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1 .\" -*- nroff -*-
2 .de IQ
3 . br
4 . ns
5 . IP "\\$1"
6 ..
7 .TH ovs\-ofctl 8 "@VERSION@" "Open vSwitch" "Open vSwitch Manual"
8 .ds PN ovs\-ofctl
9 .
10 .SH NAME
11 ovs\-ofctl \- administer OpenFlow switches
12 .
13 .SH SYNOPSIS
14 .B ovs\-ofctl
15 [\fIoptions\fR] \fIcommand \fR[\fIswitch\fR] [\fIargs\fR\&...]
16 .
17 .SH DESCRIPTION
18 The
19 .B ovs\-ofctl
20 program is a command line tool for monitoring and administering
21 OpenFlow switches. It can also show the current state of an OpenFlow
22 switch, including features, configuration, and table entries.
23 It should work with any OpenFlow switch, not just Open vSwitch.
24 .
25 .SS "OpenFlow Switch Management Commands"
26 .PP
27 These commands allow \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to monitor and administer an OpenFlow
28 switch. It is able to show the current state of a switch, including
29 features, configuration, and table entries.
30 .PP
31 Most of these commands take an argument that specifies the method for
32 connecting to an OpenFlow switch. The following connection methods
33 are supported:
34 .
35 .RS
36 .so lib/vconn-active.man
37 .
38 .IP "\fIfile\fR"
39 This is short for \fBunix:\fIfile\fR, as long as \fIfile\fR does not
40 contain a colon.
41 .
42 .IP \fIbridge\fR
43 This 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
47 Attempts to look up the bridge associated with \fIdp\fR and open as
48 above. If \fItype\fR is given, it specifies the datapath provider of
49 \fIdp\fR, otherwise the default provider \fBsystem\fR is assumed.
50 .RE
51 .
52 .TP
53 \fBshow \fIswitch\fR
54 Prints to the console information on \fIswitch\fR, including
55 information on its flow tables and ports.
56 .
57 .TP
58 \fBdump\-tables \fIswitch\fR
59 Prints to the console statistics for each of the flow tables used by
60 \fIswitch\fR.
61 .TP
62 \fBdump\-table\-features \fIswitch\fR
63 Prints to the console features for each of the flow tables used by
64 \fIswitch\fR.
65 .TP
66 \fBdump\-table\-desc \fIswitch\fR
67 Prints to the console configuration for each of the flow tables used
68 by \fIswitch\fR for OpenFlow 1.4+.
69 .IP "\fBmod\-table \fIswitch\fR \fItable_id\fR \fIsetting\fR"
70 This command configures flow table settings for OpenFlow table
71 \fItable_id\fR within \fIswitch\fR. The available settings depend on
72 the OpenFlow version in use. In OpenFlow 1.1 and 1.2 (which must be
73 enabled with the \fB\-O\fR option) only, \fBmod\-table\fR configures
74 behavior when no flow is found when a packet is looked up in a flow
75 table. The following \fIsetting\fR values are available:
76 .RS
77 .IP \fBdrop\fR
78 Drop the packet.
79 .IP \fBcontinue\fR
80 Continue to the next table in the pipeline. (This is how an OpenFlow
81 1.0 switch always handles packets that do not match any flow, in
82 tables other than the last one.)
83 .IP \fBcontroller\fR
84 Send to controller. (This is how an OpenFlow 1.0 switch always
85 handles packets that do not match any flow in the last table.)
86 .RE
87 .IP
88 In OpenFlow 1.4 and later (which must be enabled with the \fB\-O\fR
89 option) only, \fBmod\-table\fR configures the behavior when a
90 controller attempts to add a flow to a flow table that is full. The
91 following \fIsetting\fR values are available:
92 .RS
93 .IP \fBevict\fR
94 Delete some existing flow from the flow table, according to the
95 algorithm described for the \fBFlow_Table\fR table in
96 \fBovs-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5).
97 .IP \fBnoevict\fR
98 Refuse to add the new flow. (Eviction might still be enabled through
99 the \fBoverflow_policy\fR column in the \fBFlow_Table\fR table
100 documented in \fBovs-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5).)
101 .IP \fBvacancy:\fIlow\fB,\fIhigh\fR
102 Enables sending vacancy events to controllers using \fBTABLE_STATUS\fR
103 messages, based on percentage thresholds \fIlow\fR and \fIhigh\fR.
104 .IP \fBnovacancy\fR
105 Disables vacancy events.
106 .RE
107 .
108 .TP
109 \fBdump\-ports \fIswitch\fR [\fInetdev\fR]
110 Prints to the console statistics for network devices associated with
111 \fIswitch\fR. If \fInetdev\fR is specified, only the statistics
112 associated with that device will be printed. \fInetdev\fR can be an
113 OpenFlow assigned port number or device name, e.g. \fBeth0\fR.
114 .
115 .IP "\fBdump\-ports\-desc \fIswitch\fR [\fIport\fR]"
116 Prints to the console detailed information about network devices
117 associated with \fIswitch\fR. To dump only a specific port, specify
118 its number as \fIport\fR. Otherwise, if \fIport\fR is omitted, or if
119 it is specified as \fBANY\fR, then all ports are printed. This is a
120 subset of the information provided by the \fBshow\fR command.
121 .IP
122 If the connection to \fIswitch\fR negotiates OpenFlow 1.0, 1.2, or
123 1.2, this command uses an OpenFlow extension only implemented in Open
124 vSwitch (version 1.7 and later).
125 .IP
126 Only OpenFlow 1.5 and later support dumping a specific port. Earlier
127 versions of OpenFlow always dump all ports.
128 .
129 .IP "\fBmod\-port \fIswitch\fR \fIport\fR \fIaction\fR"
130 Modify characteristics of port \fBport\fR in \fIswitch\fR. \fIport\fR
131 may be an OpenFlow port number or name or the keyword \fBLOCAL\fR (the
132 preferred way to refer to the OpenFlow local port). The \fIaction\fR
133 may be any one of the following:
134 .
135 .RS
136 .IQ \fBup\fR
137 .IQ \fBdown\fR
138 Enable or disable the interface. This is equivalent to \fBifconfig
139 up\fR or \fBifconfig down\fR on a Unix system.
140 .
141 .IP \fBstp\fR
142 .IQ \fBno\-stp\fR
143 Enable or disable 802.1D spanning tree protocol (STP) on the
144 interface. OpenFlow implementations that don't support STP will
145 refuse to enable it.
146 .
147 .IP \fBreceive\fR
148 .IQ \fBno\-receive\fR
149 .IQ \fBreceive\-stp\fR
150 .IQ \fBno\-receive\-stp\fR
151 Enable or disable OpenFlow processing of packets received on this
152 interface. When packet processing is disabled, packets will be
153 dropped instead of being processed through the OpenFlow table. The
154 \fBreceive\fR or \fBno\-receive\fR setting applies to all packets
155 except 802.1D spanning tree packets, which are separately controlled
156 by \fBreceive\-stp\fR or \fBno\-receive\-stp\fR.
157 .
158 .IP \fBforward\fR
159 .IQ \fBno\-forward\fR
160 Allow or disallow forwarding of traffic to this interface. By
161 default, forwarding is enabled.
162 .
163 .IP \fBflood\fR
164 .IQ \fBno\-flood\fR
165 Controls whether an OpenFlow \fBflood\fR action will send traffic out
166 this interface. By default, flooding is enabled. Disabling flooding
167 is primarily useful to prevent loops when a spanning tree protocol is
168 not in use.
169 .
170 .IP \fBpacket\-in\fR
171 .IQ \fBno\-packet\-in\fR
172 Controls whether packets received on this interface that do not match
173 a flow table entry generate a ``packet in'' message to the OpenFlow
174 controller. By default, ``packet in'' messages are enabled.
175 .RE
176 .IP
177 The \fBshow\fR command displays (among other information) the
178 configuration that \fBmod\-port\fR changes.
179 .
180 .IP "\fBget\-frags \fIswitch\fR"
181 Prints \fIswitch\fR's fragment handling mode. See \fBset\-frags\fR,
182 below, for a description of each fragment handling mode.
183 .IP
184 The \fBshow\fR command also prints the fragment handling mode among
185 its other output.
186 .
187 .IP "\fBset\-frags \fIswitch frag_mode\fR"
188 Configures \fIswitch\fR's treatment of IPv4 and IPv6 fragments. The
189 choices for \fIfrag_mode\fR are:
190 .RS
191 .IP "\fBnormal\fR"
192 Fragments pass through the flow table like non-fragmented packets.
193 The TCP ports, UDP ports, and ICMP type and code fields are always set
194 to 0, even for fragments where that information would otherwise be
195 available (fragments with offset 0). This is the default fragment
196 handling mode for an OpenFlow switch.
197 .IP "\fBdrop\fR"
198 Fragments are dropped without passing through the flow table.
199 .IP "\fBreassemble\fR"
200 The switch reassembles fragments into full IP packets before passing
201 them through the flow table. Open vSwitch does not implement this
202 fragment handling mode.
203 .IP "\fBnx\-match\fR"
204 Fragments pass through the flow table like non-fragmented packets.
205 The TCP ports, UDP ports, and ICMP type and code fields are available
206 for matching for fragments with offset 0, and set to 0 in fragments
207 with nonzero offset. This mode is a Nicira extension.
208 .RE
209 .IP
210 See the description of \fBip_frag\fR, below, for a way to match on
211 whether a packet is a fragment and on its fragment offset.
212 .
213 .TP
214 \fBdump\-flows \fIswitch \fR[\fIflows\fR]
215 Prints to the console all flow entries in \fIswitch\fR's
216 tables that match \fIflows\fR. If \fIflows\fR is omitted, all flows
217 in the switch are retrieved. See \fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, for the
218 syntax of \fIflows\fR. The output format is described in
219 \fBTable Entry Output\fR.
220 .
221 .IP
222 By default, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR prints flow entries in the same order
223 that the switch sends them, which is unlikely to be intuitive or
224 consistent. See the description of \fB\-\-sort\fR and \fB\-\-rsort\fR,
225 under \fBOPTIONS\fR below, to influence the display order.
226 .
227 .TP
228 \fBdump\-aggregate \fIswitch \fR[\fIflows\fR]
229 Prints to the console aggregate statistics for flows in
230 \fIswitch\fR's tables that match \fIflows\fR. If \fIflows\fR is omitted,
231 the statistics are aggregated across all flows in the switch's flow
232 tables. See \fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, for the syntax of \fIflows\fR.
233 The output format is described in \fBTable Entry Output\fR.
234 .
235 .IP "\fBqueue\-stats \fIswitch \fR[\fIport \fR[\fIqueue\fR]]"
236 Prints to the console statistics for the specified \fIqueue\fR on
237 \fIport\fR within \fIswitch\fR. \fIport\fR can be an OpenFlow port
238 number or name, the keyword \fBLOCAL\fR (the preferred way to refer to
239 the OpenFlow local port), or the keyword \fBALL\fR. Either of
240 \fIport\fR or \fIqueue\fR or both may be omitted (or equivalently the
241 keyword \fBALL\fR). If both are omitted, statistics are printed for
242 all queues on all ports. If only \fIqueue\fR is omitted, then
243 statistics are printed for all queues on \fIport\fR; if only
244 \fIport\fR is omitted, then statistics are printed for \fIqueue\fR on
245 every port where it exists.
246 .
247 .IP "\fBqueue\-get\-config \fIswitch [\fIport \fR[\fIqueue\fR]]"
248 Prints to the console the configuration of \fIqueue\fR on \fIport\fR
249 in \fIswitch\fR. If \fIport\fR is omitted or \fBANY\fR, reports
250 queues for all port. If \fIqueue\fR is omitted or \fBANY\fR, reports
251 all queues. For OpenFlow 1.3 and earlier, the output always includes
252 all queues, ignoring \fIqueue\fR if specified.
253 .IP
254 This command has limited usefulness, because ports often have no
255 configured queues and because the OpenFlow protocol provides only very
256 limited information about the configuration of a queue.
257 .
258 .IP "\fBdump\-ipfix\-bridge \fIswitch
259 Prints to the console the statistics of bridge IPFIX for \fIswitch\fR.
260 If bridge IPFIX is configured on the \fIswitch\fR, IPFIX statistics
261 can be retrieved. Otherwise, error message will be printed.
262 .IP
263 This command uses an Open vSwitch extension that is only in Open
264 vSwitch 2.6 and later.
265 .
266 .IP "\fBdump\-ipfix\-flow \fIswitch
267 Prints to the console the statistics of flow-based IPFIX for
268 \fIswitch\fR. If flow-based IPFIX is configured on the \fIswitch\fR,
269 statistics of all the collector set ids on the \fIswitch\fR will be
270 printed. Otherwise, print error message.
271 .IP
272 Refer to \fBovs-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5) for more details on configuring
273 flow based IPFIX and collector set ids.
274 .IP
275 This command uses an Open vSwitch extension that is only in Open
276 vSwitch 2.6 and later.
277 .
278 .SS "OpenFlow 1.1+ Group Table Commands"
279 .
280 The following commands work only with switches that support OpenFlow
281 1.1 or later. Because support for OpenFlow 1.1 and later is still
282 experimental in Open vSwitch, it is necessary to explicitly enable
283 these protocol versions in \fBovs\-ofctl\fR (using \fB\-O\fR) and in
284 the switch itself (with the \fBprotocols\fR column in the \fBBridge\fR
285 table). For more information, see ``Q: What versions of OpenFlow does
286 Open vSwitch support?'' in the Open vSwitch FAQ.
287 .
288 .IP "\fBdump\-groups \fIswitch\fR [\fIgroup\fR]"
289 Prints group entries in \fIswitch\fR's tables to console. To dump
290 only a specific group, specify its number as \fIgroup\fR. Otherwise,
291 if \fIgroup\fR is omitted, or if it is specified as \fBALL\fR, then
292 all groups are printed. Each line of output is a group entry as
293 described in \fBGroup Syntax\fR below.
294 .IP
295 Only OpenFlow 1.5 and later support dumping a specific group. Earlier
296 versions of OpenFlow always dump all groups.
297 .
298 .IP "\fBdump\-group\-features \fIswitch"
299 Prints to the console the group features of the \fIswitch\fR.
300 .
301 .IP "\fBdump\-group-stats \fIswitch \fR[\fIgroups\fR]"
302 Prints to the console statistics for the specified \fIgroups in the
303 \fIswitch\fR's tables. If \fIgroups\fR is omitted then statistics for all
304 groups are printed. See \fBGroup Syntax\fR, below, for the syntax of
305 \fIgroups\fR.
306 .
307 .SS "OpenFlow 1.3+ Switch Meter Table Commands"
308 .
309 These commands manage the meter table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
310 case, \fImeter\fR specifies a meter entry in the format described in
311 \fBMeter Syntax\fR, below.
312 .
313 .PP
314 OpenFlow 1.3 introduced support for meters, so these commands only
315 work with switches that support OpenFlow 1.3 or later. The caveats
316 described for groups in the previous section also apply to meters.
317 .
318 .IP "\fBadd\-meter \fIswitch meter\fR"
319 Add a meter entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables. The \fImeter\fR syntax is
320 described in section \fBMeter Syntax\fR, below.
321 .
322 .IP "\fBmod\-meter \fIswitch meter\fR"
323 Modify an existing meter.
324 .
325 .IP "\fBdel\-meters \fIswitch\fR"
326 .IQ "\fBdel\-meter \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
327 Delete entries from \fIswitch\fR's meter table. \fImeter\fR can specify
328 a single meter with syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax
329 \fBmeter=all\fR.
330 .
331 .IP "\fBdump\-meters \fIswitch\fR"
332 .IQ "\fBdump\-meter \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
333 Print meter configuration. \fImeter\fR can specify a single meter with
334 syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax \fBmeter=all\fR.
335 .
336 .IP "\fBmeter\-stats \fIswitch\fR [\fImeter\fR]"
337 Print meter statistics. \fImeter\fR can specify a single meter with
338 syntax \fBmeter=\fIid\fR, or all meters with syntax \fBmeter=all\fR.
339 .
340 .IP "\fBmeter\-features \fIswitch\fR"
341 Print meter features.
342 .
343 .SS "OpenFlow Switch Flow Table Commands"
344 .
345 These commands manage the flow table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
346 case, \fIflow\fR specifies a flow entry in the format described in
347 \fBFlow Syntax\fR, below, \fIfile\fR is a text file that contains zero
348 or more flows in the same syntax, one per line, and the optional
349 \fB\-\-bundle\fR option operates the command as a single atomic
350 transation, see option \fB\-\-bundle\fR, below.
351 .
352 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flow \fIswitch flow\fR"
353 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flow \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
354 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-flows \fIswitch file\fR"
355 Add each flow entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables.
356 .
357 Each flow specification (e.g., each line in \fIfile\fR) may start with
358 \fBadd\fR, \fBmodify\fR, \fBdelete\fR, \fBmodify_strict\fR, or
359 \fBdelete_strict\fR keyword to specify whether a flow is to be added,
360 modified, or deleted, and whether the modify or delete is strict or
361 not. For backwards compatibility a flow specification without one of
362 these keywords is treated as a flow add. All flow mods are executed
363 in the order specified.
364 .
365 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBmod\-flows \fIswitch flow\fR"
366 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBmod\-flows \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
367 Modify the actions in entries from \fIswitch\fR's tables that match
368 the specified flows. With \fB\-\-strict\fR, wildcards are not treated
369 as active for matching purposes.
370 .
371 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch\fR"
372 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch \fR[\fIflow\fR]"
373 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-strict\fR] \fBdel\-flows \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
374 Deletes entries from \fIswitch\fR's flow table. With only a
375 \fIswitch\fR argument, deletes all flows. Otherwise, deletes flow
376 entries that match the specified flows. With \fB\-\-strict\fR,
377 wildcards are not treated as active for matching purposes.
378 .
379 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-readd\fR] \fBreplace\-flows \fIswitch file\fR"
380 Reads flow entries from \fIfile\fR (or \fBstdin\fR if \fIfile\fR is
381 \fB\-\fR) and queries the flow table from \fIswitch\fR. Then it fixes
382 up any differences, adding flows from \fIflow\fR that are missing on
383 \fIswitch\fR, deleting flows from \fIswitch\fR that are not in
384 \fIfile\fR, and updating flows in \fIswitch\fR whose actions, cookie,
385 or timeouts differ in \fIfile\fR.
386 .
387 .IP
388 With \fB\-\-readd\fR, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR adds all the flows from
389 \fIfile\fR, even those that exist with the same actions, cookie, and
390 timeout in \fIswitch\fR. This resets all the flow packet and byte
391 counters to 0, which can be useful for debugging.
392 .
393 .IP "\fBdiff\-flows \fIsource1 source2\fR"
394 Reads flow entries from \fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR and prints the
395 differences. A flow that is in \fIsource1\fR but not in \fIsource2\fR
396 is printed preceded by a \fB\-\fR, and a flow that is in \fIsource2\fR
397 but not in \fIsource1\fR is printed preceded by a \fB+\fR. If a flow
398 exists in both \fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR with different actions,
399 cookie, or timeouts, then both versions are printed preceded by
400 \fB\-\fR and \fB+\fR, respectively.
401 .IP
402 \fIsource1\fR and \fIsource2\fR may each name a file or a switch. If
403 a name begins with \fB/\fR or \fB.\fR, then it is considered to be a
404 file name. A name that contains \fB:\fR is considered to be a switch.
405 Otherwise, it is a file if a file by that name exists, a switch if
406 not.
407 .IP
408 For this command, an exit status of 0 means that no differences were
409 found, 1 means that an error occurred, and 2 means that some
410 differences were found.
411 .
