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1 Open vSwitch <http://openvswitch.org>
2
3 Frequently Asked Questions
4 ==========================
5
6 General
7 -------
8
9 Q: What is Open vSwitch?
10
11 A: Open vSwitch is a production quality open source software switch
12 designed to be used as a vswitch in virtualized server environments. A
13 vswitch forwards traffic between different VMs on the same physical host
14 and also forwards traffic between VMs and the physical network. Open
15 vSwitch supports standard management interfaces (e.g. sFlow, NetFlow,
16 RSPAN, CLI), and is open to programmatic extension and control using
17 OpenFlow and the OVSDB management protocol.
18
19 Open vSwitch as designed to be compatible with modern switching
20 chipsets. This means that it can be ported to existing high-fanout
21 switches allowing the same flexible control of the physical
22 infrastructure as the virtual infrastructure. It also means that
23 Open vSwitch will be able to take advantage of on-NIC switching
24 chipsets as their functionality matures.
25
26 Q: What virtualization platforms can use Open vSwitch?
27
28 A: Open vSwitch can currently run on any Linux-based virtualization
29 platform (kernel 2.6.18 and newer), including: KVM, VirtualBox, Xen,
30 Xen Cloud Platform, XenServer. As of Linux 3.3 it is part of the
31 mainline kernel. The bulk of the code is written in platform-
32 independent C and is easily ported to other environments. We welcome
33 inquires about integrating Open vSwitch with other virtualization
34 platforms.
35
36 Q: How can I try Open vSwitch?
37
38 A: The Open vSwitch source code can be built on a Linux system. You can
39 build and experiment with Open vSwitch on any Linux machine.
40 Packages for various Linux distributions are available on many
41 platforms, including: Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora.
42
43 You may also download and run a virtualization platform that already
44 has Open vSwitch integrated. For example, download a recent ISO for
45 XenServer or Xen Cloud Platform. Be aware that the version
46 integrated with a particular platform may not be the most recent Open
47 vSwitch release.
48
49 Q: Does Open vSwitch only work on Linux?
50
51 A: No, Open vSwitch has been ported to a number of different operating
52 systems and hardware platforms. Most of the development work occurs
53 on Linux, but the code should be portable to any POSIX system. We've
54 seen Open vSwitch ported to a number of different platforms,
55 including FreeBSD, Windows, and even non-POSIX embedded systems.
56
57 By definition, the Open vSwitch Linux kernel module only works on
58 Linux and will provide the highest performance. However, a userspace
59 datapath is available that should be very portable.
60
61 Q: What's involved with porting Open vSwitch to a new platform or
62 switching ASIC?
63
64 A: The PORTING document describes how one would go about porting Open
65 vSwitch to a new operating system or hardware platform.
66
67 Q: Why would I use Open vSwitch instead of the Linux bridge?
68
69 A: Open vSwitch is specially designed to make it easier to manage VM
70 network configuration and monitor state spread across many physical
71 hosts in dynamic virtualized environments. Please see WHY-OVS for a
72 more detailed description of how Open vSwitch relates to the Linux
73 Bridge.
74
75 Q: How is Open vSwitch related to distributed virtual switches like the
76 VMware vNetwork distributed switch or the Cisco Nexus 1000V?
77
78 A: Distributed vswitch applications (e.g., VMware vNetwork distributed
79 switch, Cisco Nexus 1000V) provide a centralized way to configure and
80 monitor the network state of VMs that are spread across many physical
81 hosts. Open vSwitch is not a distributed vswitch itself, rather it
82 runs on each physical host and supports remote management in a way
83 that makes it easier for developers of virtualization/cloud
84 management platforms to offer distributed vswitch capabilities.
85
86 To aid in distribution, Open vSwitch provides two open protocols that
87 are specially designed for remote management in virtualized network
88 environments: OpenFlow, which exposes flow-based forwarding state,
89 and the OVSDB management protocol, which exposes switch port state.
