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1.\" -*- nroff -*-
2.de IQ
3. br
4. ns
5. IP "\\$1"
6..
d2cb6c95 7.TH ovs\-ofctl 8 "@VERSION@" "Open vSwitch" "Open vSwitch Manual"
064af421 8.ds PN ovs\-ofctl
a9b4a41a 9.
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10.SH NAME
11ovs\-ofctl \- administer OpenFlow switches
a9b4a41a 12.
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13.SH SYNOPSIS
14.B ovs\-ofctl
15[\fIoptions\fR] \fIcommand \fR[\fIswitch\fR] [\fIargs\fR\&...]
a9b4a41a 16.
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17.SH DESCRIPTION
18The
19.B ovs\-ofctl
20program is a command line tool for monitoring and administering
21OpenFlow switches. It can also show the current state of an OpenFlow
22switch, including features, configuration, and table entries.
0d8e9638 23It should work with any OpenFlow switch, not just Open vSwitch.
a9b4a41a 24.
064af421 25.SS "OpenFlow Switch Management Commands"
a9b4a41a 26.PP
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27These commands allow \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to monitor and administer an OpenFlow
28switch. It is able to show the current state of a switch, including
29features, configuration, and table entries.
a9b4a41a 30.PP
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31Most of these commands take an argument that specifies the method for
32connecting to an OpenFlow switch. The following connection methods
33are supported:
a9b4a41a 34.
064af421 35.RS
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36.so lib/vconn-active.man
37.
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38.IP "\fIfile\fR"
39This is short for \fBunix:\fIfile\fR, as long as \fIfile\fR does not
40contain a colon.
84ee7bcf 41.
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42.IP \fIbridge\fR
43This is short for \fBunix:@RUNDIR@/\fIbridge\fB.mgmt\fR, as long as
44\fIbridge\fR does not contain a colon.
45.
46.IP [\fItype\fB@\fR]\fIdp\fR
47Attempts to look up the bridge associated with \fIdp\fR and open as
48above. If \fItype\fR is given, it specifies the datapath provider of
49\fIdp\fR, otherwise the default provider \fBsystem\fR is assumed.
064af421 50.RE
a9b4a41a 51.
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52.TP
53\fBshow \fIswitch\fR
54Prints to the console information on \fIswitch\fR, including
55information on its flow tables and ports.
a9b4a41a 56.
064af421 57.TP
4e312e69 58\fBdump\-tables \fIswitch\fR
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59Prints to the console statistics for each of the flow tables used by
60\fIswitch\fR.
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61.TP
62\fBdump\-table\-features \fIswitch\fR
63Prints to the console features for each of the flow tables used by
64\fIswitch\fR.
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65.TP
66\fBdump\-table\-desc \fIswitch\fR
67Prints to the console configuration for each of the flow tables used
68by \fIswitch\fR for OpenFlow 1.4+.
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69.IP "\fBmod\-table \fIswitch\fR \fItable_id\fR \fIsetting\fR"
70This command configures flow table settings for OpenFlow table
71\fItable_id\fR within \fIswitch\fR. The available settings depend on
72the OpenFlow version in use. In OpenFlow 1.1 and 1.2 (which must be
73enabled with the \fB\-O\fR option) only, \fBmod\-table\fR configures
74behavior when no flow is found when a packet is looked up in a flow
75table. The following \fIsetting\fR values are available:
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76.RS
77.IP \fBdrop\fR
78Drop the packet.
79.IP \fBcontinue\fR
80Continue to the next table in the pipeline. (This is how an OpenFlow
811.0 switch always handles packets that do not match any flow, in
82tables other than the last one.)
83.IP \fBcontroller\fR
84Send to controller. (This is how an OpenFlow 1.0 switch always
85handles packets that do not match any flow in the last table.)
86.RE
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87.IP
88In OpenFlow 1.4 and later (which must be enabled with the \fB\-O\fR
89option) only, \fBmod\-table\fR configures the behavior when a
90controller attempts to add a flow to a flow table that is full. The
91following \fIsetting\fR values are available:
92.RS
93.IP \fBevict\fR
94Delete some existing flow from the flow table, according to the
95algorithm described for the \fBFlow_Table\fR table in
96\fBovs-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5).
97.IP \fBnoevict\fR
98Refuse to add the new flow. (Eviction might still be enabled through
99the \fBoverflow_policy\fR oclumn in the \fBFlow_Table\fR table
100documented in \fBovs-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5).)
101.RE
c354fcc5 102.
064af421 103.TP
4e312e69 104\fBdump\-ports \fIswitch\fR [\fInetdev\fR]
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105Prints to the console statistics for network devices associated with
106\fIswitch\fR. If \fInetdev\fR is specified, only the statistics
107associated with that device will be printed. \fInetdev\fR can be an
108OpenFlow assigned port number or device name, e.g. \fBeth0\fR.
a9b4a41a 109.
70ae4f93 110.IP "\fBdump\-ports\-desc \fIswitch\fR [\fIport\fR]"
2be393ed 111Prints to the console detailed information about network devices
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112associated with \fIswitch\fR. To dump only a specific port, specify
113its number as \fIport\fR. Otherwise, if \fIport\fR is omitted, or if
114it is specified as \fBANY\fR, then all ports are printed. This is a
115subset of the information provided by the \fBshow\fR command.
116.IP
117If the connection to \fIswitch\fR negotiates OpenFlow 1.0, 1.2, or
1181.2, this command uses an OpenFlow extension only implemented in Open
119vSwitch (version 1.7 and later).
120.IP
121Only OpenFlow 1.5 and later support dumping a specific port. Earlier
122versions of OpenFlow always dump all ports.
2be393ed 123.
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124.IP "\fBmod\-port \fIswitch\fR \fIport\fR \fIaction\fR"
125Modify characteristics of port \fBport\fR in \fIswitch\fR. \fIport\fR
126may be an OpenFlow port number or name or the keyword \fBLOCAL\fR (the
127preferred way to refer to the OpenFlow local port). The \fIaction\fR
128may be any one of the following:
a9b4a41a 129.
064af421 130.RS
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131.IQ \fBup\fR
132.IQ \fBdown\fR
133Enable or disable the interface. This is equivalent to \fBifconfig
134up\fR or \fBifconfig down\fR on a Unix system.
135.
136.IP \fBstp\fR
137.IQ \fBno\-stp\fR
138Enable or disable 802.1D spanning tree protocol (STP) on the
139interface. OpenFlow implementations that don't support STP will
140refuse to enable it.
141.
142.IP \fBreceive\fR
143.IQ \fBno\-receive\fR
144.IQ \fBreceive\-stp\fR
145.IQ \fBno\-receive\-stp\fR
146Enable or disable OpenFlow processing of packets received on this
147interface. When packet processing is disabled, packets will be
148dropped instead of being processed through the OpenFlow table. The
149\fBreceive\fR or \fBno\-receive\fR setting applies to all packets
150except 802.1D spanning tree packets, which are separately controlled
151by \fBreceive\-stp\fR or \fBno\-receive\-stp\fR.
a9b4a41a 152.
451256f6 153.IP \fBforward\fR
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154.IQ \fBno\-forward\fR
155Allow or disallow forwarding of traffic to this interface. By
156default, forwarding is enabled.
451256f6 157.
064af421 158.IP \fBflood\fR
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159.IQ \fBno\-flood\fR
160Controls whether an OpenFlow \fBflood\fR action will send traffic out
161this interface. By default, flooding is enabled. Disabling flooding
162is primarily useful to prevent loops when a spanning tree protocol is
163not in use.
164.
165.IP \fBpacket\-in\fR
166.IQ \fBno\-packet\-in\fR
167Controls whether packets received on this interface that do not match
168a flow table entry generate a ``packet in'' message to the OpenFlow
169controller. By default, ``packet in'' messages are enabled.
064af421 170.RE
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171.IP
172The \fBshow\fR command displays (among other information) the
173configuration that \fBmod\-port\fR changes.
a9b4a41a 174.
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175.IP "\fBget\-frags \fIswitch\fR"
176Prints \fIswitch\fR's fragment handling mode. See \fBset\-frags\fR,
177below, for a description of each fragment handling mode.
178.IP
179The \fBshow\fR command also prints the fragment handling mode among
180its other output.
181.
182.IP "\fBset\-frags \fIswitch frag_mode\fR"
183Configures \fIswitch\fR's treatment of IPv4 and IPv6 fragments. The
184choices for \fIfrag_mode\fR are:
185.RS
186.IP "\fBnormal\fR"
187Fragments pass through the flow table like non-fragmented packets.
188The TCP ports, UDP ports, and ICMP type and code fields are always set
189to 0, even for fragments where that information would otherwise be
190available (fragments with offset 0). This is the default fragment
191handling mode for an OpenFlow switch.
192.IP "\fBdrop\fR"
193Fragments are dropped without passing through the flow table.
194.IP "\fBreassemble\fR"
195The switch reassembles fragments into full IP packets before passing
196them through the flow table. Open vSwitch does not implement this
197fragment handling mode.
198.IP "\fBnx\-match\fR"
199Fragments pass through the flow table like non-fragmented packets.
200The TCP ports, UDP ports, and ICMP type and code fields are available
201for matching for fragments with offset 0, and set to 0 in fragments
202with nonzero offset. This mode is a Nicira extension.
203.RE
204.IP
205See the description of \fBip_frag\fR, below, for a way to match on
206whether a packet is a fragment and on its fragment offset.
207.
064af421 208.TP
4e312e69 209\fBdump\-flows \fIswitch \fR[\fIflows\fR]
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210Prints to the console all flow entries in \fIswitch\fR's
211tables that match \fIflows\fR. If \fIflows\fR is omitted, all flows
212in the switch are retrieved. See \fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, for the
bdcc5925 213syntax of \fIflows\fR. The output format is described in
064af421 214\fBTable Entry Output\fR.
a9b4a41a 215.
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216.IP
217By default, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR prints flow entries in the same order
218that the switch sends them, which is unlikely to be intuitive or
219consistent. See the description of \fB\-\-sort\fR and \fB\-\-rsort\fR,
220under \fBOPTIONS\fR below, to influence the display order.
221.
064af421 222.TP
4e312e69 223\fBdump\-aggregate \fIswitch \fR[\fIflows\fR]
bdcc5925 224Prints to the console aggregate statistics for flows in
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225\fIswitch\fR's tables that match \fIflows\fR. If \fIflows\fR is omitted,
226the statistics are aggregated across all flows in the switch's flow
227tables. See \fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, for the syntax of \fIflows\fR.
3845a3fd 228The output format is described in \fBTable Entry Output\fR.
a9b4a41a 229.
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230.IP "\fBqueue\-stats \fIswitch \fR[\fIport \fR[\fIqueue\fR]]"
231Prints to the console statistics for the specified \fIqueue\fR on
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232\fIport\fR within \fIswitch\fR. \fIport\fR can be an OpenFlow port
233number or name, the keyword \fBLOCAL\fR (the preferred way to refer to
234the OpenFlow local port), or the keyword \fBALL\fR. Either of
235\fIport\fR or \fIqueue\fR or both may be omitted (or equivalently the
236keyword \fBALL\fR). If both are omitted, statistics are printed for
237all queues on all ports. If only \fIqueue\fR is omitted, then
238statistics are printed for all queues on \fIport\fR; if only
239\fIport\fR is omitted, then statistics are printed for \fIqueue\fR on
240every port where it exists.
d2805da2 241.
3200ed58 242.SS "OpenFlow 1.1+ Group Table Commands"
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243.
244The following commands work only with switches that support OpenFlow
2451.1 or later. Because support for OpenFlow 1.1 and later is still
246experimental in Open vSwitch, it is necessary to explicitly enable
247these protocol versions in \fBovs\-ofctl\fR (using \fB\-O\fR) and in
248the switch itself (with the \fBprotocols\fR column in the \fBBridge\fR
249table). For more information, see ``Q: What versions of OpenFlow does
250Open vSwitch support?'' in the Open vSwitch FAQ.
251.
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252.IP "\fBdump\-groups \fIswitch\fR [\fIgroup\fR]"
253Prints group entries in \fIswitch\fR's tables to console. To dump
254only a specific group, specify its number as \fIgroup\fR. Otherwise,
255if \fIgroup\fR is omitted, or if it is specified as \fBALL\fR, then
256all groups are printed. Each line of output is a group entry as
257described in \fBGroup Syntax\fR below.
258.IP
259Only OpenFlow 1.5 and later support dumping a specific group. Earlier
260versions of OpenFlow always dump all groups.
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261.
262.IP "\fBdump\-group\-features \fIswitch"
263Prints to the console the group features of the \fIswitch\fR.
264.
265.IP "\fBdump\-group-stats \fIswitch \fR[\fIgroups\fR]"
266Prints to the console statistics for the specified \fIgroups in the
267\fIswitch\fR's tables. If \fIgroups\fR is omitted then statistics for all
268groups are printed. See \fBGroup Syntax\fR, below, for the syntax of
269\fIgroups\fR.
270.
3200ed58
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271.SS "OpenFlow 1.3+ Switch Meter Table Commands"
272.
273These commands manage the meter table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
274case, \fImeter\fR specifies a meter entry in the format described in
275\fBMeter Syntax\fR, below.
276.
277.PP
278OpenFlow 1.3 introduced support for meters, so these commands only
279work with switches that support OpenFlow 1.3 or later. The caveats
280described for groups in the previous section also apply to meters.
281.
282.IP "\fBadd\-meter \fIswitch meter\fR"
283Add a meter entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables. The \fImeter\fR syntax is
284described in section \fBMeter Syntax\fR, below.
285.
286.IP "\fBmod\-meter \fIswitch meter\fR"
287Modify an existing meter.
288.
289.IP "\fBdel\-meters \fIswitch\fR"
290.IQ "\fBdel\-meter \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
291Delete entries from \fIswitch\fR's meter table. \fImeter\fR can specify
292a single meter with syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax
293\fBmeter=all\fR.
294.
295.IP "\fBdump\-meters \fIswitch\fR"
296.IQ "\fBdump\-meter \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
297Print meter configuration. \fImeter\fR can specify a single meter with
298syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax \fBmeter=all\fR.
299.
300.IP "\fBmeter\-stats \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
301Print meter statistics. \fImeter\fR can specify a single meter with
302syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax \fBmeter=all\fR.
303.
304.IP "\fBmeter\-features \fIswitch\fR"
305Print meter features.
306.
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307.SS "OpenFlow Switch Flow Table Commands"
308.
309These commands manage the flow table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
310case, \fIflow\fR specifies a flow entry in the format described in
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311\fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, \fIfile\fR is a text file that contains zero
312or more flows in the same syntax, one per line, and the optional
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JR
313\fB\-\-bundle\fR option operates the command as a single atomic
314transation, see option \fB\-\-bundle\fR, below.
db5076ee
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315.
316.IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flow \fIswitch flow\fR"
317.IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flow \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
318.IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flows \fIswitch file\fR"
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319Add each flow entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables.
320.
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321Each flow specification (e.g., each line in \fIfile\fR) may start with
322\fBadd\fR, \fBmodify\fR, \fBdelete\fR, \fBmodify_strict\fR, or
323\fBdelete_strict\fR keyword to specify whether a flow is to be added,
324modified, or deleted, and whether the modify or delete is strict or
325not. For backwards compatibility a flow specification without one of
326these keywords is treated as a flow add. All flow mods are executed
327in the order specified.
328.
329.IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBmod\-flows \fIswitch flow\fR"
330.IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBmod\-flows \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
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331Modify the actions in entries from \fIswitch\fR's tables that match
332the specified flows. With \fB\-\-strict\fR, wildcards are not treated
333as active for matching purposes.
334.
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335.IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch\fR"
336.IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch \fR[\fIflow\fR]"
337.IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
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338Deletes entries from \fIswitch\fR's flow table. With only a
339\fIswitch\fR argument, deletes all flows. Otherwise, deletes flow
340entries that match the specified flows. With \fB\-\-strict\fR,
341wildcards are not treated as active for matching purposes.
a9b4a41a 342.
db5076ee 343.IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-readd\fR] \fBreplace\-flows \fIswitch file\fR"
0199c526
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344Reads flow entries from \fIfile\fR (or \fBstdin\fR if \fIfile\fR is
345\fB\-\fR) and queries the flow table from \fIswitch\fR. Then it fixes
346up any differences, adding flows from \fIflow\fR that are missing on
347\fIswitch\fR, deleting flows from \fIswitch\fR that are not in
348\fIfile\fR, and updating flows in \fIswitch\fR whose actions, cookie,
349or timeouts differ in \fIfile\fR.