412 .IP "\fBpacket\-out \fIswitch\fR \fIpacket-out\fR"
413 Connects to \fIswitch\fR and instructs it to execute the
414 \fIpacket-out\fR OpenFlow message, specified as defined in
415 \fBPacket\-Out Syntax\fR section.
416 .
417 .SS "OpenFlow Switch Group Table Commands"
418 .
419 These commands manage the group table in an OpenFlow switch. In each
420 case, \fIgroup\fR specifies a group entry in the format described in
421 \fBGroup Syntax\fR, below, and \fIfile\fR is a text file that contains
422 zero or more groups in the same syntax, one per line, and the optional
423 \fB\-\-bundle\fR option operates the command as a single atomic
424 transation, see option \fB\-\-bundle\fR, below.
425
426 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-group \fIswitch group\fR"
427 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-group \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
428 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBadd\-groups \fIswitch file\fR"
429 Add each group entry to \fIswitch\fR's tables.
430 .
431 Each group specification (e.g., each line in \fIfile\fR) may start
432 with \fBadd\fR, \fBmodify\fR, \fBadd_or_mod\fR, \fBdelete\fR,
433 \fBinsert_bucket\fR, or \fBremove_bucket\fR keyword to specify whether
434 a flow is to be added, modified, or deleted, or whether a group bucket
435 is to be added or removed. For backwards compatibility a group
436 specification without one of these keywords is treated as a group add.
437 All group mods are executed in the order specified.
438 .
439 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-may\-create\fR] \fBmod\-group \fIswitch group\fR"
440 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] [\fB\-\-may\-create\fR] \fBmod\-group \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
441 Modify the action buckets in entries from \fIswitch\fR's tables for
442 each group entry. If a specified group does not already exist, then
443 without \fB\-\-may\-create\fR, this command has no effect; with
444 \fB\-\-may\-create\fR, it creates a new group. The
445 \fB\-\-may\-create\fR option uses an Open vSwitch extension to
446 OpenFlow only implemented in Open vSwitch 2.6 and later.
447 .
448 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBdel\-groups \fIswitch\fR"
449 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBdel\-groups \fIswitch \fR[\fIgroup\fR]"
450 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBdel\-groups \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
451 Deletes entries from \fIswitch\fR's group table. With only a
452 \fIswitch\fR argument, deletes all groups. Otherwise, deletes the group
453 for each group entry.
454 .
455 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBinsert\-buckets \fIswitch group\fR"
456 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBinsert\-buckets \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
457 Add buckets to an existing group present in the \fIswitch\fR's group table.
458 If no \fIcommand_bucket_id\fR is present in the group specification then all
459 buckets of the group are removed.
460 .
461 .IP "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBremove\-buckets \fIswitch group\fR"
462 .IQ "[\fB\-\-bundle\fR] \fBremove\-buckets \fIswitch \fB\- < \fIfile\fR"
463 Remove buckets to an existing group present in the \fIswitch\fR's group table.
464 If no \fIcommand_bucket_id\fR is present in the group specification then all
465 buckets of the group are removed.
466 .
467 .SS OpenFlow Switch Bundle Command
468 .
469 Transactional updates to both flow and group tables can be made with
470 the \fBbundle\fR command. \fIfile\fR is a text file that contains
471 zero or more flow mods, group mods, or packet-outs in \fBFlow
472 Syntax\fR, \fBGroup Syntax\fR, or \fBPacket\-Out Syntax\fR, each line
473 preceded by \fBflow\fR, \fBgroup\fR, or \fBpacket\-out\fR keyword,
474 correspondingly. The \fBflow\fR keyword may be optionally followed by
475 one of the keywords \fBadd\fR, \fBmodify\fR, \fBmodify_strict\fR,
476 \fBdelete\fR, or \fBdelete_strict\fR, of which the \fBadd\fR is
477 assumed if a bare \fBflow\fR is given. Similarly, the \fBgroup\fR
478 keyword may be optionally followed by one of the keywords \fBadd\fR,
479 \fBmodify\fR, \fBadd_or_mod\fR, \fBdelete\fR, \fBinsert_bucket\fR, or
480 \fBremove_bucket\fR, of which the \fBadd\fR is assumed if a bare
481 \fBgroup\fR is given.
482 .
483 .IP "\fBbundle \fIswitch file\fR"
484 Execute all flow and group mods in \fIfile\fR as a single atomic
485 transaction against \fIswitch\fR's tables. All bundled mods are
486 executed in the order specified.
487 .
488 .SS "OpenFlow Switch Tunnel TLV Table Commands"
489 .
490 Open vSwitch maintains a mapping table between tunnel option TLVs (defined
491 by <class, type, length>) and NXM fields \fBtun_metadata\fIn\fR,
492 where \fIn\fR ranges from 0 to 63, that can be operated on for the
493 purposes of matches, actions, etc. This TLV table can be used for
494 Geneve option TLVs or other protocols with options in same TLV format
495 as Geneve options. This mapping must be explicitly specified by the user
496 through the following commands.
497
498 A TLV mapping is specified with the syntax
499 \fB{class=\fIclass\fB,type=\fItype\fB,len=\fIlength\fB}->tun_metadata\fIn\fR.
500 When an option mapping exists for a given \fBtun_metadata\fIn\fR,
501 matching on the defined field becomes possible, e.g.:
502
503 .RS
504 ovs-ofctl add-tlv-map br0 "{class=0xffff,type=0,len=4}->tun_metadata0"
505 .PP
506 ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 tun_metadata0=1234,actions=controller
507 .RE
508
509 A mapping should not be changed while it is in active
510 use by a flow. The result of doing so is undefined.
511
512 Currently, the TLV mapping table is shared between all OpenFlow
513 switches in a given instance of Open vSwitch. This restriction will
514 be lifted in the future to allow for easier management.
515
516 These commands are Nicira extensions to OpenFlow and require Open vSwitch
517 2.5 or later.
518
519 .IP "\fBadd\-tlv\-map \fIswitch option\fR[\fB,\fIoption\fR]..."
520 Add each \fIoption\fR to \fIswitch\fR's tables. Duplicate fields are
521 rejected.
522 .
523 .IP "\fBdel\-tlv\-map \fIswitch \fR[\fIoption\fR[\fB,\fIoption\fR]]..."
524 Delete each \fIoption\fR from \fIswitch\fR's table, or all option TLV
525 mapping if no \fIoption\fR is specified.
526 Fields that aren't mapped are ignored.
527 .
528 .IP "\fBdump\-tlv\-map \fIswitch\fR"
529 Show the currently mapped fields in the switch's option table as well
530 as switch capabilities.
531 .
532 .SS "OpenFlow Switch Monitoring Commands"
533 .
534 .IP "\fBsnoop \fIswitch\fR"
535 Connects to \fIswitch\fR and prints to the console all OpenFlow
536 messages received. Unlike other \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands, if
537 \fIswitch\fR is the name of a bridge, then the \fBsnoop\fR command
538 connects to a Unix domain socket named
539 \fB@RUNDIR@/\fIswitch\fB.snoop\fR. \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR listens on
540 such a socket for each bridge and sends to it all of the OpenFlow
541 messages sent to or received from its configured OpenFlow controller.
542 Thus, this command can be used to view OpenFlow protocol activity
543 between a switch and its controller.
544 .IP
545 When a switch has more than one controller configured, only the
546 traffic to and from a single controller is output. If none of the
547 controllers is configured as a master or a slave (using a Nicira
548 extension to OpenFlow 1.0 or 1.1, or a standard request in OpenFlow
549 1.2 or later), then a controller is chosen arbitrarily among
550 them. If there is a master controller, it is chosen; otherwise, if
551 there are any controllers that are not masters or slaves, one is
552 chosen arbitrarily; otherwise, a slave controller is chosen
553 arbitrarily. This choice is made once at connection time and does not
554 change as controllers reconfigure their roles.
555 .IP
556 If a switch has no controller configured, or if
557 the configured controller is disconnected, no traffic is sent, so
558 monitoring will not show any traffic.
559 .
560 .IP "\fBmonitor \fIswitch\fR [\fImiss-len\fR] [\fBinvalid_ttl\fR] [\fBwatch:\fR[\fIspec\fR...]]"
561 Connects to \fIswitch\fR and prints to the console all OpenFlow
562 messages received. Usually, \fIswitch\fR should specify the name of a
563 bridge in the \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR database.
564 .IP
565 If \fImiss-len\fR is provided, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR sends an OpenFlow ``set
566 configuration'' message at connection setup time that requests
567 \fImiss-len\fR bytes of each packet that misses the flow table. Open vSwitch
568 does not send these and other asynchronous messages to an
569 \fBovs\-ofctl monitor\fR client connection unless a nonzero value is
570 specified on this argument. (Thus, if \fImiss\-len\fR is not
571 specified, very little traffic will ordinarily be printed.)
572 .IP
573 If \fBinvalid_ttl\fR is passed, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR sends an OpenFlow ``set
574 configuration'' message at connection setup time that requests
575 \fBINVALID_TTL_TO_CONTROLLER\fR, so that \fBovs\-ofctl monitor\fR can
576 receive ``packet-in'' messages when TTL reaches zero on \fBdec_ttl\fR action.
577 Only OpenFlow 1.1 and 1.2 support \fBinvalid_ttl\fR; Open vSwitch also
578 implements it for OpenFlow 1.0 as an extension.
579 .IP
580 \fBwatch:\fR[\fB\fIspec\fR...] causes \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to send a
581 ``monitor request'' Nicira extension message to the switch at
582 connection setup time. This message causes the switch to send
583 information about flow table changes as they occur. The following
584 comma-separated \fIspec\fR syntax is available:
585 .RS
586 .IP "\fB!initial\fR"
587 Do not report the switch's initial flow table contents.
588 .IP "\fB!add\fR"
589 Do not report newly added flows.
590 .IP "\fB!delete\fR"
591 Do not report deleted flows.
592 .IP "\fB!modify\fR"
593 Do not report modifications to existing flows.
594 .IP "\fB!own\fR"
595 Abbreviate changes made to the flow table by \fBovs\-ofctl\fR's own
596 connection to the switch. (These could only occur using the
597 \fBofctl/send\fR command described below under \fBRUNTIME MANAGEMENT
598 COMMANDS\fR.)
599 .IP "\fB!actions\fR"
600 Do not report actions as part of flow updates.
601 .IP "\fBtable=\fInumber\fR"
602 Limits the monitoring to the table with the given \fInumber\fR between
603 0 and 254. By default, all tables are monitored.
604 .IP "\fBout_port=\fIport\fR"
605 If set, only flows that output to \fIport\fR are monitored. The
606 \fIport\fR may be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
607 (e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR).
608 .IP "\fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR"
609 Monitors only flows that have \fIfield\fR specified as the given
610 \fIvalue\fR. Any syntax valid for matching on \fBdump\-flows\fR may
611 be used.
612 .RE
613 .IP
614 This command may be useful for debugging switch or controller
615 implementations. With \fBwatch:\fR, it is particularly useful for
616 observing how a controller updates flow tables.
617 .
618 .SS "OpenFlow Switch and Controller Commands"
619 .
620 The following commands, like those in the previous section, may be
621 applied to OpenFlow switches, using any of the connection methods
622 described in that section. Unlike those commands, these may also be
623 applied to OpenFlow controllers.
624 .
625 .TP
626 \fBprobe \fItarget\fR
627 Sends a single OpenFlow echo-request message to \fItarget\fR and waits
628 for the response. With the \fB\-t\fR or \fB\-\-timeout\fR option, this
629 command can test whether an OpenFlow switch or controller is up and
630 running.
631 .
632 .TP
633 \fBping \fItarget \fR[\fIn\fR]
634 Sends a series of 10 echo request packets to \fItarget\fR and times
635 each reply. The echo request packets consist of an OpenFlow header
636 plus \fIn\fR bytes (default: 64) of randomly generated payload. This
637 measures the latency of individual requests.
638 .
639 .TP
640 \fBbenchmark \fItarget n count\fR
641 Sends \fIcount\fR echo request packets that each consist of an
642 OpenFlow header plus \fIn\fR bytes of payload and waits for each
643 response. Reports the total time required. This is a measure of the
644 maximum bandwidth to \fItarget\fR for round-trips of \fIn\fR-byte
645 messages.
646 .
647 .SS "Other Commands"
648 .
649 .IP "\fBofp\-parse\fR \fIfile\fR"
650 Reads \fIfile\fR (or \fBstdin\fR if \fIfile\fR is \fB\-\fR) as a
651 series of OpenFlow messages in the binary format used on an OpenFlow
652 connection, and prints them to the console. This can be useful for
653 printing OpenFlow messages captured from a TCP stream.
654 .
655 .IP "\fBofp\-parse\-pcap\fR \fIfile\fR [\fIport\fR...]"
656 Reads \fIfile\fR, which must be in the PCAP format used by network
657 capture tools such as \fBtcpdump\fR or \fBwireshark\fR, extracts all
658 the TCP streams for OpenFlow connections, and prints the OpenFlow
659 messages in those connections in human-readable format on
660 \fBstdout\fR.
661 .IP
662 OpenFlow connections are distinguished by TCP port number.
663 Non-OpenFlow packets are ignored. By default, data on TCP ports 6633
664 and 6653 are considered to be OpenFlow. Specify one or more
665 \fIport\fR arguments to override the default.
666 .IP
667 This command cannot usefully print SSL encrypted traffic. It does not
668 understand IPv6.
669 .
670 .SS "Flow Syntax"
671 .PP
672 Some \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands accept an argument that describes a flow or
673 flows. Such flow descriptions comprise a series
674 \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR assignments, separated by commas or white
675 space. (Embedding spaces into a flow description normally requires
676 quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
677 multiple arguments.)
678 .PP
679 Flow descriptions should be in \fBnormal form\fR. This means that a
680 flow may only specify a value for an L3 field if it also specifies a
681 particular L2 protocol, and that a flow may only specify an L4 field
682 if it also specifies particular L2 and L3 protocol types. For
683 example, if the L2 protocol type \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded, then L3
684 fields \fBnw_src\fR, \fBnw_dst\fR, and \fBnw_proto\fR must also be
685 wildcarded. Similarly, if \fBdl_type\fR or \fBnw_proto\fR (the L3
686 protocol type) is wildcarded, so must be the L4 fields \fBtcp_dst\fR and
687 \fBtcp_src\fR. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will warn about
688 flows not in normal form.
689 .PP
690 The following field assignments describe how a flow matches a packet.
691 If any of these assignments is omitted from the flow syntax, the field
692 is treated as a wildcard; thus, if all of them are omitted, the
693 resulting flow matches all packets. The string \fB*\fR may be specified
694 to explicitly mark any of these fields as a wildcard.
695 (\fB*\fR should be quoted to protect it from shell expansion.)
696 .
697 .IP \fBin_port=\fIport\fR
698 Matches OpenFlow port \fIport\fR, which may be an OpenFlow port number
699 or keyword (e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR).
700 \fBovs\-ofctl show\fR.
701 .IP
702 (The \fBresubmit\fR action can search OpenFlow flow tables with
703 arbitrary \fBin_port\fR values, so flows that match port numbers that
704 do not exist from an OpenFlow perspective can still potentially be
705 matched.)
706 .
707 .IP \fBdl_vlan=\fIvlan\fR
708 Matches IEEE 802.1q Virtual LAN tag \fIvlan\fR. Specify \fB0xffff\fR
709 as \fIvlan\fR to match packets that are not tagged with a Virtual LAN;
710 otherwise, specify a number between 0 and 4095, inclusive, as the
711 12-bit VLAN ID to match.
712 .
713 .IP \fBdl_vlan_pcp=\fIpriority\fR
714 Matches IEEE 802.1q Priority Code Point (PCP) \fIpriority\fR, which is
715 specified as a value between 0 and 7, inclusive. A higher value
716 indicates a higher frame priority level.
717 .
718 .IP \fBdl_src=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
719 .IQ \fBdl_dst=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
720 Matches an Ethernet source (or destination) address specified as 6
721 pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
722 (e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR).
723 .
724 .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
725 .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
726 Matches an Ethernet destination address specified as 6 pairs of
727 hexadecimal digits delimited by colons (e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR),
728 with a wildcard mask following the slash. Open vSwitch 1.8 and later
729 support arbitrary masks for source and/or destination. Earlier
730 versions only support masking the destination with the following masks:
731 .RS
732 .IP \fB01:00:00:00:00:00\fR
733 Match only the multicast bit. Thus,
734 \fBdl_dst=01:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00\fR matches all multicast
735 (including broadcast) Ethernet packets, and
736 \fBdl_dst=00:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00\fR matches all unicast
737 Ethernet packets.
738 .IP \fBfe:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff\fR
739 Match all bits except the multicast bit. This is probably not useful.
740 .IP \fBff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff\fR
741 Exact match (equivalent to omitting the mask).
742 .IP \fB00:00:00:00:00:00\fR
743 Wildcard all bits (equivalent to \fBdl_dst=*\fR.)
744 .RE
745 .
746 .IP \fBdl_type=\fIethertype\fR
747 Matches Ethernet protocol type \fIethertype\fR, which is specified as an
748 integer between 0 and 65535, inclusive, either in decimal or as a
749 hexadecimal number prefixed by \fB0x\fR (e.g. \fB0x0806\fR to match ARP
750 packets).
751 .
752 .IP \fBnw_src=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
753 .IQ \fBnw_dst=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
754 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x0800 (possibly via shorthand, e.g. \fBip\fR
755 or \fBtcp\fR), matches IPv4 source (or destination) address \fIip\fR,
756 which may be specified as an IP address or host name
757 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
758 \fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to an IPv4 address prefix.
759 The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
760 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
761 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR). Open vSwitch 1.8 and later support
762 arbitrary dotted quad masks; earlier versions support only CIDR masks,
763 that is, the dotted quads that are equivalent to some CIDR block.
764 .IP
765 When \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR or \fBarp\fR is specified, matches the
766 \fBar_spa\fR or \fBar_tpa\fR field, respectively, in ARP packets for
767 IPv4 and Ethernet.
768 .IP
769 When \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR or \fBrarp\fR is specified, matches the
770 \fBar_spa\fR or \fBar_tpa\fR field, respectively, in RARP packets for
771 IPv4 and Ethernet.
772 .IP
773 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800,
774 0x0806, or 0x8035, the values of \fBnw_src\fR and \fBnw_dst\fR are ignored
775 (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
776 .
777 .IP \fBnw_proto=\fIproto\fR
778 .IQ \fBip_proto=\fIproto\fR
779 When \fBip\fR or \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR is specified, matches IP
780 protocol type \fIproto\fR, which is specified as a decimal number
781 between 0 and 255, inclusive (e.g. 1 to match ICMP packets or 6 to match
782 TCP packets).
783 .IP
784 When \fBipv6\fR or \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR is specified, matches IPv6
785 header type \fIproto\fR, which is specified as a decimal number between
786 0 and 255, inclusive (e.g. 58 to match ICMPv6 packets or 6 to match
787 TCP). The header type is the terminal header as described in the
788 \fBDESIGN\fR document.
789 .IP
790 When \fBarp\fR or \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR is specified, matches the lower
791 8 bits of the ARP opcode. ARP opcodes greater than 255 are treated as
792 0.
793 .IP
794 When \fBrarp\fR or \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR is specified, matches the lower
795 8 bits of the ARP opcode. ARP opcodes greater than 255 are treated as
796 0.
797 .IP
798 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800,
799 0x0806, 0x8035 or 0x86dd, the value of \fBnw_proto\fR is ignored (see
800 \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
801 .
802 .IP \fBnw_tos=\fItos\fR
803 Matches IP ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field \fItos\fR, which is
804 specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive. Note that
805 the two lower reserved bits are ignored for matching purposes.
