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1 Design Decisions In Open vSwitch
2 ================================
3
4This document describes design decisions that went into implementing
5Open vSwitch. While we believe these to be reasonable decisions, it is
6impossible to predict how Open vSwitch will be used in all environments.
7Understanding assumptions made by Open vSwitch is critical to a
8successful deployment. The end of this document contains contact
9information that can be used to let us know how we can make Open vSwitch
10more generally useful.
11
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12Asynchronous Messages
13=====================
14
15Over time, Open vSwitch has added many knobs that control whether a
16given controller receives OpenFlow asynchronous messages. This
17section describes how all of these features interact.
18
19First, a service controller never receives any asynchronous messages
20unless it explicitly configures a miss_send_len greater than zero with
21an OFPT_SET_CONFIG message.
22
23Second, OFPT_FLOW_REMOVED and NXT_FLOW_REMOVED messages are generated
24only if the flow that was removed had the OFPFF_SEND_FLOW_REM flag
25set.
26
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27Third, OFPT_PACKET_IN and NXT_PACKET_IN messages are sent only to
28OpenFlow controller connections that have the correct connection ID
29(see "struct nx_controller_id" and "struct nx_action_controller"):
30
31 - For packet-in messages generated by a NXAST_CONTROLLER action,
32 the controller ID specified in the action.
33
34 - For other packet-in messages, controller ID zero. (This is the
35 default ID when an OpenFlow controller does not configure one.)
36
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37Finally, Open vSwitch consults a per-connection table indexed by the
38message type, reason code, and current role. The following table
39shows how this table is initialized by default when an OpenFlow
40connection is made. An entry labeled "yes" means that the message is
41sent, an entry labeled "---" means that the message is suppressed.
42
43 master/
44 message and reason code other slave
45 ---------------------------------------- ------- -----
46 OFPT_PACKET_IN / NXT_PACKET_IN
47 OFPR_NO_MATCH yes ---
48 OFPR_ACTION yes ---
49 OFPR_INVALID_TTL --- ---
50
51 OFPT_FLOW_REMOVED / NXT_FLOW_REMOVED
52 OFPRR_IDLE_TIMEOUT yes ---
53 OFPRR_HARD_TIMEOUT yes ---
54 OFPRR_DELETE yes ---
55
56 OFPT_PORT_STATUS
57 OFPPR_ADD yes yes
58 OFPPR_DELETE yes yes
59 OFPPR_MODIFY yes yes
60
61The NXT_SET_ASYNC_CONFIG message directly sets all of the values in
62this table for the current connection. The
63OFPC_INVALID_TTL_TO_CONTROLLER bit in the OFPT_SET_CONFIG message
64controls the setting for OFPR_INVALID_TTL for the "master" role.
65
66
67OFPAT_ENQUEUE
68=============
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69
70The OpenFlow 1.0 specification requires the output port of the OFPAT_ENQUEUE
71action to "refer to a valid physical port (i.e. < OFPP_MAX) or OFPP_IN_PORT".
72Although OFPP_LOCAL is not less than OFPP_MAX, it is an 'internal' port which
73can have QoS applied to it in Linux. Since we allow the OFPAT_ENQUEUE to apply
74to 'internal' ports whose port numbers are less than OFPP_MAX, we interpret
75OFPP_LOCAL as a physical port and support OFPAT_ENQUEUE on it as well.
76
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78OFPT_FLOW_MOD
79=============
80
81The OpenFlow 1.0 specification for the behavior of OFPT_FLOW_MOD is
82confusing. The following table summarizes the Open vSwitch
83implementation of its behavior in the following categories:
84
85 - "match on priority": Whether the flow_mod acts only on flows
86 whose priority matches that included in the flow_mod message.
87
88 - "match on out_port": Whether the flow_mod acts only on flows
89 that output to the out_port included in the flow_mod message (if
90 out_port is not OFPP_NONE).
91
92 - "updates flow_cookie": Whether the flow_mod changes the
93 flow_cookie of the flow or flows that it matches to the
94 flow_cookie included in the flow_mod message.