90 In addition to the switch implementation itself, Open vSwitch
91 includes tools (ovs-controller, ovs-ofctl, ovs-vsctl) that developers
92 can script and extend to provide distributed vswitch capabilities
93 that are closely integrated with their virtualization management
94 platform.
95
96 Q: Why doesn't Open vSwitch support distribution?
97
98 A: Open vSwitch is intended to be a useful component for building
99 flexible network infrastructure. There are many different approaches
100 to distribution which balance trade-offs between simplicity,
101 scalability, hardware compatibility, convergence times, logical
102 forwarding model, etc. The goal of Open vSwitch is to be able to
103 support all as a primitive building block rather than choose a
104 particular point in the distributed design space.
105
106 Q: How can I contribute to the Open vSwitch Community?
107
108 A: You can start by joining the mailing lists and helping to answer
109 questions. You can also suggest improvements to documentation. If
110 you have a feature or bug you would like to work on, send a mail to
111 one of the mailing lists:
112
113 http://openvswitch.org/mlists/
114
115
116
117 Releases
118 --------
119
120 Q: What does it mean for an Open vSwitch release to be LTS (long-term
121 support)?
122
123 A: All official releases have been through a comprehensive testing
124 process and are suitable for production use. Planned releases will
125 occur several times a year. If a significant bug is identified in an
126 LTS release, we will provide an updated release that includes the
127 fix. Releases that are not LTS may not be fixed and may just be
128 supplanted by the next major release. The current LTS release is
129 1.4.x.
130
131 Q: What features are not available in the Open vSwitch kernel datapath
132 that ships as part of the upstream Linux kernel?
133
134 A: The kernel module in upstream Linux 3.3 and later does not include
135 the following features:
136
137 - Bridge compatibility, that is, support for the ovs-brcompatd
138 daemon that (if you enable it) lets "brctl" and other Linux
139 bridge tools transparently work with Open vSwitch instead.
140
141 We do not expect bridge compatibility to ever be available in
142 upstream Linux. If you need bridge compatibility, use the
143 kernel module from the Open vSwitch distribution instead of the
144 upstream Linux kernel module.
145
146 - Tunnel virtual ports, that is, interfaces with type "gre",
147 "ipsec_gre", "capwap". It is possible to create tunnels in
148 Linux and attach them to Open vSwitch as system devices.
149 However, they cannot be dynamically created through the OVSDB
150 protocol or set the tunnel ids as a flow action.
151
152 Work is in progress in adding these features to the upstream
153 Linux version of the Open vSwitch kernel module. For now, if
154 you need these features, use the kernel module from the Open
155 vSwitch distribution instead of the upstream Linux kernel
156 module.
157
158 - Patch virtual ports, that is, interfaces with type "patch".
159 You can use Linux "veth" devices as a substitute.
160
161 We don't have any plans to add patch ports upstream.
162
163 Q: What features are not available when using the userspace datapath?
164
165 A: Tunnel and patch virtual ports are not supported, as described in the
166 previous answer. It is also not possible to use queue-related
167 actions. On Linux kernels before 2.6.39, maximum-sized VLAN packets
168 may not be transmitted.
169
170
171 Basic Configuration
172 -------------------
173
174 Q: How do I configure a port as an access port?
175
176 A: Add "tag=VLAN" to your "ovs-vsctl add-port" command. For example,
177 the following commands configure br0 with eth0 as a trunk port (the
178 default) and tap0 as an access port for VLAN 9:
179
180 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
181 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
182 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap0 tag=9
183
184 If you want to configure an already added port as an access port,
185 use "ovs-vsctl set", e.g.:
186
187 ovs-vsctl set port tap0 tag=9
188
189 Q: How do I configure a port as a SPAN port, that is, enable mirroring
190 of all traffic to that port?