806 .IP
807 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
808 0x86dd, the value of \fBnw_tos\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
809 above).
810 .
811 .IP \fBip_dscp=\fIdscp\fR
812 Matches IP ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field \fIdscp\fR, which is
813 specified as a decimal number between 0 and 63, inclusive.
814 .IP
815 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
816 0x86dd, the value of \fBip_dscp\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
817 above).
818 .
819 .IP \fBnw_ecn=\fIecn\fR
820 .IQ \fBip_ecn=\fIecn\fR
821 Matches \fIecn\fR bits in IP ToS or IPv6 traffic class fields, which is
822 specified as a decimal number between 0 and 3, inclusive.
823 .IP
824 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
825 0x86dd, the value of \fBnw_ecn\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
826 above).
827 .
828 .IP \fBnw_ttl=\fIttl\fR
829 Matches IP TTL or IPv6 hop limit value \fIttl\fR, which is
830 specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive.
831 .IP
832 When \fBdl_type\fR is wildcarded or set to a value other than 0x0800 or
833 0x86dd, the value of \fBnw_ttl\fR is ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR
834 above).
835 .IP
836 .
837 .IP \fBtcp_src=\fIport\fR
838 .IQ \fBtcp_dst=\fIport\fR
839 .IQ \fBudp_src=\fIport\fR
840 .IQ \fBudp_dst=\fIport\fR
841 .IQ \fBsctp_src=\fIport\fR
842 .IQ \fBsctp_dst=\fIport\fR
843 Matches a TCP, UDP, or SCTP source or destination port \fIport\fR,
844 which is specified as a decimal number between 0 and 65535, inclusive.
845 .IP
846 When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR are wildcarded or set to values
847 that do not indicate an appropriate protocol, the values of these
848 settings are ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
849 .
850 .IP \fBtcp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
851 .IQ \fBtcp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
852 .IQ \fBudp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
853 .IQ \fBudp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
854 .IQ \fBsctp_src=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
855 .IQ \fBsctp_dst=\fIport\fB/\fImask\fR
856 Bitwise match on TCP (or UDP or SCTP) source or destination port.
857 The \fIport\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit numbers
858 written in decimal or in hexadecimal prefixed by \fB0x\fR. Each 1-bit
859 in \fImask\fR requires that the corresponding bit in \fIport\fR must
860 match. Each 0-bit in \fImask\fR causes the corresponding bit to be
861 ignored.
862 .IP
863 Bitwise matches on transport ports are rarely useful in isolation, but
864 a group of them can be used to reduce the number of flows required to
865 match on a range of transport ports. For example, suppose that the
866 goal is to match TCP source ports 1000 to 1999, inclusive. One way is
867 to insert 1000 flows, each of which matches on a single source port.
868 Another way is to look at the binary representations of 1000 and 1999,
869 as follows:
870 .br
871 .B "01111101000"
872 .br
873 .B "11111001111"
874 .br
875 and then to transform those into a series of bitwise matches that
876 accomplish the same results:
877 .br
878 .B "01111101xxx"
879 .br
880 .B "0111111xxxx"
881 .br
882 .B "10xxxxxxxxx"
883 .br
884 .B "110xxxxxxxx"
885 .br
886 .B "1110xxxxxxx"
887 .br
888 .B "11110xxxxxx"
889 .br
890 .B "1111100xxxx"
891 .br
892 which become the following when written in the syntax required by
893 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR:
894 .br
895 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x03e8/0xfff8"
896 .br
897 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x03f0/0xfff0"
898 .br
899 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0400/0xfe00"
900 .br
901 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0600/0xff00"
902 .br
903 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0700/0xff80"
904 .br
905 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x0780/0xffc0"
906 .br
907 .B "tcp,tcp_src=0x07c0/0xfff0"
908 .IP
909 Only Open vSwitch 1.6 and later supports bitwise matching on transport
910 ports.
911 .IP
912 Like the exact-match forms described
913 above, the bitwise match forms apply only when \fBdl_type\fR and
914 \fBnw_proto\fR specify TCP or UDP or SCTP.
915 .
916 .IP \fBtp_src=\fIport\fR
917 .IQ \fBtp_dst=\fIport\fR
918 These are deprecated generic forms of L4 port matches. In new code,
919 please use the TCP-, UDP-, or SCTP-specific forms described above.
920 .
921 .IP \fBtcp_flags=\fIflags\fB/\fImask\fR
922 .IQ \fBtcp_flags=\fR[\fB+\fIflag\fR...][\fB-\fIflag\fR...]
923 Bitwise match on TCP flags. The \fIflags\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit
924 numbers written in decimal or in hexadecimal prefixed by \fB0x\fR.
925 Each 1-bit in \fImask\fR requires that the corresponding bit in
926 \fIflags\fR must match. Each 0-bit in \fImask\fR causes the corresponding
927 bit to be ignored.
928 .IP
929 Alternatively, the flags can be specified by their symbolic names
930 (listed below), each preceded by either \fB+\fR for a flag that must
931 be set, or \fB\-\fR for a flag that must be unset, without any other
932 delimiters between the flags. Flags not mentioned are wildcarded.
933 For example, \fBtcp,tcp_flags=+syn\-ack\fR matches TCP SYNs that are
934 not ACKs.
935 .IP
936 TCP protocol currently defines 9 flag bits, and additional 3 bits are
937 reserved (must be transmitted as zero), see RFCs 793, 3168, and 3540.
938 The flag bits are, numbering from the least significant bit:
939 .RS
940 .IP "\fB0: fin\fR"
941 No more data from sender.
942 .IP "\fB1: syn\fR"
943 Synchronize sequence numbers.
944 .IP "\fB2: rst\fR"
945 Reset the connection.
946 .IP "\fB3: psh\fR"
947 Push function.
948 .IP "\fB4: ack\fR"
949 Acknowledgement field significant.
950 .IP "\fB5: urg\fR"
951 Urgent pointer field significant.
952 .IP "\fB6: ece\fR"
953 ECN Echo.
954 .IP "\fB7: cwr\fR"
955 Congestion Windows Reduced.
956 .IP "\fB8: ns\fR"
957 Nonce Sum.
958 .IP "\fB9-11:\fR"
959 Reserved.
960 .IP "\fB12-15:\fR"
961 Not matchable, must be zero.
962 .RE
963 .IP \fBicmp_type=\fItype\fR
964 .IQ \fBicmp_code=\fIcode\fR
965 When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR specify ICMP or ICMPv6, \fItype\fR
966 matches the ICMP type and \fIcode\fR matches the ICMP code. Each is
967 specified as a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive.
968 .IP
969 When \fBdl_type\fR and \fBnw_proto\fR take other values, the values of
970 these settings are ignored (see \fBFlow Syntax\fR above).
971 .
972 .IP \fBtable=\fInumber\fR
973 For flow dump commands, limits the flows dumped to those in the table
974 with the given \fInumber\fR between 0 and 254. If not specified (or if
975 255 is specified as \fInumber\fR), then flows in all tables are
976 dumped.
977 .
978 .IP
979 For flow table modification commands, behavior varies based on the
980 OpenFlow version used to connect to the switch:
981 .
982 .RS
983 .IP "OpenFlow 1.0"
984 OpenFlow 1.0 does not support \fBtable\fR for modifying flows.
985 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will exit with an error if \fBtable\fR (other than
986 \fBtable=255\fR) is specified for a switch that only supports OpenFlow
987 1.0.
988 .IP
989 In OpenFlow 1.0, the switch chooses the table into which to insert a
990 new flow. The Open vSwitch software switch always chooses table 0.
991 Other Open vSwitch datapaths and other OpenFlow implementations may
992 choose different tables.
993 .IP
994 The OpenFlow 1.0 behavior in Open vSwitch for modifying or removing
995 flows depends on whether \fB\-\-strict\fR is used. Without
996 \fB\-\-strict\fR, the command applies to matching flows in all tables.
997 With \fB\-\-strict\fR, the command will operate on any single matching
998 flow in any table; it will do nothing if there are matches in more
999 than one table. (The distinction between these behaviors only matters
1000 if non-OpenFlow 1.0 commands were also used, because OpenFlow 1.0
1001 alone cannot add flows with the same matching criteria to multiple
1002 tables.)
1003 .
1004 .IP "OpenFlow 1.0 with table_id extension"
1005 Open vSwitch implements an OpenFlow extension that allows the
1006 controller to specify the table on which to operate. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
1007 automatically enables the extension when \fBtable\fR is specified and
1008 OpenFlow 1.0 is used. \fBovs\-ofctl\fR automatically detects whether
1009 the switch supports the extension. As of this writing, this extension
1010 is only known to be implemented by Open vSwitch.
1011 .
1012 .IP
1013 With this extension, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR operates on the requested table
1014 when \fBtable\fR is specified, and acts as described for OpenFlow 1.0
1015 above when no \fBtable\fR is specified (or for \fBtable=255\fR).
1016 .
1017 .IP "OpenFlow 1.1"
1018 OpenFlow 1.1 requires flow table modification commands to specify a
1019 table. When \fBtable\fR is not specified (or \fBtable=255\fR is
1020 specified), \fBovs\-ofctl\fR defaults to table 0.
1021 .
1022 .IP "OpenFlow 1.2 and later"
1023 OpenFlow 1.2 and later allow flow deletion commands, but not other
1024 flow table modification commands, to operate on all flow tables, with
1025 the behavior described above for OpenFlow 1.0.
1026 .RE
1027 .
1028 .IP \fBmetadata=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1029 Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in the metadata
1030 field. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 64-bit integers, by default in decimal
1031 (use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify hexadecimal). Arbitrary \fImask\fR values
1032 are allowed: a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in
1033 \fIvalue\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. Matching on
1034 metadata was added in Open vSwitch 1.8.
1035 .
1036 .PP
1037 The following shorthand notations are also available:
1038 .
1039 .IP \fBip\fR
1040 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR.
1041 .
1042 .IP \fBipv6\fR
1043 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR.
1044 .
1045 .IP \fBicmp\fR
1046 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=1\fR.
1047 .
1048 .IP \fBicmp6\fR
1049 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=58\fR.
1050 .
1051 .IP \fBtcp\fR
1052 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=6\fR.
1053 .
1054 .IP \fBtcp6\fR
1055 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=6\fR.
1056 .
1057 .IP \fBudp\fR
1058 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=17\fR.
1059 .
1060 .IP \fBudp6\fR
1061 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=17\fR.
1062 .
1063 .IP \fBsctp\fR
1064 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0800,nw_proto=132\fR.
1065 .
1066 .IP \fBsctp6\fR
1067 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=132\fR.
1068 .
1069 .IP \fBarp\fR
1070 Same as \fBdl_type=0x0806\fR.
1071 .
1072 .IP \fBrarp\fR
1073 Same as \fBdl_type=0x8035\fR.
1074 .
1075 .IP \fBmpls\fR
1076 Same as \fBdl_type=0x8847\fR.
1077 .
1078 .IP \fBmplsm\fR
1079 Same as \fBdl_type=0x8848\fR.
1080 .
1081 .PP
1082 The following field assignments require support for the NXM (Nicira
1083 Extended Match) extension to OpenFlow. When one of these is specified,
1084 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will automatically attempt to negotiate use of this
1085 extension. If the switch does not support NXM, then \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
1086 will report a fatal error.
1087 .
1088 .IP \fBvlan_tci=\fItci\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1089 Matches modified VLAN TCI \fItci\fR. If \fImask\fR is omitted,
1090 \fItci\fR is the exact VLAN TCI to match; if \fImask\fR is specified,
1091 then a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in
1092 \fItci\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. Both
1093 \fItci\fR and \fImask\fR are 16-bit values that are decimal by
1094 default; use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1095 .
1096 .IP
1097 The value that \fBvlan_tci\fR matches against is 0 for a packet that
1098 has no 802.1Q header. Otherwise, it is the TCI value from the 802.1Q
1099 header with the CFI bit (with value \fB0x1000\fR) forced to 1.
1100 .IP
1101 Examples:
1102 .RS
1103 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0\fR
1104 Match packets without an 802.1Q header.
1105 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0x1000/0x1000\fR
1106 Match packets with an 802.1Q header, regardless of VLAN and priority
1107 values.
1108 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0xf123\fR
1109 Match packets tagged with priority 7 in VLAN 0x123.
1110 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0x1123/0x1fff\fR
1111 Match packets tagged with VLAN 0x123 (and any priority).
1112 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0x5000/0xf000\fR
1113 Match packets tagged with priority 2 (in any VLAN).
1114 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0/0xfff\fR
1115 Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with VLAN 0 (and any
1116 priority).
1117 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0x5000/0xe000\fR
1118 Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with priority 2 (in any
1119 VLAN).
1120 .IP \fBvlan_tci=0/0xefff\fR
1121 Match packets with no 802.1Q header or tagged with VLAN 0 and priority
1122 0.
1123 .RE
1124 .IP
1125 Some of these matching possibilities can also be achieved with
1126 \fBdl_vlan\fR and \fBdl_vlan_pcp\fR.
1127 .
1128 .IP \fBip_frag=\fIfrag_type\fR
1129 When \fBdl_type\fR specifies IP or IPv6, \fIfrag_type\fR
1130 specifies what kind of IP fragments or non-fragments to match. The
1131 following values of \fIfrag_type\fR are supported:
1132 .RS
1133 .IP "\fBno\fR"
1134 Matches only non-fragmented packets.
1135 .IP "\fByes\fR"
1136 Matches all fragments.
1137 .IP "\fBfirst\fR"
1138 Matches only fragments with offset 0.
1139 .IP "\fBlater\fR"
1140 Matches only fragments with nonzero offset.
1141 .IP "\fBnot_later\fR"
1142 Matches non-fragmented packets and fragments with zero offset.
1143 .RE
1144 .IP
1145 The \fBip_frag\fR match type is likely to be most useful in
1146 \fBnx\-match\fR mode. See the description of the \fBset\-frags\fR
1147 command, above, for more details.
1148 .
1149 .IP \fBarp_spa=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1150 .IQ \fBarp_tpa=\fIip\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1151 When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_spa\fR and
1152 \fBarp_tpa\fR match the source and target IPv4 address, respectively.
1153 An address may be specified as an IP address or host name
1154 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
1155 \fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to an IPv4 address prefix.
1156 The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
1157 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
1158 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR).
1159 .
1160 .IP \fBarp_sha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1161 .IQ \fBarp_tha=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1162 When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_sha\fR and
1163 \fBarp_tha\fR match the source and target hardware address, respectively. An
1164 address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
1165 (e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR).
1166 .
1167 .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
1168 .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
1169 When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_sha\fR and
1170 \fBarp_tha\fR match the source and target hardware address, respectively. An
1171 address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal digits delimited by colons
1172 (e.g. \fB00:0A:E4:25:6B:B0\fR), with a wildcard mask following the slash.
1173 .
1174 .IP \fBarp_op=\fIopcode\fR
1175 When \fBdl_type\fR specifies either ARP or RARP, \fBarp_op\fR matches the
1176 ARP opcode. Only ARP opcodes between 1 and 255 should be specified for
1177 matching.
1178 .
1179 .IP \fBipv6_src=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1180 .IQ \fBipv6_dst=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1181 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x86dd (possibly via shorthand, e.g., \fBipv6\fR
1182 or \fBtcp6\fR), matches IPv6 source (or destination) address \fIipv6\fR,
1183 which may be specified as defined in RFC 2373. The preferred format is
1184 \fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fB:\fIx\fR, where
1185 \fIx\fR are the hexadecimal values of the eight 16-bit pieces of the
1186 address. A single instance of \fB::\fR may be used to indicate multiple
1187 groups of 16-bits of zeros. The optional \fInetmask\fR allows
1188 restricting a match to an IPv6 address prefix. A netmask is specified
1189 as an IPv6 address (e.g. \fB2001:db8:3c4d:1::/ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff::\fR)
1190 or a CIDR block (e.g. \fB2001:db8:3c4d:1::/64\fR). Open vSwitch 1.8
1191 and later support arbitrary masks; earlier versions support only CIDR
1192 masks, that is, CIDR block and IPv6 addresses that are equivalent to
1193 CIDR blocks.
1194 .
1195 .IP \fBipv6_label=\fIlabel\fR
1196 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x86dd (possibly via shorthand, e.g., \fBipv6\fR
1197 or \fBtcp6\fR), matches IPv6 flow label \fIlabel\fR.
1198 .
1199 .IP \fBnd_target=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1200 When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify
1201 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery (ICMPv6 type 135 or 136), matches the target address
1202 \fIipv6\fR. \fIipv6\fR is in the same format described earlier for the
1203 \fBipv6_src\fR and \fBipv6_dst\fR fields.
1204 .
1205 .IP \fBnd_sll=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1206 When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify IPv6
1207 Neighbor Solicitation (ICMPv6 type 135), matches the source link\-layer
1208 address option. An address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal
1209 digits delimited by colons.
1210 .
1211 .IP \fBnd_tll=\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fB:\fIxx\fR
1212 When \fBdl_type\fR, \fBnw_proto\fR, and \fBicmp_type\fR specify IPv6
1213 Neighbor Advertisement (ICMPv6 type 136), matches the target link\-layer
1214 address option. An address is specified as 6 pairs of hexadecimal
1215 digits delimited by colons.
1216 .
1217 .IP \fBmpls_bos=\fIbos\fR
1218 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1219 \fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the bottom-of-stack bit of the
1220 outer-most MPLS label stack entry. Valid values are 0 and 1.
1221 .IP
1222 If 1 then for a packet with a well-formed MPLS label stack the
1223 bottom-of-stack bit indicates that the outer label stack entry is also
1224 the inner-most label stack entry and thus that is that there is only one
1225 label stack entry present. Conversely, if 0 then for a packet with a
1226 well-formed MPLS label stack the bottom-of-stack bit indicates that the
1227 outer label stack entry is not the inner-most label stack entry and
1228 thus there is more than one label stack entry present.
1229 .
1230 .IP \fBmpls_label=\fIlabel\fR
1231 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1232 \fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the label of the outer
1233 MPLS label stack entry. The label is a 20-bit value that is decimal by default;
1234 use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1235 .
1236 .IP \fBmpls_tc=\fItc\fR
1237 When \fBdl_type\fR is 0x8847 or 0x8848 (possibly via shorthand e.g.,
1238 \fBmpls\fR or \fBmplsm\fR), matches the traffic-class of the outer
1239 MPLS label stack entry. Valid values are between 0 (lowest) and 7 (highest).
1240 .
1241 .IP \fBtun_id=\fItunnel-id\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1242 .IQ \fBtunnel_id=\fItunnel-id\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1243 Matches tunnel identifier \fItunnel-id\fR. Only packets that arrive
1244 over a tunnel that carries a key (e.g. GRE with the RFC 2890 key
1245 extension and a nonzero key value) will have a nonzero tunnel ID.
1246 If \fImask\fR is omitted, \fItunnel-id\fR is the exact tunnel ID to match;
1247 if \fImask\fR is specified, then a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the
1248 corresponding bit in \fItunnel-id\fR must match exactly, and a 0-bit
1249 wildcards that bit.
1250 .
1251 .IP \fBtun_flags=\fIflags\fR
1252 Matches flags indicating various aspects of the tunnel encapsulation. Currently,
1253 there is only one flag defined:
1254 .IP
1255 \fBoam\fR: The tunnel protocol indicated that this is an OAM control packet.
1256 .IP
1257 Flags can be prefixed by \fB+\fR or \fB-\fR to indicate that the flag should
1258 be matched as either present or not present, respectively. In addition, flags
1259 can be specified without a prefix and separated by \fB|\fR to indicate an exact
1260 match.