350.
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351.IP
352With \fB\-\-readd\fR, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR adds all the flows from
353\fIfile\fR, even those that exist with the same actions, cookie, and
354timeout in \fIswitch\fR. This resets all the flow packet and byte
355counters to 0, which can be useful for debugging.
356.
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357.IP "\fBdiff\-flows \fIsource1 source2\fR"
358Reads flow entries from \fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR and prints the
359differences. A flow that is in \fIsource1\fR but not in \fIsource2\fR
360is printed preceded by a \fB\-\fR, and a flow that is in \fIsource2\fR
361but not in \fIsource1\fR is printed preceded by a \fB+\fR. If a flow
362exists in both \fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR with different actions,
363cookie, or timeouts, then both versions are printed preceded by
364\fB\-\fR and \fB+\fR, respectively.
365.IP
366\fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR may each name a file or a switch. If
367a name begins with \fB/\fR or \fB.\fR, then it is considered to be a
368file name. A name that contains \fB:\fR is considered to be a switch.
369Otherwise, it is a file if a file by that name exists, a switch if
370not.
371.IP
372For this command, an exit status of 0 means that no differences were
373found, 1 means that an error occurred, and 2 means that some
374differences were found.
375.
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376.IP "\fBpacket\-out \fIswitch in_port actions packet\fR..."
377Connects to \fIswitch\fR and instructs it to execute the OpenFlow
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378\fIactions\fR on each \fIpacket\fR. Each \fBpacket\fR is specified as a
379series of hex digits. For the purpose of executing the
0c3d5fc8 380actions, the packets are considered to have arrived on \fIin_port\fR,
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381which may be an OpenFlow port number or name (e.g. \fBeth0\fR), the
382keyword \fBLOCAL\fR (the preferred way to refer to the OpenFlow
383``local'' port), or the keyword \fBNONE\fR to indicate that the packet
384was generated by the switch itself.
0c3d5fc8 385.
7395c052
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386.SS "OpenFlow Switch Group Table Commands"
387.
388These commands manage the group table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
389case, \fIgroup\fR specifies a group entry in the format described in
390\fBGroup Syntax\fR, below, and \fIfile\fR is a text file that contains
391zero or more groups in the same syntax, one per line.
392
393.IP "\fBadd\-group \fIswitch group\fR"
394.IQ "\fBadd\-group \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
395.IQ "\fBadd\-groups \fIswitch file\fR"
396Add each group entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables.
397.
398.IP "\fBmod\-group \fIswitch group\fR"
399.IQ "\fBmod\-group \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
400Modify the action buckets in entries from \fIswitch\fR's tables for
401each group entry.
402.
403.IP "\fBdel\-groups \fIswitch\fR"
404.IQ "\fBdel\-groups \fIswitch \fR[\fIgroup\fR]"
405.IQ "\fBdel\-groups \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
406Deletes entries from \fIswitch\fR's group table. With only a
407\fIswitch\fR argument, deletes all groups. Otherwise, deletes the group
408for each group entry.
409.
bdbb8426
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410.IP "\fBinsert\-buckets \fIswitch group\fR"
411.IQ "\fBinsert\-buckets \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
412Add buckets to an existing group present in the \fIswitch\fR's group table.
413If no \fIcommand_bucket_id\fR is present in the group specification then all
414buckets of the group are removed.
415.
416.IP "\fBremove\-buckets \fIswitch group\fR"
417.IQ "\fBremove\-buckets \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
418Remove buckets to an existing group present in the \fIswitch\fR's group table.
419If no \fIcommand_bucket_id\fR is present in the group specification then all
420buckets of the group are removed.
421.
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422.SS "OpenFlow Switch Geneve Option Table Commands"
423.
1e71b944
BP
424Open vSwitch maintains a mapping table between Geneve options (defined
425by <class, type, length>) and an NXM field \fBtun_metadata\fIn\fR,
426where \fIn\fR ranges from 0 to 63, that can be operated on for the
427purposes of matches, actions, etc. This mapping must be explicitly
428specified by the user through the following commands.
6159c531 429
1e71b944
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430A Geneve option mapping is specified with the syntax
431\fB{class=\fIclass\fB,type=\fItype\fB,len=\fIlength\fB}->tun_metadata\fIn\fR.
432When an option mapping exists for a given \fBtun_metadata\fIn\fR,
433matching on the defined field becomes possible, e.g.:
434
435.RS
436ovs-ofctl add-geneve-map br0 "{class=0xffff,type=0,len=4}->tun_metadata0"
437.PP
438ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 tun_metadata0=1234,actions=controller
439.RE
440
441A mapping should not be changed while it is in active
442use by a flow. The result of doing so is undefined.
6159c531 443
9558d2a5
JG
444Currently, the Geneve mapping table is shared between all OpenFlow
445switches in a given instance of Open vSwitch. This restriction will
446be lifted in the future to allow for easier management.
447
6159c531
JG
448These commands are Nicira extensions to OpenFlow and require Open vSwitch
4492.5 or later.
450
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451.IP "\fBadd\-geneve\-map \fIswitch option\fR[\fB,\fIoption\fR]..."
452Add each \fIoption\fR to \fIswitch\fR's tables. Duplicate fields are
6159c531
JG
453rejected.
454.
1e71b944
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455.IP "\fBdel\-geneve\-map \fIswitch \fR[\fIoption\fR[\fB,\fIoption\fR]]..."
456Delete each \fIoption\fR from \fIswitch\fR's table, or all Geneve option
457mapping if no \fIoption\fR is specified.
458Fields that aren't mapped are ignored.
6159c531
JG
459.
460.IP "\fBdump\-geneve\-map \fIswitch\fR"
461Show the currently mapped fields in the switch's option table as well
462as switch capabilities.
463.
4989c59f
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464.SS "OpenFlow Switch Monitoring Commands"
465.
0caf6bde
BP
466.IP "\fBsnoop \fIswitch\fR"
467Connects to \fIswitch\fR and prints to the console all OpenFlow
468messages received. Unlike other \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands, if
469\fIswitch\fR is the name of a bridge, then the \fBsnoop\fR command
470connects to a Unix domain socket named
421e818c 471\fB@RUNDIR@/\fIswitch\fB.snoop\fR. \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR listens on
0caf6bde
BP
472such a socket for each bridge and sends to it all of the OpenFlow
473messages sent to or received from its configured OpenFlow controller.
474Thus, this command can be used to view OpenFlow protocol activity
475between a switch and its controller.
476.IP
477When a switch has more than one controller configured, only the
e2bfacb6
BP
478traffic to and from a single controller is output. If none of the
479controllers is configured as a master or a slave (using a Nicira
70d0aed3
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480extension to OpenFlow 1.0 or 1.1, or a standard request in OpenFlow
4811.2 or later), then a controller is chosen arbitrarily among
e2bfacb6
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482them. If there is a master controller, it is chosen; otherwise, if
483there are any controllers that are not masters or slaves, one is
484chosen arbitrarily; otherwise, a slave controller is chosen
485arbitrarily. This choice is made once at connection time and does not
486change as controllers reconfigure their roles.
487.IP
488If a switch has no controller configured, or if
0caf6bde
BP
489the configured controller is disconnected, no traffic is sent, so
490monitoring will not show any traffic.
491.
2b07c8b1 492.IP "\fBmonitor \fIswitch\fR [\fImiss-len\fR] [\fBinvalid_ttl\fR] [\fBwatch:\fR[\fIspec\fR...]]"
064af421 493Connects to \fIswitch\fR and prints to the console all OpenFlow
045b2e5c
BP
494messages received. Usually, \fIswitch\fR should specify the name of a
495bridge in the \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR database.
a9b4a41a 496.IP
064af421
BP
497If \fImiss-len\fR is provided, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR sends an OpenFlow ``set
498configuration'' message at connection setup time that requests
0caf6bde
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499\fImiss-len\fR bytes of each packet that misses the flow table. Open vSwitch
500does not send these and other asynchronous messages to an
064af421 501\fBovs\-ofctl monitor\fR client connection unless a nonzero value is
0caf6bde
BP
502specified on this argument. (Thus, if \fImiss\-len\fR is not
503specified, very little traffic will ordinarily be printed.)
a9b4a41a 504.IP
f0fd1a17
PS
505If \fBinvalid_ttl\fR is passed, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR sends an OpenFlow ``set
506configuration'' message at connection setup time that requests
5484c47a
BP
507\fBINVALID_TTL_TO_CONTROLLER\fR, so that \fBovs\-ofctl monitor\fR can
508receive ``packet-in'' messages when TTL reaches zero on \fBdec_ttl\fR action.
f0fd1a17 509.IP
2b07c8b1
BP
510\fBwatch:\fR[\fB\fIspec\fR...] causes \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to send a
511``monitor request'' Nicira extension message to the switch at
512connection setup time. This message causes the switch to send
513information about flow table changes as they occur. The following
514comma-separated \fIspec\fR syntax is available:
515.RS
516.IP "\fB!initial\fR"
517Do not report the switch's initial flow table contents.
518.IP "\fB!add\fR"
519Do not report newly added flows.
520.IP "\fB!delete\fR"
521Do not report deleted flows.
522.IP "\fB!modify\fR"
523Do not report modifications to existing flows.
524.IP "\fB!own\fR"
525Abbreviate changes made to the flow table by \fBovs\-ofctl\fR's own
526connection to the switch. (These could only occur using the
527\fBofctl/send\fR command described below under \fBRUNTIME MANAGEMENT
528COMMANDS\fR.)
529.IP "\fB!actions\fR"
530Do not report actions as part of flow updates.
531.IP "\fBtable=\fInumber\fR"
532Limits the monitoring to the table with the given \fInumber\fR between
5330 and 254. By default, all tables are monitored.
534.IP "\fBout_port=\fIport\fR"
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BP
535If set, only flows that output to \fIport\fR are monitored. The
536\fIport\fR may be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
537(e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR).
2b07c8b1
BP
538.IP "\fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR"
539Monitors only flows that have \fIfield\fR specified as the given
540\fIvalue\fR. Any syntax valid for matching on \fBdump\-flows\fR may
541be used.
542.RE
543.IP
064af421 544This command may be useful for debugging switch or controller
2b07c8b1
BP
545implementations. With \fBwatch:\fR, it is particularly useful for
546observing how a controller updates flow tables.
a9b4a41a 547.
064af421 548.SS "OpenFlow Switch and Controller Commands"
a9b4a41a 549.
064af421
BP
550The following commands, like those in the previous section, may be
551applied to OpenFlow switches, using any of the connection methods
552described in that section. Unlike those commands, these may also be
553applied to OpenFlow controllers.
a9b4a41a 554.
064af421
BP
555.TP
556\fBprobe \fItarget\fR
557Sends a single OpenFlow echo-request message to \fItarget\fR and waits
4e312e69 558for the response. With the \fB\-t\fR or \fB\-\-timeout\fR option, this
064af421
BP
559command can test whether an OpenFlow switch or controller is up and
560running.
a9b4a41a 561.
064af421
BP
562.TP
563\fBping \fItarget \fR[\fIn\fR]
564Sends a series of 10 echo request packets to \fItarget\fR and times
565each reply. The echo request packets consist of an OpenFlow header
566plus \fIn\fR bytes (default: 64) of randomly generated payload. This
567measures the latency of individual requests.
a9b4a41a 568.
064af421
BP
569.TP
570\fBbenchmark \fItarget n count\fR
571Sends \fIcount\fR echo request packets that each consist of an
572OpenFlow header plus \fIn\fR bytes of payload and waits for each
573response. Reports the total time required. This is a measure of the
574maximum bandwidth to \fItarget\fR for round-trips of \fIn\fR-byte
575messages.
a9b4a41a 576.
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BP
577.SS "Other Commands"
578.
579.IP "\fBofp\-parse\fR \fIfile\fR"
580Reads \fIfile\fR (or \fBstdin\fR if \fIfile\fR is \fB\-\fR) as a
581series of OpenFlow messages in the binary format used on an OpenFlow
582connection, and prints them to the console. This can be useful for
583printing OpenFlow messages captured from a TCP stream.
584.
f3dd1419
BP
585.IP "\fBofp\-parse\-pcap\fR \fIfile\fR [\fIport\fR...]"
586Reads \fIfile\fR, which must be in the PCAP format used by network
587capture tools such as \fBtcpdump\fR or \fBwireshark\fR, extracts all
588the TCP streams for OpenFlow connections, and prints the OpenFlow
589messages in those connections in human-readable format on
590\fBstdout\fR.
591.IP
592OpenFlow connections are distinguished by TCP port number.
593Non-OpenFlow packets are ignored. By default, data on TCP ports 6633
594and 6653 are considered to be OpenFlow. Specify one or more
595\fIport\fR arguments to override the default.
596.IP
597This command cannot usefully print SSL encrypted traffic. It does not
598understand IPv6.
599.
064af421 600.SS "Flow Syntax"
a9b4a41a 601.PP
064af421
BP
602Some \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands accept an argument that describes a flow or
603flows. Such flow descriptions comprise a series
604\fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR assignments, separated by commas or white
605space. (Embedding spaces into a flow description normally requires
606quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
607multiple arguments.)
a9b4a41a 608.PP
0b3f2725
BP
609Flow descriptions should be in \fBnormal form\fR. This means that a
610flow may only specify a value for an L3 field if it also specifies a
611particular L2 protocol, and that a flow may only specify an L4 field
612if it also specifies particular L2 and L3 protocol types. For
613example, if the L2 protocol type \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded, then L3
614fields \fBnw_src\fR, \fBnw_dst\fR, and \fBnw_proto\fR must also be
615wildcarded. Similarly, if \fBdl_type\fR or \fBnw_proto\fR (the L3
1c58a78b
BP
616protocol type) is wildcarded, so must be the L4 fields \fBtcp_dst\fR and
617\fBtcp_src\fR. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will warn about
0b3f2725
BP
618flows not in normal form.
619.PP
064af421
BP
620The following field assignments describe how a flow matches a packet.
621If any of these assignments is omitted from the flow syntax, the field
622is treated as a wildcard; thus, if all of them are omitted, the
bedde04c
GS
623resulting flow matches all packets. The string \fB*\fR may be specified
624to explicitly mark any of these fields as a wildcard.
064af421 625(\fB*\fR should be quoted to protect it from shell expansion.)
a9b4a41a 626.
c6100d92
BP
627.IP \fBin_port=\fIport\fR
628Matches OpenFlow port \fIport\fR, which may be an OpenFlow port number
629or keyword (e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR).
630\fBovs\-ofctl show\fR.
03a8a29e
BP
631.IP
632(The \fBresubmit\fR action can search OpenFlow flow tables with
633arbitrary \fBin_port\fR values, so flows that match port numbers that
634do not exist from an OpenFlow perspective can still potentially be
635matched.)
a9b4a41a 636.
064af421 637.IP \fBdl_vlan=\fIvlan\fR
f30f26be
JP
638Matches IEEE 802.1q Virtual LAN tag \fIvlan\fR. Specify \fB0xffff\fR
639as \fIvlan\fR to match packets that are not tagged with a Virtual LAN;
064af421
BP
640otherwise, specify a number between 0 and 4095, inclusive, as the
64112-bit VLAN ID to match.
a9b4a41a 642.
959a2ecd
JP
643.IP \fBdl_vlan_pcp=\fIpriority\fR
644Matches IEEE 802.1q Priority Code Point (PCP) \fIpriority\fR, which is
645specified as a value between 0 and 7, inclusive. A higher value
646indicates a higher frame priority level.
a9b4a41a 647.
ed951f15
BP
648.IP \fBdl_src=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
649.IQ \fBdl_dst=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
650Matches an Ethernet source (or destination) address specified as 6
651pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
652(e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR).
653.
73c0ce34
JS
654.IP \fBdl_src=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB/\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
655.IQ \fBdl_dst=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB/\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
cb8ca532
BP
656Matches an Ethernet destination address specified as 6 pairs of
657hexadecimal digits delimited by colons (e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR),
73c0ce34
JS
658with a wildcard mask following the slash. Open vSwitch 1.8 and later
659support arbitrary masks for source and/or destination. Earlier
660versions only support masking the destination with the following masks:
cb8ca532
BP
661.RS
662.IP \fB01:00:00:00:00:00\fR
663Match only the multicast bit. Thus,
664\fBdl_dst=01:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00\fR matches all multicast
665(including broadcast) Ethernet packets, and
666\fBdl_dst=00:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00\fR matches all unicast
667Ethernet packets.