95
96 - "updates OFPFF_ flags": Whether the flow_mod changes the
97 OFPFF_SEND_FLOW_REM flag of the flow or flows that it matches to
98 the setting included in the flags of the flow_mod message.
99
100 - "honors OFPFF_CHECK_OVERLAP": Whether the OFPFF_CHECK_OVERLAP
101 flag in the flow_mod is significant.
102
103 - "updates idle_timeout" and "updates hard_timeout": Whether the
104 idle_timeout and hard_timeout in the flow_mod, respectively,
105 have an effect on the flow or flows matched by the flow_mod.
106
107 - "updates idle timer": Whether the flow_mod resets the per-flow
108 timer that measures how long a flow has been idle.
109
110 - "updates hard timer": Whether the flow_mod resets the per-flow
111 timer that measures how long it has been since a flow was
112 modified.
113
114 - "zeros counters": Whether the flow_mod resets per-flow packet
115 and byte counters to zero.
116
117 - "sends flow_removed message": Whether the flow_mod generates a
118 flow_removed message for the flow or flows that it affects.
119
120An entry labeled "yes" means that the flow mod type does have the
121indicated behavior, "---" means that it does not, an empty cell means
122that the property is not applicable, and other values are explained
123below the table.
124
125 MODIFY DELETE
126 ADD MODIFY STRICT DELETE STRICT
127 === ====== ====== ====== ======
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128match on priority --- --- yes --- yes
129match on out_port --- --- --- yes yes
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130updates flow_cookie yes yes yes
131updates OFPFF_SEND_FLOW_REM yes + +
132honors OFPFF_CHECK_OVERLAP yes + +
133updates idle_timeout yes + +
134updates hard_timeout yes + +
135resets idle timer yes + +
136resets hard timer yes yes yes
137zeros counters yes + +
138sends flow_removed message --- --- --- % %
139
140(+) "modify" and "modify-strict" only take these actions when they
141 create a new flow, not when they update an existing flow.
142
143(%) "delete" and "delete_strict" generates a flow_removed message if
144 the deleted flow or flows have the OFPFF_SEND_FLOW_REM flag set.
145 (Each controller can separately control whether it wants to
146 receive the generated messages.)
147
148
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149Flow Cookies
150============
151
152OpenFlow 1.0 and later versions have the concept of a "flow cookie",
153which is a 64-bit integer value attached to each flow. The treatment
154of the flow cookie has varied greatly across OpenFlow versions,
155however.
156
157In OpenFlow 1.0:
158
159 - OFPFC_ADD set the cookie in the flow that it added.
160
161 - OFPFC_MODIFY and OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT updated the cookie for
162 the flow or flows that it modified.
163
164 - OFPST_FLOW messages included the flow cookie.
165
166 - OFPT_FLOW_REMOVED messages reported the cookie of the flow
167 that was removed.
168
169OpenFlow 1.1 made the following changes:
170
171 - Flow mod operations OFPFC_MODIFY, OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT,
172 OFPFC_DELETE, and OFPFC_DELETE_STRICT, plus flow stats
173 requests and aggregate stats requests, gained the ability to
174 match on flow cookies with an arbitrary mask.
175
176 - OFPFC_MODIFY and OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT were changed to add a
177 new flow, in the case of no match, only if the flow table
178 modification operation did not match on the cookie field.
179 (In OpenFlow 1.0, modify operations always added a new flow
180 when there was no match.)
181
182 - OFPFC_MODIFY and OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT no longer updated flow
183 cookies.
184
185OpenFlow 1.2 made the following changes:
186
187 - OFPC_MODIFY and OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT were changed to never
188 add a new flow, regardless of whether the flow cookie was
189 used for matching.
190
191Open vSwitch support for OpenFlow 1.0 implements the OpenFlow 1.0
192behavior with the following extensions:
193
194 - An NXM extension field NXM_NX_COOKIE(_W) allows the NXM
195 versions of OFPFC_MODIFY, OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT, OFPFC_DELETE,
196 and OFPFC_DELETE_STRICT flow_mods, plus flow stats requests
197 and aggregate stats requests, to match on flow cookies with
198 arbitrary masks. This is much like the equivalent OpenFlow
199 1.1 feature.