1261 .IP
1262 Note that it is possible for newer version of Open vSwitch to introduce
1263 additional flags with varying meaning. It is therefore not recommended to use
1264 an exact match on this field since the behavior of these new flags is unknown
1265 and should be ignored.
1266 .IP
1267 For non-tunneled packets, the value is 0.
1268 .IP
1269 This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1270 .
1271 .IP \fBtun_src=\fIipv4\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1272 .IQ \fBtun_dst=\fIipv4\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1273 .IQ \fBtun_ipv6_src=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1274 .IQ \fBtun_ipv6_dst=\fIipv6\fR[\fB/\fInetmask\fR]
1275 Matches tunnel IP source (or destination) address \fIip\fR. Only packets
1276 that arrive over a tunnel will have nonzero tunnel addresses.
1277 The address may be specified as an IP address or host name
1278 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.1\fR or \fBwww.example.com\fR). The optional
1279 \fInetmask\fR allows restricting a match to a masked IP address.
1280 The netmask may be specified as a dotted quad
1281 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0\fR) or as a CIDR block
1282 (e.g. \fB192.168.1.0/24\fR).
1283 .
1284 .IP \fBtun_gbp_id=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1285 .IQ \fBtun_gbp_flags=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1286 Matches the group policy identifier and flags in the VXLAN header. Only
1287 packets that arrive over a VXLAN tunnel with the "gbp" extension
1288 enabled can have this field set. The fields may also be referred to by
1289 NXM_NX_TUN_GBP_ID[] (16 bits) and NXM_NX_TUN_GBP_FLAGS[] (8 bits) in
1290 the context of field manipulation actions. If these fields are set and
1291 the packet matched by the flow is encapsulated in a VXLAN-GBP tunnel,
1292 then the policy identifier and flags are transmitted to the destination
1293 VXLAN tunnel endpoint.
1294 .IP
1295 The \fBtun_gbp_flags\fR field has the following format:
1296 .IP
1297 .in +2
1298 \f(CR+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\fR
1299 .br
1300 \f(CR|-|D|-|-|A|-|-|-|\fR
1301 .br
1302 \f(CR+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\fR
1303
1304 .B D :=
1305 Don't Learn bit. When set, this bit indicates that the egress
1306 tunnel endpoint MUST NOT learn the source address of the encapsulated
1307 frame.
1308
1309 .B A :=
1310 Indicates that the group policy has already been applied to
1311 this packet. Policies MUST NOT be applied by devices when the A bit is
1312 set.
1313 .in -2
1314 .IP
1315 For more information, please see the corresponding IETF draft:
1316 https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-smith-vxlan-group-policy
1317 .
1318 .IP "\fBtun_metadata\fIidx\fR[\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]]"
1319 Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1320 tunnel metadata field number \fIidx\fR (numbered from 0 to 63).
1321 The act of specifying a field implies a match on the existence
1322 of that field in the packet in addition to the masked value. As
1323 a shorthand, it is possible to specify only the field name to
1324 simply match on an option being present.
1325 .IP
1326 Tunnel metadata fields can be dynamically assigned onto the data
1327 contained in the option TLVs of packets (e.g. Geneve variable
1328 options stores zero or more options in TLV format and tunnel
1329 metadata can be assigned onto these option TLVs) using the
1330 commands described in the section \fBOpenFlow Switch Tunnel TLV Table
1331 Commands\fR. Once assigned, the length of the field is variable
1332 according to the size of the option. Before updating a mapping in
1333 the option table, flows with references to it should be removed,
1334 otherwise the result is non-deterministic.
1335 .IP
1336 These fields were introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1337 .
1338 .IP "\fBreg\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1339 Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1340 register number \fIidx\fR. The valid range of \fIidx\fR depends on
1341 the switch. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 32-bit integers, by
1342 default in decimal (use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify hexadecimal).
1343 Arbitrary \fImask\fR values are allowed: a 1-bit in \fImask\fR
1344 indicates that the corresponding bit in \fIvalue\fR must match
1345 exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit.
1346 .IP
1347 When a packet enters an OpenFlow switch, all of the registers are set
1348 to 0. Only explicit actions change register values.
1349 .
1350 .IP "\fBxreg\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1351 Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1352 64-bit ``extended register'' number \fIidx\fR. Each of the 64-bit
1353 extended registers overlays two of the 32-bit registers: \fBxreg0\fR
1354 overlays \fBreg0\fR and \fBreg1\fR, with \fBreg0\fR supplying the
1355 most-significant bits of \fBxreg0\fR and \fBreg1\fR the
1356 least-significant. \fBxreg1\fR similarly overlays \fBreg2\fR and
1357 \fBreg3\fR, and so on.
1358 .IP
1359 These fields were added in Open vSwitch 2.3 to conform with the
1360 OpenFlow 1.5 specification. OpenFlow 1.5 calls these fields
1361 just the ``packet registers,'' but Open vSwitch already had 32-bit
1362 registers by that name, which is why Open vSwitch refers to the
1363 standard registers as ``extended registers''.
1364 .
1365 .IP "\fBxxreg\fIidx\fB=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]"
1366 Matches \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional \fImask\fR in
1367 128-bit ``extended-extended register'' number \fIidx\fR. Each of the
1368 128-bit extended registers overlays four of the 32-bit registers:
1369 \fBxxreg0\fR overlays \fBreg0\fR through \fBreg3\fR, with \fBreg0\fR
1370 supplying the most-significant bits of \fBxxreg0\fR and \fBreg3\fR the
1371 least-significant. \fBxxreg1\fR similarly overlays \fBreg4\fR through
1372 \fBreg7\fR, and so on.
1373 .IP
1374 These fields were added in Open vSwitch 2.6.
1375 .
1376 .IP \fBpkt_mark=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1377 Matches packet metadata mark \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with optional
1378 \fImask\fR. The mark is associated data that may be passed into other
1379 system components in order to facilitate interaction between subsystems.
1380 On Linux this corresponds to the skb mark but the exact implementation is
1381 platform-dependent.
1382 .
1383 .IP \fBactset_output=\fIport\fR
1384 Matches the output port currently in the OpenFlow action set, where
1385 \fIport\fR may be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
1386 (e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR). If there is no output port in the OpenFlow action
1387 set, or if the output port will be ignored (e.g. because there is an
1388 output group in the OpenFlow action set), then the value will be
1389 \fBUNSET\fR.
1390 .IP
1391 This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.4 to conform with the
1392 OpenFlow 1.5 specification.
1393 .
1394 .IP \fBconj_id=\fIvalue\fR
1395 Matches the given 32-bit \fIvalue\fR against the conjunction ID. This
1396 is used only with the \fBconjunction\fR action (see below).
1397 .IP
1398 This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.4.
1399 .
1400 .IP \fBct_state=\fIflags\fB/\fImask\fR
1401 .IQ \fBct_state=\fR[\fB+\fIflag\fR...][\fB-\fIflag\fR...]
1402 Bitwise match on connection state flags. This is used with the \fBct\fR
1403 action (see below).
1404 .IP
1405 The \fBct_state\fR field provides information from a connection tracking
1406 module. It describes whether the packet has previously traversed the
1407 connection tracker (tracked, or trk) and, if it has been tracked, any
1408 additional information that the connection tracker was able to provide about
1409 the connection that the current packet belongs to.
1410 .IP
1411 Individual packets may be in one of two states: Untracked or tracked. When the
1412 \fBct\fR action is executed on a packet, it becomes tracked for the the
1413 remainder of OpenFlow pipeline processing. Once a packet has become tracked,
1414 the state of its corresponding connection may be determined. Note that the
1415 \fBct_state\fR is only significant for the current \fBct_zone\fR.
1416 .IP
1417 Connections may be in one of two states: uncommitted or committed. Connections
1418 are uncommitted by default. To determine ongoing information about a
1419 connection, like whether the connection is established or not, the connection
1420 must be committed. When the \fBct\fR action is executed on a packet with the
1421 \fBcommit\fR parameter, the connection will become committed and will remain in
1422 this state until the end of the connection. Committed connections store state
1423 beyond the duration of packet processing.
1424 .IP
1425 The \fIflags\fR and \fImask\fR are 32-bit numbers written in decimal or
1426 in hexadecimal prefixed by \fB0x\fR. Each 1-bit in \fImask\fR requires
1427 that the corresponding bit in \fIflags\fR must match. Each 0-bit in
1428 \fImask\fR causes the corresponding bit to be ignored.
1429 .IP
1430 Alternatively, the flags can be specified by their symbolic names
1431 (listed below), each preceded by either \fB+\fR for a flag that must
1432 be set, or \fB\-\fR for a flag that must be unset, without any other
1433 delimiters between the flags. Flags not mentioned are wildcarded. For
1434 example, \fBtcp,ct_state=+trk\-new\fR matches TCP packets that
1435 have been run through the connection tracker and do not establish a new
1436 connection.
1437 .IP
1438 The following flags describe the state of the tracking:
1439 .RS
1440 .IP "\fB0x01: new\fR"
1441 This is the beginning of a new connection. This flag may only be present for
1442 uncommitted connections.
1443 .IP "\fB0x02: est\fR"
1444 This is part of an already existing connection. This flag may only be present
1445 for committed connections.
1446 .IP "\fB0x04: rel\fR"
1447 This is a connection that is related to an existing connection, for
1448 instance ICMP "destination unreachable" messages or FTP data connections. This
1449 flag may only be present for committed connections.
1450 .IP "\fB0x08: rpl\fR"
1451 The flow is in the reply direction, meaning it did not initiate the
1452 connection. This flag may only be present for committed connections.
1453 .IP "\fB0x10: inv\fR"
1454 The state is invalid, meaning that the connection tracker couldn't identify the
1455 connection. This flag is a catch-all for any problems that the connection
1456 tracker may have, for example:
1457 .RS
1458 .PP
1459 - L3/L4 protocol handler is not loaded/unavailable. With the Linux kernel
1460 datapath, this may mean that the "nf_conntrack_ipv4" or "nf_conntrack_ipv6"
1461 modules are not loaded.
1462 .PP
1463 - L3/L4 protocol handler determines that the packet is malformed.
1464 .PP
1465 - Packets are unexpected length for protocol.
1466 .RE
1467 .IP "\fB0x20: trk\fR"
1468 This packet is tracked, meaning that it has previously traversed the connection
1469 tracker. If this flag is not set, then no other flags will be set. If this flag
1470 is set, then the packet is tracked and other flags may also be set.
1471 .IP "\fB0x40: snat\fR"
1472 This packet was transformed by source address/port translation by a
1473 preceding \fBct\fR action.
1474 .IP "\fB0x80: dnat\fR"
1475 This packet was transformed by destination address/port translation by
1476 a preceding \fBct\fR action.
1477 .PP
1478 This field was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5. The \fBsnat\fR and
1479 \fBdnat\fR bits were added in Open vSwitch 2.6.
1480 .RE
1481 .
1482 .PP
1483 The following fields are associated with the connection tracker and will only
1484 be populated for tracked packets. The \fBct\fR action will populate these
1485 fields, and allows modification of some of the below fields.
1486 .IP \fBct_zone=\fIzone
1487 Matches the given 16-bit connection \fIzone\fR exactly. This represents the
1488 most recent connection tracking context that \fBct\fR was executed in. Each
1489 zone is an independent connection tracking context, so if you wish to track
1490 the same packet in multiple contexts then you must use the \fBct\fR action
1491 multiple times. Introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1492 .
1493 .IP \fBct_mark=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1494 Matches the given 32-bit connection mark \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with
1495 optional \fImask\fR. This represents metadata associated with the connection
1496 that the current packet is part of. Introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1497 .
1498 .IP \fBct_label=\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]
1499 Matches the given 128-bit connection labels \fIvalue\fR either exactly or with
1500 optional \fImask\fR. This represents metadata associated with the connection
1501 that the current packet is part of. Introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.
1502 .
1503 .PP
1504 Defining IPv6 flows (those with \fBdl_type\fR equal to 0x86dd) requires
1505 support for NXM. The following shorthand notations are available for
1506 IPv6-related flows:
1507 .
1508 .IP \fBipv6\fR
1509 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd\fR.
1510 .
1511 .IP \fBtcp6\fR
1512 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=6\fR.
1513 .
1514 .IP \fBudp6\fR
1515 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=17\fR.
1516 .
1517 .IP \fBsctp6\fR
1518 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=132\fR.
1519 .
1520 .IP \fBicmp6\fR
1521 Same as \fBdl_type=0x86dd,nw_proto=58\fR.
1522 .
1523 .PP
1524 Finally, field assignments to \fBduration\fR, \fBn_packets\fR, or
1525 \fBn_bytes\fR are ignored to allow output from the \fBdump\-flows\fR
1526 command to be used as input for other commands that parse flows.
1527 .
1528 .PP
1529 The \fBadd\-flow\fR, \fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands
1530 require an additional field, which must be the final field specified:
1531 .
1532 .IP \fBactions=\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fR
1533 Specifies a comma-separated list of actions to take on a packet when the
1534 flow entry matches. If no \fIaction\fR is specified, then packets
1535 matching the flow are dropped. The following forms of \fIaction\fR
1536 are supported:
1537 .
1538 .RS
1539 .IP \fIport\fR
1540 .IQ \fBoutput:\fIport\fR
1541 Outputs the packet to OpenFlow port number \fIport\fR. If \fIport\fR
1542 is the packet's input port, the packet is not output.
1543 .
1544 .IP \fBoutput:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
1545 Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow port number read from \fIsrc\fR,
1546 which must be an NXM field as described above. For example,
1547 \fBoutput:NXM_NX_REG0[16..31]\fR outputs to the OpenFlow port number
1548 written in the upper half of register 0. If the port number is the
1549 packet's input port, the packet is not output.
1550 .IP
1551 This form of \fBoutput\fR was added in Open vSwitch 1.3.0. This form
1552 of \fBoutput\fR uses an OpenFlow extension that is not supported by
1553 standard OpenFlow switches.
1554 .
1555 .IP \fBoutput(port=\fIport\fR\fB,max_len=\fInbytes\fR)
1556 Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow port number read from \fIport\fR,
1557 with maximum packet size set to \fInbytes\fR. \fIport\fR may be OpenFlow
1558 port number, \fBlocal\fR, or \fBin_port\fR. Patch port is not supported.
1559 Packets larger than \fInbytes\fR will be trimmed to \fInbytes\fR while
1560 packets smaller than \fInbytes\fR remains the original size.
1561 .
1562 .IP \fBgroup:\fIgroup_id\fR
1563 Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow group \fIgroup_id\fR. OpenFlow 1.1
1564 introduced support for groups; Open vSwitch 2.6 and later also
1565 supports output to groups as an extension to OpenFlow 1.0. See
1566 \fBGroup Syntax\fR for more details.
1567 .
1568 .IP \fBnormal\fR
1569 Subjects the packet to the device's normal L2/L3 processing. (This
1570 action is not implemented by all OpenFlow switches.)
1571 .
1572 .IP \fBflood\fR
1573 Outputs the packet on all switch physical ports other than the port on
1574 which it was received and any ports on which flooding is disabled
1575 (typically, these would be ports disabled by the IEEE 802.1D spanning
1576 tree protocol).
1577 .
1578 .IP \fBall\fR
1579 Outputs the packet on all switch physical ports other than the port on
1580 which it was received.
1581 .
1582 .IP \fBlocal\fR
1583 Outputs the packet on the ``local port,'' which corresponds to the
1584 network device that has the same name as the bridge.
1585 .
1586 .IP \fBin_port\fR
1587 Outputs the packet on the port from which it was received.
1588 .
1589 .IP \fBcontroller(\fIkey\fB=\fIvalue\fR...\fB)
1590 Sends the packet and its metadata to the OpenFlow controller as a ``packet in''
1591 message. The supported key-value pairs are:
1592 .RS
1593 .IP "\fBmax_len=\fInbytes\fR"
1594 Limit to \fInbytes\fR the number of bytes of the packet to send to
1595 the controller. By default the entire packet is sent.
1596 .IP "\fBreason=\fIreason\fR"
1597 Specify \fIreason\fR as the reason for sending the message in the
1598 ``packet in'' message. The supported reasons are \fBaction\fR (the
1599 default), \fBno_match\fR, and \fBinvalid_ttl\fR.
1600 .IP "\fBid=\fIcontroller-id\fR"
1601 Specify \fIcontroller-id\fR, a 16-bit integer, as the connection ID of
1602 the OpenFlow controller or controllers to which the ``packet in''
1603 message should be sent. The default is zero. Zero is also the
1604 default connection ID for each controller connection, and a given
1605 controller connection will only have a nonzero connection ID if its
1606 controller uses the \fBNXT_SET_CONTROLLER_ID\fR Nicira extension to
1607 OpenFlow.
1608 .IP "\fBuserdata=\fIhh\fR...\fR"
1609 Supplies the bytes represented as hex digits \fIhh\fR as additional
1610 data to the controller in the packet-in message. Pairs of hex digits
1611 may be separated by periods for readability.
1612 .IP "\fBpause\fR"
1613 Causes the switch to freeze the packet's trip through Open vSwitch
1614 flow tables and serializes that state into the packet-in message as a
1615 ``continuation,'' an additional property in the \fBNXT_PACKET_IN2\fR
1616 message. The controller can later send the continuation back to the
1617 switch in an \fBNXT_RESUME\fR message, which will restart the packet's
1618 traversal from the point where it was interrupted. This permits an
1619 OpenFlow controller to interpose on a packet midway through processing
1620 in Open vSwitch.
1621 .
1622 .RE
1623 .IP
1624 If any \fIreason\fR other than \fBaction\fR or any nonzero
1625 \fIcontroller-id\fR is supplied, Open vSwitch extension
1626 \fBNXAST_CONTROLLER\fR, supported by Open vSwitch 1.6 and later, is
1627 used. If \fBuserdata\fR is supplied, then \fBNXAST_CONTROLLER2\fR,
1628 supported by Open vSwitch 2.6 and later, is used.
1629 .
1630 .IP \fBcontroller\fR
1631 .IQ \fBcontroller\fR[\fB:\fInbytes\fR]
1632 Shorthand for \fBcontroller()\fR or
1633 \fBcontroller(max_len=\fInbytes\fB)\fR, respectively.
1634 .
1635 .IP \fBenqueue(\fIport\fB,\fIqueue\fB)\fR
1636 Enqueues the packet on the specified \fIqueue\fR within port
1637 \fIport\fR, which must be an OpenFlow port number or keyword
1638 (e.g. \fBLOCAL\fR). The number of supported queues depends on the
1639 switch; some OpenFlow implementations do not support queuing at all.
1640 .
1641 .IP \fBdrop\fR
1642 Discards the packet, so no further processing or forwarding takes place.
1643 If a drop action is used, no other actions may be specified.
1644 .
1645 .IP \fBmod_vlan_vid\fR:\fIvlan_vid\fR
1646 Modifies the VLAN id on a packet. The VLAN tag is added or modified
1647 as necessary to match the value specified. If the VLAN tag is added,
1648 a priority of zero is used (see the \fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR action to set
1649 this).
1650 .
1651 .IP \fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR:\fIvlan_pcp\fR
1652 Modifies the VLAN priority on a packet. The VLAN tag is added or modified
1653 as necessary to match the value specified. Valid values are between 0
1654 (lowest) and 7 (highest). If the VLAN tag is added, a vid of zero is used
1655 (see the \fBmod_vlan_vid\fR action to set this).
1656 .
1657 .IP \fBstrip_vlan\fR
1658 Strips the VLAN tag from a packet if it is present.
1659 .