668.IP \fBfe:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff\fR
669Match all bits except the multicast bit. This is probably not useful.
670.IP \fBff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff\fR
671Exact match (equivalent to omitting the mask).
672.IP \fB00:00:00:00:00:00\fR
673Wildcard all bits (equivalent to \fBdl_dst=*\fR.)
674.RE
675.
064af421
BP
676.IP \fBdl_type=\fIethertype\fR
677Matches Ethernet protocol type \fIethertype\fR, which is specified as an
678integer between 0 and 65535, inclusive, either in decimal or as a
679hexadecimal number prefixed by \fB0x\fR (e.g. \fB0x0806\fR to match ARP
680packets).
a9b4a41a 681.
064af421 682.IP \fBnw_src=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
ed951f15
BP
683.IQ \fBnw_dst=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
684When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x0800 (possibly via shorthand, e.g. \fBip\fR
685or \fBtcp\fR), matches IPv4 source (or destination) address \fIip\fR,
686which may be specified as an IP address or host name
687(e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
688\fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to an IPv4 address prefix.
689The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
690(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
c08201d6
BP
691(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR). Open vSwitch 1.8 and later support
692arbitrary dotted quad masks; earlier versions support only CIDR masks,
693that is, the dotted quads that are equivalent to some CIDR block.
ed951f15
BP
694.IP
695When \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR or \fBarp\fR is specified, matches the
696\fBar_spa\fR or \fBar_tpa\fR field, respectively, in ARP packets for
697IPv4 and Ethernet.
698.IP
8087f5ff
MM
699When \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR or \fBrarp\fR is specified, matches the
700\fBar_spa\fR or \fBar_tpa\fR field, respectively, in RARP packets for
701IPv4 and Ethernet.
702.IP
703When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800,
7040x0806, or 0x8035, the values of \fBnw_src\fR and \fBnw_dst\fR are ignored
0b3f2725 705(see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
a9b4a41a 706.
064af421 707.IP \fBnw_proto=\fIproto\fR
44a7e26d 708.IQ \fBip_proto=\fIproto\fR
ed951f15
BP
709When \fBip\fR or \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR is specified, matches IP
710protocol type \fIproto\fR, which is specified as a decimal number
d31f1109
JP
711between 0 and 255, inclusive (e.g. 1 to match ICMP packets or 6 to match
712TCP packets).
713.IP
714When \fBipv6\fR or \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR is specified, matches IPv6
715header type \fIproto\fR, which is specified as a decimal number between
7160 and 255, inclusive (e.g. 58 to match ICMPv6 packets or 6 to match
717TCP). The header type is the terminal header as described in the
718\fBDESIGN\fR document.
ed951f15
BP
719.IP
720When \fBarp\fR or \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR is specified, matches the lower
7218 bits of the ARP opcode. ARP opcodes greater than 255 are treated as
7220.
723.IP
8087f5ff
MM
724When \fBrarp\fR or \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR is specified, matches the lower
7258 bits of the ARP opcode. ARP opcodes greater than 255 are treated as
7260.
727.IP
d31f1109 728When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800,
8087f5ff
MM
7290x0806, 0x8035 or 0x86dd, the value of \fBnw_proto\fR is ignored (see
730\fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
a9b4a41a 731.
834377ea 732.IP \fBnw_tos=\fItos\fR
d31f1109
JP
733Matches IP ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field \fItos\fR, which is
734specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive. Note that
735the two lower reserved bits are ignored for matching purposes.
ed951f15 736.IP
5c0ceb0a
JP
737When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
7380x86dd, the value of \fBnw_tos\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
739above).
a9b4a41a 740.
44a7e26d
JR
741.IP \fBip_dscp=\fIdscp\fR
742Matches IP ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field \fIdscp\fR, which is
743specified as a decimal number between 0 and 63, inclusive.
744.IP
745When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
7460x86dd, the value of \fBip_dscp\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
747above).
748.
530180fd 749.IP \fBnw_ecn=\fIecn\fR
44a7e26d 750.IQ \fBip_ecn=\fIecn\fR
530180fd
JP
751Matches \fIecn\fR bits in IP ToS or IPv6 traffic class fields, which is
752specified as a decimal number between 0 and 3, inclusive.
753.IP
754When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
7550x86dd, the value of \fBnw_ecn\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
756above).
757.
a61680c6
JP
758.IP \fBnw_ttl=\fIttl\fR
759Matches IP TTL or IPv6 hop limit value \fIttl\fR, which is
760specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive.
761.IP
762When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
7630x86dd, the value of \fBnw_ttl\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
764above).
765.IP
766.
1c58a78b
BP
767.IP \fBtcp_src=\fIport\fR
768.IQ \fBtcp_dst=\fIport\fR
769.IQ \fBudp_src=\fIport\fR
770.IQ \fBudp_dst=\fIport\fR
771.IQ \fBsctp_src=\fIport\fR
772.IQ \fBsctp_dst=\fIport\fR
773Matches a TCP, UDP, or SCTP source or destination port \fIport\fR,
774which is specified as a decimal number between 0 and 65535, inclusive.
775.IP
776When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR are wildcarded or set to values
777that do not indicate an appropriate protocol, the values of these
778settings are ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
779.
780.IP \fBtcp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
781.IQ \fBtcp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
782.IQ \fBudp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
783.IQ \fBudp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
784.IQ \fBsctp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
785.IQ \fBsctp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
786Bitwise match on TCP (or UDP or SCTP) source or destination port.
787The \fIport\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit numbers
73f33563
BP
788written in decimal or in hexadecimal prefixed by \fB0x\fR. Each 1-bit
789in \fImask\fR requires that the corresponding bit in \fIport\fR must
790match. Each 0-bit in \fImask\fR causes the corresponding bit to be
791ignored.
792.IP
793Bitwise matches on transport ports are rarely useful in isolation, but
794a group of them can be used to reduce the number of flows required to
795match on a range of transport ports. For example, suppose that the
796goal is to match TCP source ports 1000 to 1999, inclusive. One way is
edcbeb4d 797to insert 1000 flows, each of which matches on a single source port.
73f33563
BP
798Another way is to look at the binary representations of 1000 and 1999,
799as follows:
800.br
801.B "01111101000"
802.br
803.B "11111001111"
804.br
805and then to transform those into a series of bitwise matches that
806accomplish the same results:
807.br
808.B "01111101xxx"
809.br
810.B "0111111xxxx"
811.br
812.B "10xxxxxxxxx"
813.br
814.B "110xxxxxxxx"
815.br
816.B "1110xxxxxxx"
817.br
818.B "11110xxxxxx"
819.br
820.B "1111100xxxx"
821.br
822which become the following when written in the syntax required by
823\fBovs\-ofctl\fR:
824.br
1c58a78b 825.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x03e8/0xfff8"
73f33563 826.br
1c58a78b 827.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x03f0/0xfff0"
73f33563 828.br
1c58a78b 829.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0400/0xfe00"
73f33563 830.br
1c58a78b 831.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0600/0xff00"
73f33563 832.br
1c58a78b 833.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0700/0xff80"
73f33563 834.br
1c58a78b 835.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0780/0xffc0"
73f33563 836.br
1c58a78b 837.B "tcp,tcp_src=0x07c0/0xfff0"
73f33563
BP
838.IP
839Only Open vSwitch 1.6 and later supports bitwise matching on transport
840ports.
841.IP
1c58a78b 842Like the exact-match forms described
edcbeb4d 843above, the bitwise match forms apply only when \fBdl_type\fR and
0d56eaf2 844\fBnw_proto\fR specify TCP or UDP or SCTP.
73f33563 845.
1c58a78b
BP
846.IP \fBtp_src=\fIport\fR
847.IQ \fBtp_dst=\fIport\fR
848These are deprecated generic forms of L4 port matches. In new code,
849please use the TCP-, UDP-, or SCTP-specific forms described above.
850.
dc235f7f 851.IP \fBtcp_flags=\fIflags\fB/\fImask\fR
61bf6666 852.IQ \fBtcp_flags=\fR[\fB+\fIflag\fR...][\fB-\fIflag\fR...]
dc235f7f
JR
853Bitwise match on TCP flags. The \fIflags\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit
854numbers written in decimal or in hexadecimal prefixed by \fB0x\fR.
855Each 1-bit in \fImask\fR requires that the corresponding bit in
856\fIflags\fR must match. Each 0-bit in \fImask\fR causes the corresponding
857bit to be ignored.
858.IP
61bf6666
JR
859Alternatively, the flags can be specified by their symbolic names
860(listed below), each preceded by either \fB+\fR for a flag that must
861be set, or \fB\-\fR for a flag that must be unset, without any other
862delimiters between the flags. Flags not mentioned are wildcarded.
863For example, \fBtcp,tcp_flags=+syn\-ack\fR matches TCP SYNs that are
864not ACKs.
865.IP
dc235f7f
JR
866TCP protocol currently defines 9 flag bits, and additional 3 bits are
867reserved (must be transmitted as zero), see RFCs 793, 3168, and 3540.
868The flag bits are, numbering from the least significant bit:
869.RS
61bf6666 870.IP "\fB0: fin\fR"
dc235f7f 871No more data from sender.
61bf6666 872.IP "\fB1: syn\fR"
dc235f7f 873Synchronize sequence numbers.
61bf6666 874.IP "\fB2: rst\fR"
dc235f7f 875Reset the connection.
61bf6666 876.IP "\fB3: psh\fR"
dc235f7f 877Push function.
61bf6666 878.IP "\fB4: ack\fR"
dc235f7f 879Acknowledgement field significant.
61bf6666 880.IP "\fB5: urg\fR"
dc235f7f 881Urgent pointer field significant.
61bf6666 882.IP "\fB6: ece\fR"
dc235f7f 883ECN Echo.
61bf6666 884.IP "\fB7: cwr\fR"
dc235f7f 885Congestion Windows Reduced.
61bf6666 886.IP "\fB8: ns\fR"
dc235f7f
JR
887Nonce Sum.
888.IP "\fB9-11:\fR"
889Reserved.
890.IP "\fB12-15:\fR"
891Not matchable, must be zero.
892.RE
064af421 893.IP \fBicmp_type=\fItype\fR
ed951f15 894.IQ \fBicmp_code=\fIcode\fR
d31f1109
JP
895When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR specify ICMP or ICMPv6, \fItype\fR
896matches the ICMP type and \fIcode\fR matches the ICMP code. Each is
897specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive.
ed951f15
BP
898.IP
899When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR take other values, the values of
0b3f2725 900these settings are ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
71e17a7a 901.
6c1491fb 902.IP \fBtable=\fInumber\fR
0e197060
BP
903For flow dump commands, limits the flows dumped to those in the table
904with the given \fInumber\fR between 0 and 254. If not specified (or if
905255 is specified as \fInumber\fR), then flows in all tables are
906dumped.
907.
908.IP
909For flow table modification commands, behavior varies based on the
910OpenFlow version used to connect to the switch:
911.
912.RS
913.IP "OpenFlow 1.0"
914OpenFlow 1.0 does not support \fBtable\fR for modifying flows.
915\fBovs\-ofctl\fR will exit with an error if \fBtable\fR (other than
916\fBtable=255\fR) is specified for a switch that only supports OpenFlow
9171.0.
918.IP
919In OpenFlow 1.0, the switch chooses the table into which to insert a
920new flow. The Open vSwitch software switch always chooses table 0.
921Other Open vSwitch datapaths and other OpenFlow implementations may
922choose different tables.
923.IP
924The OpenFlow 1.0 behavior in Open vSwitch for modifying or removing
925flows depends on whether \fB\-\-strict\fR is used. Without
926\fB\-\-strict\fR, the command applies to matching flows in all tables.
927With \fB\-\-strict\fR, the command will operate on any single matching
928flow in any table; it will do nothing if there are matches in more
929than one table. (The distinction between these behaviors only matters
930if non-OpenFlow 1.0 commands were also used, because OpenFlow 1.0
931alone cannot add flows with the same matching criteria to multiple
932tables.)
933.
934.IP "OpenFlow 1.0 with table_id extension"
935Open vSwitch implements an OpenFlow extension that allows the
936controller to specify the table on which to operate. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
937automatically enables the extension when \fBtable\fR is specified and
938OpenFlow 1.0 is used. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR automatically detects whether
939the switch supports the extension. As of this writing, this extension
940is only known to be implemented by Open vSwitch.
941.
942.IP
943With this extension, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR operates on the requested table
944when \fBtable\fR is specified, and acts as described for OpenFlow 1.0
945above when no \fBtable\fR is specified (or for \fBtable=255\fR).
946.
947.IP "OpenFlow 1.1"
948OpenFlow 1.1 requires flow table modification commands to specify a
949table. When \fBtable\fR is not specified (or \fBtable=255\fR is
950specified), \fBovs\-ofctl\fR defaults to table 0.
951.
952.IP "OpenFlow 1.2 and later"
953OpenFlow 1.2 and later allow flow deletion commands, but not other
954flow table modification commands, to operate on all flow tables, with
955the behavior described above for OpenFlow 1.0.
956.RE
6c1491fb 957.
54fa24c5
JS
958.IP \fBmetadata=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
959Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in the metadata
960field. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 64-bit integers, by default in decimal
961(use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify hexadecimal). Arbitrary \fImask\fR values
962are allowed: a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in
963\fIvalue\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. Matching on
964metadata was added in Open vSwitch 1.8.
965.
71e17a7a 966.PP
d31f1109
JP
967The following shorthand notations are also available:
968.
969.IP \fBip\fR
970Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR.
971.
c5a41255
JP
972.IP \fBipv6\fR
973Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR.
974.
d31f1109
JP
975.IP \fBicmp\fR
976Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=1\fR.
977.
c5a41255
JP
978.IP \fBicmp6\fR
979Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=58\fR.
980.
d31f1109
JP
981.IP \fBtcp\fR
982Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=6\fR.
983.
c5a41255
JP
984.IP \fBtcp6\fR
985Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=6\fR.
986.
d31f1109
JP
987.IP \fBudp\fR
988Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=17\fR.
989.
c5a41255
JP
990.IP \fBudp6\fR
991Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=17\fR.
992.
0d56eaf2
JS
993.IP \fBsctp\fR
994Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=132\fR.
995.
c5a41255
JP
996.IP \fBsctp6\fR
997Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=132\fR.
998.
d31f1109
JP
999.IP \fBarp\fR
1000Same as \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR.
1001.
8087f5ff
MM
1002.IP \fBrarp\fR
1003Same as \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR.
1004.
c5a41255
JP
1005.IP \fBmpls\fR
1006Same as \fBdl_type=0x8847\fR.
1007.
1008.IP \fBmplsm\fR
1009Same as \fBdl_type=0x8848\fR.
1010.
d31f1109 1011.PP
71e17a7a
JP
1012The following field assignments require support for the NXM (Nicira
1013Extended Match) extension to OpenFlow. When one of these is specified,
1014\fBovs\-ofctl\fR will automatically attempt to negotiate use of this
1015extension. If the switch does not support NXM, then \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
1016will report a fatal error.
1017.
33d8c6b4
BP
1018.IP \fBvlan_tci=\fItci\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1019Matches modified VLAN TCI \fItci\fR. If \fImask\fR is omitted,
1020\fItci\fR is the exact VLAN TCI to match; if \fImask\fR is specified,
a8600e1a 1021then a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in
33d8c6b4
BP
1022\fItci\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. Both
1023\fItci\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit values that are decimal by
1024default; use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1025.
1026.IP
1027The value that \fBvlan_tci\fR matches against is 0 for a packet that
1028has no 802.1Q header. Otherwise, it is the TCI value from the 802.1Q
1029header with the CFI bit (with value \fB0x1000\fR) forced to 1.
1030.IP
1031Examples:
1032.RS
1033.IP \fBvlan_tci=0\fR
1034Match only packets without an 802.1Q header.
1035.IP \fBvlan_tci=0xf123\fR
1036Match packets tagged with priority 7 in VLAN 0x123.
1037.IP \fBvlan_tci=0x1123/0x1fff\fR
1038Match packets tagged with VLAN 0x123 (and any priority).