200
201 - However, unlike OpenFlow 1.1, OFPC_MODIFY and
202 OFPFC_MODIFY_STRICT, regardless of whether there was a match
203 based on a cookie or not, always add a new flow if there is
204 no match, and they always update the cookies of flows that
205 they do match.
206
207 - NXT_PACKET_IN (the Nicira extended version of
208 OFPT_PACKET_IN) reports the cookie of the rule that
209 generated the packet, or all-1-bits if no rule generated the
210 packet. (Older versions of OVS used all-0-bits instead of
211 all-1-bits.)
212
213
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214Multiple Table Support
215======================
216
217OpenFlow 1.0 has only rudimentary support for multiple flow tables.
218Notably, OpenFlow 1.0 does not allow the controller to specify the
219flow table to which a flow is to be added. Open vSwitch adds an
220extension for this purpose, which is enabled on a per-OpenFlow
221connection basis using the NXT_FLOW_MOD_TABLE_ID message. When the
222extension is enabled, the upper 8 bits of the 'command' member in an
223OFPT_FLOW_MOD or NXT_FLOW_MOD message designates the table to which a
224flow is to be added.
225
226The Open vSwitch software switch implementation offers 255 flow
227tables. On packet ingress, only the first flow table (table 0) is
228searched, and the contents of the remaining tables are not considered
229in any way. Tables other than table 0 only come into play when an
230NXAST_RESUBMIT_TABLE action specifies another table to search.
231
232Tables 128 and above are reserved for use by the switch itself.
233Controllers should use only tables 0 through 127.
234
235
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236IPv6
237====
238
239Open vSwitch supports stateless handling of IPv6 packets. Flows can be
240written to support matching TCP, UDP, and ICMPv6 headers within an IPv6
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241packet. Deeper matching of some Neighbor Discovery messages is also
242supported.
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243
244IPv6 was not designed to interact well with middle-boxes. This,
245combined with Open vSwitch's stateless nature, have affected the
246processing of IPv6 traffic, which is detailed below.
247
248Extension Headers
249-----------------
250
251The base IPv6 header is incredibly simple with the intention of only
252containing information relevant for routing packets between two
253endpoints. IPv6 relies heavily on the use of extension headers to
254provide any other functionality. Unfortunately, the extension headers
255were designed in such a way that it is impossible to move to the next
256header (including the layer-4 payload) unless the current header is
257understood.
258
259Open vSwitch will process the following extension headers and continue
260to the next header:
261
262 * Fragment (see the next section)
263 * AH (Authentication Header)
264 * Hop-by-Hop Options
265 * Routing
266 * Destination Options
267
268When a header is encountered that is not in that list, it is considered
269"terminal". A terminal header's IPv6 protocol value is stored in
270"nw_proto" for matching purposes. If a terminal header is TCP, UDP, or
271ICMPv6, the packet will be further processed in an attempt to extract
272layer-4 information.
273
274Fragments
275---------
276
277IPv6 requires that every link in the internet have an MTU of 1280 octets
278or greater (RFC 2460). As such, a terminal header (as described above in
279"Extension Headers") in the first fragment should generally be
280reachable. In this case, the terminal header's IPv6 protocol type is
281stored in the "nw_proto" field for matching purposes. If a terminal
282header cannot be found in the first fragment (one with a fragment offset
283of zero), the "nw_proto" field is set to 0. Subsequent fragments (those
284with a non-zero fragment offset) have the "nw_proto" field set to the
285IPv6 protocol type for fragments (44).
286
287Jumbograms
288----------
289
290An IPv6 jumbogram (RFC 2675) is a packet containing a payload longer
291than 65,535 octets. A jumbogram is only relevant in subnets with a link
292MTU greater than 65,575 octets, and are not required to be supported on
293nodes that do not connect to link with such large MTUs. Currently, Open
294vSwitch doesn't process jumbograms.