1660 .IP \fBpush_vlan\fR:\fIethertype\fR
1661 Push a new VLAN tag onto the packet. Ethertype is used as the Ethertype
1662 for the tag. Only ethertype 0x8100 should be used. (0x88a8 which the spec
1663 allows isn't supported at the moment.)
1664 A priority of zero and the tag of zero are used for the new tag.
1665 .
1666 .IP \fBpush_mpls\fR:\fIethertype\fR
1667 Changes the packet's Ethertype to \fIethertype\fR, which must be either
1668 \fB0x8847\fR or \fB0x8848\fR, and pushes an MPLS LSE.
1669 .IP
1670 If the packet does not already contain any MPLS labels then an initial
1671 label stack entry is pushed. The label stack entry's label is 2 if the
1672 packet contains IPv6 and 0 otherwise, its default traffic control value is
1673 the low 3 bits of the packet's DSCP value (0 if the packet is not IP), and
1674 its TTL is copied from the IP TTL (64 if the packet is not IP).
1675 .IP
1676 If the packet does already contain an MPLS label, pushes a new
1677 outermost label as a copy of the existing outermost label.
1678 .IP
1679 A limitation of the implementation is that processing of actions will stop
1680 if \fBpush_mpls\fR follows another \fBpush_mpls\fR unless there is a
1681 \fBpop_mpls\fR in between.
1682 .
1683 .IP \fBpop_mpls\fR:\fIethertype\fR
1684 Strips the outermost MPLS label stack entry.
1685 Currently the implementation restricts \fIethertype\fR to a non-MPLS Ethertype
1686 and thus \fBpop_mpls\fR should only be applied to packets with
1687 an MPLS label stack depth of one. A further limitation is that processing of
1688 actions will stop if \fBpop_mpls\fR follows another \fBpop_mpls\fR unless
1689 there is a \fBpush_mpls\fR in between.
1690 .
1691 .IP \fBmod_dl_src\fB:\fImac\fR
1692 Sets the source Ethernet address to \fImac\fR.
1693 .
1694 .IP \fBmod_dl_dst\fB:\fImac\fR
1695 Sets the destination Ethernet address to \fImac\fR.
1696 .
1697 .IP \fBmod_nw_src\fB:\fIip\fR
1698 Sets the IPv4 source address to \fIip\fR.
1699 .
1700 .IP \fBmod_nw_dst\fB:\fIip\fR
1701 Sets the IPv4 destination address to \fIip\fR.
1702 .
1703 .IP \fBmod_tp_src\fB:\fIport\fR
1704 Sets the TCP or UDP or SCTP source port to \fIport\fR.
1705 .
1706 .IP \fBmod_tp_dst\fB:\fIport\fR
1707 Sets the TCP or UDP or SCTP destination port to \fIport\fR.
1708 .
1709 .IP \fBmod_nw_tos\fB:\fItos\fR
1710 Sets the DSCP bits in the IPv4 ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field to
1711 \fItos\fR, which must be a multiple of 4 between 0 and 255. This action
1712 does not modify the two least significant bits of the ToS field (the ECN bits).
1713 .
1714 .IP \fBmod_nw_ecn\fB:\fIecn\fR
1715 Sets the ECN bits in the IPv4 ToS or IPv6 traffic class field to \fIecn\fR,
1716 which must be a value between 0 and 3, inclusive. This action does not modify
1717 the six most significant bits of the field (the DSCP bits).
1718 .IP
1719 Requires OpenFlow 1.1 or later.
1720 .
1721 .IP \fBmod_nw_ttl\fB:\fIttl\fR
1722 Sets the IPv4 TTL or IPv6 hop limit field to \fIttl\fR, which is specified as
1723 a decimal number between 0 and 255, inclusive. Switch behavior when setting
1724 \fIttl\fR to zero is not well specified, though.
1725 .IP
1726 Requires OpenFlow 1.1 or later.
1727 .RE
1728 .IP
1729 The following actions are Nicira vendor extensions that, as of this writing, are
1730 only known to be implemented by Open vSwitch:
1731 .
1732 .RS
1733 .
1734 .IP \fBresubmit\fB:\fIport\fR
1735 .IQ \fBresubmit\fB(\fR[\fIport\fR]\fB,\fR[\fItable\fR]\fB)
1736 Re-searches this OpenFlow flow table (or the table whose number is
1737 specified by \fItable\fR) with the \fBin_port\fR field replaced by
1738 \fIport\fR (if \fIport\fR is specified) and executes the actions
1739 found, if any, in addition to any other actions in this flow entry.
1740 .IP
1741 Recursive \fBresubmit\fR actions are obeyed up to
1742 implementation-defined limits:
1743 .RS
1744 .IP \(bu
1745 Open vSwitch 1.0.1 and earlier did not support recursion.
1746 .IP \(bu
1747 Open vSwitch 1.0.2 and 1.0.3 limited recursion to 8 levels.
1748 .IP \(bu
1749 Open vSwitch 1.1 and 1.2 limited recursion to 16 levels.
1750 .IP \(bu
1751 Open vSwitch 1.2 through 1.8 limited recursion to 32 levels.
1752 .IP \(bu
1753 Open vSwitch 1.9 through 2.0 limited recursion to 64 levels.
1754 .IP \(bu
1755 Open vSwitch 2.1 through 2.5 limited recursion to 64 levels and impose
1756 a total limit of 4,096 resubmits per flow translation (earlier versions
1757 did not impose any total limit).
1758 .IP \(bu
1759 Open vSwitch 2.6 and later imposes the same limits as 2.5, with one
1760 exception: \fBresubmit\fR from table \fIx\fR to any table \fIy\fR >
1761 \fIx\fR does not count against the recursion limit.
1762 .RE
1763 .IP
1764 Open vSwitch before 1.2.90 did not support \fItable\fR.
1765 .
1766 .IP \fBset_tunnel\fB:\fIid\fR
1767 .IQ \fBset_tunnel64\fB:\fIid\fR
1768 If outputting to a port that encapsulates the packet in a tunnel and
1769 supports an identifier (such as GRE), sets the identifier to \fIid\fR.
1770 If the \fBset_tunnel\fR form is used and \fIid\fR fits in 32 bits,
1771 then this uses an action extension that is supported by Open vSwitch
1772 1.0 and later. Otherwise, if \fIid\fR is a 64-bit value, it requires
1773 Open vSwitch 1.1 or later.
1774 .
1775 .IP \fBset_queue\fB:\fIqueue\fR
1776 Sets the queue that should be used to \fIqueue\fR when packets are
1777 output. The number of supported queues depends on the switch; some
1778 OpenFlow implementations do not support queuing at all.
1779 .
1780 .IP \fBpop_queue\fR
1781 Restores the queue to the value it was before any \fBset_queue\fR
1782 actions were applied.
1783 .
1784 .IP \fBct\fR
1785 .IQ \fBct\fB(\fR[\fIargument\fR][\fB,\fIargument\fR...]\fB)
1786 Send the packet through the connection tracker. Refer to the \fBct_state\fR
1787 documentation above for possible packet and connection states. The following
1788 arguments are supported:
1789
1790 .RS
1791 .IP \fBcommit\fR
1792 .RS
1793 Commit the connection to the connection tracking module. Information about the
1794 connection will be stored beyond the lifetime of the packet in the pipeline.
1795 Some \fBct_state\fR flags are only available for committed connections.
1796 .RE
1797 .IP \fBtable=\fInumber\fR
1798 Fork pipeline processing in two. The original instance of the packet will
1799 continue processing the current actions list as an untracked packet. An
1800 additional instance of the packet will be sent to the connection tracker, which
1801 will be re-injected into the OpenFlow pipeline to resume processing in table
1802 \fInumber\fR, with the \fBct_state\fR and other ct match fields set. If the
1803 \fBtable\fR is not specified, then the packet which is submitted to the
1804 connection tracker is not re-injected into the OpenFlow pipeline. It is
1805 strongly recommended to specify a table later than the current table to prevent
1806 loops.
1807 .IP \fBzone=\fIvalue\fR
1808 .IQ \fBzone=\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
1809 A 16-bit context id that can be used to isolate connections into separate
1810 domains, allowing overlapping network addresses in different zones. If a zone
1811 is not provided, then the default is to use zone zero. The \fBzone\fR may be
1812 specified either as an immediate 16-bit \fIvalue\fR, or may be provided from an
1813 NXM field \fIsrc\fR. The \fIstart\fR and \fIend\fR pair are inclusive, and must
1814 specify a 16-bit range within the field. This value is copied to the
1815 \fBct_zone\fR match field for packets which are re-injected into the pipeline
1816 using the \fBtable\fR option.
1817 .IP \fBexec\fB(\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fB)\fR
1818 Perform actions within the context of connection tracking. This is a restricted
1819 set of actions which are in the same format as their specifications as part
1820 of a flow. Only actions which modify the \fBct_mark\fR or \fBct_label\fR
1821 fields are accepted within the \fBexec\fR action, and these fields may only be
1822 modified with this option. For example:
1823 .
1824 .RS
1825 .IP \fBset_field:\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]->ct_mark\fR
1826 Store a 32-bit metadata value with the connection. Subsequent lookups
1827 for packets in this connection will populate the \fBct_mark\fR flow
1828 field when the packet is sent to the connection tracker with the
1829 \fBtable\fR specified.
1830 .IP \fBset_field:\fIvalue\fR[\fB/\fImask\fR]->ct_label\fR
1831 Store a 128-bit metadata value with the connection. Subsequent
1832 lookups for packets in this connection will populate the
1833 \fBct_label\fR flow field when the packet is sent to the connection
1834 tracker with the \fBtable\fR specified.
1835 .RE
1836 .IP
1837 The \fBcommit\fR parameter must be specified to use \fBexec(...)\fR.
1838 .
1839 .IP \fBalg=\fIalg\fR
1840 Specify application layer gateway \fIalg\fR to track specific connection
1841 types. Supported types include:
1842 .RS
1843 .IP \fBftp\fR
1844 Look for negotiation of FTP data connections. If a subsequent FTP data
1845 connection arrives which is related, the \fBct\fR action will set the
1846 \fBrel\fR flag in the \fBct_state\fR field for packets sent through \fBct\fR.
1847 .RE
1848 .
1849 .IP
1850 The \fBcommit\fR parameter must be specified to use \fBalg=\fIalg\fR.
1851 .
1852 .IP
1853 When committing related connections, the \fBct_mark\fR for that connection is
1854 inherited from the current \fBct_mark\fR stored with the original connection
1855 (ie, the connection created by \fBct(alg=...)\fR).
1856 .
1857 .IP \fBnat\fR[\fB(\fR(\fBsrc\fR|\fBdst\fR)\fB=\fIaddr1\fR[\fB-\fIaddr2\fR][\fB:\fIport1\fR[\fB-\fIport2\fR]][\fB,\fIflags\fR]\fB)\fR]
1858 .
1859 Specify address and port translation for the connection being tracked.
1860 For new connections either \fBsrc\fR or \fBdst\fR argument must be
1861 provided to set up either source address/port translation (SNAT) or
1862 destination address/port translation (DNAT), respectively. Setting up
1863 address translation for a new connection takes effect only if the
1864 \fBcommit\fR flag is also provided for the enclosing \fBct\fR action.
1865 A bare \fBnat\fR action will only translate the packet being processed
1866 in the way the connection has been set up with an earlier \fBct\fR
1867 action. Also a \fBnat\fR action with \fBsrc\fR or \fBdst\fR, when
1868 applied to a packet belonging to an established (rather than new)
1869 connection, will behave the same as a bare \fBnat\fR.
1870 .IP
1871 \fBsrc\fR and \fBdst\fR options take the following arguments:
1872 .RS
1873 .IP \fIaddr1\fR[\fB-\fIaddr2\fR]
1874 The address range from which the translated address should be
1875 selected. If only one address is given, then that address will always
1876 be selected, otherwise the address selection can be informed by the
1877 optional \fBpersistent\fR flag as described below. Either IPv4 or
1878 IPv6 addresses can be provided, but both addresses must be of the same
1879 type, and the datapath behavior is undefined in case of providing IPv4
1880 address range for an IPv6 packet, or IPv6 address range for an IPv4
1881 packet. IPv6 addresses must be bracketed with '[' and ']' if a port
1882 range is also given.
1883 .RE
1884 .
1885 .RS
1886 .IP \fIport1\fR[\fB-\fIport2\fR]
1887 The port range from which the translated port should be selected. If
1888 only one port number is provided, then that should be selected. In
1889 case of a mapping conflict the datapath may choose any other
1890 non-conflicting port number instead, even when no port range is
1891 specified. The port number selection can be informed by the optional
1892 \fBrandom\fR and \fBhash\fR flags as described below.
1893 .RE
1894 .IP
1895 The optional flags are:
1896 .RS
1897 .IP \fBrandom\fR
1898 The selection of the port from the given range should be done using a
1899 fresh random number. This flag is mutually exclusive with \fBhash\fR.
1900 .RE
1901 .
1902 .RS
1903 .IP \fBhash\fR
1904 The selection of the port from the given range should be done using a
1905 datapath specific hash of the packet's IP addresses and the other,
1906 non-mapped port number. This flag is mutually exclusive with
1907 \fBrandom\fR.
1908 .RE
1909 .
1910 .RS
1911 .IP \fBpersistent\fR
1912 The selection of the IP address from the given range should be done so
1913 that the same mapping can be provided after the system restarts.
1914 .RE
1915 .IP
1916 If an \fBalg\fR is specified for the committing \fBct\fR action that
1917 also includes \fBnat\fR with a \fBsrc\fR or \fBdst\fR attribute,
1918 then the datapath tries to set up the helper to be NAT aware. This
1919 functionality is datapath specific and may not be supported by all
1920 datapaths.
1921 .IP
1922 \fBnat\fR was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.6. The first datapath that
1923 implements \fBct nat\fR support is the one that ships with Linux 4.6.
1924 .RE
1925 .IP
1926 The \fBct\fR action may be used as a primitive to construct stateful firewalls
1927 by selectively committing some traffic, then matching the \fBct_state\fR to
1928 allow established connections while denying new connections. The following
1929 flows provide an example of how to implement a simple firewall that allows new
1930 connections from port 1 to port 2, and only allows established connections to
1931 send traffic from port 2 to port 1:
1932 \fBtable=0,priority=1,action=drop
1933 table=0,priority=10,arp,action=normal
1934 table=0,priority=100,ip,ct_state=-trk,action=ct(table=1)
1935 table=1,in_port=1,ip,ct_state=+trk+new,action=ct(commit),2
1936 table=1,in_port=1,ip,ct_state=+trk+est,action=2
1937 table=1,in_port=2,ip,ct_state=+trk+new,action=drop
1938 table=1,in_port=2,ip,ct_state=+trk+est,action=1\fR
1939 .IP
1940 If \fBct\fR is executed on IP (or IPv6) fragments, then the message is
1941 implicitly reassembled before sending to the connection tracker and
1942 refragmented upon \fBoutput\fR, to the original maximum received fragment size.
1943 Reassembly occurs within the context of the \fBzone\fR, meaning that IP
1944 fragments in different zones are not assembled together. Pipeline processing
1945 for the initial fragments is halted; When the final fragment is received, the
1946 message is assembled and pipeline processing will continue for that flow.
1947 Because packet ordering is not guaranteed by IP protocols, it is not possible
1948 to determine which IP fragment will cause message reassembly (and therefore
1949 continue pipeline processing). As such, it is strongly recommended that
1950 multiple flows should not execute \fBct\fR to reassemble fragments from the
1951 same IP message.
1952 .IP
1953 Currently, connection tracking is only available on Linux kernels with the
1954 nf_conntrack module loaded. The \fBct\fR action was introduced in Open vSwitch
1955 2.5.
1956 .
1957 .IP \fBdec_ttl\fR
1958 .IQ \fBdec_ttl(\fIid1\fR[\fB,\fIid2\fR]...\fB)\fR
1959 Decrement TTL of IPv4 packet or hop limit of IPv6 packet. If the
1960 TTL or hop limit is initially zero or decrementing would make it so, no
1961 decrement occurs, as packets reaching TTL zero must be rejected. Instead,
1962 a ``packet-in'' message with reason code \fBOFPR_INVALID_TTL\fR is
1963 sent to each connected controller that has enabled receiving them,
1964 if any. Processing the current set of actions then stops. However,
1965 if the current set of actions was reached through ``resubmit'' then
1966 remaining actions in outer levels resume processing.
1967 .IP
1968 This action also optionally supports the ability to specify a list of
1969 valid controller ids. Each of the controllers in the list will receive
1970 the ``packet_in'' message only if they have registered to receive the
1971 invalid ttl packets. If controller ids are not specified, the
1972 ``packet_in'' message will be sent only to the controllers having
1973 controller id zero which have registered for the invalid ttl packets.
1974 .
1975 .IP \fBset_mpls_label\fR:\fIlabel\fR
1976 Set the label of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1977 \fIlabel\fR should be a 20-bit value that is decimal by default;
1978 use a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
1979 .
1980 .IP \fBset_mpls_tc\fR:\fItc\fR
1981 Set the traffic-class of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1982 \fItc\fR should be a in the range 0 to 7 inclusive.
1983 .
1984 .IP \fBset_mpls_ttl\fR:\fIttl\fR
1985 Set the TTL of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet.
1986 \fIttl\fR should be in the range 0 to 255 inclusive.
1987 .
1988 .IP \fBdec_mpls_ttl\fR
1989 Decrement TTL of the outer MPLS label stack entry of a packet. If the TTL
1990 is initially zero or decrementing would make it so, no decrement occurs.
1991 Instead, a ``packet-in'' message with reason code \fBOFPR_INVALID_TTL\fR
1992 is sent to the main controller (id zero), if it has enabled receiving them.
1993 Processing the current set of actions then stops. However, if the current
1994 set of actions was reached through ``resubmit'' then remaining actions in
1995 outer levels resume processing.
1996 .
1997 .IP \fBnote:\fR[\fIhh\fR]...
1998 Does nothing at all. Any number of bytes represented as hex digits
1999 \fIhh\fR may be included. Pairs of hex digits may be separated by
2000 periods for readability.
2001 The \fBnote\fR action's format doesn't include an exact length for its
2002 payload, so the provided bytes will be padded on the right by enough
2003 bytes with value 0 to make the total number 6 more than a multiple of
2004 8.
2005 .
2006 .IP "\fBmove:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR"
2007 Copies the named bits from field \fIsrc\fR to field \fIdst\fR.
2008 \fIsrc\fR and \fIdst\fR must be NXM field names as defined in
2009 \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR, e.g. \fBNXM_OF_UDP_SRC\fR or \fBNXM_NX_REG0\fR.
2010 Each \fIstart\fR and \fIend\fR pair, which are inclusive, must specify
2011 the same number of bits and must fit within its respective field.
2012 Shorthands for \fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR exist: use
2013 \fB[\fIbit\fB]\fR to specify a single bit or \fB[]\fR to specify an
2014 entire field.
2015 .IP
2016 Examples: \fBmove:NXM_NX_REG0[0..5]\->NXM_NX_REG1[26..31]\fR copies the
2017 six bits numbered 0 through 5, inclusive, in register 0 into bits 26
2018 through 31, inclusive;
2019 \fBmove:NXM_NX_REG0[0..15]\->NXM_OF_VLAN_TCI[]\fR copies the least
2020 significant 16 bits of register 0 into the VLAN TCI field.
2021 .IP
2022 In OpenFlow 1.0 through 1.4, \fBmove\fR ordinarily uses an Open
2023 vSwitch extension to OpenFlow. In OpenFlow 1.5, \fBmove\fR uses the
2024 OpenFlow 1.5 standard \fBcopy_field\fR action. The ONF has
2025 also made \fBcopy_field\fR available as an extension to OpenFlow 1.3.