1039.IP \fBvlan_tci=0x5000/0xf000\fR
1040Match packets tagged with priority 2 (in any VLAN).
1041.IP \fBvlan_tci=0/0xfff\fR
1042Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with VLAN 0 (and any
1043priority).
1044.IP \fBvlan_tci=0x5000/0xe000\fR
1045Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with priority 2 (in any
1046VLAN).
1047.IP \fBvlan_tci=0/0xefff\fR
1048Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with VLAN 0 and priority
10490.
1050.RE
1051.IP
1052Some of these matching possibilities can also be achieved with
1053\fBdl_vlan\fR and \fBdl_vlan_pcp\fR.
1054.
7257b535
BP
1055.IP \fBip_frag=\fIfrag_type\fR
1056When \fBdl_type\fR specifies IP or IPv6, \fIfrag_type\fR
1057specifies what kind of IP fragments or non-fragments to match. The
1058following values of \fIfrag_type\fR are supported:
1059.RS
1060.IP "\fBno\fR"
1061Matches only non-fragmented packets.
1062.IP "\fByes\fR"
1063Matches all fragments.
1064.IP "\fBfirst\fR"
1065Matches only fragments with offset 0.
1066.IP "\fBlater\fR"
1067Matches only fragments with nonzero offset.
1068.IP "\fBnot_later\fR"
1069Matches non-fragmented packets and fragments with zero offset.
1070.RE
1071.IP
1072The \fBip_frag\fR match type is likely to be most useful in
1073\fBnx\-match\fR mode. See the description of the \fBset\-frags\fR
1074command, above, for more details.
1075.
1e6fbba0
SH
1076.IP \fBarp_spa=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1077.IQ \fBarp_tpa=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1078When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_spa\fR and
e935fc32 1079\fBarp_tpa\fR match the source and target IPv4 address, respectively.
1e6fbba0
SH
1080An address may be specified as an IP address or host name
1081(e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
1082\fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to an IPv4 address prefix.
1083The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
1084(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
1085(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR).
1086.
bad68a99
JP
1087.IP \fBarp_sha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1088.IQ \fBarp_tha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
8087f5ff
MM
1089When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_sha\fR and
1090\fBarp_tha\fR match the source and target hardware address, respectively. An
9183708a
SH
1091address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
1092(e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR).
bad68a99 1093.
9183708a
SH
1094.IP \fBarp_sha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB/\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1095.IQ \fBarp_tha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB/\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1096When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_sha\fR and
1097\fBarp_tha\fR match the source and target hardware address, respectively. An
1098address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
1099(e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR), with a wildcard mask following the slash.
1100.
1101
d31f1109
JP
1102.IP \fBipv6_src=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1103.IQ \fBipv6_dst=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1104When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x86dd (possibly via shorthand, e.g., \fBipv6\fR
1105or \fBtcp6\fR), matches IPv6 source (or destination) address \fIipv6\fR,
1106which may be specified as defined in RFC 2373. The preferred format is
1107\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fR, where
1108\fIx\fR are the hexadecimal values of the eight 16-bit pieces of the
1109address. A single instance of \fB::\fR may be used to indicate multiple
1110groups of 16-bits of zeros. The optional \fInetmask\fR allows
1111restricting a match to an IPv6 address prefix. A netmask is specified
ff0b06ee
BP
1112as an IPv6 address (e.g. \fB2001:db8:3c4d:1::/ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff::\fR)
1113or a CIDR block (e.g. \fB2001:db8:3c4d:1::/64\fR). Open vSwitch 1.8
1114and later support arbitrary masks; earlier versions support only CIDR
1115masks, that is, CIDR block and IPv6 addresses that are equivalent to
1116CIDR blocks.
d31f1109 1117.
fa8223b7
JP
1118.IP \fBipv6_label=\fIlabel\fR
1119When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x86dd (possibly via shorthand, e.g., \fBipv6\fR
1120or \fBtcp6\fR), matches IPv6 flow label \fIlabel\fR.
1121.
47284b1f 1122.IP \fBnd_target=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
685a51a5
JP
1123When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify
1124IPv6 Neighbor Discovery (ICMPv6 type 135 or 136), matches the target address
1125\fIipv6\fR. \fIipv6\fR is in the same format described earlier for the
1126\fBipv6_src\fR and \fBipv6_dst\fR fields.
1127.
1128.IP \fBnd_sll=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1129When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify IPv6
1130Neighbor Solicitation (ICMPv6 type 135), matches the source link\-layer
1131address option. An address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal
1132digits delimited by colons.
1133.
1134.IP \fBnd_tll=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1135When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify IPv6
1136Neighbor Advertisement (ICMPv6 type 136), matches the target link\-layer
1137address option. An address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal
1138digits delimited by colons.
1139.
b4dca848
SH
1140.IP \fBmpls_bos=\fIbos\fR
1141When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1142\fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the bottom-of-stack bit of the
1143outer-most MPLS label stack entry. Valid values are 0 and 1.
1144.IP
1145If 1 then for a packet with a well-formed MPLS label stack the
1146bottom-of-stack bit indicates that the outer label stack entry is also
1147the inner-most label stack entry and thus that is that there is only one
1148label stack entry present. Conversely, if 0 then for a packet with a
1149well-formed MPLS label stack the bottom-of-stack bit indicates that the
1150outer label stack entry is not the inner-most label stack entry and
1151thus there is more than one label stack entry present.
1152.
1153.IP \fBmpls_label=\fIlabel\fR
1154When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1155\fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the label of the outer
1156MPLS label stack entry. The label is a 20-bit value that is decimal by default;
1157use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1158.
1159.IP \fBmpls_tc=\fItc\fR
1160When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1161\fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the traffic-class of the outer
1162MPLS label stack entry. Valid values are between 0 (lowest) and 7 (highest).
1163.
8368c090 1164.IP \fBtun_id=\fItunnel-id\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
44a7e26d 1165.IQ \fBtunnel_id=\fItunnel-id\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
8368c090 1166Matches tunnel identifier \fItunnel-id\fR. Only packets that arrive
4c5df7f7 1167over a tunnel that carries a key (e.g. GRE with the RFC 2890 key
bcb90943
SH
1168extension and a nonzero key value) will have a nonzero tunnel ID.
1169If \fImask\fR is omitted, \fItunnel-id\fR is the exact tunnel ID to match;
1170if \fImask\fR is specified, then a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the
1171corresponding bit in \fItunnel-id\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit
1172wildcards that bit.
71e17a7a 1173.
b666962b
JG
1174.IP \fBtun_flags=\fIflags\fR
1175Matches flags indicating various aspects of the tunnel encapsulation. Currently,
1176there is only one flag defined:
1177.IP
1178\fBoam\fR: The tunnel protocol indicated that this is an OAM control packet.
1179.IP
1180Flags can be prefixed by \fB+\fR or \fB-\fR to indicate that the flag should
1181be matched as either present or not present, respectively. In addition, flags
1182can be specified without a prefix and separated by \fB|\fR to indicate an exact
1183match.
1184.IP
1185Note that it is possible for newer version of Open vSwitch to introduce
1186additional flags with varying meaning. It is therefore not recommended to use
1187an exact match on this field since the behavior of these new flags is unknown
1188and should be ignored.
1189.IP
1190For non-tunneled packets, the value is 0.
1191.IP
1192This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1193.
0ad90c84
JR
1194.IP \fBtun_src=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1195.IQ \fBtun_dst=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1196Matches tunnel IPv4 source (or destination) address \fIip\fR. Only packets
1197that arrive over a tunnel will have nonzero tunnel addresses.
1198The address may be specified as an IP address or host name
1199(e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
1200\fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to a masked IPv4 address.
1201The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
1202(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
1203(e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR).
1204.
ac6073e3
MC
1205.IP \fBtun_gbp_id=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1206.IQ \fBtun_gbp_flags=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1207Matches the group policy identifier and flags in the VXLAN header. Only
1208packets that arrive over a VXLAN tunnel with the "gbp" extension
1209enabled can have this field set. The fields may also be referred to by
1210NXM_NX_TUN_GBP_ID[] (16 bits) and NXM_NX_TUN_GBP_FLAGS[] (8 bits) in
1211the context of field manipulation actions. If these fields are set and
1212the packet matched by the flow is encapsulated in a VXLAN-GBP tunnel,
1213then the policy identifier and flags are transmitted to the destination
1214VXLAN tunnel endpoint.
1215.IP
1216The \fBtun_gbp_flags\fR field has the following format:
1217.IP
1218.in +2
1219\f(CR+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\fR
1220.br
1221\f(CR|-|D|-|-|A|-|-|-|\fR
1222.br
1223\f(CR+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\fR
1224
1225.B D :=
1226Don't Learn bit. When set, this bit indicates that the egress
1227tunnel endpoint MUST NOT learn the source address of the encapsulated
1228frame.
1229
1230.B A :=
1231Indicates that the group policy has already been applied to
1232this packet. Policies MUST NOT be applied by devices when the A bit is
1233set.
1234.in -2
1235.IP
1236For more information, please see the corresponding IETF draft:
1237https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-smith-vxlan-group-policy
1238.
9558d2a5
JG
1239.IP "\fBtun_metadata\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1240Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1241tunnel metadata field number \fIidx\fR (numbered from 0 to 63).
1242Tunnel metadata fields can be dynamically assigned onto the data
1243contained in the options of Geneve packets using the commands
1244described in the section \fBOpenFlow Switch Geneve Option Table
1245Commands\fR. Once assigned, the length of the field is variable
1246according to the size of the option. Before updating a mapping in
1247the option table, flows with references to it should be removed,
1248otherwise the result is non-deterministic.
1249.IP
1250These fields were introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1251.
00b1c62f
BP
1252.IP "\fBreg\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1253Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1254register number \fIidx\fR. The valid range of \fIidx\fR depends on
1255the switch. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 32-bit integers, by
1256default in decimal (use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify hexadecimal).
1257Arbitrary \fImask\fR values are allowed: a 1-bit in \fImask\fR
1258indicates that the corresponding bit in \fIvalue\fR must match
1259exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit.
1260.IP
1261When a packet enters an OpenFlow switch, all of the registers are set
79fe0f46
BP
1262to 0. Only explicit actions change register values.
1263.
1264.IP "\fBxreg\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1265Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
126664-bit ``extended register'' number \fIidx\fR. Each of the 64-bit
1267extended registers overlays two of the 32-bit registers: \fBxreg0\fR
1268overlays \fBreg0\fR and \fBreg1\fR, with \fBreg0\fR supplying the
1269most-significant bits of \fBxreg0\fR and \fBreg1\fR the
5e0464a0 1270least-significant. \fBxreg1\fR similarly overlays \fBreg2\fR and
79fe0f46
BP
1271\fBreg3\fR, and so on.
1272.IP
1273These fields were added in Open vSwitch 2.3 to conform with the
d3cb080e 1274OpenFlow 1.5 specification. OpenFlow 1.5 calls these fields
79fe0f46
BP
1275just the ``packet registers,'' but Open vSwitch already had 32-bit
1276registers by that name, which is why Open vSwitch refers to the
1277standard registers as ``extended registers''.
a9b4a41a 1278.
ac923e91
JG
1279.IP \fBpkt_mark=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1280Matches packet metadata mark \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional
1281\fImask\fR. The mark is associated data that may be passed into other
1282system components in order to facilitate interaction between subsystems.
1283On Linux this corresponds to the skb mark but the exact implementation is
1284platform-dependent.
1285.
c61f3870
BP
1286.IP \fBactset_output=\fIport\fR
1287Matches the output port currently in the OpenFlow action set, where
1288\fIport\fR may be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
1289(e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR). If there is no output port in the OpenFlow action
1290set, or if the output port will be ignored (e.g. because there is an
1291output group in the OpenFlow action set), then the value will be
1292\fBUNSET\fR.
1293.IP
1294This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.4 to conform with the
d3cb080e 1295OpenFlow 1.5 specification.
18080541
BP
1296.
1297.IP \fBconj_id=\fIvalue\fR
1298Matches the given 32-bit \fIvalue\fR against the conjunction ID. This
1299is used only with the \fBconjunction\fR action (see below).
1300.IP
1301This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.4.
1302.
064af421 1303.PP
d31f1109
JP
1304Defining IPv6 flows (those with \fBdl_type\fR equal to 0x86dd) requires
1305support for NXM. The following shorthand notations are available for
1306IPv6-related flows:
a9b4a41a 1307.
d31f1109
JP
1308.IP \fBipv6\fR
1309Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR.
a9b4a41a 1310.
d31f1109
JP
1311.IP \fBtcp6\fR
1312Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=6\fR.
a9b4a41a 1313.
d31f1109
JP
1314.IP \fBudp6\fR
1315Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=17\fR.
a9b4a41a 1316.
0d56eaf2
JS
1317.IP \fBsctp6\fR
1318Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=132\fR.
1319.
d31f1109
JP
1320.IP \fBicmp6\fR
1321Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=58\fR.
a9b4a41a 1322.
064af421 1323.PP
2c6d8411
BP
1324Finally, field assignments to \fBduration\fR, \fBn_packets\fR, or
1325\fBn_bytes\fR are ignored to allow output from the \fBdump\-flows\fR
1326command to be used as input for other commands that parse flows.
1327.
1328.PP
c821124b
BP
1329The \fBadd\-flow\fR, \fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands
1330require an additional field, which must be the final field specified:
a9b4a41a 1331.
d1ba66e9 1332.IP \fBactions=\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fR
064af421 1333Specifies a comma-separated list of actions to take on a packet when the
d1ba66e9
BP
1334flow entry matches. If no \fIaction\fR is specified, then packets
1335matching the flow are dropped. The following forms of \fIaction\fR
1336are supported:
a9b4a41a 1337.
064af421 1338.RS
d1ba66e9
BP
1339.IP \fIport\fR
1340.IQ \fBoutput:\fIport\fR
1341Outputs the packet to OpenFlow port number \fIport\fR. If \fIport\fR
1342is the packet's input port, the packet is not output.
c6100d92
BP
1343.
1344.IP \fBoutput:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
1345Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow port number read from \fIsrc\fR,
1346which must be an NXM field as described above. For example,
1347\fBoutput:NXM_NX_REG0[16..31]\fR outputs to the OpenFlow port number
d1ba66e9
BP
1348written in the upper half of register 0. If the port number is the
1349packet's input port, the packet is not output.
1350.IP
1351This form of \fBoutput\fR was added in Open vSwitch 1.3.0. This form
1352of \fBoutput\fR uses an OpenFlow extension that is not supported by
1353standard OpenFlow switches.
5682f723 1354.
b47e67c4
TG
1355.IP \fBgroup:\fIgroup_id\fR
1356Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow group \fIgroup_id\fR. Group tables
1357are only supported in OpenFlow 1.1+. See Group Syntax for more details.
1358.
064af421
BP
1359.IP \fBnormal\fR
1360Subjects the packet to the device's normal L2/L3 processing. (This
1361action is not implemented by all OpenFlow switches.)
a9b4a41a 1362.
064af421
BP
1363.IP \fBflood\fR
1364Outputs the packet on all switch physical ports other than the port on
1365which it was received and any ports on which flooding is disabled
1366(typically, these would be ports disabled by the IEEE 802.1D spanning
1367tree protocol).
a9b4a41a 1368.
064af421
BP
1369.IP \fBall\fR
1370Outputs the packet on all switch physical ports other than the port on
1371which it was received.
a9b4a41a 1372.
d1ba66e9
BP
1373.IP \fBlocal\fR
1374Outputs the packet on the ``local port,'' which corresponds to the
1375network device that has the same name as the bridge.
1376.
1377.IP \fBin_port\fR
1378Outputs the packet on the port from which it was received.
1379.
a7349929 1380.IP \fBcontroller(\fIkey\fB=\fIvalue\fR...\fB)
064af421 1381Sends the packet to the OpenFlow controller as a ``packet in''
a7349929
BP
1382message. The supported key-value pairs are:
1383.RS
1384.IP "\fBmax_len=\fInbytes\fR"
1385Limit to \fInbytes\fR the number of bytes of the packet to send to
1386the controller. By default the entire packet is sent.
1387.IP "\fBreason=\fIreason\fR"
1388Specify \fIreason\fR as the reason for sending the message in the
1389``packet in'' message. The supported reasons are \fBaction\fR (the
1390default), \fBno_match\fR, and \fBinvalid_ttl\fR.