295
296
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297In-Band Control
298===============
299
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300Motivation
301----------
302
303An OpenFlow switch must establish and maintain a TCP network
304connection to its controller. There are two basic ways to categorize
305the network that this connection traverses: either it is completely
306separate from the one that the switch is otherwise controlling, or its
307path may overlap the network that the switch controls. We call the
308former case "out-of-band control", the latter case "in-band control".
309
310Out-of-band control has the following benefits:
311
312 - Simplicity: Out-of-band control slightly simplifies the switch
313 implementation.
314
315 - Reliability: Excessive switch traffic volume cannot interfere
316 with control traffic.
317
318 - Integrity: Machines not on the control network cannot
319 impersonate a switch or a controller.
320
321 - Confidentiality: Machines not on the control network cannot
322 snoop on control traffic.
323
324In-band control, on the other hand, has the following advantages:
325
326 - No dedicated port: There is no need to dedicate a physical
327 switch port to control, which is important on switches that have
328 few ports (e.g. wireless routers, low-end embedded platforms).
329
330 - No dedicated network: There is no need to build and maintain a
331 separate control network. This is important in many
332 environments because it reduces proliferation of switches and
333 wiring.
334
335Open vSwitch supports both out-of-band and in-band control. This
336section describes the principles behind in-band control. See the
337description of the Controller table in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) to
338configure OVS for in-band control.
339
340Principles
341----------
342
343The fundamental principle of in-band control is that an OpenFlow
344switch must recognize and switch control traffic without involving the
345OpenFlow controller. All the details of implementing in-band control
346are special cases of this principle.
347
348The rationale for this principle is simple. If the switch does not
349handle in-band control traffic itself, then it will be caught in a
350contradiction: it must contact the controller, but it cannot, because
351only the controller can set up the flows that are needed to contact
352the controller.
353
354The following points describe important special cases of this
355principle.
356
357 - In-band control must be implemented regardless of whether the
358 switch is connected.
359
360 It is tempting to implement the in-band control rules only when
361 the switch is not connected to the controller, using the
362 reasoning that the controller should have complete control once
363 it has established a connection with the switch.
364
365 This does not work in practice. Consider the case where the
366 switch is connected to the controller. Occasionally it can
367 happen that the controller forgets or otherwise needs to obtain
368 the MAC address of the switch. To do so, the controller sends a
369 broadcast ARP request. A switch that implements the in-band
370 control rules only when it is disconnected will then send an
371 OFPT_PACKET_IN message up to the controller. The controller will
372 be unable to respond, because it does not know the MAC address of
373 the switch. This is a deadlock situation that can only be
374 resolved by the switch noticing that its connection to the
375 controller has hung and reconnecting.
376
377 - In-band control must override flows set up by the controller.
378
379 It is reasonable to assume that flows set up by the OpenFlow
380 controller should take precedence over in-band control, on the
381 basis that the controller should be in charge of the switch.
382
383 Again, this does not work in practice. Reasonable controller
384 implementations may set up a "last resort" fallback rule that
385 wildcards every field and, e.g., sends it up to the controller or
386 discards it. If a controller does that, then it will isolate
387 itself from the switch.
388
389 - The switch must recognize all control traffic.
390
391 The fundamental principle of in-band control states, in part,
392 that a switch must recognize control traffic without involving
393 the OpenFlow controller. More specifically, the switch must
394 recognize *all* control traffic. "False negatives", that is,
395 packets that constitute control traffic but that the switch does
396 not recognize as control traffic, lead to control traffic storms.
397
398 Consider an OpenFlow switch that only recognizes control packets
399 sent to or from that switch. Now suppose that two switches of
400 this type, named A and B, are connected to ports on an Ethernet
401 hub (not a switch) and that an OpenFlow controller is connected
402 to a third hub port. In this setup, control traffic sent by
403 switch A will be seen by switch B, which will send it to the
404 controller as part of an OFPT_PACKET_IN message. Switch A will
405 then see the OFPT_PACKET_IN message's packet, re-encapsulate it
406 in another OFPT_PACKET_IN, and send it to the controller. Switch
407 B will then see that OFPT_PACKET_IN, and so on in an infinite
408 loop.