2026 Open vSwitch 2.4 and later understands this extension and uses it if a
2027 controller uses it, but for backward compatibility with older versions
2028 of Open vSwitch, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR does not use it.
2029 .
2030 .IP "\fBset_field:\fIvalue\fR[/\fImask\fR]\fB\->\fIdst"
2031 .IQ "\fBload:\fIvalue\fB\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
2032 Loads a literal value into a field or part of a field. With
2033 \fBset_field\fR, \fBvalue\fR and the optional \fBmask\fR are given in
2034 the customary syntax for field \fIdst\fR, which is expressed as a
2035 field name. For example, \fBset_field:00:11:22:33:44:55->eth_src\fR
2036 sets the Ethernet source address to 00:11:22:33:44:55. With
2037 \fBload\fR, \fIvalue\fR must be an integer value (in decimal or
2038 prefixed by \fB0x\fR for hexadecimal) and \fIdst\fR is the NXM or OXM
2039 name for the field. For example,
2040 \fBload:0x001122334455->OXM_OF_ETH_DST[]\fR has the same effect as the
2041 prior \fBset_field\fR example.
2042 .IP
2043 The two forms exist for historical reasons. Open vSwitch 1.1
2044 introduced \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR as a Nicira extension to OpenFlow 1.0
2045 and used \fBload\fR to express it. Later, OpenFlow 1.2 introduced a
2046 standard \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR action that was restricted to loading
2047 entire fields, so Open vSwitch added the form \fBset_field\fR with
2048 this restriction. OpenFlow 1.5 extended \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR to the
2049 point that it became a superset of \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR. Open vSwitch
2050 translates either syntax as necessary for the OpenFlow version in use:
2051 in OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.1, \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR; in OpenFlow 1.2, 1.3,
2052 and 1.4, \fBNXAST_REG_LOAD\fR for \fBload\fR or for loading a
2053 subfield, \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR otherwise; and OpenFlow 1.5 and later,
2054 \fBOFPAT_SET_FIELD\fR.
2055 .
2056 .IP "\fBpush:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
2057 Pushes \fIstart\fR to \fIend\fR bits inclusive, in fields
2058 on top of the stack.
2059 .IP
2060 Example: \fBpush:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5]\fR push the value stored in register
2061 2 bits 0 through 5, inclusive, on to the internal stack.
2062 .
2063 .IP "\fBpop:\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]"
2064 Pops from the top of the stack, retrieves the \fIstart\fR to \fIend\fR bits
2065 inclusive, from the value popped and store them into the corresponding
2066 bits in \fIdst\fR.
2067 .
2068 .IP
2069 Example: \fBpop:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5]\fR pops the value from top of the stack.
2070 Set register 2 bits 0 through 5, inclusive, based on bits 0 through 5 from the
2071 value just popped.
2072 .
2073 .
2074 .IP "\fBmultipath(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIn_links\fB, \fIarg\fB, \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB])\fR"
2075 Hashes \fIfields\fR using \fIbasis\fR as a universal hash parameter,
2076 then the applies multipath link selection \fIalgorithm\fR (with
2077 parameter \fIarg\fR) to choose one of \fIn_links\fR output links
2078 numbered 0 through \fIn_links\fR minus 1, and stores the link into
2079 \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, which must be an NXM field as
2080 described above.
2081 .IP
2082 \fIfields\fR must be one of the following:
2083 .RS
2084 .IP \fBeth_src\fR
2085 Hashes Ethernet source address only.
2086 .IP \fBsymmetric_l4\fR
2087 Hashes Ethernet source, destination, and type, VLAN ID, IPv4/IPv6
2088 source, destination, and protocol, and TCP or SCTP (but not UDP)
2089 ports. The hash is computed so that pairs of corresponding flows in
2090 each direction hash to the same value, in environments where L2 paths
2091 are the same in each direction. UDP ports are not included in the
2092 hash to support protocols such as VXLAN that use asymmetric ports in
2093 each direction.
2094 .IP \fBsymmetric_l3l4\fR
2095 Hashes IPv4/IPv6 source, destination, and protocol, and TCP or SCTP
2096 (but not UDP) ports. Like \fBsymmetric_l4\fR, this is a symmetric
2097 hash, but by excluding L2 headers it is more effective in environments
2098 with asymmetric L2 paths (e.g. paths involving VRRP IP addresses on a
2099 router). Not an effective hash function for protocols other than IPv4
2100 and IPv6, which hash to a constant zero.
2101 .IP \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR
2102 Like \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR, but UDP ports are included in the hash.
2103 This is a more effective hash when asymmetric UDP protocols such as
2104 VXLAN are not a consideration.
2105 .RE
2106 .IP
2107 \fIalgorithm\fR must be one of \fBmodulo_n\fR,
2108 \fBhash_threshold\fR, \fBhrw\fR, and \fBiter_hash\fR. Only
2109 the \fBiter_hash\fR algorithm uses \fIarg\fR.
2110 .IP
2111 Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
2112 .
2113 .IP "\fBbundle(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIslave_type\fB, slaves:[\fIs1\fB, \fIs2\fB, ...])\fR"
2114 Hashes \fIfields\fR using \fIbasis\fR as a universal hash parameter, then
2115 applies the bundle link selection \fIalgorithm\fR to choose one of the listed
2116 slaves represented as \fIslave_type\fR. Currently the only supported
2117 \fIslave_type\fR is \fBofport\fR. Thus, each \fIs1\fR through \fIsN\fR should
2118 be an OpenFlow port number. Outputs to the selected slave.
2119 .IP
2120 Currently, \fIfields\fR must be either \fBeth_src\fR, \fBsymmetric_l4\fR, \fBsymmetric_l3l4\fR, or \fBsymmetric_l3l4+udp\fR,
2121 and \fIalgorithm\fR must be one of \fBhrw\fR and \fBactive_backup\fR.
2122 .IP
2123 Example: \fBbundle(eth_src,0,hrw,ofport,slaves:4,8)\fR uses an Ethernet source
2124 hash with basis 0, to select between OpenFlow ports 4 and 8 using the Highest
2125 Random Weight algorithm.
2126 .IP
2127 Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
2128 .
2129 .IP "\fBbundle_load(\fIfields\fB, \fIbasis\fB, \fIalgorithm\fB, \fIslave_type\fB, \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB], slaves:[\fIs1\fB, \fIs2\fB, ...])\fR"
2130 Has the same behavior as the \fBbundle\fR action, with one exception. Instead
2131 of outputting to the selected slave, it writes its selection to
2132 \fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, which must be an NXM field as described
2133 above.
2134 .IP
2135 Example: \fBbundle_load(eth_src, 0, hrw, ofport, NXM_NX_REG0[],
2136 slaves:4, 8)\fR uses an Ethernet source hash with basis 0, to select
2137 between OpenFlow ports 4 and 8 using the Highest Random Weight
2138 algorithm, and writes the selection to \fBNXM_NX_REG0[]\fR.
2139 .IP
2140 Refer to \fBnicira\-ext.h\fR for more details.
2141 .
2142 .IP "\fBlearn(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]...\fB)\fR"
2143 This action adds or modifies a flow in an OpenFlow table, similar to
2144 \fBovs\-ofctl \-\-strict mod\-flows\fR. The arguments specify the
2145 flow's match fields, actions, and other properties, as follows. At
2146 least one match criterion and one action argument should ordinarily be
2147 specified.
2148 .RS
2149 .IP \fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2150 .IQ \fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2151 .IQ \fBpriority=\fIvalue\fR
2152 .IQ \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR
2153 .IQ \fBsend_flow_rem\fR
2154 These arguments have the same meaning as in the usual \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
2155 flow syntax.
2156 .
2157 .IP \fBfin_idle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2158 .IQ \fBfin_hard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2159 Adds a \fBfin_timeout\fR action with the specified arguments to the
2160 new flow. This feature was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.90.
2161 .
2162 .IP \fBtable=\fInumber\fR
2163 The table in which the new flow should be inserted. Specify a decimal
2164 number between 0 and 254. The default, if \fBtable\fR is unspecified,
2165 is table 1.
2166 .
2167 .IP \fBdelete_learned\fR
2168 This flag enables deletion of the learned flows when the flow with the
2169 \fBlearn\fR action is removed. Specifically, when the last
2170 \fBlearn\fR action with this flag and particular \fBtable\fR and
2171 \fBcookie\fR values is removed, the switch deletes all of the flows in
2172 the specified table with the specified cookie.
2173 .
2174 .IP
2175 This flag was added in Open vSwitch 2.4.
2176 .
2177 .IP \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
2178 .IQ \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]=\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
2179 .IQ \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
2180 Adds a match criterion to the new flow.
2181 .IP
2182 The first form specifies that \fIfield\fR must match the literal
2183 \fIvalue\fR, e.g. \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR. All of the fields and values
2184 for \fBovs\-ofctl\fR flow syntax are available with their usual
2185 meanings. Shorthand notation matchers (e.g. \fBip\fR in place of
2186 \fBdl_type=0x0800\fR) are not currently implemented.
2187 .IP
2188 The second form specifies that \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
2189 in the new flow must match \fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR taken
2190 from the flow currently being processed.
2191 For example, \fINXM_OF_UDP_DST\fB[]\fR=\fINXM_OF_UDP_SRC\fB[]\fR on a
2192 TCP packet for which the UDP src port is \fB53\fR, creates a flow which
2193 matches \fINXM_OF_UDP_DST\fB[]\fR=\fB53\fR.
2194 .IP
2195 The third form is a shorthand for the second form. It specifies that
2196 \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR in the new flow must match the same
2197 \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR taken from the flow currently
2198 being processed.
2199 For example, \fINXM_OF_TCP_DST\fB[]\fR on a TCP packet
2200 for which the TCP dst port is \fB80\fR, creates a flow which
2201 matches \fINXM_OF_TCP_DST\fB[]\fR=\fB80\fR.
2202 .
2203 .IP \fBload:\fIvalue\fB\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
2204 .IQ \fBload:\fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\->\fIdst\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]
2205 .
2206 Adds a \fBload\fR action to the new flow.
2207 .IP
2208 The first form loads the literal \fIvalue\fR into bits \fIstart\fR
2209 through \fIend\fR, inclusive, in field \fIdst\fR. Its syntax is the
2210 same as the \fBload\fR action described earlier in this section.
2211 .IP
2212 The second form loads \fIsrc\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR, a value
2213 from the flow currently being processed, into bits \fIstart\fR
2214 through \fIend\fR, inclusive, in field \fIdst\fR.
2215 .
2216 .IP \fBoutput:\fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR
2217 Add an \fBoutput\fR action to the new flow's actions, that outputs to
2218 the OpenFlow port taken from \fIfield\fB[\fIstart\fB..\fIend\fB]\fR,
2219 which must be an NXM field as described above.
2220 .RE
2221 .IP
2222 For best performance, segregate learned flows into a table (using
2223 \fBtable=\fInumber\fR) that is not used for any other flows except
2224 possibly for a lowest-priority ``catch-all'' flow, that is, a flow
2225 with no match criteria. (This is why the default \fBtable\fR is 1, to
2226 keep the learned flows separate from the primary flow table 0.)
2227 .RE
2228 .
2229 .RS
2230 .
2231 .IP \fBclear_actions\fR
2232 Clears all the actions in the action set immediately.
2233 .
2234 .IP \fBwrite_actions(\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fB)
2235 Add the specific actions to the action set. The syntax of
2236 \fIactions\fR is the same as in the \fBactions=\fR field. The action
2237 set is carried between flow tables and then executed at the end of the
2238 pipeline.
2239 .
2240 .IP
2241 The actions in the action set are applied in the following order, as
2242 required by the OpenFlow specification, regardless of the order in
2243 which they were added to the action set. Except as specified
2244 otherwise below, the action set only holds at most a single action of
2245 each type. When more than one action of a single type is written to
2246 the action set, the one written later replaces the earlier action:
2247 .
2248 .RS
2249 .IP 1.
2250 \fBstrip_vlan\fR
2251 .IQ
2252 \fBpop_mpls\fR
2253 .
2254 .IP 2.
2255 \fBpush_mpls\fR
2256 .
2257 .IP 3.
2258 \fBpush_vlan\fR
2259 .
2260 .IP 4.
2261 \fBdec_ttl\fR
2262 .IQ
2263 \fBdec_mpls_ttl\fR
2264 .
2265 .IP 5.
2266 \fBload\fR
2267 .IQ
2268 \fBmove\fR
2269 .IQ
2270 \fBmod_dl_dst\fR
2271 .IQ
2272 \fBmod_dl_src\fR
2273 .IQ
2274 \fBmod_nw_dst\fR
2275 .IQ
2276 \fBmod_nw_src\fR
2277 .IQ
2278 \fBmod_nw_tos\fR
2279 .IQ
2280 \fBmod_nw_ecn\fR
2281 .IQ
2282 \fBmod_nw_ttl\fR
2283 .IQ
2284 \fBmod_tp_dst\fR
2285 .IQ
2286 \fBmod_tp_src\fR
2287 .IQ
2288 \fBmod_vlan_pcp\fR
2289 .IQ
2290 \fBmod_vlan_vid\fR
2291 .IQ
2292 \fBset_field\fR
2293 .IQ
2294 \fBset_tunnel\fR
2295 .IQ
2296 \fBset_tunnel64\fR
2297 .IQ
2298 The action set can contain any number of these actions, with
2299 cumulative effect. They will be applied in the order as added.
2300 That is, when multiple actions modify the same part of a field,
2301 the later modification takes effect, and when they modify
2302 different parts of a field (or different fields), then both
2303 modifications are applied.
2304 .
2305 .IP 6.
2306 \fBset_queue\fR
2307 .
2308 .IP 7.
2309 \fBgroup\fR
2310 .IQ
2311 \fBoutput\fR
2312 .IQ
2313 \fBresubmit\fR
2314 .IQ
2315 If more than one of these actions is present, then the one listed
2316 earliest above is executed and the others are ignored, regardless of
2317 the order in which they were added to the action set. (If none of these
2318 actions is present, the action set has no real effect, because the
2319 modified packet is not sent anywhere and thus the modifications are
2320 not visible.)
2321 .RE
2322 .IP
2323 Only the actions listed above may be written to the action set.
2324 .
2325 .IP \fBwrite_metadata\fB:\fIvalue\fR[/\fImask\fR]
2326 Updates the metadata field for the flow. If \fImask\fR is omitted, the
2327 metadata field is set exactly to \fIvalue\fR; if \fImask\fR is specified, then
2328 a 1-bit in \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in the metadata
2329 field will be replaced with the corresponding bit from \fIvalue\fR. Both
2330 \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR are 64-bit values that are decimal by default; use
2331 a \fB0x\fR prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.
2332 .
2333 .IP \fBmeter\fR:\fImeter_id\fR
2334 Apply the \fImeter_id\fR before any other actions. If a meter band rate is
2335 exceeded, the packet may be dropped, or modified, depending on the meter
2336 band type. See the description of the \fBMeter Table Commands\fR, above,
2337 for more details.
2338 .
2339 .IP \fBgoto_table\fR:\fItable\fR
2340 Indicates the next table in the process pipeline.
2341 .
2342 .IP "\fBfin_timeout(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]\fB)"
2343 This action changes the idle timeout or hard timeout, or both, of this
2344 OpenFlow rule when the rule matches a TCP packet with the FIN or RST
2345 flag. When such a packet is observed, the action reduces the rule's
2346 timeouts to those specified on the action. If the rule's existing
2347 timeout is already shorter than the one that the action specifies,
2348 then that timeout is unaffected.
2349 .IP
2350 \fIargument\fR takes the following forms:
2351 .RS
2352 .IP "\fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
2353 Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds of
2354 inactivity.
2355 .
2356 .IP "\fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
2357 Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds,
2358 regardless of activity. (\fIseconds\fR specifies time since the
2359 flow's creation, not since the receipt of the FIN or RST.)
2360 .RE
2361 .IP
2362 This action was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.90.
2363 .
2364 .IP "\fBsample(\fIargument\fR[\fB,\fIargument\fR]...\fB)\fR"
2365 Samples packets and sends one sample for every sampled packet.
2366 .IP
2367 \fIargument\fR takes the following forms:
2368 .RS
2369 .IP "\fBprobability=\fIpackets\fR"
2370 The number of sampled packets out of 65535. Must be greater or equal to 1.
2371 .IP "\fBcollector_set_id=\fIid\fR"
2372 The unsigned 32-bit integer identifier of the set of sample collectors
2373 to send sampled packets to. Defaults to 0.
2374 .IP "\fBobs_domain_id=\fIid\fR"
2375 When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit integer
2376 Observation Domain ID sent in every IPFIX flow record. Defaults to 0.
2377 .IP "\fBobs_point_id=\fIid\fR"
2378 When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit integer
2379 Observation Point ID sent in every IPFIX flow record. Defaults to 0.
2380 .IP "\fBsampling_port=\fIport\fR"
2381 Sample packets on the port. It can be set as input port or output
2382 port. When this option is omitted, or specified as \fBNONE\fR, IPFIX
2383 does not differentiate between ingress packets and egress packets and
2384 does not export egress tunnel information. This option was added in
2385 Open vSwitch 2.5.90.
2386 .RE
2387 .IP
2388 Refer to \fBovs\-vswitchd.conf.db\fR(5) for more details on
2389 configuring sample collector sets.
2390 .IP
2391 This action was added in Open vSwitch 1.10.90.
2392 .
2393 .IP "\fBexit\fR"
2394 This action causes Open vSwitch to immediately halt execution of
2395 further actions. Those actions which have already been executed are
2396 unaffected. Any further actions, including those which may be in
2397 other tables, or different levels of the \fBresubmit\fR call stack,
2398 are ignored. Actions in the action set is still executed (specify
2399 \fBclear_actions\fR before \fBexit\fR to discard them).
2400 .
2401 .IP "\fBconjunction(\fIid\fB, \fIk\fB/\fIn\fR\fB)\fR"
2402 An individual OpenFlow flow can match only a single value for each
2403 field. However, situations often arise where one wants to match one
2404 of a set of values within a field or fields. For matching a single
2405 field against a set, it is straightforward and efficient to add
2406 multiple flows to the flow table, one for each value in the set. For
2407 example, one might use the following flows to send packets with IP
2408 source address \fIa\fR, \fIb\fR, \fIc\fR, or \fId\fR to the OpenFlow
2409 controller:
2410 .RS +1in
2411 .br
2412 \fBip,ip_src=\fIa\fB actions=controller\fR
2413 .br
2414 \fBip,ip_src=\fIb\fB actions=controller\fR
2415 .br
2416 \fBip,ip_src=\fIc\fB actions=controller\fR
2417 .br
2418 \fBip,ip_src=\fId\fB actions=controller\fR
2419 .br
2420 .RE
2421 .IP
2422 Similarly, these flows send packets with IP destination address
2423 \fIe\fR, \fIf\fR, \fIg\fR, or \fIh\fR to the OpenFlow controller:
2424 .RS +1in
2425 .br
2426 \fBip,ip_dst=\fIe\fB actions=controller\fR
2427 .br
2428 \fBip,ip_dst=\fIf\fB actions=controller\fR
2429 .br
2430 \fBip,ip_dst=\fIg\fB actions=controller\fR
2431 .br
2432 \fBip,ip_dst=\fIh\fB actions=controller\fR
2433 .br
2434 .RE
2435 .IP
2436 Installing all of the above flows in a single flow table yields a
2437 disjunctive effect: a packet is sent to the controller if \fBip_src\fR
2438 \[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} or \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2439 {\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR} (or both). (Pedantically, if both
2440 of the above sets of flows are present in the flow table, they should
2441 have different priorities, because OpenFlow says that the results are
2442 undefined when two flows with same priority can both match a single
2443 packet.)