191
192 A: The following commands configure br0 with eth0 and tap0 as trunk
193 ports. All traffic coming in or going out on eth0 or tap0 is also
194 mirrored to tap1; any traffic arriving on tap1 is dropped:
195
196 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
197 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
198 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap0
199 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap1 \
200 -- --id=@p get port tap1 \
201 -- --id=@m create mirror name=m0 select-all=true output-port=@p \
202 -- set bridge br0 mirrors=@m
203
204 To later disable mirroring, run:
205
206 ovs-vsctl clear bridge br0 mirrors
207
208 Q: How do I configure a VLAN as an RSPAN VLAN, that is, enable
209 mirroring of all traffic to that VLAN?
210
211 A: The following commands configure br0 with eth0 as a trunk port and
212 tap0 as an access port for VLAN 10. All traffic coming in or going
213 out on tap0, as well as traffic coming in or going out on eth0 in
214 VLAN 10, is also mirrored to VLAN 15 on eth0. The original tag for
215 VLAN 10, in cases where one is present, is dropped as part of
216 mirroring:
217
218 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
219 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
220 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap0 tag=10
221 ovs-vsctl \
222 -- --id=@m create mirror name=m0 select-all=true select-vlan=10 \
223 output-vlan=15 \
224 -- set bridge br0 mirrors=@m
225
226 To later disable mirroring, run:
227
228 ovs-vsctl clear bridge br0 mirrors
229
230 Mirroring to a VLAN can disrupt a network that contains unmanaged
231 switches. See ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for details. Mirroring to a
232 GRE tunnel has fewer caveats than mirroring to a VLAN and should
233 generally be preferred.
234
235 Q: Can I mirror more than one input VLAN to an RSPAN VLAN?
236
237 A: Yes, but mirroring to a VLAN strips the original VLAN tag in favor
238 of the specified output-vlan. This loss of information may make
239 the mirrored traffic too hard to interpret.
240
241 To mirror multiple VLANs, use the commands above, but specify a
242 comma-separated list of VLANs as the value for select-vlan. To
243 mirror every VLAN, use the commands above, but omit select-vlan and
244 its value entirely.
245
246 When a packet arrives on a VLAN that is used as a mirror output
247 VLAN, the mirror is disregarded. Instead, in standalone mode, OVS
248 floods the packet across all the ports for which the mirror output
249 VLAN is configured. (If an OpenFlow controller is in use, then it
250 can override this behavior through the flow table.) If OVS is used
251 as an intermediate switch, rather than an edge switch, this ensures
252 that the RSPAN traffic is distributed through the network.
253
254 Mirroring to a VLAN can disrupt a network that contains unmanaged
255 switches. See ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for details. Mirroring to a
256 GRE tunnel has fewer caveats than mirroring to a VLAN and should
257 generally be preferred.
258
259 Q: How do I configure mirroring of all traffic to a GRE tunnel?
260
261 A: The following commands configure br0 with eth0 and tap0 as trunk
262 ports. All traffic coming in or going out on eth0 or tap0 is also
263 mirrored to gre0, a GRE tunnel to the remote host 192.168.1.10; any
264 traffic arriving on gre0 is dropped:
265
266 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
267 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
268 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap0
269 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 gre0 \
270 -- set interface gre0 type=gre options:remote_ip=192.168.1.10 \
271 -- --id=@p get port gre0 \
272 -- --id=@m create mirror name=m0 select-all=true output-port=@p \
273 -- set bridge br0 mirrors=@m
274
275 To later disable mirroring and destroy the GRE tunnel:
276
277 ovs-vsctl clear bridge br0 mirrors
278 ovs-vcstl del-port br0 gre0
279
280 Q: Does Open vSwitch support ERSPAN?
281
282 A: No. ERSPAN is an undocumented proprietary protocol. As an
283 alternative, Open vSwitch supports mirroring to a GRE tunnel (see
284 above).
285
286
287 Configuration Problems
288 ----------------------
289
290 Q: I created a bridge and added my Ethernet port to it, using commands
291 like these:
292
293 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
294 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
295
296 and as soon as I ran the "add-port" command I lost all connectivity
297 through eth0. Help!
