If there are no paths then the
flags were passed into mfib_table_entry_update, but in the case where
the entry didn't exist and there were paths and flags, the entry was
created within mfib_table_entry_paths_update() which used a default
of MFIB_ENTRY_FLAG_NONE.
Pass the flags through into the mfib_table_entry_paths_update fn. All
existing callers other than the create case will now pass in
MFIB_ENTRY_FLAG_NONE.
Type: fix
Signed-off-by: Paul Atkins <patkins@graphiant.com>
Change-Id: I256375ba2fa863a62a88474ce1ea6bf2accdd456
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Type: feature
from the API doc, a table replace is:
"
The use-case is that, for some unspecified reason, the control plane
has a very different set of entries it wants in the table than VPP
currently has. The CP would thus like to 'replace' VPP's current table
only by specifying what the new set of entries shall be, i.e. it is not
going to delete anything that already eixts.
the CP delcartes the start of this procedure with this begin_replace
API Call, and when it has populated all the entries it wants, it calls
the below end_replace API. From this point on it is of coursce free
to add and delete entries as usual.
The underlying mechanism by which VPP implements this replace is
purposefully left unspecified.
"
In the FIB, the algorithm is implemented using mark and sweep.
Algorithm goes:
1) replace_begin: this marks all the entries in that table as 'stale'
2) download all the entries that should be in this table
- this clears the stale flag on those entries
3) signal the table converged: ip_table_replace_end
- this removes all entries that are still stale
this procedure can be used when an agent first connects to VPP,
as an alternative to dump and diff state reconciliation.
Change-Id: I168edec10cf7670866076b129ebfe6149ea8222e
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Enhance the route add/del APIs to take a set of paths rather than just one.
Most unicast routing protocols calcualte all the available paths in one
run of the algorithm so updating all the paths at once is beneficial for the client.
two knobs control the behaviour:
is_multipath - if set the the set of paths passed will be added to those
that already exist, otherwise the set will replace them.
is_add - add or remove the set
is_add=0, is_multipath=1 and an empty set, results in deleting the route.
It is also considerably faster to add multiple paths at once, than one at a time:
vat# ip_add_del_route 1.1.1.1/32 count 100000 multipath via 10.10.10.11
100000 routes in .572240 secs, 174751.80 routes/sec
vat# ip_add_del_route 1.1.1.1/32 count 100000 multipath via 10.10.10.12
100000 routes in .528383 secs, 189256.54 routes/sec
vat# ip_add_del_route 1.1.1.1/32 count 100000 multipath via 10.10.10.13
100000 routes in .757131 secs, 132077.52 routes/sec
vat# ip_add_del_route 1.1.1.1/32 count 100000 multipath via 10.10.10.14
100000 routes in .878317 secs, 113854.12 routes/sec
vat# ip_route_add_del 1.1.1.1/32 count 100000 multipath via 10.10.10.11 via 10.10.10.12 via 10.10.10.13 via 10.10.10.14
100000 routes in .900212 secs, 111084.93 routes/sec
Change-Id: I416b93f7684745099c1adb0b33edac58c9339c1a
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <neale.ranns@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Ole Troan <ot@cisco.com>
Signed-off-by: Paul Vinciguerra <pvinci@vinciconsulting.com>
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Change-Id: I28e8a99b980ad343a4209e673201791b91ceab4e
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I8dc261e40b8398c5c8ab6bb69ecebbd0176055d9
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I497e9f6489dd35219bcf2b51ac992467aac4c8eb
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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DBGvpp# sh fib mem
FIB memory
Tables:
SAFI Number Bytes
IPv4 unicast 2 673066
IPv6 unicast 2 1054608
MPLS 1 4194312
IPv4 multicast 2 2322
IPv6 multicast 2 ???
Nodes:
Name Size in-use /allocated totals
Entry 96 20 / 20 1920/1920
Entry Source 32 0 / 0 0/0
Entry Path-Extensions 60 0 / 0 0/0
multicast-Entry 192 12 / 12 2304/2304
Path-list 40 28 / 28 1120/1120
uRPF-list 16 20 / 20 320/320
Path 72 28 / 28 2016/2016
Node-list elements 20 28 / 28 560/560
Node-list heads 8 30 / 30 240/240
Change-Id: I8c8f6f1c87502a40265bf4f302d0daef111a4a4e
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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- always use 'va_args' as pointer in all format_* functions
- u32 for all 'indent' params as it's declaration was inconsistent
Change-Id: Ic5799309a6b104c9b50fec309cba789c8da99e79
Signed-off-by: Christophe Fontaine <christophe.fontaine@enea.com>
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Change-Id: I4b4648831551519b2ffb6f93255d28a4b8726c22
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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part 2;
- this adds the code to create an IP and MPLS table via the API.
- but the enforcement that the table must be created before it is used is still missing, this is so that CSIT can pass.
Change-Id: Id124d884ade6cb7da947225200e3bb193454c555
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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Add IP[46] MFIB dump.
Change-Id: I4a2821f65e67a5416b291e4912c84f64989883b8
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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1 - use the SR policy to construct the replicate DPO. Each bucket therein is a SR tunnel.
2 - install a special mfib entry that links via this replicate
3 - forwarding is now mfib-lookup -> replicate -> sr_rewrite (per-tunnel)
no need for a separate sr_replicate node.
4 - Stack the sr tunnel on the forwarding DPO of the first-hop FIB entry.
no need for a second lookup post SR encap.
5 - fix some path-list lock leaks in the MFIB entry.
Change-Id: I20de96ea4c4be4fae252625bde159d9c435c8315
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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- IPv[46] mfib tables with support for (*,G/m), (*,G) and (S,G) exact and longest prefix match
- Replication represented via a new replicate DPO.
- RPF configuration and data-plane checking
- data-plane signals sent to listening control planes.
The functions of multicast forwarding entries differ from their unicast conterparts, so we introduce a new mfib_table_t and mfib_entry_t objects. However, we re-use the fib_path_list to resolve and build the entry's output list. the fib_path_list provides the service to construct a replicate DPO for multicast.
'make tests' is added to with two new suites; TEST=mfib, this is invocation of the CLI command 'test mfib' which deals with many path add/remove, flag set/unset scenarios, TEST=ip-mcast, data-plane forwarding tests.
Updated applications to use the new MIFB functions;
- IPv6 NS/RA.
- DHCPv6
unit tests for these are undated accordingly.
Change-Id: I49ec37b01f1b170335a5697541c8fd30e6d3a961
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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