2444 .IP
2445 Suppose, on the other hand, one wishes to match conjunctively, that
2446 is, to send a packet to the controller only if both \fBip_src\fR \[mo]
2447 {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2448 {\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR}. This requires 4 \[mu] 4 = 16
2449 flows, one for each possible pairing of \fBip_src\fR and \fBip_dst\fR.
2450 That is acceptable for our small example, but it does not gracefully
2451 extend to larger sets or greater numbers of dimensions.
2452 .IP
2453 The \fBconjunction\fR action is a solution for conjunctive matches
2454 that is built into Open vSwitch. A \fBconjunction\fR action ties
2455 groups of individual OpenFlow flows into higher-level ``conjunctive
2456 flows''. Each group corresponds to one dimension, and each flow
2457 within the group matches one possible value for the dimension. A
2458 packet that matches one flow from each group matches the conjunctive
2459 flow.
2460 .IP
2461 To implement a conjunctive flow with \fBconjunction\fR, assign the
2462 conjunctive flow a 32-bit \fIid\fR, which must be unique within an
2463 OpenFlow table. Assign each of the \fIn\fR \[>=] 2 dimensions a
2464 unique number from 1 to \fIn\fR; the ordering is unimportant. Add one
2465 flow to the OpenFlow flow table for each possible value of each
2466 dimension with \fBconjunction(\fIid, \fIk\fB/\fIn\fB)\fR as the flow's
2467 actions, where \fIk\fR is the number assigned to the flow's dimension.
2468 Together, these flows specify the conjunctive flow's match condition.
2469 When the conjunctive match condition is met, Open vSwitch looks up one
2470 more flow that specifies the conjunctive flow's actions and receives
2471 its statistics. This flow is found by setting \fBconj_id\fR to the
2472 specified \fIid\fR and then again searching the flow table.
2473 .IP
2474 The following flows provide an example. Whenever the IP source is one
2475 of the values in the flows that match on the IP source (dimension 1 of
2476 2), \fIand\fR the IP destination is one of the values in the flows
2477 that match on IP destination (dimension 2 of 2), Open vSwitch searches
2478 for a flow that matches \fBconj_id\fR against the conjunction ID
2479 (1234), finding the first flow listed below.
2480 .RS +1in
2481 .br
2482 .B "conj_id=1234 actions=controller"
2483 .br
2484 .B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.1 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2485 .br
2486 .B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.4 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2487 .br
2488 .B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.6 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2489 .br
2490 .B "ip,ip_src=10.0.0.7 actions=conjunction(1234, 1/2)"
2491 .br
2492 .B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.2 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2493 .br
2494 .B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.5 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2495 .br
2496 .B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.7 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2497 .br
2498 .B "ip,ip_dst=10.0.0.8 actions=conjunction(1234, 2/2)"
2499 .RE
2500 .IP
2501 Many subtleties exist:
2502 .RS
2503 .IP \(bu
2504 In the example above, every flow in a single dimension has the same
2505 form, that is, dimension 1 matches on \fBip_src\fR, dimension 2 on
2506 \fBip_dst\fR, but this is not a requirement. Different flows within a
2507 dimension may match on different bits within a field (e.g. IP network
2508 prefixes of different lengths, or TCP/UDP port ranges as bitwise
2509 matches), or even on entirely different fields (e.g. to match packets
2510 for TCP source port 80 or TCP destination port 80).
2511 .IP \(bu
2512 The flows within a dimension can vary their matches across more than
2513 one field, e.g. to match only specific pairs of IP source and
2514 destination addresses or L4 port numbers.
2515 .IP \(bu
2516 A flow may have multiple \fBconjunction\fR actions, with different
2517 \fIid\fR values. This is useful for multiple conjunctive flows with
2518 overlapping sets. If one conjunctive flow matches packets with both
2519 \fBip_src\fR \[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo]
2520 {\fId\fR,\fIe\fR} and a second conjunctive flow matches \fBip_src\fR
2521 \[mo] {\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR} and \fBip_dst\fR \[mo] {\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR}, for
2522 example, then the flow that matches \fBip_src=\fIb\fR would have two
2523 \fBconjunction\fR actions, one for each conjunctive flow. The order
2524 of \fBconjunction\fR actions within a list of actions is not
2525 significant.
2526 .IP \(bu
2527 A flow with \fBconjunction\fR actions may also include \fBnote\fR
2528 actions for annotations, but not any other kind of actions. (They
2529 would not be useful because they would never be executed.)
2530 .IP \(bu
2531 All of the flows that constitute a conjunctive flow with a given
2532 \fIid\fR must have the same priority. (Flows with the same \fIid\fR
2533 but different priorities are currently treated as different
2534 conjunctive flows, that is, currently \fIid\fR values need only be
2535 unique within an OpenFlow table at a given priority. This behavior
2536 isn't guaranteed to stay the same in later releases, so please use
2537 \fIid\fR values unique within an OpenFlow table.)
2538 .IP \(bu
2539 Conjunctive flows must not overlap with each other, at a given
2540 priority, that is, any given packet must be able to match at most one
2541 conjunctive flow at a given priority. Overlapping conjunctive flows
2542 yield unpredictable results.
2543 .IP \(bu
2544 Following a conjunctive flow match, the search for the flow with
2545 \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR is done in the same general-purpose way as other flow
2546 table searches, so one can use flows with \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR to act
2547 differently depending on circumstances. (One exception is that the
2548 search for the \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR flow itself ignores conjunctive flows,
2549 to avoid recursion.) If the search with \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR fails, Open
2550 vSwitch acts as if the conjunctive flow had not matched at all, and
2551 continues searching the flow table for other matching flows.
2552 .IP \(bu
2553 OpenFlow prerequisite checking occurs for the flow with
2554 \fBconj_id=\fIid\fR in the same way as any other flow, e.g. in an
2555 OpenFlow 1.1+ context, putting a \fBmod_nw_src\fR action into the
2556 example above would require adding an \fBip\fR match, like this:
2557 .RS +1in
2558 .br
2559 .B "conj_id=1234,ip actions=mod_nw_src:1.2.3.4,controller"
2560 .br
2561 .RE
2562 .IP \(bu
2563 OpenFlow prerequisite checking also occurs for the individual flows
2564 that comprise a conjunctive match in the same way as any other flow.
2565 .IP \(bu
2566 The flows that constitute a conjunctive flow do not have useful
2567 statistics. They are never updated with byte or packet counts, and so
2568 on. (For such a flow, therefore, the idle and hard timeouts work much
2569 the same way.)
2570 .IP \(bu
2571 Conjunctive flows can be a useful building block for negation, that
2572 is, inequality matches like \fBtcp_src\fR \[!=] 80. To implement an
2573 inequality match, convert it to a pair of range matches, e.g. 0 \[<=]
2574 \fBtcp_src\fR < 80 and 80 < \fBtcp_src\fR \[<=] 65535, then convert each
2575 of the range matches into a collection of bitwise matches as explained
2576 above in the description of \fBtcp_src\fR.
2577 .IP \(bu
2578 Sometimes there is a choice of which flows include a particular match.
2579 For example, suppose that we added an extra constraint to our example,
2580 to match on \fBip_src\fR \[mo] {\fIa\fR,\fIb\fR,\fIc\fR,\fId\fR} and
2581 \fBip_dst\fR \[mo] {\fIe\fR,\fIf\fR,\fIg\fR,\fIh\fR} and \fBtcp_dst\fR
2582 = \fIi\fR. One way to implement this is to add the new constraint to
2583 the \fBconj_id\fR flow, like this:
2584 .RS +1in
2585 .br
2586 \fBconj_id=1234,tcp,tcp_dst=\fIi\fB actions=mod_nw_src:1.2.3.4,controller\fR
2587 .br
2588 .RE
2589 .IP
2590 \fIbut this is not recommended\fR because of the cost of the extra
2591 flow table lookup. Instead, add the constraint to the individual
2592 flows, either in one of the dimensions or (slightly better) all of
2593 them.
2594 .IP \(bu
2595 A conjunctive match must have \fIn\fR \[>=] 2 dimensions (otherwise a
2596 conjunctive match is not necessary). Open vSwitch enforces this.
2597 .IP \(bu
2598 Each dimension within a conjunctive match should ordinarily have more
2599 than one flow. Open vSwitch does not enforce this.
2600 .RE
2601 .IP
2602 The \fBconjunction\fR action and \fBconj_id\fR field were introduced
2603 in Open vSwitch 2.4.
2604 .RE
2605 .
2606 .PP
2607 An opaque identifier called a cookie can be used as a handle to identify
2608 a set of flows:
2609 .
2610 .IP \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR
2611 .
2612 A cookie can be associated with a flow using the \fBadd\-flow\fR,
2613 \fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands. \fIvalue\fR can be any
2614 64-bit number and need not be unique among flows. If this field is
2615 omitted, a default cookie value of 0 is used.
2616 .
2617 .IP \fBcookie=\fIvalue\fR\fB/\fImask\fR
2618 .
2619 When using NXM, the cookie can be used as a handle for querying,
2620 modifying, and deleting flows. \fIvalue\fR and \fImask\fR may be
2621 supplied for the \fBdel\-flows\fR, \fBmod\-flows\fR, \fBdump\-flows\fR, and
2622 \fBdump\-aggregate\fR commands to limit matching cookies. A 1-bit in
2623 \fImask\fR indicates that the corresponding bit in \fIcookie\fR must
2624 match exactly, and a 0-bit wildcards that bit. A mask of \-1 may be used
2625 to exactly match a cookie.
2626 .IP
2627 The \fBmod\-flows\fR command can update the cookies of flows that
2628 match a cookie by specifying the \fIcookie\fR field twice (once with a
2629 mask for matching and once without to indicate the new value):
2630 .RS
2631 .IP "\fBovs\-ofctl mod\-flows br0 cookie=1,actions=normal\fR"
2632 Change all flows' cookies to 1 and change their actions to \fBnormal\fR.
2633 .IP "\fBovs\-ofctl mod\-flows br0 cookie=1/\-1,cookie=2,actions=normal\fR"
2634 Update cookies with a value of 1 to 2 and change their actions to
2635 \fBnormal\fR.
2636 .RE
2637 .IP
2638 The ability to match on cookies was added in Open vSwitch 1.5.0.
2639 .
2640 .PP
2641 The following additional field sets the priority for flows added by
2642 the \fBadd\-flow\fR and \fBadd\-flows\fR commands. For
2643 \fBmod\-flows\fR and \fBdel\-flows\fR when \fB\-\-strict\fR is
2644 specified, priority must match along with the rest of the flow
2645 specification. For \fBmod-flows\fR without \fB\-\-strict\fR,
2646 priority is only significant if the command creates a new flow, that
2647 is, non-strict \fBmod\-flows\fR does not match on priority and will
2648 not change the priority of existing flows. Other commands do not
2649 allow priority to be specified.
2650 .
2651 .IP \fBpriority=\fIvalue\fR
2652 The priority at which a wildcarded entry will match in comparison to
2653 others. \fIvalue\fR is a number between 0 and 65535, inclusive. A higher
2654 \fIvalue\fR will match before a lower one. An exact-match entry will always
2655 have priority over an entry containing wildcards, so it has an implicit
2656 priority value of 65535. When adding a flow, if the field is not specified,
2657 the flow's priority will default to 32768.
2658 .IP
2659 OpenFlow leaves behavior undefined when two or more flows with the
2660 same priority can match a single packet. Some users expect
2661 ``sensible'' behavior, such as more specific flows taking precedence
2662 over less specific flows, but OpenFlow does not specify this and Open
2663 vSwitch does not implement it. Users should therefore take care to
2664 use priorities to ensure the behavior that they expect.
2665 .
2666 .PP
2667 The \fBadd\-flow\fR, \fBadd\-flows\fR, and \fBmod\-flows\fR commands
2668 support the following additional options. These options affect only
2669 new flows. Thus, for \fBadd\-flow\fR and \fBadd\-flows\fR, these
2670 options are always significant, but for \fBmod\-flows\fR they are
2671 significant only if the command creates a new flow, that is, their
2672 values do not update or affect existing flows.
2673 .
2674 .IP "\fBidle_timeout=\fIseconds\fR"
2675 Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds of
2676 inactivity. A value of 0 (the default) prevents a flow from expiring
2677 due to inactivity.
2678 .
2679 .IP \fBhard_timeout=\fIseconds\fR
2680 Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds,
2681 regardless of activity. A value of 0 (the default) gives the flow no
2682 hard expiration deadline.
2683 .
2684 .IP "\fBimportance=\fIvalue\fR"
2685 Sets the importance of a flow. The flow entry eviction mechanism can
2686 use importance as a factor in deciding which flow to evict. A value
2687 of 0 (the default) makes the flow non-evictable on the basis of
2688 importance. Specify a value between 0 and 65535.
2689 .IP
2690 Only OpenFlow 1.4 and later support \fBimportance\fR.
2691 .
2692 .IP "\fBsend_flow_rem\fR"
2693 Marks the flow with a flag that causes the switch to generate a ``flow
2694 removed'' message and send it to interested controllers when the flow
2695 later expires or is removed.
2696 .
2697 .IP "\fBcheck_overlap\fR"
2698 Forces the switch to check that the flow match does not overlap that
2699 of any different flow with the same priority in the same table. (This
2700 check is expensive so it is best to avoid it.)
2701 .
2702 .PP
2703 The \fBdump\-flows\fR, \fBdump\-aggregate\fR, \fBdel\-flow\fR
2704 and \fBdel\-flows\fR commands support these additional optional fields:
2705 .
2706 .TP
2707 \fBout_port=\fIport\fR
2708 If set, a matching flow must include an output action to \fIport\fR,
2709 which must be an OpenFlow port number or name (e.g. \fBlocal\fR).
2710 .
2711 .TP
2712 \fBout_group=\fIport\fR
2713 If set, a matching flow must include an \fBgroup\fR action naming
2714 \fIgroup\fR, which must be an OpenFlow group number. This field
2715 is supported in Open vSwitch 2.5 and later and requires OpenFlow 1.1
2716 or later.
2717 .
2718 .SS "Table Entry Output"
2719 .
2720 The \fBdump\-tables\fR and \fBdump\-aggregate\fR commands print information
2721 about the entries in a datapath's tables. Each line of output is a
2722 flow entry as described in \fBFlow Syntax\fR, above, plus some
2723 additional fields:
2724 .
2725 .IP \fBduration=\fIsecs\fR
2726 The time, in seconds, that the entry has been in the table.
2727 \fIsecs\fR includes as much precision as the switch provides, possibly
2728 to nanosecond resolution.
2729 .
2730 .IP \fBn_packets\fR
2731 The number of packets that have matched the entry.
2732 .
2733 .IP \fBn_bytes\fR
2734 The total number of bytes from packets that have matched the entry.
2735 .
2736 .PP
2737 The following additional fields are included only if the switch is
2738 Open vSwitch 1.6 or later and the NXM flow format is used to dump the
2739 flow (see the description of the \fB\-\-flow-format\fR option below).
2740 The values of these additional fields are approximations only and in
2741 particular \fBidle_age\fR will sometimes become nonzero even for busy
2742 flows.
2743 .
2744 .IP \fBhard_age=\fIsecs\fR
2745 The integer number of seconds since the flow was added or modified.
2746 \fBhard_age\fR is displayed only if it differs from the integer part
2747 of \fBduration\fR. (This is separate from \fBduration\fR because
2748 \fBmod\-flows\fR restarts the \fBhard_timeout\fR timer without zeroing
2749 \fBduration\fR.)
2750 .
2751 .IP \fBidle_age=\fIsecs\fR
2752 The integer number of seconds that have passed without any packets
2753 passing through the flow.
2754 .
2755 .SS "Packet\-Out Syntax"
2756 .PP
2757 \fBovs\-ofctl bundle\fR command accepts packet-outs to be specified in
2758 the bundle file. Each packet-out comprises of a series of
2759 \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR assignments, separated by commas or white
2760 space. (Embedding spaces into a packet-out description normally
2761 requires quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description
2762 into multiple arguments.). Unless noted otherwise only the last
2763 instance of each field is honoured. This same syntax is also
2764 supported by the \fBovs\-ofctl packet-out\fR command.
2765 .PP
2766 .IP \fBin_port=\fIport\fR
2767 The port number to be considered the in_port when processing actions.
2768 This can be any valid OpenFlow port number, or any of the \fBLOCAL\fR,
2769 \fBCONTROLLER\fR, or \fBNONE\fR.
2770 .
2771 This field is required.
2772
2773 .IP \fBpacket=\fIhex-string\fR
2774 The actual packet to send, expressed as a string of hexadecimal bytes.
2775 .
2776 This field is required.
2777
2778 .IP \fBactions=\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fR
2779 The syntax of actions are identical to the \fBactions=\fR field
2780 described in \fBFlow Syntax\fR above. Specifying \fBactions=\fR is
2781 optional, but omitting actions is interpreted as a drop, so the packet
2782 will not be sent anywhere from the switch.
2783 .
2784 \fBactions\fR must be specified at the end of each line, like for flow mods.
2785 .RE
2786 .
2787 .SS "Group Syntax"
2788 .PP
2789 Some \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands accept an argument that describes a group or
2790 groups. Such flow descriptions comprise a series
2791 \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR assignments, separated by commas or white
2792 space. (Embedding spaces into a group description normally requires
2793 quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
2794 multiple arguments.). Unless noted otherwise only the last instance
2795 of each field is honoured.
2796 .PP
2797 .IP \fBgroup_id=\fIid\fR
2798 The integer group id of group.
2799 When this field is specified in \fBdel\-groups\fR or \fBdump\-groups\fR,
2800 the keyword "all" may be used to designate all groups.
2801 .
2802 This field is required.
2803
2804
2805 .IP \fBtype=\fItype\fR
2806 The type of the group. The \fBadd-group\fR, \fBadd-groups\fR and
2807 \fBmod-groups\fR commands require this field. It is prohibited for
2808 other commands. The following keywords designated the allowed types:
2809 .RS
2810 .IP \fBall\fR
2811 Execute all buckets in the group.
2812 .IP \fBselect\fR
2813 Execute one bucket in the group.
2814 The switch should select the bucket in such a way that should implement
2815 equal load sharing is achieved. The switch may optionally select the
2816 bucket based on bucket weights.
2817 .IP \fBindirect\fR
2818 Executes the one bucket in the group.
2819 .IP \fBff\fR
2820 .IQ \fBfast_failover\fR
2821 Executes the first live bucket in the group which is associated with
2822 a live port or group.
2823 .RE
2824
2825 .IP \fBcommand_bucket_id=\fIid\fR
2826 The bucket to operate on. The \fBinsert-buckets\fR and \fBremove-buckets\fR
2827 commands require this field. It is prohibited for other commands.
2828 \fIid\fR may be an integer or one of the following keywords:
2829 .RS
2830 .IP \fBall\fR
2831 Operate on all buckets in the group.
2832 Only valid when used with the \fBremove-buckets\fR command in which
2833 case the effect is to remove all buckets from the group.
2834 .IP \fBfirst\fR
2835 Operate on the first bucket present in the group.
2836 In the case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2837 insert new bucets just before the first bucket already present in the group;
2838 or to replace the buckets of the group if there are no buckets already present
2839 in the group.
2840 In the case of the \fBremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2841 remove the first bucket of the group; or do nothing if there are no
2842 buckets present in the group.
2843 .IP \fBlast\fR
2844 Operate on the last bucket present in the group.
2845 In the case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2846 insert new bucets just after the last bucket already present in the group;
2847 or to replace the buckets of the group if there are no buckets already present
2848 in the group.