298
299 A: A physical Ethernet device that is part of an Open vSwitch bridge
300 should not have an IP address. If one does, then that IP address
301 will not be fully functional.
302
303 You can restore functionality by moving the IP address to an Open
304 vSwitch "internal" device, such as the network device named after
305 the bridge itself. For example, assuming that eth0's IP address is
306 192.168.128.5, you could run the commands below to fix up the
307 situation:
308
309 ifconfig eth0 0.0.0.0
310 ifconfig br0 192.168.128.5
311
312 (If your only connection to the machine running OVS is through the
313 IP address in question, then you would want to run all of these
314 commands on a single command line, or put them into a script.) If
315 there were any additional routes assigned to eth0, then you would
316 also want to use commands to adjust these routes to go through br0.
317
318 If you use DHCP to obtain an IP address, then you should kill the
319 DHCP client that was listening on the physical Ethernet interface
320 (e.g. eth0) and start one listening on the internal interface
321 (e.g. br0). You might still need to manually clear the IP address
322 from the physical interface (e.g. with "ifconfig eth0 0.0.0.0").
323
324 There is no compelling reason why Open vSwitch must work this way.
325 However, this is the way that the Linux kernel bridge module has
326 always worked, so it's a model that those accustomed to Linux
327 bridging are already used to. Also, the model that most people
328 expect is not implementable without kernel changes on all the
329 versions of Linux that Open vSwitch supports.
330
331 By the way, this issue is not specific to physical Ethernet
332 devices. It applies to all network devices except Open vswitch
333 "internal" devices.
334
335 Q: I created a bridge and added a couple of Ethernet ports to it,
336 using commands like these:
337
338 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
339 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
340 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth1
341
342 and now my network seems to have melted: connectivity is unreliable
343 (even connectivity that doesn't go through Open vSwitch), all the
344 LEDs on my physical switches are blinking, wireshark shows
345 duplicated packets, and CPU usage is very high.
346
347 A: More than likely, you've looped your network. Probably, eth0 and
348 eth1 are connected to the same physical Ethernet switch. This
349 yields a scenario where OVS receives a broadcast packet on eth0 and
350 sends it out on eth1, then the physical switch connected to eth1
351 sends the packet back on eth0, and so on forever. More complicated
352 scenarios, involving a loop through multiple switches, are possible
353 too.
354
355 The solution depends on what you are trying to do:
356
357 - If you added eth0 and eth1 to get higher bandwidth or higher
358 reliability between OVS and your physical Ethernet switch,
359 use a bond. The following commands create br0 and then add
360 eth0 and eth1 as a bond:
361
362 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
363 ovs-vsctl add-bond br0 bond0 eth0 eth1
364
365 Bonds have tons of configuration options. Please read the
366 documentation on the Port table in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5)
367 for all the details.
368
369 - Perhaps you don't actually need eth0 and eth1 to be on the
370 same bridge. For example, if you simply want to be able to
371 connect each of them to virtual machines, then you can put
372 each of them on a bridge of its own:
373
374 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
375 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
376
377 ovs-vsctl add-br br1
378 ovs-vsctl add-port br1 eth1
379
380 and then connect VMs to br0 and br1. (A potential
381 disadvantage is that traffic cannot directly pass between br0
382 and br1. Instead, it will go out eth0 and come back in eth1,
383 or vice versa.)
384
385 - If you have a redundant or complex network topology and you
386 want to prevent loops, turn on spanning tree protocol (STP).
387 The following commands create br0, enable STP, and add eth0
388 and eth1 to the bridge. The order is important because you
389 don't want have to have a loop in your network even
390 transiently:
391
392 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
393 ovs-vsctl set bridge br0 stp_enable=true
394 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
395 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth1
396
397 The Open vSwitch implementation of STP is not well tested.
398 Please report any bugs you observe, but if you'd rather avoid
399 acting as a beta tester then another option might be your
400 best shot.