409
410 Incidentally, the consequences of "false positives", where
411 packets that are not control traffic are nevertheless recognized
412 as control traffic, are much less severe. The controller will
413 not be able to control their behavior, but the network will
414 remain in working order. False positives do constitute a
415 security problem.
416
417 - The switch should use echo-requests to detect disconnection.
418
419 TCP will notice that a connection has hung, but this can take a
420 considerable amount of time. For example, with default settings
421 the Linux kernel TCP implementation will retransmit for between
422 13 and 30 minutes, depending on the connection's retransmission
423 timeout, according to kernel documentation. This is far too long
424 for a switch to be disconnected, so an OpenFlow switch should
425 implement its own connection timeout. OpenFlow OFPT_ECHO_REQUEST
426 messages are the best way to do this, since they test the
427 OpenFlow connection itself.
428
429Implementation
430--------------
431
432This section describes how Open vSwitch implements in-band control.
433Correctly implementing in-band control has proven difficult due to its
434many subtleties, and has thus gone through many iterations. Please
435read through and understand the reasoning behind the chosen rules
436before making modifications.
437
438Open vSwitch implements in-band control as "hidden" flows, that is,
439flows that are not visible through OpenFlow, and at a higher priority
440than wildcarded flows can be set up through OpenFlow. This is done so
441that the OpenFlow controller cannot interfere with them and possibly
442break connectivity with its switches. It is possible to see all
443flows, including in-band ones, with the ovs-appctl "bridge/dump-flows"
444command.
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445
446The Open vSwitch implementation of in-band control can hide traffic to
447arbitrary "remotes", where each remote is one TCP port on one IP address.
448Currently the remotes are automatically configured as the in-band OpenFlow
449controllers plus the OVSDB managers, if any. (The latter is a requirement
450because OVSDB managers are responsible for configuring OpenFlow controllers,
451so if the manager cannot be reached then OpenFlow cannot be reconfigured.)
452
453The following rules (with the OFPP_NORMAL action) are set up on any bridge
454that has any remotes:
455
456 (a) DHCP requests sent from the local port.
457 (b) ARP replies to the local port's MAC address.
458 (c) ARP requests from the local port's MAC address.
459
460In-band also sets up the following rules for each unique next-hop MAC
461address for the remotes' IPs (the "next hop" is either the remote
462itself, if it is on a local subnet, or the gateway to reach the remote):
463
464 (d) ARP replies to the next hop's MAC address.
465 (e) ARP requests from the next hop's MAC address.
466
467In-band also sets up the following rules for each unique remote IP address:
468
469 (f) ARP replies containing the remote's IP address as a target.
470 (g) ARP requests containing the remote's IP address as a source.
471
472In-band also sets up the following rules for each unique remote (IP,port)
473pair:
474
475 (h) TCP traffic to the remote's IP and port.
476 (i) TCP traffic from the remote's IP and port.
477
478The goal of these rules is to be as narrow as possible to allow a
479switch to join a network and be able to communicate with the
480remotes. As mentioned earlier, these rules have higher priority
481than the controller's rules, so if they are too broad, they may
482prevent the controller from implementing its policy. As such,
483in-band actively monitors some aspects of flow and packet processing
484so that the rules can be made more precise.
485
486In-band control monitors attempts to add flows into the datapath that
487could interfere with its duties. The datapath only allows exact
488match entries, so in-band control is able to be very precise about
489the flows it prevents. Flows that miss in the datapath are sent to
490userspace to be processed, so preventing these flows from being
491cached in the "fast path" does not affect correctness. The only type
492of flow that is currently prevented is one that would prevent DHCP
493replies from being seen by the local port. For example, a rule that
494forwarded all DHCP traffic to the controller would not be allowed,
495but one that forwarded to all ports (including the local port) would.
496
497As mentioned earlier, packets that miss in the datapath are sent to
498the userspace for processing. The userspace has its own flow table,
499the "classifier", so in-band checks whether any special processing
500is needed before the classifier is consulted. If a packet is a DHCP
501response to a request from the local port, the packet is forwarded to
502the local port, regardless of the flow table. Note that this requires
503L7 processing of DHCP replies to determine whether the 'chaddr' field
504matches the MAC address of the local port.