2849 In the case of the \fBremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2850 remove the last bucket of the group; or do nothing if there are no
2851 buckets present in the group.
2852 .RE
2853 .IP
2854 If \fIid\fR is an integer then it should correspond to the \fBbucket_id\fR
2855 of a bucket present in the group.
2856 In case of the \fBinsert-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2857 insert buckets just before the bucket in the group whose \fBbucket_id\fR is
2858 \fIid\fR.
2859 In case of the \fBiremove-buckets\fR command the effect is to
2860 remove the in the group whose \fBbucket_id\fR is \fIid\fR.
2861 It is an error if there is no bucket persent group in whose \fBbucket_id\fR is
2862 \fIid\fR.
2863
2864 .IP \fBselection_method\fR=\fImethod\fR
2865 The selection method used to select a bucket for a select group.
2866 This is a string of 1 to 15 bytes in length known to lower layers.
2867 This field is optional for \fBadd\-group\fR, \fBadd\-groups\fR and
2868 \fBmod\-group\fR commands on groups of type \fBselect\fR. Prohibited
2869 otherwise. The default value is the empty string.
2870 .IP
2871 Other than the empty string, \fBhash\fR is currently the only defined
2872 selection method.
2873 .IP
2874 This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2875 when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2876
2877 .IP \fBselection_method_param\fR=\fIparam\fR
2878 64-bit integer parameter to the selection method selected by the
2879 \fBselection_method\fR field. The parameter's use is defined by the
2880 lower-layer that implements the \fBselection_method\fR. It is optional if
2881 the \fBselection_method\fR field is specified as a non-empty string.
2882 Prohibited otherwise. The default value is zero.
2883 .IP
2884 This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2885 when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2886
2887 .IP \fBfields\fR=\fIfield\fR
2888 .IQ \fBfields(\fIfield\fR[\fB=\fImask\fR]\fR...\fB)\fR
2889 The field parameters to selection method selected by the
2890 \fBselection_method\fR field. The syntax is described in \fBFlow
2891 Syntax\fR with the additional restrictions that if a value is provided
2892 it is treated as a wildcard mask and wildcard masks following a slash
2893 are prohibited. The pre-requisites of fields must be provided by any
2894 flows that output to the group. The use of the fields is defined by
2895 the lower-layer that implements the \fBselection_method\fR. They are
2896 optional if the \fBselection_method\fR field is specified as ``hash',
2897 prohibited otherwise. The default is no fields.
2898 .IP
2899 This option will use a Netronome OpenFlow extension which is only supported
2900 when using Open vSwitch 2.4 and later with OpenFlow 1.5 and later.
2901
2902 .IP \fBbucket\fR=\fIbucket_parameters\fR
2903 The \fBadd-group\fR, \fBadd-groups\fR and \fBmod-group\fR commands
2904 require at least one bucket field. Bucket fields must appear after
2905 all other fields.
2906 .
2907 Multiple bucket fields to specify multiple buckets.
2908 The order in which buckets are specified corresponds to their order in
2909 the group. If the type of the group is "indirect" then only one group may
2910 be specified.
2911 .
2912 \fIbucket_parameters\fR consists of a list of \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
2913 assignments, separated by commas or white space followed by a
2914 comma-separated list of actions.
2915 The fields for \fIbucket_parameters\fR are:
2916 .
2917 .RS
2918 .IP \fBbucket_id=\fIid\fR
2919 The 32-bit integer group id of the bucket. Values greater than
2920 0xffffff00 are reserved.
2921 .
2922 This field was added in Open vSwitch 2.4 to conform with the OpenFlow
2923 1.5 specification. It is not supported when earlier versions
2924 of OpenFlow are used. Open vSwitch will automatically allocate bucket
2925 ids when they are not specified.
2926 .IP \fBactions=\fR[\fIaction\fR][\fB,\fIaction\fR...]\fR
2927 The syntax of actions are identical to the \fBactions=\fR field described in
2928 \fBFlow Syntax\fR above. Specifying \fBactions=\fR is optional, any unknown
2929 bucket parameter will be interpreted as an action.
2930 .IP \fBweight=\fIvalue\fR
2931 The relative weight of the bucket as an integer. This may be used by the switch
2932 during bucket select for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBselect\fR.
2933 .IP \fBwatch_port=\fIport\fR
2934 Port used to determine liveness of group.
2935 This or the \fBwatch_group\fR field is required
2936 for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBff\fR or \fBfast_failover\fR.
2937 .IP \fBwatch_group=\fIgroup_id\fR
2938 Group identifier of group used to determine liveness of group.
2939 This or the \fBwatch_port\fR field is required
2940 for groups whose \fBtype\fR is \fBff\fR or \fBfast_failover\fR.
2941 .RE
2942 .
2943 .SS "Meter Syntax"
2944 .PP
2945 The meter table commands accept an argument that describes a meter.
2946 Such meter descriptions comprise a series \fIfield\fB=\fIvalue\fR
2947 assignments, separated by commas or white space.
2948 (Embedding spaces into a group description normally requires
2949 quoting to prevent the shell from breaking the description into
2950 multiple arguments.). Unless noted otherwise only the last instance
2951 of each field is honoured.
2952 .PP
2953 .IP \fBmeter=\fIid\fR
2954 The integer meter id of the meter.
2955 When this field is specified in \fBdel-meter\fR, \fBdump-meter\fR, or
2956 \fBmeter-stats\fR, the keyword "all" may be used to designate all meters.
2957 .
2958 This field is required, exept for \fBmeter-stats\fR, which dumps all stats
2959 when this field is not specified.
2960
2961 .IP \fBkbps\fR
2962 .IQ \fBpktps\fR
2963 The unit for the meter band rate parameters, either kilobits per second, or
2964 packets per second, respectively. One of these must be specified. The burst
2965 size unit corresponds to the rate unit by dropping the "per second", i.e.,
2966 burst is in units of kilobits or packets, respectively.
2967
2968 .IP \fBburst\fR
2969 Specify burst size for all bands, or none of them, if this flag is not given.
2970
2971 .IP \fBstats\fR
2972 Collect meter and band statistics.
2973
2974 .IP \fBbands\fR=\fIband_parameters\fR
2975 The \fBadd-meter\fR and \fBmod-meter\fR commands require at least one
2976 band specification. Bands must appear after all other fields.
2977 .RS
2978 .IP \fBtype=\fItype\fR
2979 The type of the meter band. This keyword starts a new band specification.
2980 Each band specifies a rate above which the band is to take some action. The
2981 action depends on the band type. If multiple bands' rate is exceeded, then
2982 the band with the highest rate among the exceeded bands is selected.
2983 The following keywords designate the allowed
2984 meter band types:
2985 .RS
2986 .IP \fBdrop\fR
2987 Drop packets exceeding the band's rate limit.
2988 .RE
2989 .
2990 .IP "The other \fIband_parameters\fR are:"
2991 .IP \fBrate=\fIvalue\fR
2992 The relative rate limit for this band, in kilobits per second or packets per
2993 second, depending on the meter flags defined above.
2994 .IP \fBburst_size=\fIsize\fR
2995 The maximum burst allowed for the band. If \fBpktps\fR is specified,
2996 then \fIsize\fR is a packet count, otherwise it is in kilobits. If
2997 unspecified, the switch is free to select some reasonable value
2998 depending on its configuration.
2999 .RE
3000 .
3001 .SH OPTIONS
3002 .TP
3003 \fB\-\-strict\fR
3004 Uses strict matching when running flow modification commands.
3005 .
3006 .IP "\fB\-\-read-only\fR"
3007 Do not execute read/write commands.
3008 .
3009 .IP "\fB\-\-bundle\fR"
3010 Execute flow mods as an OpenFlow 1.4 atomic bundle transaction.
3011 .RS
3012 .IP \(bu
3013 Within a bundle, all flow mods are processed in the order they appear
3014 and as a single atomic transaction, meaning that if one of them fails,
3015 the whole transaction fails and none of the changes are made to the
3016 \fIswitch\fR's flow table, and that each given datapath packet
3017 traversing the OpenFlow tables sees the flow tables either as before
3018 the transaction, or after all the flow mods in the bundle have been
3019 successfully applied.
3020 .IP \(bu
3021 The beginning and the end of the flow table modification commands in a
3022 bundle are delimited with OpenFlow 1.4 bundle control messages, which
3023 makes it possible to stream the included commands without explicit
3024 OpenFlow barriers, which are otherwise used after each flow table
3025 modification command. This may make large modifications execute
3026 faster as a bundle.
3027 .IP \(bu
3028 Bundles require OpenFlow 1.4 or higher. An explicit \fB-O
3029 OpenFlow14\fR option is not needed, but you may need to enable
3030 OpenFlow 1.4 support for OVS by setting the OVSDB \fIprotocols\fR
3031 column in the \fIbridge\fR table.
3032 .RE
3033 .
3034 .so lib/ofp-version.man
3035 .
3036 .IP "\fB\-F \fIformat\fR[\fB,\fIformat\fR...]"
3037 .IQ "\fB\-\-flow\-format=\fIformat\fR[\fB,\fIformat\fR...]"
3038 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR supports the following individual flow formats, any
3039 number of which may be listed as \fIformat\fR:
3040 .RS
3041 .IP "\fBOpenFlow10\-table_id\fR"
3042 This is the standard OpenFlow 1.0 flow format. All OpenFlow switches
3043 and all versions of Open vSwitch support this flow format.
3044 .
3045 .IP "\fBOpenFlow10+table_id\fR"
3046 This is the standard OpenFlow 1.0 flow format plus a Nicira extension
3047 that allows \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to specify the flow table in which a
3048 particular flow should be placed. Open vSwitch 1.2 and later supports
3049 this flow format.
3050 .
3051 .IP "\fBNXM\-table_id\fR (Nicira Extended Match)"
3052 This Nicira extension to OpenFlow is flexible and extensible. It
3053 supports all of the Nicira flow extensions, such as \fBtun_id\fR and
3054 registers. Open vSwitch 1.1 and later supports this flow format.
3055 .
3056 .IP "\fBNXM+table_id\fR (Nicira Extended Match)"
3057 This combines Nicira Extended match with the ability to place a flow
3058 in a specific table. Open vSwitch 1.2 and later supports this flow
3059 format.
3060 .
3061 .IP "\fBOXM-OpenFlow12\fR"
3062 .IQ "\fBOXM-OpenFlow13\fR"
3063 .IQ "\fBOXM-OpenFlow14\fR"
3064 These are the standard OXM (OpenFlow Extensible Match) flow format in
3065 OpenFlow 1.2, 1.3, and 1.4, respectively.
3066 .RE
3067 .
3068 .IP
3069 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR also supports the following abbreviations for
3070 collections of flow formats:
3071 .RS
3072 .IP "\fBany\fR"
3073 Any supported flow format.
3074 .IP "\fBOpenFlow10\fR"
3075 \fBOpenFlow10\-table_id\fR or \fBOpenFlow10+table_id\fR.
3076 .IP "\fBNXM\fR"
3077 \fBNXM\-table_id\fR or \fBNXM+table_id\fR.
3078 .IP "\fBOXM\fR"
3079 \fBOXM-OpenFlow12\fR, \fBOXM-OpenFlow13\fR, or \fBOXM-OpenFlow14\fR.
3080 .RE
3081 .
3082 .IP
3083 For commands that modify the flow table, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR by default
3084 negotiates the most widely supported flow format that supports the
3085 flows being added. For commands that query the flow table,
3086 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR by default uses the most advanced format supported by
3087 the switch.
3088 .IP
3089 This option, where \fIformat\fR is a comma-separated list of one or
3090 more of the formats listed above, limits \fBovs\-ofctl\fR's choice of
3091 flow format. If a command cannot work as requested using one of the
3092 specified flow formats, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will report a fatal error.
3093 .
3094 .IP "\fB\-P \fIformat\fR"
3095 .IQ "\fB\-\-packet\-in\-format=\fIformat\fR"
3096 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR supports the following ``packet-in'' formats, in order of
3097 increasing capability:
3098 .RS
3099 .IP "\fBstandard\fR"
3100 This uses the \fBOFPT_PACKET_IN\fR message, the standard ``packet-in''
3101 message for any given OpenFlow version. Every OpenFlow switch that
3102 supports a given OpenFlow version supports this format.
3103 .
3104 .IP "\fBnxt_packet_in\fR"
3105 This uses the \fBNXT_PACKET_IN\fR message, which adds many of the
3106 capabilities of the OpenFlow 1.1 and later ``packet-in'' messages
3107 before those OpenFlow versions were available in Open vSwitch. Open
3108 vSwitch 1.1 and later support this format. Only Open vSwitch 2.6 and
3109 later, however, support it for OpenFlow 1.1 and later (but there is
3110 little reason to use it with those versions of OpenFlow).
3111 .
3112 .IP "\fBnxt_packet_in2\fR"
3113 This uses the \fBNXT_PACKET_IN2\fR message, which is extensible and
3114 should avoid the need to define new formats later. In particular,
3115 this format supports passing arbitrary user-provided data to a
3116 controller using the \fBuserdata\fB option on the \fBcontroller\fR
3117 action. Open vSwitch 2.6 and later support this format.
3118 .
3119 .RE
3120 .IP
3121 Without this option, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR prefers \fBnxt_packet_in2\fR if
3122 the switch supports it. Otherwise, if OpenFlow 1.0 is in use,
3123 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR prefers \fBnxt_packet_in\fR if the switch supports
3124 it. Otherwise, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR falls back to the \fBstandard\fR
3125 packet-in format. When this option is specified, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
3126 insists on the selected format. If the switch does not support the
3127 requested format, \fBovs\-ofctl\fR will report a fatal error.
3128 .IP
3129 Before version 2.6, Open vSwitch called \fBstandard\fR format
3130 \fBopenflow10\fR and \fBnxt_packet_in\fR format \fBnxm\fR, and
3131 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR still accepts these names as synonyms. (The name
3132 \fBopenflow10\fR was a misnomer because this format actually varies
3133 from one OpenFlow version to another; it is not consistently OpenFlow
3134 1.0 format. Similarly, when \fBnxt_packet_in2\fR was introduced, the
3135 name \fBnxm\fR became confusing because it also uses OXM/NXM.)
3136 .
3137 .IP
3138 This option affects only the \fBmonitor\fR command.
3139 .
3140 .IP "\fB\-\-timestamp\fR"
3141 Print a timestamp before each received packet. This option only
3142 affects the \fBmonitor\fR, \fBsnoop\fR, and \fBofp\-parse\-pcap\fR
3143 commands.
3144 .
3145 .IP "\fB\-m\fR"
3146 .IQ "\fB\-\-more\fR"
3147 Increases the verbosity of OpenFlow messages printed and logged by
3148 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR commands. Specify this option more than once to
3149 increase verbosity further.
3150 .
3151 .IP \fB\-\-sort\fR[\fB=\fIfield\fR]
3152 .IQ \fB\-\-rsort\fR[\fB=\fIfield\fR]
3153 Display output sorted by flow \fIfield\fR in ascending
3154 (\fB\-\-sort\fR) or descending (\fB\-\-rsort\fR) order, where
3155 \fIfield\fR is any of the fields that are allowed for matching or
3156 \fBpriority\fR to sort by priority. When \fIfield\fR is omitted, the
3157 output is sorted by priority. Specify these options multiple times to
3158 sort by multiple fields.
3159 .IP
3160 Any given flow will not necessarily specify a value for a given
3161 field. This requires special treatement:
3162 .RS
3163 .IP \(bu
3164 A flow that does not specify any part of a field that is used for sorting is
3165 sorted after all the flows that do specify the field. For example,
3166 \fB\-\-sort=tcp_src\fR will sort all the flows that specify a TCP
3167 source port in ascending order, followed by the flows that do not
3168 specify a TCP source port at all.
3169 .IP \(bu
3170 A flow that only specifies some bits in a field is sorted as if the
3171 wildcarded bits were zero. For example, \fB\-\-sort=nw_src\fR would
3172 sort a flow that specifies \fBnw_src=192.168.0.0/24\fR the same as
3173 \fBnw_src=192.168.0.0\fR.
3174 .RE
3175 .IP
3176 These options currently affect only \fBdump\-flows\fR output.
3177 .
3178 .ds DD \
3179 \fBovs\-ofctl\fR detaches only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or \
3180 \fBsnoop\fR commands.
3181 .so lib/daemon.man
3182 .so lib/unixctl.man
3183 .SS "Public Key Infrastructure Options"
3184 .so lib/ssl.man
3185 .so lib/vlog.man
3186 .so lib/colors.man
3187 .so lib/common.man
3188 .
3189 .SH "RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS"
3190 \fBovs\-appctl\fR(8) can send commands to a running \fBovs\-ofctl\fR
3191 process. The supported commands are listed below.
3192 .
3193 .IP "\fBexit\fR"
3194 Causes \fBovs\-ofctl\fR to gracefully terminate. This command applies
3195 only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or \fBsnoop\fR commands.
3196 .
3197 .IP "\fBofctl/set\-output\-file \fIfile\fR"
3198 Causes all subsequent output to go to \fIfile\fR instead of stderr.
3199 This command applies only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR or
3200 \fBsnoop\fR commands.
3201 .
3202 .IP "\fBofctl/send \fIofmsg\fR..."
3203 Sends each \fIofmsg\fR, specified as a sequence of hex digits that
3204 express an OpenFlow message, on the OpenFlow connection. This command
3205 is useful only when executing the \fBmonitor\fR command.
3206 .
3207 .IP "\fBofctl/packet\-out \fIpacket-out\fR"
3208 Sends an OpenFlow PACKET_OUT message specified in \fBPacket\-Out
3209 Syntax\fR, on the OpenFlow connection. See \fBPacket\-Out Syntax\fR
3210 section for more information. This command is useful only when
3211 executing the \fBmonitor\fR command.
3212 .
3213 .IP "\fBofctl/barrier\fR"
3214 Sends an OpenFlow barrier request on the OpenFlow connection and waits
3215 for a reply. This command is useful only for the \fBmonitor\fR
3216 command.
3217 .
3218 .SH EXAMPLES
3219 .
3220 The following examples assume that \fBovs\-vswitchd\fR has a bridge
3221 named \fBbr0\fR configured.
3222 .
3223 .TP
3224 \fBovs\-ofctl dump\-tables br0\fR
3225 Prints out the switch's table stats. (This is more interesting after
3226 some traffic has passed through.)
3227 .
3228 .TP
3229 \fBovs\-ofctl dump\-flows br0\fR
3230 Prints the flow entries in the switch.
3231 .
3232 .TP
3233 \fBovs\-ofctl add\-flow table=0 actions=learn(table=1,hard_timeout=10, NXM_OF_VLAN_TCI[0..11],output:NXM_OF_IN_PORT[]), resubmit(,1)\fR
3234 \fBovs\-ofctl add\-flow table=1 priority=0 actions=flood\fR
3235 Implements a level 2 MAC learning switch using the learn.
3236 .
3237 .TP
3238 \fBovs\-ofctl add\-flow br0 'table=0,priority=0 actions=load:3->NXM_NX_REG0[0..15],learn(table=0,priority=1,idle_timeout=10,NXM_OF_ETH_SRC[],NXM_OF_VLAN_TCI[0..11],output:NXM_NX_REG0[0..15]),output:2\fR
3239 In this use of a learn action, the first packet from each source MAC
3240 will be sent to port 2. Subsequent packets will be output to port 3,
3241 with an idle timeout of 10 seconds.
3242 .
3243 Additional examples may be found documented as part of related sections.
3244 .
3245 .SH "SEE ALSO"
3246 .
3247 .BR ovs\-appctl (8),
3248 .BR ovs\-vswitchd (8)
3249 .BR ovs\-vswitchd.conf.db (8)