401
402 Q: I can't seem to use Open vSwitch in a wireless network.
403
404 A: Wireless base stations generally only allow packets with the source
405 MAC address of NIC that completed the initial handshake.
406 Therefore, without MAC rewriting, only a single device can
407 communicate over a single wireless link.
408
409 This isn't specific to Open vSwitch, it's enforced by the access
410 point, so the same problems will show up with the Linux bridge or
411 any other way to do bridging.
412
413 Q: Is there any documentation on the database tables and fields?
414
415 A: Yes. ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) is a comprehensive reference.
416
417 Q: When I run ovs-dpctl I no longer see the bridges I created. Instead,
418 I only see a datapath called "ovs-system". How can I see datapath
419 information about a particular bridge?
420
421 A: In version 1.9.0, OVS switched to using a single datapath that is
422 shared by all bridges of that type. The "ovs-appctl dpif/*"
423 commands provide similar functionality that is scoped by the bridge.
424
425
426 VLANs
427 -----
428
429 Q: What's a VLAN?
430
431 A: At the simplest level, a VLAN (short for "virtual LAN") is a way to
432 partition a single switch into multiple switches. Suppose, for
433 example, that you have two groups of machines, group A and group B.
434 You want the machines in group A to be able to talk to each other,
435 and you want the machine in group B to be able to talk to each
436 other, but you don't want the machines in group A to be able to
437 talk to the machines in group B. You can do this with two
438 switches, by plugging the machines in group A into one switch and
439 the machines in group B into the other switch.
440
441 If you only have one switch, then you can use VLANs to do the same
442 thing, by configuring the ports for machines in group A as VLAN
443 "access ports" for one VLAN and the ports for group B as "access
444 ports" for a different VLAN. The switch will only forward packets
445 between ports that are assigned to the same VLAN, so this
446 effectively subdivides your single switch into two independent
447 switches, one for each group of machines.
448
449 So far we haven't said anything about VLAN headers. With access
450 ports, like we've described so far, no VLAN header is present in
451 the Ethernet frame. This means that the machines (or switches)
452 connected to access ports need not be aware that VLANs are
453 involved, just like in the case where we use two different physical
454 switches.
455
456 Now suppose that you have a whole bunch of switches in your
457 network, instead of just one, and that some machines in group A are
458 connected directly to both switches 1 and 2. To allow these
459 machines to talk to each other, you could add an access port for
460 group A's VLAN to switch 1 and another to switch 2, and then
461 connect an Ethernet cable between those ports. That works fine,
462 but it doesn't scale well as the number of switches and the number
463 of VLANs increases, because you use up a lot of valuable switch
464 ports just connecting together your VLANs.
465
466 This is where VLAN headers come in. Instead of using one cable and
467 two ports per VLAN to connect a pair of switches, we configure a
468 port on each switch as a VLAN "trunk port". Packets sent and
469 received on a trunk port carry a VLAN header that says what VLAN
470 the packet belongs to, so that only two ports total are required to
471 connect the switches, regardless of the number of VLANs in use.
472 Normally, only switches (either physical or virtual) are connected
473 to a trunk port, not individual hosts, because individual hosts
474 don't expect to see a VLAN header in the traffic that they receive.
475
476 None of the above discussion says anything about particular VLAN
477 numbers. This is because VLAN numbers are completely arbitrary.
478 One must only ensure that a given VLAN is numbered consistently
479 throughout a network and that different VLANs are given different
480 numbers. (That said, VLAN 0 is usually synonymous with a packet
481 that has no VLAN header, and VLAN 4095 is reserved.)
482
483 Q: VLANs don't work.
484
485 A: Many drivers in Linux kernels before version 3.3 had VLAN-related
486 bugs. If you are having problems with VLANs that you suspect to be
487 driver related, then you have several options:
488
489 - Upgrade to Linux 3.3 or later.
490
491 - Build and install a fixed version of the particular driver
492 that is causing trouble, if one is available.
493
494 - Use a NIC whose driver does not have VLAN problems.