1391.IP "\fBid=\fIcontroller-id\fR"
1392Specify \fIcontroller-id\fR, a 16-bit integer, as the connection ID of
1393the OpenFlow controller or controllers to which the ``packet in''
1394message should be sent. The default is zero. Zero is also the
1395default connection ID for each controller connection, and a given
1396controller connection will only have a nonzero connection ID if its
1397controller uses the \fBNXT_SET_CONTROLLER_ID\fR Nicira extension to
1398OpenFlow.
1399.RE
d1ba66e9 1400.IP
a7349929
BP
1401Any \fIreason\fR other than \fBaction\fR and any nonzero
1402\fIcontroller-id\fR uses a Nicira vendor extension that, as of this
1403writing, is only known to be implemented by Open vSwitch (version 1.6
1404or later).
1405.
1406.IP \fBcontroller\fR
1407.IQ \fBcontroller\fR[\fB:\fInbytes\fR]
1408Shorthand for \fBcontroller()\fR or
1409\fBcontroller(max_len=\fInbytes\fB)\fR, respectively.
a9b4a41a 1410.
d1ba66e9
BP
1411.IP \fBenqueue(\fIport\fB,\fIqueue\fB)\fR
1412Enqueues the packet on the specified \fIqueue\fR within port
1413\fIport\fR, which must be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
1414(e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR). The number of supported queues depends on the
1415switch; some OpenFlow implementations do not support queuing at all.
64c1e8af 1416.
064af421
BP
1417.IP \fBdrop\fR
1418Discards the packet, so no further processing or forwarding takes place.
1419If a drop action is used, no other actions may be specified.
a9b4a41a 1420.
064af421
BP
1421.IP \fBmod_vlan_vid\fR:\fIvlan_vid\fR
1422Modifies the VLAN id on a packet. The VLAN tag is added or modified
1423as necessary to match the value specified. If the VLAN tag is added,
1424a priority of zero is used (see the \fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR action to set
1425this).
a9b4a41a 1426.
064af421
BP
1427.IP \fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR:\fIvlan_pcp\fR
1428Modifies the VLAN priority on a packet. The VLAN tag is added or modified
1429as necessary to match the value specified. Valid values are between 0
1430(lowest) and 7 (highest). If the VLAN tag is added, a vid of zero is used
1431(see the \fBmod_vlan_vid\fR action to set this).
a9b4a41a 1432.
064af421
BP
1433.IP \fBstrip_vlan\fR
1434Strips the VLAN tag from a packet if it is present.
a9b4a41a 1435.
3e34fbdd 1436.IP \fBpush_vlan\fR:\fIethertype\fR
898dcef1 1437Push a new VLAN tag onto the packet. Ethertype is used as the Ethertype
3e34fbdd
IY
1438for the tag. Only ethertype 0x8100 should be used. (0x88a8 which the spec
1439allows isn't supported at the moment.)
1440A priority of zero and the tag of zero are used for the new tag.
1441.
b02475c5 1442.IP \fBpush_mpls\fR:\fIethertype\fR
912c1938
SH
1443Changes the packet's Ethertype to \fIethertype\fR, which must be either
1444\fB0x8847\fR or \fB0x8848\fR, and pushes an MPLS LSE.
1445.IP
1446If the packet does not already contain any MPLS labels then an initial
1447label stack entry is pushed. The label stack entry's label is 2 if the
1448packet contains IPv6 and 0 otherwise, its default traffic control value is
1449the low 3 bits of the packet's DSCP value (0 if the packet is not IP), and
1450its TTL is copied from the IP TTL (64 if the packet is not IP).
b02475c5
SH
1451.IP
1452If the packet does already contain an MPLS label, pushes a new
1453outermost label as a copy of the existing outermost label.
1454.IP
b0a17866
SH
1455A limitation of the implementation is that processing of actions will stop
1456if \fBpush_mpls\fR follows another \fBpush_mpls\fR unless there is a
1457\fBpop_mpls\fR in between.
b02475c5
SH
1458.
1459.IP \fBpop_mpls\fR:\fIethertype\fR
799a91bb
SH
1460Strips the outermost MPLS label stack entry.
1461Currently the implementation restricts \fIethertype\fR to a non-MPLS Ethertype
1462and thus \fBpop_mpls\fR should only be applied to packets with
b0a17866
SH
1463an MPLS label stack depth of one. A further limitation is that processing of
1464actions will stop if \fBpop_mpls\fR follows another \fBpop_mpls\fR unless
1465there is a \fBpush_mpls\fR in between.
b02475c5 1466.
064af421
BP
1467.IP \fBmod_dl_src\fB:\fImac\fR
1468Sets the source Ethernet address to \fImac\fR.
a9b4a41a 1469.
064af421
BP
1470.IP \fBmod_dl_dst\fB:\fImac\fR
1471Sets the destination Ethernet address to \fImac\fR.
a9b4a41a 1472.
e423eca6
JP
1473.IP \fBmod_nw_src\fB:\fIip\fR
1474Sets the IPv4 source address to \fIip\fR.
a9b4a41a 1475.
e423eca6
JP
1476.IP \fBmod_nw_dst\fB:\fIip\fR
1477Sets the IPv4 destination address to \fIip\fR.
a9b4a41a 1478.
e423eca6 1479.IP \fBmod_tp_src\fB:\fIport\fR
0d56eaf2 1480Sets the TCP or UDP or SCTP source port to \fIport\fR.
a9b4a41a 1481.
e423eca6 1482.IP \fBmod_tp_dst\fB:\fIport\fR
0d56eaf2 1483Sets the TCP or UDP or SCTP destination port to \fIport\fR.
a9b4a41a 1484.
959a2ecd 1485.IP \fBmod_nw_tos\fB:\fItos\fR
04f01c24
BP
1486Sets the DSCP bits in the IPv4 ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field to
1487\fItos\fR, which must be a multiple of 4 between 0 and 255. This action
1488does not modify the two least significant bits of the ToS field (the ECN bits).
ff14eb7a
JR
1489.
1490.IP \fBmod_nw_ecn\fB:\fIecn\fR
1491Sets the ECN bits in the IPv4 ToS or IPv6 traffic class field to \fIecn\fR,
1492which must be a value between 0 and 3, inclusive. This action does not modify
1493the six most significant bits of the field (the DSCP bits).
1494.IP
1495Requires OpenFlow 1.1 or later.
0c20dbe4
JR
1496.
1497.IP \fBmod_nw_ttl\fB:\fIttl\fR
1498Sets the IPv4 TTL or IPv6 hop limit field to \fIttl\fR, which is specified as
1499a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive. Switch behavior when setting
1500\fIttl\fR to zero is not well specified, though.
1501.IP
1502Requires OpenFlow 1.1 or later.
659586ef
JG
1503.RE
1504.IP
1505The following actions are Nicira vendor extensions that, as of this writing, are
1506only known to be implemented by Open vSwitch:
1507.
1508.RS
1509.
3a2fe1f3 1510.IP \fBresubmit\fB:\fIport\fR
29901626
BP
1511.IQ \fBresubmit\fB(\fR[\fIport\fR]\fB,\fR[\fItable\fR]\fB)
1512Re-searches this OpenFlow flow table (or the table whose number is
1513specified by \fItable\fR) with the \fBin_port\fR field replaced by
1514\fIport\fR (if \fIport\fR is specified) and executes the actions
1515found, if any, in addition to any other actions in this flow entry.
1516.IP
1517Recursive \fBresubmit\fR actions are obeyed up to an
1518implementation-defined maximum depth. Open vSwitch 1.0.1 and earlier
1519did not support recursion; Open vSwitch before 1.2.90 did not support
1520\fItable\fR.
659586ef
JG
1521.
1522.IP \fBset_tunnel\fB:\fIid\fR
b9298d3f
BP
1523.IQ \fBset_tunnel64\fB:\fIid\fR
1524If outputting to a port that encapsulates the packet in a tunnel and
5a6861aa 1525supports an identifier (such as GRE), sets the identifier to \fIid\fR.
b9298d3f
BP
1526If the \fBset_tunnel\fR form is used and \fIid\fR fits in 32 bits,
1527then this uses an action extension that is supported by Open vSwitch
15281.0 and later. Otherwise, if \fIid\fR is a 64-bit value, it requires
1529Open vSwitch 1.1 or later.
3a2fe1f3 1530.
eedc0097
JP
1531.IP \fBset_queue\fB:\fIqueue\fR
1532Sets the queue that should be used to \fIqueue\fR when packets are
1533output. The number of supported queues depends on the switch; some
1534OpenFlow implementations do not support queuing at all.
1535.
1536.IP \fBpop_queue\fR
1537Restores the queue to the value it was before any \fBset_queue\fR
1538actions were applied.
1539.
f0fd1a17 1540.IP \fBdec_ttl\fR
c2d967a5 1541.IQ \fBdec_ttl\fB[\fR(\fIid1,id2\fI)\fR]\fR
f0fd1a17 1542Decrement TTL of IPv4 packet or hop limit of IPv6 packet. If the
972b5f38
JR
1543TTL or hop limit is initially zero or decrementing would make it so, no
1544decrement occurs, as packets reaching TTL zero must be rejected. Instead,
f0fd1a17
PS
1545a ``packet-in'' message with reason code \fBOFPR_INVALID_TTL\fR is
1546sent to each connected controller that has enabled receiving them,
c2d967a5
MM
1547if any. Processing the current set of actions then stops. However,
1548if the current set of actions was reached through ``resubmit'' then
1549remaining actions in outer levels resume processing. This action
1550also optionally supports the ability to specify a list of valid
1551controller ids. Each of controllers in the list will receive the
1552``packet_in'' message only if they have registered to receive the
1553invalid ttl packets. If controller ids are not specified, the
1554``packet_in'' message will be sent only to the controllers having
1555controller id zero which have registered for the invalid ttl packets.
f0fd1a17 1556.
afd5ac06
SH
1557.IP \fBset_mpls_label\fR:\fIlabel\fR
1558Set the label of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1559\fIlabel\fR should be a 20-bit value that is decimal by default;
1560use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1561.
1562.IP \fBset_mpls_tc\fR:\fItc\fR
1563Set the traffic-class of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1564\fItc\fR should be a in the range 0 to 7 inclusive.
1565.
0f3f3c3d
SH
1566.IP \fBset_mpls_ttl\fR:\fIttl\fR
1567Set the TTL of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1568\fIttl\fR should be in the range 0 to 255 inclusive.
1569.
b676167a
SH
1570.IP \fBdec_mpls_ttl\fR
1571Decrement TTL of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet. If the TTL
972b5f38
JR
1572is initially zero or decrementing would make it so, no decrement occurs.
1573Instead, a ``packet-in'' message with reason code \fBOFPR_INVALID_TTL\fR
1574is sent to the main controller (id zero), if it has enabled receiving them.
b676167a
SH
1575Processing the current set of actions then stops. However, if the current
1576set of actions was reached through ``resubmit'' then remaining actions in
1577outer levels resume processing.
1578.
96fc46e8
BP
1579.IP \fBnote:\fR[\fIhh\fR]...
1580Does nothing at all. Any number of bytes represented as hex digits
1581\fIhh\fR may be included. Pairs of hex digits may be separated by
1582periods for readability.
e0631927
BP
1583The \fBnote\fR action's format doesn't include an exact length for its
1584payload, so the provided bytes will be padded on the right by enough
1585bytes with value 0 to make the total number 6 more than a multiple of
15868.
f393f81e 1587.
5a6861aa 1588.IP "\fBmove:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR"
f393f81e
BP
1589Copies the named bits from field \fIsrc\fR to field \fIdst\fR.
1590\fIsrc\fR and \fIdst\fR must be NXM field names as defined in
1591\fBnicira\-ext.h\fR, e.g. \fBNXM_OF_UDP_SRC\fR or \fBNXM_NX_REG0\fR.
1592Each \fIstart\fR and \fIend\fR pair, which are inclusive, must specify
1593the same number of bits and must fit within its respective field.
1594Shorthands for \fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR exist: use
1595\fB[\fIbit\fB]\fR to specify a single bit or \fB[]\fR to specify an
1596entire field.
1597.IP
1598Examples: \fBmove:NXM_NX_REG0[0..5]\->NXM_NX_REG1[26..31]\fR copies the
1599six bits numbered 0 through 5, inclusive, in register 0 into bits 26
1600through 31, inclusive;
5a6861aa 1601\fBmove:NXM_NX_REG0[0..15]\->NXM_OF_VLAN_TCI[]\fR copies the least
f393f81e 1602significant 16 bits of register 0 into the VLAN TCI field.
1a12c419 1603.IP
914624f8
BP
1604In OpenFlow 1.0 through 1.4, \fBmove\fR ordinarily uses an Open
1605vSwitch extension to OpenFlow. In OpenFlow 1.5, \fBmove\fR uses the
d3cb080e 1606OpenFlow 1.5 standard \fBcopy_field\fR action. The ONF has
914624f8
BP
1607also made \fBcopy_field\fR available as an extension to OpenFlow 1.3.
1608Open vSwitch 2.4 and later understands this extension and uses it if a
1609controller uses it, but for backward compatibility with older versions
1610of Open vSwitch, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR does not use it.
f393f81e 1611.
7eb4b1f1
BP
1612.IP "\fBset_field:\fIvalue\fR[/\fImask\fR]\fB\->\fIdst"
1613.IQ "\fBload:\fIvalue\fB\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
1614Loads a literal value into a field or part of a field. With
1615\fBset_field\fR, \fBvalue\fR and the optional \fBmask\fR are given in
1616the customary syntax for field \fIdst\fR, which is expressed as a
1617field name. For example, \fBset_field:00:11:22:33:44:55->eth_src\fR
1618sets the Ethernet source address to 00:11:22:33:44:55. With
1619\fBload\fR, \fIvalue\fR must be an integer value (in decimal or
1620prefixed by \fB0x\fR for hexadecimal) and \fIdst\fR is the NXM or OXM
1621name for the field. For example,
1622\fBload:0x001122334455->OXM_OF_ETH_DST[]\fR has the same effect as the
1623prior \fBset_field\fR example.
1624.IP
1625The two forms exist for historical reasons. Open vSwitch 1.1
1626introduced \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR as a Nicira extension to OpenFlow 1.0
1627and used \fBload\fR to express it. Later, OpenFlow 1.2 introduced a
1628standard \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR action that was restricted to loading
1629entire fields, so Open vSwitch added the form \fBset_field\fR with
1630this restriction. OpenFlow 1.5 extended \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR to the
1631point that it became a superset of \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR. Open vSwitch
1632translates either syntax as necessary for the OpenFlow version in use:
1633in OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.1, \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR; in OpenFlow 1.2, 1.3,
1634and 1.4, \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR for \fBload\fR or for loading a
1635subfield, \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR otherwise; and OpenFlow 1.5 and later,
1636\fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR.
53ddd40a 1637.
bd85dac1
AZ
1638.IP "\fBpush:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
1639Pushes \fIstart\fR to \fIend\fR bits inclusive, in fields
1640on top of the stack.
1641.IP
1642Example: \fBpush:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5]\fR push the value stored in register
16432 bits 0 through 5, inclusive, on to the internal stack.
1644.
1645.IP "\fBpop:\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
1646Pops from the top of the stack, retrieves the \fIstart\fR to \fIend\fR bits
1647inclusive, from the value popped and store them into the corresponding
1648bits in \fIdst\fR.
1649.
1650.IP
1651Example: \fBpop:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5]\fR pops the value from top of the stack.
1652Set register 2 bits 0 through 5, inclusive, based on bits 0 through 5 from the
1653value just popped.
1654.
f5c45121 1655.
53ddd40a
BP
1656.IP "\fBmultipath(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIn_links\fB, \fIarg\fB, \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB])\fR"
1657Hashes \fIfields\fR using \fIbasis\fR as a universal hash parameter,
1658then the applies multipath link selection \fIalgorithm\fR (with
1659parameter \fIarg\fR) to choose one of \fIn_links\fR output links
1660numbered 0 through \fIn_links\fR minus 1, and stores the link into
43edca57 1661\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, which must be an NXM field as
53ddd40a
BP
1662described above.
1663.IP
4249b547
JB
1664\fIfields\fR must be one of the following:
1665.RS
1666.IP \fBeth_src\fR
1667Hashes Ethernet source address only.