505
506It is interesting to note that for an L3-based in-band control
507mechanism, the majority of rules are devoted to ARP traffic. At first
508glance, some of these rules appear redundant. However, each serves an
509important role. First, in order to determine the MAC address of the
510remote side (controller or gateway) for other ARP rules, we must allow
511ARP traffic for our local port with rules (b) and (c). If we are
512between a switch and its connection to the remote, we have to
513allow the other switch's ARP traffic to through. This is done with
514rules (d) and (e), since we do not know the addresses of the other
515switches a priori, but do know the remote's or gateway's. Finally,
516if the remote is running in a local guest VM that is not reached
517through the local port, the switch that is connected to the VM must
518allow ARP traffic based on the remote's IP address, since it will
519not know the MAC address of the local port that is sending the traffic
520or the MAC address of the remote in the guest VM.
521
522With a few notable exceptions below, in-band should work in most
523network setups. The following are considered "supported' in the
524current implementation:
525
526 - Locally Connected. The switch and remote are on the same
527 subnet. This uses rules (a), (b), (c), (h), and (i).
528
529 - Reached through Gateway. The switch and remote are on
530 different subnets and must go through a gateway. This uses
531 rules (a), (b), (c), (h), and (i).
532
533 - Between Switch and Remote. This switch is between another
534 switch and the remote, and we want to allow the other
535 switch's traffic through. This uses rules (d), (e), (h), and
536 (i). It uses (b) and (c) indirectly in order to know the MAC
537 address for rules (d) and (e). Note that DHCP for the other
538 switch will not work unless an OpenFlow controller explicitly lets this
539 switch pass the traffic.
540
541 - Between Switch and Gateway. This switch is between another
542 switch and the gateway, and we want to allow the other switch's
543 traffic through. This uses the same rules and logic as the
544 "Between Switch and Remote" configuration described earlier.
545
546 - Remote on Local VM. The remote is a guest VM on the
547 system running in-band control. This uses rules (a), (b), (c),
548 (h), and (i).
549
550 - Remote on Local VM with Different Networks. The remote
551 is a guest VM on the system running in-band control, but the
552 local port is not used to connect to the remote. For
553 example, an IP address is configured on eth0 of the switch. The
554 remote's VM is connected through eth1 of the switch, but an
555 IP address has not been configured for that port on the switch.
556 As such, the switch will use eth0 to connect to the remote,
557 and eth1's rules about the local port will not work. In the
558 example, the switch attached to eth0 would use rules (a), (b),
559 (c), (h), and (i) on eth0. The switch attached to eth1 would use
560 rules (f), (g), (h), and (i).
561
562The following are explicitly *not* supported by in-band control:
563
564 - Specify Remote by Name. Currently, the remote must be
565 identified by IP address. A naive approach would be to permit
566 all DNS traffic. Unfortunately, this would prevent the
567 controller from defining any policy over DNS. Since switches
568 that are located behind us need to connect to the remote,
569 in-band cannot simply add a rule that allows DNS traffic from
570 the local port. The "correct" way to support this is to parse
571 DNS requests to allow all traffic related to a request for the
572 remote's name through. Due to the potential security
573 problems and amount of processing, we decided to hold off for
574 the time-being.
575
576 - Differing Remotes for Switches. All switches must know
577 the L3 addresses for all the remotes that other switches
578 may use, since rules need to be set up to allow traffic related
579 to those remotes through. See rules (f), (g), (h), and (i).
580
581 - Differing Routes for Switches. In order for the switch to
582 allow other switches to connect to a remote through a
583 gateway, it allows the gateway's traffic through with rules (d)
584 and (e). If the routes to the remote differ for the two
585 switches, we will not know the MAC address of the alternate
586 gateway.
587
588
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589Suggestions
590===========
591
592Suggestions to improve Open vSwitch are welcome at discuss@openvswitch.org.