495
496 - Use "VLAN splinters", a feature in Open vSwitch 1.4 and later
497 that works around bugs in kernel drivers. To enable VLAN
498 splinters on interface eth0, use the command:
499
500 ovs-vsctl set interface eth0 other-config:enable-vlan-splinters=true
501
502 For VLAN splinters to be effective, Open vSwitch must know
503 which VLANs are in use. See the "VLAN splinters" section in
504 the Interface table in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for details on
505 how Open vSwitch infers in-use VLANs.
506
507 VLAN splinters increase memory use and reduce performance, so
508 use them only if needed.
509
510 - Apply the "vlan workaround" patch from the XenServer kernel
511 patch queue, build Open vSwitch against this patched kernel,
512 and then use ovs-vlan-bug-workaround(8) to enable the VLAN
513 workaround for each interface whose driver is buggy.
514
515 (This is a nontrivial exercise, so this option is included
516 only for completeness.)
517
518 It is not always easy to tell whether a Linux kernel driver has
519 buggy VLAN support. The ovs-vlan-test(8) and ovs-test(8) utilities
520 can help you test. See their manpages for details. Of the two
521 utilities, ovs-test(8) is newer and more thorough, but
522 ovs-vlan-test(8) may be easier to use.
523
524 Q: VLANs still don't work. I've tested the driver so I know that it's OK.
525
526 A: Do you have VLANs enabled on the physical switch that OVS is
527 attached to? Make sure that the port is configured to trunk the
528 VLAN or VLANs that you are using with OVS.
529
530 Q: Outgoing VLAN-tagged traffic goes through OVS to my physical switch
531 and to its destination host, but OVS seems to drop incoming return
532 traffic.
533
534 A: It's possible that you have the VLAN configured on your physical
535 switch as the "native" VLAN. In this mode, the switch treats
536 incoming packets either tagged with the native VLAN or untagged as
537 part of the native VLAN. It may also send outgoing packets in the
538 native VLAN without a VLAN tag.
539
540 If this is the case, you have two choices:
541
542 - Change the physical switch port configuration to tag packets
543 it forwards to OVS with the native VLAN instead of forwarding
544 them untagged.
545
546 - Change the OVS configuration for the physical port to a
547 native VLAN mode. For example, the following sets up a
548 bridge with port eth0 in "native-tagged" mode in VLAN 9:
549
550 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
551 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0 tag=9 vlan_mode=native-tagged
552
553 In this situation, "native-untagged" mode will probably work
554 equally well. Refer to the documentation for the Port table
555 in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for more information.
556
557 Q: Can I configure an IP address on a VLAN?
558
559 A: Yes. Use an "internal port" configured as an access port. For
560 example, the following configures IP address 192.168.0.7 on VLAN 9.
561 That is, OVS will forward packets from eth0 to 192.168.0.7 only if
562 they have an 802.1Q header with VLAN 9. Conversely, traffic
563 forwarded from 192.168.0.7 to eth0 will be tagged with an 802.1Q
564 header with VLAN 9:
565
566 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
567 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
568 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 vlan9 tag=9 -- set interface vlan9 type=internal
569 ifconfig vlan9 192.168.0.7
570
571 Q: My OpenFlow controller doesn't see the VLANs that I expect.
572
573 A: The configuration for VLANs in the Open vSwitch database (e.g. via
574 ovs-vsctl) only affects traffic that goes through Open vSwitch's
575 implementation of the OpenFlow "normal switching" action. By
576 default, when Open vSwitch isn't connected to a controller and
577 nothing has been manually configured in the flow table, all traffic
578 goes through the "normal switching" action. But, if you set up
579 OpenFlow flows on your own, through a controller or using ovs-ofctl
580 or through other means, then you have to implement VLAN handling
581 yourself.
582
583 You can use "normal switching" as a component of your OpenFlow
584 actions, e.g. by putting "normal" into the lists of actions on
585 ovs-ofctl or by outputting to OFPP_NORMAL from an OpenFlow
586 controller. This will only be suitable for some situations,
587 though.