1668.IP \fBsymmetric_l4\fR
1669Hashes Ethernet source, destination, and type, VLAN ID, IPv4/IPv6
1670source, destination, and protocol, and TCP or SCTP (but not UDP)
1671ports. The hash is computed so that pairs of corresponding flows in
1672each direction hash to the same value, in environments where L2 paths
1673are the same in each direction. UDP ports are not included in the
1674hash to support protocols such as VXLAN that use asymmetric ports in
1675each direction.
1676.IP \fBsymmetric_l3l4\fR
1677Hashes IPv4/IPv6 source, destination, and protocol, and TCP or SCTP
1678(but not UDP) ports. Like \fBsymmetric_l4\fR, this is a symmetric
1679hash, but by excluding L2 headers it is more effective in environments
1680with asymmetric L2 paths (e.g. paths involving VRRP IP addresses on a
1681router). Not an effective hash function for protocols other than IPv4
1682and IPv6, which hash to a constant zero.
1683.IP \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR
1684Like \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR, but UDP ports are included in the hash.
1685This is a more effective hash when asymmetric UDP protocols such as
1686VXLAN are not a consideration.
1687.RE
1688.IP
1689\fIalgorithm\fR must be one of \fBmodulo_n\fR,
53ddd40a
BP
1690\fBhash_threshold\fR, \fBhrw\fR, and \fBiter_hash\fR. Only
1691the \fBiter_hash\fR algorithm uses \fIarg\fR.
1692.IP
1693Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
3b6a2571 1694.
daff3353
EJ
1695.IP "\fBbundle(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIslave_type\fB, slaves:[\fIs1\fB, \fIs2\fB, ...])\fR"
1696Hashes \fIfields\fR using \fIbasis\fR as a universal hash parameter, then
1697applies the bundle link selection \fIalgorithm\fR to choose one of the listed
1698slaves represented as \fIslave_type\fR. Currently the only supported
1699\fIslave_type\fR is \fBofport\fR. Thus, each \fIs1\fR through \fIsN\fR should
1700be an OpenFlow port number. Outputs to the selected slave.
1701.IP
4249b547
JB
1702Currently, \fIfields\fR must be either \fBeth_src\fR, \fBsymmetric_l4\fR, \fBsymmetric_l3l4\fR, or \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR,
1703and \fIalgorithm\fR must be one of \fBhrw\fR and \fBactive_backup\fR.
daff3353
EJ
1704.IP
1705Example: \fBbundle(eth_src,0,hrw,ofport,slaves:4,8)\fR uses an Ethernet source
1706hash with basis 0, to select between OpenFlow ports 4 and 8 using the Highest
1707Random Weight algorithm.
1708.IP
1709Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
a368bb53
EJ
1710.
1711.IP "\fBbundle_load(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIslave_type\fB, \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB], slaves:[\fIs1\fB, \fIs2\fB, ...])\fR"
1712Has the same behavior as the \fBbundle\fR action, with one exception. Instead
1713of outputting to the selected slave, it writes its selection to
1714\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, which must be an NXM field as described
1715above.
1716.IP
2638c6dc
BP
1717Example: \fBbundle_load(eth_src, 0, hrw, ofport, NXM_NX_REG0[],
1718slaves:4, 8)\fR uses an Ethernet source hash with basis 0, to select
1719between OpenFlow ports 4 and 8 using the Highest Random Weight
1720algorithm, and writes the selection to \fBNXM_NX_REG0[]\fR.
a368bb53
EJ
1721.IP
1722Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
75a75043
BP
1723.
1724.IP "\fBlearn(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]...\fB)\fR"
1725This action adds or modifies a flow in an OpenFlow table, similar to
1726\fBovs\-ofctl \-\-strict mod\-flows\fR. The arguments specify the
1727flow's match fields, actions, and other properties, as follows. At
1728least one match criterion and one action argument should ordinarily be
1729specified.
1730.RS
1731.IP \fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
1732.IQ \fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
1733.IQ \fBpriority=\fIvalue\fR
45d77538 1734.IQ \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR
3d6832c2
BP
1735.IQ \fBsend_flow_rem\fR
1736These arguments have the same meaning as in the usual \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
1737flow syntax.
75a75043 1738.
0e553d9c
BP
1739.IP \fBfin_idle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
1740.IQ \fBfin_hard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
1741Adds a \fBfin_timeout\fR action with the specified arguments to the
1742new flow. This feature was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.90.
1743.
75a75043
BP
1744.IP \fBtable=\fInumber\fR
1745The table in which the new flow should be inserted. Specify a decimal
1746number between 0 and 254. The default, if \fBtable\fR is unspecified,
1747is table 1.
1748.
35f48b8b
BP
1749.IP \fBdelete_learned\fR
1750This flag enables deletion of the learned flows when the flow with the
1751\fBlearn\fR action is removed. Specifically, when the last
1752\fBlearn\fR action with this flag and particular \fBtable\fR and
1753\fBcookie\fR values is removed, the switch deletes all of the flows in
1754the specified table with the specified cookie.
1755.
1756.IP
1757This flag was added in Open vSwitch 2.4.
1758.
75a75043
BP
1759.IP \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
1760.IQ \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]=\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
1761.IQ \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
1762Adds a match criterion to the new flow.
1763.IP
1764The first form specifies that \fIfield\fR must match the literal
1765\fIvalue\fR, e.g. \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR. All of the fields and values
1766for \fBovs\-ofctl\fR flow syntax are available with their usual
1767meanings.
1768.IP
1769The second form specifies that \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
1770in the new flow must match \fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR taken
1771from the flow currently being processed.
1772.IP
1773The third form is a shorthand for the second form. It specifies that
1774\fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR in the new flow must match
1775\fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR taken from the flow currently
1776being processed.
1777.
1778.IP \fBload:\fIvalue\fB\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
1779.IQ \fBload:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
1780.
1781Adds a \fBload\fR action to the new flow.
1782.IP
1783The first form loads the literal \fIvalue\fR into bits \fIstart\fR
1784through \fIend\fR, inclusive, in field \fIdst\fR. Its syntax is the
1785same as the \fBload\fR action described earlier in this section.
1786.IP
1787The second form loads \fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, a value
1788from the flow currently being processed, into bits \fIstart\fR
1789through \fIend\fR, inclusive, in field \fIdst\fR.
1790.
1791.IP \fBoutput:\fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
1792Add an \fBoutput\fR action to the new flow's actions, that outputs to
1793the OpenFlow port taken from \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR,
1794which must be an NXM field as described above.
1795.RE
1796.IP
1797For best performance, segregate learned flows into a table (using
1798\fBtable=\fInumber\fR) that is not used for any other flows except
1799possibly for a lowest-priority ``catch-all'' flow, that is, a flow
1800with no match criteria. (This is why the default \fBtable\fR is 1, to
1801keep the learned flows separate from the primary flow table 0.)
c4f5d00b 1802.RE
a9b4a41a 1803.
8dd54666 1804.RS
8dd54666 1805.
b19e8793
IY
1806.IP \fBclear_actions\fR
1807Clears all the actions in the action set immediately.
1808.
7fdb60a7
SH
1809.IP \fBwrite_actions(\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fB)
1810Add the specific actions to the action set. The syntax of
1811\fIactions\fR is the same as in the \fBactions=\fR field. The action
1812set is carried between flow tables and then executed at the end of the
1813pipeline.
1814.
1815.IP
1816The actions in the action set are applied in the following order, as
1817required by the OpenFlow specification, regardless of the order in
1818which they were added to the action set. Except as specified
1819otherwise below, the action set only holds at most a single action of
1820each type. When more than one action of a single type is written to
1821the action set, the one written later replaces the earlier action:
1822.
1823.RS
1824.IP 1.
1825\fBstrip_vlan\fR
1826.IQ
1827\fBpop_mpls\fR
1828.
1829.IP 2.
1830\fBpush_mpls\fR
1831.
1832.IP 3.
1833\fBpush_vlan\fR
1834.
1835.IP 4.
1836\fBdec_ttl\fR
1837.IQ
1838\fBdec_mpls_ttl\fR
1839.
1840.IP 5.
1841\fBload\fR
1842.IQ
1b0ee636
TG
1843\fBmove\fR
1844.IQ
7fdb60a7
SH
1845\fBmod_dl_dst\fR
1846.IQ
1847\fBmod_dl_src\fR
1848.IQ
1849\fBmod_nw_dst\fR
1850.IQ
1851\fBmod_nw_src\fR
1852.IQ
1853\fBmod_nw_tos\fR
1854.IQ
ff14eb7a
JR
1855\fBmod_nw_ecn\fR
1856.IQ
0c20dbe4
JR
1857\fBmod_nw_ttl\fR
1858.IQ
7fdb60a7
SH
1859\fBmod_tp_dst\fR
1860.IQ
1861\fBmod_tp_src\fR
1862.IQ
1863\fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR
1864.IQ
1865\fBmod_vlan_vid\fR
1866.IQ
1867\fBset_field\fR
1868.IQ
1869\fBset_tunnel\fR
1870.IQ
1871\fBset_tunnel64\fR
1872.IQ
1873The action set can contain any number of these actions, with
1b0ee636
TG
1874cumulative effect. They will be applied in the order as added.
1875That is, when multiple actions modify the same part of a field,
1876the later modification takes effect, and when they modify
1877different parts of a field (or different fields), then both
7fdb60a7
SH
1878modifications are applied.
1879.
1880.IP 6.
1881\fBset_queue\fR
1882.
1883.IP 7.
1884\fBgroup\fR
1885.IQ
1886\fBoutput\fR
1887.IQ
2e34a6a3
SS
1888\fBresubmit\fR
1889.IQ
1890If more than one of these actions is present, then the one listed
1891earliest above is executed and the others are ignored, regardless of
1892the order in which they were added to the action set. (If none of these
1893actions is present, the action set has no real effect, because the
1894modified packet is not sent anywhere and thus the modifications are
1895not visible.)
7fdb60a7
SH
1896.RE
1897.IP
1898Only the actions listed above may be written to the action set.
1899.
4cceacb9
JS
1900.IP \fBwrite_metadata\fB:\fIvalue\fR[/\fImask\fR]
1901Updates the metadata field for the flow. If \fImask\fR is omitted, the
1902metadata field is set exactly to \fIvalue\fR; if \fImask\fR is specified, then
1903a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in the metadata
1904field will be replaced with the corresponding bit from \fIvalue\fR. Both
1905\fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 64-bit values that are decimal by default; use
1906a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1907.
3200ed58
JR
1908.IP \fBmeter\fR:\fImeter_id\fR
1909Apply the \fImeter_id\fR before any other actions. If a meter band rate is
1910exceeded, the packet may be dropped, or modified, depending on the meter
1911band type. See the description of the \fBMeter Table Commands\fR, above,
1912for more details.
1913.
8dd54666
IY
1914.IP \fBgoto_table\fR:\fItable\fR
1915Indicates the next table in the process pipeline.
8dd54666 1916.
0e553d9c
BP
1917.IP "\fBfin_timeout(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]\fB)"
1918This action changes the idle timeout or hard timeout, or both, of this
1919OpenFlow rule when the rule matches a TCP packet with the FIN or RST
1920flag. When such a packet is observed, the action reduces the rule's
1921timeouts to those specified on the action. If the rule's existing
1922timeout is already shorter than the one that the action specifies,
1923then that timeout is unaffected.
1924.IP
1925\fIargument\fR takes the following forms:
1926.RS
1927.IP "\fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
1928Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds of
1929inactivity.
1930.
1931.IP "\fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
1932Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds,
1933regardless of activity. (\fIseconds\fR specifies time since the
1934flow's creation, not since the receipt of the FIN or RST.)
1935.RE
1936.IP
1937This action was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.90.
29089a54
RL
1938.
1939.IP "\fBsample(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]...\fB)\fR"
1940Samples packets and sends one sample for every sampled packet.
1941.IP
1942\fIargument\fR takes the following forms:
1943.RS
1944.IP "\fBprobability=\fIpackets\fR"
1945The number of sampled packets out of 65535. Must be greater or equal to 1.
1946.IP "\fBcollector_set_id=\fIid\fR"
1947The unsigned 32-bit integer identifier of the set of sample collectors
1948to send sampled packets to. Defaults to 0.
1949.IP "\fBobs_domain_id=\fIid\fR"
1950When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit integer
1951Observation Domain ID sent in every IPFIX flow record. Defaults to 0.
1952.IP "\fBobs_point_id=\fIid\fR"
1953When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit integer
1954Observation Point ID sent in every IPFIX flow record. Defaults to 0.
1955.RE
1956.IP
1957Refer to \fBovs\-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(8) for more details on
1958configuring sample collector sets.
1959.IP
1960This action was added in Open vSwitch 1.10.90.
1961.
848e8809 1962.IP "\fBexit\fR"
7fdb60a7
SH
1963This action causes Open vSwitch to immediately halt execution of
1964further actions. Those actions which have already been executed are
1965unaffected. Any further actions, including those which may be in
1966other tables, or different levels of the \fBresubmit\fR call stack,
1967are ignored. Actions in the action set is still executed (specify
1968\fBclear_actions\fR before \fBexit\fR to discard them).
18080541
BP
1969.
1970.IP "\fBconjunction(\fIid\fB, \fIk\fB/\fIn\fR\fB)\fR"
1971An individual OpenFlow flow can match only a single value for each
1972field. However, situations often arise where one wants to match one
1973of a set of values within a field or fields. For matching a single
1974field against a set, it is straightforward and efficient to add
1975multiple flows to the flow table, one for each value in the set. For
1976example, one might use the following flows to send packets with IP
1977source address \fIa\fR, \fIb\fR, \fIc\fR, or \fId\fR to the OpenFlow
1978controller:
1979.RS +1in
1980.br
1981\fBip,ip_src=\fIa\fB actions=controller\fR
1982.br
1983\fBip,ip_src=\fIb\fB actions=controller\fR
1984.br
1985\fBip,ip_src=\fIc\fB actions=controller\fR
1986.br
1987\fBip,ip_src=\fId\fB actions=controller\fR
1988.br
1989.RE
1990.IP
1991Similarly, these flows send packets with IP destination address
1992\fIe\fR, \fIf\fR, \fIg\fR, or \fIh\fR to the OpenFlow controller:
1993.RS +1in
1994.br
1995\fBip,ip_dst=\fIe\fB actions=controller\fR
1996.br
1997\fBip,ip_dst=\fIf\fB actions=controller\fR
1998.br
1999\fBip,ip_dst=\fIg\fB actions=controller\fR
2000.br
2001\fBip,ip_dst=\fIh\fB actions=controller\fR
2002.br
2003.RE
2004.IP
2005Installing all of the above flows in a single flow table yields a
2006disjunctive effect: a packet is sent to the controller if \fBip_src\fR
2007\[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} or \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2008{\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR} (or both). (Pedantically, if both
2009of the above sets of flows are present in the flow table, they should
2010have different priorities, because OpenFlow says that the results are
2011undefined when two flows with same priority can both match a single
2012packet.)
2013.IP
2014Suppose, on the other hand, one wishes to match conjunctively, that
2015is, to send a packet to the controller only if both \fBip_src\fR \[mo]
2016{\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2017{\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR}. This requires 4 \[mu] 4 = 16
2018flows, one for each possible pairing of \fBip_src\fR and \fBip_dst\fR.
2019That is acceptable for our small example, but it does not gracefully
2020extend to larger sets or greater numbers of dimensions.
2021.IP
2022The \fBconjunction\fR action is a solution for conjunctive matches
2023that is built into Open vSwitch. A \fBconjunction\fR action ties
2024groups of individual OpenFlow flows into higher-level ``conjunctive
2025flows''. Each group corresponds to one dimension, and each flow
2026within the group matches one possible value for the dimension. A
2027packet that matches one flow from each group matches the conjunctive
2028flow.
2029.IP
2030To implement a conjunctive flow with \fBconjunction\fR, assign the
2031conjunctive flow a 32-bit \fIid\fR, which must be unique within an
2032OpenFlow table. Assign each of the \fIn\fR \[>=] 2 dimensions a
2033unique number from 1 to \fIn\fR; the ordering is unimportant. Add one
2034flow to the OpenFlow flow table for each possible value of each
2035dimension with \fBconjunction(\fIid, \fIk\fB/\fIn\fB)\fR as the flow's
2036actions, where \fIk\fR is the number assigned to the flow's dimension.
2037Together, these flows specify the conjunctive flow's match condition.