588
589 Q: I configured ports on a bridge as access ports with different VLAN
590 tags, like this:
591
592 ovs-vsctl add-br br0
593 ovs-vsctl set-controller br0 tcp:192.168.0.10:6633
594 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 eth0
595 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap0 tag=9
596 ovs-vsctl add-port br0 tap1 tag=10
597
598 but the VMs running behind tap0 and tap1 can still communicate,
599 that is, they are not isolated from each other even though they are
600 on different VLANs.
601
602 A: Do you have a controller configured on br0 (as the commands above
603 do)? If so, then this is a variant on the previous question, "My
604 OpenFlow controller doesn't see the VLANs that I expect," and you
605 can refer to the answer there for more information.
606
607
608 Controllers
609 -----------
610
611 Q: What versions of OpenFlow does Open vSwitch support?
612
613 A: Open vSwitch supports OpenFlow 1.0. It also includes a number of
614 extensions that bring many of the features from later versions of
615 OpenFlow. Work is underway to provide support for later versions and
616 can be tracked here:
617
618 http://openvswitch.org/development/openflow-1-x-plan/
619
620 Q: I'm getting "error type 45250 code 0". What's that?
621
622 A: This is a Open vSwitch extension to OpenFlow error codes. Open
623 vSwitch uses this extension when it must report an error to an
624 OpenFlow controller but no standard OpenFlow error code is
625 suitable.
626
627 Open vSwitch logs the errors that it sends to controllers, so the
628 easiest thing to do is probably to look at the ovs-vswitchd log to
629 find out what the error was.
630
631 If you want to dissect the extended error message yourself, the
632 format is documented in include/openflow/nicira-ext.h in the Open
633 vSwitch source distribution. The extended error codes are
634 documented in lib/ofp-errors.h.
635
636 Q1: Some of the traffic that I'd expect my OpenFlow controller to see
637 doesn't actually appear through the OpenFlow connection, even
638 though I know that it's going through.
639 Q2: Some of the OpenFlow flows that my controller sets up don't seem
640 to apply to certain traffic, especially traffic between OVS and
641 the controller itself.
642
643 A: By default, Open vSwitch assumes that OpenFlow controllers are
644 connected "in-band", that is, that the controllers are actually
645 part of the network that is being controlled. In in-band mode,
646 Open vSwitch sets up special "hidden" flows to make sure that
647 traffic can make it back and forth between OVS and the controllers.
648 These hidden flows are higher priority than any flows that can be
649 set up through OpenFlow, and they are not visible through normal
650 OpenFlow flow table dumps.
651
652 Usually, the hidden flows are desirable and helpful, but
653 occasionally they can cause unexpected behavior. You can view the
654 full OpenFlow flow table, including hidden flows, on bridge br0
655 with the command:
656
657 ovs-appctl bridge/dump-flows br0
658
659 to help you debug. The hidden flows are those with priorities
660 greater than 65535 (the maximum priority that can be set with
661 OpenFlow).
662
663 The DESIGN file at the top level of the Open vSwitch source
664 distribution describes the in-band model in detail.
665
666 If your controllers are not actually in-band (e.g. they are on
667 localhost via 127.0.0.1, or on a separate network), then you should
668 configure your controllers in "out-of-band" mode. If you have one
669 controller on bridge br0, then you can configure out-of-band mode
670 on it with:
671
672 ovs-vsctl set controller br0 connection-mode=out-of-band
673
674 Q: I configured all my controllers for out-of-band control mode but
675 "ovs-appctl bridge/dump-flows" still shows some hidden flows.
676
677 A: You probably have a remote manager configured (e.g. with "ovs-vsctl
678 set-manager"). By default, Open vSwitch assumes that managers need
679 in-band rules set up on every bridge. You can disable these rules
680 on bridge br0 with:
681
682 ovs-vsctl set bridge br0 other-config:disable-in-band=true
683
684 This actually disables in-band control entirely for the bridge, as
685 if all the bridge's controllers were configured for out-of-band
686 control.
687
688 Q: My OpenFlow controller doesn't see the VLANs that I expect.
689
690 A: See answer under "VLANs", above.
691
692 Q: I ran "ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 nw_dst=192.168.0.1,actions=drop"
693 but I got a funny message like this:
694
695 ofp_util|INFO|normalization changed ofp_match, details:
696 ofp_util|INFO| pre: nw_dst=192.168.0.1
697 ofp_util|INFO|post:
698
699 and when I ran "ovs-ofctl dump-flows br0" I saw that my nw_dst
700 match had disappeared, so that the flow ends up matching every
701 packet.
702
703 A: The term "normalization" in the log message means that a flow
704 cannot match on an L3 field without saying what L3 protocol is in
705 use. The "ovs-ofctl" command above didn't specify an L3 protocol,
706 so the L3 field match was dropped.
707
708 In this case, the L3 protocol could be IP or ARP. A correct
709 command for each possibility is, respectively:
710
711 ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 ip,nw_dst=192.168.0.1,actions=drop
712
713 and
714
715 ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 arp,nw_dst=192.168.0.1,actions=drop
716
717 Similarly, a flow cannot match on an L4 field without saying what
718 L4 protocol is in use. For example, the flow match "tp_src=1234"
719 is, by itself, meaningless and will be ignored. Instead, to match
720 TCP source port 1234, write "tcp,tp_src=1234", or to match UDP
721 source port 1234, write "udp,tp_src=1234".
722
723 Q: How can I figure out the OpenFlow port number for a given port?
724
725 A: The OFPT_FEATURES_REQUEST message requests an OpenFlow switch to
726 respond with an OFPT_FEATURES_REPLY that, among other information,
727 includes a mapping between OpenFlow port names and numbers. From a
728 command prompt, "ovs-ofctl show br0" makes such a request and
729 prints the response for switch br0.
730
731 The Interface table in the Open vSwitch database also maps OpenFlow
732 port names to numbers. To print the OpenFlow port number
733 associated with interface eth0, run:
734
735 ovs-vsctl get Interface eth0 ofport
736
737 You can print the entire mapping with:
738
739 ovs-vsctl -- --columns=name,ofport list Interface
740
741 but the output mixes together interfaces from all bridges in the
742 database, so it may be confusing if more than one bridge exists.
743
744 In the Open vSwitch database, ofport value -1 means that the
745 interface could not be created due to an error. (The Open vSwitch
746 log should indicate the reason.) ofport value [] (the empty set)
747 means that the interface hasn't been created yet. The latter is
748 normally an intermittent condition (unless ovs-vswitchd is not
749 running).
750
751 Q: I added some flows with my controller or with ovs-ofctl, but when I
752 run "ovs-dpctl dump-flows" I don't see them.
753
754 A: ovs-dpctl queries a kernel datapath, not an OpenFlow switch. It
755 won't display the information that you want. You want to use
756 "ovs-ofctl dump-flows" instead.
757
758 Q: It looks like each of the interfaces in my bonded port shows up
759 as an individual OpenFlow port. Is that right?
760
761 A: Yes, Open vSwitch makes individual bond interfaces visible as
762 OpenFlow ports, rather than the bond as a whole. The interfaces
763 are treated together as a bond for only a few purposes:
764
765 - Sending a packet to the OFPP_NORMAL port. (When an OpenFlow
766 controller is not configured, this happens implicitly to
767 every packet.)
768
769 - The "autopath" Nicira extension action. However, "autopath"
770 is deprecated and scheduled for removal in February 2013.
771
772 - Mirrors configured for output to a bonded port.
773
774 It would make a lot of sense for Open vSwitch to present a bond as
775 a single OpenFlow port. If you want to contribute an
776 implementation of such a feature, please bring it up on the Open
777 vSwitch development mailing list at dev@openvswitch.org.
778
779 Contact
780 -------
781
782 bugs@openvswitch.org
783 http://openvswitch.org/