2038When the conjunctive match condition is met, Open vSwitch looks up one
2039more flow that specifies the conjunctive flow's actions and receives
2040its statistics. This flow is found by setting \fBconj_id\fR to the
2041specified \fIid\fR and then again searching the flow table.
2042.IP
2043The following flows provide an example. Whenever the IP source is one
2044of the values in the flows that match on the IP source (dimension 1 of
20452), \fIand\fR the IP destination is one of the values in the flows
2046that match on IP destination (dimension 2 of 2), Open vSwitch searches
2047for a flow that matches \fBconj_id\fR against the conjunction ID
2048(1234), finding the first flow listed below.
2049.RS +1in
2050.br
2051.B "conj_id=1234 actions=controller"
2052.br
2053.B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.1 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2054.br
2055.B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.4 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2056.br
2057.B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.6 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2058.br
2059.B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.7 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2060.br
2061.B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.2 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2062.br
2063.B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.5 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2064.br
2065.B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.7 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2066.br
2067.B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.8 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2068.RE
2069.IP
2070Many subtleties exist:
2071.RS
2072.IP \(bu
2073In the example above, every flow in a single dimension has the same
2074form, that is, dimension 1 matches on \fBip_src\fR, dimension 2 on
2075\fBip_dst\fR, but this is not a requirement. Different flows within a
2076dimension may match on different bits within a field (e.g. IP network
2077prefixes of different lengths, or TCP/UDP port ranges as bitwise
2078matches), or even on entirely different fields (e.g. to match packets
2079for TCP source port 80 or TCP destination port 80).
2080.IP \(bu
2081The flows within a dimension can vary their matches across more than
2082one field, e.g. to match only specific pairs of IP source and
2083destination addresses or L4 port numbers.
2084.IP \(bu
2085A flow may have multiple \fBconjunction\fR actions, with different
2086\fIid\fR values. This is useful for multiple conjunctive flows with
2087overlapping sets. If one conjunctive flow matches packets with both
2088\fBip_src\fR \[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2089{\fId\fR,\fIe\fR} and a second conjunctive flow matches \fBip_src\fR
2090\[mo] {\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo] {\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR}, for
2091example, then the flow that matches \fBip_src=\fIb\fR would have two
2092\fBconjunction\fR actions, one for each conjunctive flow. The order
2093of \fBconjunction\fR actions within a list of actions is not
2094significant.
2095.IP \(bu
f08e39dd
BP
2096A flow with \fBconjunction\fR actions may also include \fBnote\fR
2097actions for annotations, but not any other kind of actions. (They
2098would not be useful because they would never be executed.)
18080541
BP
2099.IP \(bu
2100All of the flows that constitute a conjunctive flow with a given
2101\fIid\fR must have the same priority. (Flows with the same \fIid\fR
2102but different priorities are currently treated as different
2103conjunctive flows, that is, currently \fIid\fR values need only be
2104unique within an OpenFlow table at a given priority. This behavior
2105isn't guaranteed to stay the same in later releases, so please use
2106\fIid\fR values unique within an OpenFlow table.)
2107.IP \(bu
2108Conjunctive flows must not overlap with each other, at a given
2109priority, that is, any given packet must be able to match at most one
2110conjunctive flow at a given priority. Overlapping conjunctive flows
2111yield unpredictable results.
2112.IP \(bu
2113Following a conjunctive flow match, the search for the flow with
2114\fBconj_id=\fIid\fR is done in the same general-purpose way as other flow
2115table searches, so one can use flows with \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR to act
2116differently depending on circumstances. (One exception is that the
2117search for the \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR flow itself ignores conjunctive flows,
2118to avoid recursion.) If the search with \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR fails, Open
2119vSwitch acts as if the conjunctive flow had not matched at all, and
2120continues searching the flow table for other matching flows.
2121.IP \(bu
2122OpenFlow prerequisite checking occurs for the flow with
2123\fBconj_id=\fIid\fR in the same way as any other flow, e.g. in an
2124OpenFlow 1.1+ context, putting a \fBmod_nw_src\fR action into the
2125example above would require adding an \fBip\fR match, like this:
2126.RS +1in
2127.br
2128.B "conj_id=1234,ip actions=mod_nw_src:1.2.3.4,controller"
2129.br
2130.RE
2131.IP \(bu
2132OpenFlow prerequisite checking also occurs for the individual flows
2133that comprise a conjunctive match in the same way as any other flow.
2134.IP \(bu
2135The flows that constitute a conjunctive flow do not have useful
2136statistics. They are never updated with byte or packet counts, and so
2137on. (For such a flow, therefore, the idle and hard timeouts work much
2138the same way.)
2139.IP \(bu
2140Conjunctive flows can be a useful building block for negation, that
2141is, inequality matches like \fBtcp_src\fR \[!=] 80. To implement an
2142inequality match, convert it to a pair of range matches, e.g. 0 \[<=]
2143\fBtcp_src\ < 80 and 80 < \fBtcp_src\fR \[<=] 65535, then convert each
2144of the range matches into a collection of bitwise matches as explained
2145above in the description of \fBtcp_src\fR.
2146.IP \(bu
2147Sometimes there is a choice of which flows include a particular match.
2148For example, suppose that we added an extra constraint to our example,
2149to match on \fBip_src\fR \[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} and
2150\fBip_dst\fR \[mo] {\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR} and \fBtcp_dst\fR
2151= \fIi\fR. One way to implement this is to add the new constraint to
2152the \fBconj_id\fR flow, like this:
2153.RS +1in
2154.br
2155\fBconj_id=1234,tcp,tcp_dst=\fIi\fB actions=mod_nw_src:1.2.3.4,controller\fR
2156.br
2157.RE
2158.IP
2159\fIbut this is not recommended\fR because of the cost of the extra
2160flow table lookup. Instead, add the constraint to the individual
2161flows, either in one of the dimensions or (slightly better) all of
2162them.
2163.IP \(bu
2164A conjunctive match must have \fIn\fR \[>=] 2 dimensions (otherwise a
2165conjunctive match is not necessary). Open vSwitch enforces this.
2166.IP \(bu
2167Each dimension within a conjunctive match should ordinarily have more
2168than one flow. Open vSwitch does not enforce this.
2169.RE
2170.IP
2171The \fBconjunction\fR action and \fBconj_id\fR field were introduced
2172in Open vSwitch 2.4.
24362cd6 2173.RE
848e8809 2174.
064af421 2175.PP
e729e793
JP
2176An opaque identifier called a cookie can be used as a handle to identify
2177a set of flows:
2178.
623e1caf
JP
2179.IP \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR
2180.
2181A cookie can be associated with a flow using the \fBadd\-flow\fR,
2182\fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands. \fIvalue\fR can be any
218364-bit number and need not be unique among flows. If this field is
2184omitted, a default cookie value of 0 is used.
2185.
2186.IP \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR\fB/\fImask\fR
e729e793 2187.
e729e793 2188When using NXM, the cookie can be used as a handle for querying,
623e1caf
JP
2189modifying, and deleting flows. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR may be
2190supplied for the \fBdel\-flows\fR, \fBmod\-flows\fR, \fBdump\-flows\fR, and
2191\fBdump\-aggregate\fR commands to limit matching cookies. A 1-bit in
2192\fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in \fIcookie\fR must
2193match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. A mask of \-1 may be used
2194to exactly match a cookie.
2195.IP
2196The \fBmod\-flows\fR command can update the cookies of flows that
2197match a cookie by specifying the \fIcookie\fR field twice (once with a
2198mask for matching and once without to indicate the new value):
2199.RS
2200.IP "\fBovs\-ofctl mod\-flows br0 cookie=1,actions=normal\fR"
2201Change all flows' cookies to 1 and change their actions to \fBnormal\fR.
2202.IP "\fBovs\-ofctl mod\-flows br0 cookie=1/\-1,cookie=2,actions=normal\fR"
2203Update cookies with a value of 1 to 2 and change their actions to
2204\fBnormal\fR.
2205.RE
2206.IP
2207The ability to match on cookies was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.0.
8cce2125
JP
2208.
2209.PP
4b6b46ce
BP
2210The following additional field sets the priority for flows added by
2211the \fBadd\-flow\fR and \fBadd\-flows\fR commands. For
2212\fBmod\-flows\fR and \fBdel\-flows\fR when \fB\-\-strict\fR is
2213specified, priority must match along with the rest of the flow
623e1caf 2214specification. For \fBmod-flows\fR without \fB\-\-strict\fR,
fdb3539e
BP
2215priority is only significant if the command creates a new flow, that
2216is, non-strict \fBmod\-flows\fR does not match on priority and will
2217not change the priority of existing flows. Other commands do not
2218allow priority to be specified.
a9b4a41a 2219.
064af421
BP
2220.IP \fBpriority=\fIvalue\fR
2221The priority at which a wildcarded entry will match in comparison to
2222others. \fIvalue\fR is a number between 0 and 65535, inclusive. A higher
2223\fIvalue\fR will match before a lower one. An exact-match entry will always
2224have priority over an entry containing wildcards, so it has an implicit
2225priority value of 65535. When adding a flow, if the field is not specified,
2226the flow's priority will default to 32768.
4530afba
BP
2227.IP
2228OpenFlow leaves behavior undefined when two or more flows with the
2229same priority can match a single packet. Some users expect
2230``sensible'' behavior, such as more specific flows taking precedence
2231over less specific flows, but OpenFlow does not specify this and Open
2232vSwitch does not implement it. Users should therefore take care to
2233use priorities to ensure the behavior that they expect.
a9b4a41a 2234.
064af421 2235.PP
fdb3539e
BP
2236The \fBadd\-flow\fR, \fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands
2237support the following additional options. These options affect only
2238new flows. Thus, for \fBadd\-flow\fR and \fBadd\-flows\fR, these
2239options are always significant, but for \fBmod\-flows\fR they are
2240significant only if the command creates a new flow, that is, their
a993007b 2241values do not update or affect existing flows.
a9b4a41a 2242.
fdb3539e 2243.IP "\fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
064af421 2244Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds of
fdb3539e
BP
2245inactivity. A value of 0 (the default) prevents a flow from expiring
2246due to inactivity.
a9b4a41a 2247.
064af421
BP
2248.IP \fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2249Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds,
2250regardless of activity. A value of 0 (the default) gives the flow no
2251hard expiration deadline.
a9b4a41a 2252.
ca26eb44
RB
2253.IP "\fBimportance=\fIvalue\fR"
2254Sets the importance of a flow. The flow entry eviction mechanism can
2255use importance as a factor in deciding which flow to evict. A value
2256of 0 (the default) makes the flow non-evictable on the basis of
2257importance. Specify a value between 0 and 65535.
2258.IP
2259Only OpenFlow 1.4 and later support \fBimportance\fR.
2260.
a993007b
BP
2261.IP "\fBsend_flow_rem\fR"
2262Marks the flow with a flag that causes the switch to generate a ``flow
2263removed'' message and send it to interested controllers when the flow
2264later expires or is removed.
2265.
2266.IP "\fBcheck_overlap\fR"
2267Forces the switch to check that the flow match does not overlap that
2268of any different flow with the same priority in the same table. (This
2269check is expensive so it is best to avoid it.)
2270.
064af421 2271.PP
4e312e69
BP
2272The \fBdump\-flows\fR, \fBdump\-aggregate\fR, \fBdel\-flow\fR
2273and \fBdel\-flows\fR commands support one additional optional field:
a9b4a41a 2274.
064af421
BP
2275.TP
2276\fBout_port=\fIport\fR
c6100d92 2277If set, a matching flow must include an output action to \fIport\fR,
60a0b9e5 2278which must be an OpenFlow port number or name (e.g. \fBlocal\fR).
a9b4a41a 2279.
064af421 2280.SS "Table Entry Output"
a9b4a41a 2281.
4e312e69 2282The \fBdump\-tables\fR and \fBdump\-aggregate\fR commands print information
064af421 2283about the entries in a datapath's tables. Each line of output is a
f27f2134
BP
2284flow entry as described in \fBFlow Syntax\fR, above, plus some
2285additional fields:
a9b4a41a 2286.
f27f2134
BP
2287.IP \fBduration=\fIsecs\fR
2288The time, in seconds, that the entry has been in the table.
2289\fIsecs\fR includes as much precision as the switch provides, possibly
2290to nanosecond resolution.
a9b4a41a 2291.
064af421
BP
2292.IP \fBn_packets\fR
2293The number of packets that have matched the entry.
a9b4a41a 2294.
064af421
BP
2295.IP \fBn_bytes\fR
2296The total number of bytes from packets that have matched the entry.
a9b4a41a 2297.
064af421 2298.PP
f27f2134
BP
2299The following additional fields are included only if the switch is
2300Open vSwitch 1.6 or later and the NXM flow format is used to dump the
2301flow (see the description of the \fB\-\-flow-format\fR option below).
2302The values of these additional fields are approximations only and in
2303particular \fBidle_age\fR will sometimes become nonzero even for busy
2304flows.
2305.
2306.IP \fBhard_age=\fIsecs\fR
2307The integer number of seconds since the flow was added or modified.
2308\fBhard_age\fR is displayed only if it differs from the integer part
2309of \fBduration\fR. (This is separate from \fBduration\fR because
2310\fBmod\-flows\fR restarts the \fBhard_timeout\fR timer without zeroing
2311\fBduration\fR.)
2312.
2313.IP \fBidle_age=\fIsecs\fR
2314The integer number of seconds that have passed without any packets
2315passing through the flow.
a9b4a41a 2316.
7395c052
NZ
2317.SS "Group Syntax"
2318.PP
2319Some \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands accept an argument that describes a group or
2320groups. Such flow descriptions comprise a series
2321\fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR assignments, separated by commas or white
2322space. (Embedding spaces into a group description normally requires
2323quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
2324multiple arguments.). Unless noted otherwise only the last instance
2325of each field is honoured.
2326.PP
2327.IP \fBgroup_id=\fIid\fR
2328The integer group id of group.
19187a71 2329When this field is specified in \fBdel\-groups\fR or \fBdump\-groups\fR,
7395c052
NZ
2330the keyword "all" may be used to designate all groups.
2331.
2332This field is required.
2333
2334
2335.IP \fBtype=\fItype\fR
bdbb8426 2336The type of the group. The \fBadd-group\fR, \fBadd-groups\fR and
ed1d5ef3 2337\fBmod-groups\fR commands require this field. It is prohibited for
bdbb8426 2338other commands. The following keywords designated the allowed types:
7395c052
NZ
2339.RS
2340.IP \fBall\fR
2341Execute all buckets in the group.
2342.IP \fBselect\fR
2343Execute one bucket in the group.
2344The switch should select the bucket in such a way that should implement
2345equal load sharing is achieved. The switch may optionally select the
2346bucket based on bucket weights.
2347.IP \fBindirect\fR
2348Executes the one bucket in the group.
2349.IP \fBff\fR
2350.IQ \fBfast_failover\fR
2351Executes the first live bucket in the group which is associated with
2352a live port or group.
2353.RE
2354
bdbb8426
SH
2355.IP \fBcommand_bucket_id=\fIid\fR
2356The bucket to operate on. The \fBinsert-buckets\fR and \fBremove-buckets\fR
2357commands require this field. It is prohibited for other commands.
2358\fIid\fR may be an integer or one of the following keywords:
2359.RS
2360.IP \fBall\fR
2361Operate on all buckets in the group.
2362Only valid when used with the \fBremove-buckets\fR command in which
2363case the effect is to remove all buckets from the group.
2364.IP \fBfirst\fR
2365Operate on the first bucket present in the group.
2366In the case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2367insert new bucets just before the first bucket already present in the group;
2368or to replace the buckets of the group if there are no buckets already present
2369in the group.
2370In the case of the \fBremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2371remove the first bucket of the group; or do nothing if there are no
2372buckets present in the group.
2373.IP \fBlast\fR
2374Operate on the last bucket present in the group.
2375In the case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2376insert new bucets just after the last bucket already present in the group;
2377or to replace the buckets of the group if there are no buckets already present
2378in the group.
2379In the case of the \fBremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2380remove the last bucket of the group; or do nothing if there are no
2381buckets present in the group.
2382.RE
2383.IP
2384If \fIid\fR is an integer then it should correspond to the \fBbucket_id\fR
2385of a bucket present in the group.
2386In case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2387insert buckets just before the bucket in the group whose \fBbucket_id\fR is
2388\fIid\fR.
2389In case of the \fBiremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2390remove the in the group whose \fBbucket_id\fR is \fIid\fR.
2391It is an error if there is no bucket persent group in whose \fBbucket_id\fR is
2392\fIid\fR.
2393
b879391e
SH
2394.IP \fBselection_method\fR=\fImethod\fR
2395The selection method used to select a bucket for a select group.
2396This is a string of 1 to 15 bytes in length known to lower layers.
2397This field is optional for \fBadd\-group\fR, \fBadd\-groups\fR and
2398\fBmod\-group\fR commands on groups of type \fBselect\fR. Prohibited
2399otherwise. The default value is the empty string.
2400.IP
2401This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2402when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2403
2404.IP \fBselection_method_param\fR=\fIparam\fR
240564-bit integer parameter to the selection method selected by the
2406\fBselection_method\fR field. The parameter's use is defined by the
2407lower-layer that implements the \fBselection_method\fR. It is optional if
2408the \fBselection_method\fR field is specified as a non-empty string.
2409Prohibited otherwise. The default value is zero.
2410.IP
2411This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2412when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2413
2414.IP \fBfields\fR=\fIparam\fR
2415The field parameters to selection method selected by the
2416\fBselection_method\fR field. The syntax is described in \fBFlow Syntax\fR
2417with the additional restrictions that if a value is provided it is
2418treated as a wildcard mask and wildcard masks following a slash are
2419prohibited. The pre-requisites of fields must be provided by any flows that
2420output to the group. The use of the fields is defined by the lower-layer
2421that implements the \fBselection_method\fR. They are optional if the
2422\fBselection_method\fR field is specified as a non-empty string.
2423Prohibited otherwise. The default is no fields.
2424.IP
2425This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2426when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2427
7395c052
NZ
2428.IP \fBbucket\fR=\fIbucket_parameters\fR
2429The \fBadd-group\fR, \fBadd-groups\fR and \fBmod-group\fR commands
2430require at least one bucket field. Bucket fields must appear after
2431all other fields.
2432.
2433Multiple bucket fields to specify multiple buckets.
2434The order in which buckets are specified corresponds to their order in
2435the group. If the type of the group is "indirect" then only one group may
2436be specified.
2437.
2438\fIbucket_parameters\fR consists of a list of \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
2439assignments, separated by commas or white space followed by a
2440comma-separated list of actions.
7395c052
NZ
2441The fields for \fIbucket_parameters\fR are:
2442.
2443.RS
2d5d050c
SH
2444.IP \fBbucket_id=\fIid\fR
2445The 32-bit integer group id of the bucket. Values greater than
24460xffffff00 are reserved.
2447.
2448This field was added in Open vSwitch 2.4 to conform with the OpenFlow
d3cb080e 24491.5 specification. It is not supported when earlier versions
2d5d050c
SH
2450of OpenFlow are used. Open vSwitch will automatically allocate bucket
2451ids when they are not specified.
f1457c26
TG
2452.IP \fBactions=\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fR
2453The syntax of actions are identical to the \fBactions=\fR field described in
2454\fBFlow Syntax\fR above. Specyfing \fBactions=\fR is optional, any unknown
2455bucket parameter will be interpreted as an action.
7395c052
NZ
2456.IP \fBweight=\fIvalue\fR
2457The relative weight of the bucket as an integer. This may be used by the switch
2458during bucket select for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBselect\fR.
2459.IP \fBwatch_port=\fIport\fR
2460Port used to determine liveness of group.
2461This or the \fBwatch_group\fR field is required
2462for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBff\fR or \fBfast_failover\fR.
2463.IP \fBwatch_group=\fIgroup_id\fR
2464Group identifier of group used to determine liveness of group.
2465This or the \fBwatch_port\fR field is required
2466for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBff\fR or \fBfast_failover\fR.
2467.RE
2468.
3200ed58
JR
2469.SS "Meter Syntax"
2470.PP
2471The meter table commands accept an argument that describes a meter.
2472Such meter descriptions comprise a series \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
2473assignments, separated by commas or white space.
2474(Embedding spaces into a group description normally requires
2475quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
2476multiple arguments.). Unless noted otherwise only the last instance
2477of each field is honoured.
2478.PP
2479.IP \fBmeter=\fIid\fR
2480The integer meter id of the meter.
2481When this field is specified in \fBdel-meter\fR, \fBdump-meter\fR, or
2482\fBmeter-stats\fR, the keyword "all" may be used to designate all meters.
2483.
2484This field is required, exept for \fBmeter-stats\fR, which dumps all stats
2485when this field is not specified.
2486
2487.IP \fBkbps\fR
2488.IQ \fBpktps\fR
2489The unit for the meter band rate parameters, either kilobits per second, or
2490packets per second, respectively. One of these must be specified. The burst
2491size unit corresponds to the rate unit by dropping the "per second", i.e.,
2492burst is in units of kilobits or packets, respectively.
2493
2494.IP \fBburst\fR
2495Specify burst size for all bands, or none of them, if this flag is not given.
2496
2497.IP \fBstats\fR
2498Collect meter and band statistics.
2499
2500.IP \fBbands\fR=\fIband_parameters\fR
2501The \fBadd-meter\fR and \fBmod-meter\fR commands require at least one
2502band specification. Bands must appear after all other fields.
2503.RS
2504.IP \fBtype=\fItype\fR
2505The type of the meter band. This keyword starts a new band specification.
2506Each band specifies a rate above which the band is to take some action. The
2507action depends on the band type. If multiple bands' rate is exceeded, then
2508the band with the highest rate among the exceeded bands is selected.
2509The following keywords designate the allowed
2510meter band types:
2511.RS
2512.IP \fBdrop\fR
2513Drop packets exceeding the band's rate limit.
2514.RE
2515.
2516.IP "The other \fIband_parameters\fR are:"
2517.IP \fBrate=\fIvalue\fR
2518The relative rate limit for this band, in kilobits per second or packets per
2519second, depending on the meter flags defined above.
96660ed1
BP
2520.IP \fBburst_size=\fIsize\fR
2521The maximum burst allowed for the band. If \fBpktps\fR is specified,
2522then \fIsize\fR is a packet count, otherwise it is in kilobits. If
2523unspecified, the switch is free to select some reasonable value
2524depending on its configuration.
3200ed58
JR
2525.RE
2526.
064af421
BP
2527.SH OPTIONS
2528.TP
4e312e69 2529\fB\-\-strict\fR
064af421 2530Uses strict matching when running flow modification commands.
a9b4a41a 2531.
db5076ee 2532.IP "\fB\-\-bundle\fR"
39c94593 2533Execute flow mods as an OpenFlow 1.4 atomic bundle transaction.
db5076ee
JR
2534.RS
2535.IP \(bu
2536Within a bundle, all flow mods are processed in the order they appear
39c94593
JR
2537and as a single atomic transaction, meaning that if one of them fails,
2538the whole transaction fails and none of the changes are made to the
2539\fIswitch\fR's flow table, and that each given datapath packet
2540traversing the OpenFlow tables sees the flow tables either as before
2541the transaction, or after all the flow mods in the bundle have been
2542successfully applied.
db5076ee
JR
2543.IP \(bu
2544The beginning and the end of the flow table modification commands in a
2545bundle are delimited with OpenFlow 1.4 bundle control messages, which
2546makes it possible to stream the included commands without explicit
2547OpenFlow barriers, which are otherwise used after each flow table
2548modification command. This may make large modifications execute
2549faster as a bundle.
2550.IP \(bu
2551Bundles require OpenFlow 1.4 or higher. An explicit \fB-O
2552OpenFlow14\fR option is not needed, but you may need to enable
2553OpenFlow 1.4 support for OVS by setting the OVSDB \fIprotocols\fR
2554column in the \fIbridge\fR table.
db5076ee
JR
2555.RE
2556.
a53a8efa
SH
2557.so lib/ofp-version.man
2558.
27527aa0
BP
2559.IP "\fB\-F \fIformat\fR[\fB,\fIformat\fR...]"
2560.IQ "\fB\-\-flow\-format=\fIformat\fR[\fB,\fIformat\fR...]"
2561\fBovs\-ofctl\fR supports the following individual flow formats, any
2562number of which may be listed as \fIformat\fR:
88ca35ee 2563.RS
27527aa0
BP
2564.IP "\fBOpenFlow10\-table_id\fR"
2565This is the standard OpenFlow 1.0 flow format. All OpenFlow switches
2566and all versions of Open vSwitch support this flow format.
88ca35ee 2567.
27527aa0
BP
2568.IP "\fBOpenFlow10+table_id\fR"
2569This is the standard OpenFlow 1.0 flow format plus a Nicira extension
2570that allows \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to specify the flow table in which a
2571particular flow should be placed. Open vSwitch 1.2 and later supports
2572this flow format.
2573.
2574.IP "\fBNXM\-table_id\fR (Nicira Extended Match)"
88ca35ee
BP
2575This Nicira extension to OpenFlow is flexible and extensible. It
2576supports all of the Nicira flow extensions, such as \fBtun_id\fR and
27527aa0
BP
2577registers. Open vSwitch 1.1 and later supports this flow format.
2578.
2579.IP "\fBNXM+table_id\fR (Nicira Extended Match)"
2580This combines Nicira Extended match with the ability to place a flow
2581in a specific table. Open vSwitch 1.2 and later supports this flow
2582format.
e71bff1b
BP
2583.
2584.IP "\fBOXM-OpenFlow12\fR"
2585.IQ "\fBOXM-OpenFlow13\fR"
aa233d57 2586.IQ "\fBOXM-OpenFlow14\fR"
e71bff1b 2587These are the standard OXM (OpenFlow Extensible Match) flow format in
aa233d57 2588OpenFlow 1.2, 1.3, and 1.4, respectively.
88ca35ee 2589.RE
27527aa0 2590.
88ca35ee 2591.IP
27527aa0
BP
2592\fBovs\-ofctl\fR also supports the following abbreviations for
2593collections of flow formats:
2594.RS
2595.IP "\fBany\fR"
aa233d57 2596Any supported flow format.
27527aa0
BP
2597.IP "\fBOpenFlow10\fR"
2598\fBOpenFlow10\-table_id\fR or \fBOpenFlow10+table_id\fR.
2599.IP "\fBNXM\fR"
2600\fBNXM\-table_id\fR or \fBNXM+table_id\fR.
e71bff1b 2601.IP "\fBOXM\fR"
aa233d57 2602\fBOXM-OpenFlow12\fR, \fBOXM-OpenFlow13\fR, or \fBOXM-OpenFlow14\fR.
27527aa0 2603.RE
4f564f8d 2604.
27527aa0
BP
2605.IP
2606For commands that modify the flow table, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR by default
2607negotiates the most widely supported flow format that supports the
2608flows being added. For commands that query the flow table,
2609\fBovs\-ofctl\fR by default uses the most advanced format supported by
2610the switch.
2611.IP
2612This option, where \fIformat\fR is a comma-separated list of one or
2613more of the formats listed above, limits \fBovs\-ofctl\fR's choice of
2614flow format. If a command cannot work as requested using one of the
2615specified flow formats, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will report a fatal error.
54834960
EJ
2616.
2617.IP "\fB\-P \fIformat\fR"
2618.IQ "\fB\-\-packet\-in\-format=\fIformat\fR"
2619\fBovs\-ofctl\fR supports the following packet_in formats, in order of
2620increasing capability:
2621.RS
2622.IP "\fBopenflow10\fR"
2623This is the standard OpenFlow 1.0 packet in format. It should be supported by
2624all OpenFlow switches.
2625.
2626.IP "\fBnxm\fR (Nicira Extended Match)"
2627This packet_in format includes flow metadata encoded using the NXM format.
2628.
2629.RE
2630.IP
2631Usually, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR prefers the \fBnxm\fR packet_in format, but will
2632allow the switch to choose its default if \fBnxm\fR is unsupported. When
2633\fIformat\fR is one of the formats listed in the above table, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
2634will insist on the selected format. If the switch does not support the
2635requested format, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will report a fatal error. This option only
ca8526e0 2636affects the \fBmonitor\fR command.
54834960 2637.
0c9560b7
BP
2638.IP "\fB\-\-timestamp\fR"
2639Print a timestamp before each received packet. This option only
f3dd1419
BP
2640affects the \fBmonitor\fR, \fBsnoop\fR, and \fBofp\-parse\-pcap\fR
2641commands.
0c9560b7 2642.
4f564f8d
BP
2643.IP "\fB\-m\fR"
2644.IQ "\fB\-\-more\fR"
2645Increases the verbosity of OpenFlow messages printed and logged by
2646\fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands. Specify this option more than once to
2647increase verbosity further.
1eb85ef5 2648.
bdcc5925
BP
2649.IP \fB\-\-sort\fR[\fB=\fIfield\fR]
2650.IQ \fB\-\-rsort\fR[\fB=\fIfield\fR]
2651Display output sorted by flow \fIfield\fR in ascending
2652(\fB\-\-sort\fR) or descending (\fB\-\-rsort\fR) order, where
2653\fIfield\fR is any of the fields that are allowed for matching or
2654\fBpriority\fR to sort by priority. When \fIfield\fR is omitted, the
2655output is sorted by priority. Specify these options multiple times to
2656sort by multiple fields.
2657.IP
2658Any given flow will not necessarily specify a value for a given
2659field. This requires special treatement:
2660.RS
2661.IP \(bu
2662A flow that does not specify any part of a field that is used for sorting is
2663sorted after all the flows that do specify the field. For example,
2664\fB\-\-sort=tcp_src\fR will sort all the flows that specify a TCP
2665source port in ascending order, followed by the flows that do not
0d56eaf2 2666specify a TCP source port at all.
bdcc5925
BP
2667.IP \(bu
2668A flow that only specifies some bits in a field is sorted as if the
2669wildcarded bits were zero. For example, \fB\-\-sort=nw_src\fR would
2670sort a flow that specifies \fBnw_src=192.168.0.0/24\fR the same as
2671\fBnw_src=192.168.0.0\fR.
2672.RE
2673.IP
2674These options currently affect only \fBdump\-flows\fR output.
2675.
1eb85ef5
EJ
2676.ds DD \
2677\fBovs\-ofctl\fR detaches only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or \
2678\fBsnoop\fR commands.
2679.so lib/daemon.man
19945013 2680.so lib/unixctl.man
ac300505 2681.SS "Public Key Infrastructure Options"
84ee7bcf 2682.so lib/ssl.man
064af421
BP
2683.so lib/vlog.man
2684.so lib/common.man
a9b4a41a 2685.
1eb85ef5 2686.SH "RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS"
96761f58
BP
2687\fBovs\-appctl\fR(8) can send commands to a running \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
2688process. The supported commands are listed below.
2689.
1eb85ef5 2690.IP "\fBexit\fR"
96761f58
BP
2691Causes \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to gracefully terminate. This command applies
2692only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or \fBsnoop\fR commands.
2693.
1e1d00a5
BP
2694.IP "\fBofctl/set\-output\-file \fIfile\fR"
2695Causes all subsequent output to go to \fIfile\fR instead of stderr.
2696This command applies only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or
2697\fBsnoop\fR commands.
2698.
96761f58
BP
2699.IP "\fBofctl/send \fIofmsg\fR..."
2700Sends each \fIofmsg\fR, specified as a sequence of hex digits that
2701express an OpenFlow message, on the OpenFlow connection. This command
2702is useful only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR command.
2703.
bb638b9a
BP
2704.IP "\fBofctl/barrier\fR"
2705Sends an OpenFlow barrier request on the OpenFlow connection and waits
2706for a reply. This command is useful only for the \fBmonitor\fR
2707command.
2708.
064af421 2709.SH EXAMPLES
a9b4a41a 2710.
045b2e5c
BP
2711The following examples assume that \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR has a bridge
2712named \fBbr0\fR configured.
a9b4a41a 2713.
064af421 2714.TP
045b2e5c 2715\fBovs\-ofctl dump\-tables br0\fR
064af421
BP
2716Prints out the switch's table stats. (This is more interesting after
2717some traffic has passed through.)
a9b4a41a 2718.
064af421 2719.TP
045b2e5c 2720\fBovs\-ofctl dump\-flows br0\fR
064af421 2721Prints the flow entries in the switch.
a9b4a41a 2722.
064af421 2723.SH "SEE ALSO"
a9b4a41a 2724.
064af421 2725.BR ovs\-appctl (8),
064af421 2726.BR ovs\-vswitchd (8)
29089a54 2727.BR ovs\-vswitchd.conf.db (8)