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1[[sysadmin_network_configuration]]
2Network Configuration
3---------------------
4ifdef::wiki[]
5:pve-toplevel:
6endif::wiki[]
7
8Network configuration can be done either via the GUI, or by manually
9editing the file `/etc/network/interfaces`, which contains the
10whole network configuration. The `interfaces(5)` manual page contains the
11complete format description. All {pve} tools try hard to keep direct
12user modifications, but using the GUI is still preferable, because it
13protects you from errors.
14
15Once the network is configured, you can use the Debian traditional tools `ifup`
16and `ifdown` commands to bring interfaces up and down.
17
18Apply Network Changes
19~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
20
21{pve} does not write changes directly to `/etc/network/interfaces`. Instead, we
22write into a temporary file called `/etc/network/interfaces.new`, this way you
23can do many related changes at once. This also allows to ensure your changes
24are correct before applying, as a wrong network configuration may render a node
25inaccessible.
26
27Reboot Node to apply
28^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
29
30With the default installed `ifupdown` network managing package you need to
31reboot to commit any pending network changes. Most of the time, the basic {pve}
32network setup is stable and does not change often, so rebooting should not be
33required often.
34
35Reload Network with ifupdown2
36^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
37
38With the optional `ifupdown2` network managing package you also can reload the
39network configuration live, without requiring a reboot.
40
41NOTE: 'ifupdown2' cannot understand 'OpenVSwitch' syntax, so reloading is *not*
42possible if OVS interfaces are configured.
43
44Since {pve} 6.1 you can apply pending network changes over the web-interface,
45using the 'Apply Configuration' button in the 'Network' panel of a node.
46
47To install 'ifupdown2' ensure you have the latest {pve} updates installed, then
48
49WARNING: installing 'ifupdown2' will remove 'ifupdown', but as the removal
50scripts of 'ifupdown' before version '0.8.35+pve1' have a issue where network
51is fully stopped on removal footnote:[Introduced with Debian Buster:
52https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=945877] you *must* ensure
53that you have a up to date 'ifupdown' package version.
54
55For the installation itself you can then simply do:
56
57 apt install ifupdown2
58
59With that you're all set. You can also switch back to the 'ifupdown' variant at
60any time, if you run into issues.
61
62Naming Conventions
63~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
64
65We currently use the following naming conventions for device names:
66
67* Ethernet devices: en*, systemd network interface names. This naming scheme is
68 used for new {pve} installations since version 5.0.
69
70* Ethernet devices: eth[N], where 0 ≤ N (`eth0`, `eth1`, ...) This naming
71scheme is used for {pve} hosts which were installed before the 5.0
72release. When upgrading to 5.0, the names are kept as-is.
73
74* Bridge names: vmbr[N], where 0 ≤ N ≤ 4094 (`vmbr0` - `vmbr4094`)
75
76* Bonds: bond[N], where 0 ≤ N (`bond0`, `bond1`, ...)
77
78* VLANs: Simply add the VLAN number to the device name,
79 separated by a period (`eno1.50`, `bond1.30`)
80
81This makes it easier to debug networks problems, because the device
82name implies the device type.
83
84Systemd Network Interface Names
85^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
86
87Systemd uses the two character prefix 'en' for Ethernet network
88devices. The next characters depends on the device driver and the fact
89which schema matches first.
90
91* o<index>[n<phys_port_name>|d<dev_port>] — devices on board
92
93* s<slot>[f<function>][n<phys_port_name>|d<dev_port>] — device by hotplug id
94
95* [P<domain>]p<bus>s<slot>[f<function>][n<phys_port_name>|d<dev_port>] — devices by bus id
96
97* x<MAC> — device by MAC address
98
99The most common patterns are:
100
101* eno1 — is the first on board NIC
102
103* enp3s0f1 — is the NIC on pcibus 3 slot 0 and use the NIC function 1.
104
105For more information see https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/[Predictable Network Interface Names].
106
107Choosing a network configuration
108~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
109
110Depending on your current network organization and your resources you can
111choose either a bridged, routed, or masquerading networking setup.
112
113{pve} server in a private LAN, using an external gateway to reach the internet
114^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
115
116The *Bridged* model makes the most sense in this case, and this is also
117the default mode on new {pve} installations.
118Each of your Guest system will have a virtual interface attached to the
119{pve} bridge. This is similar in effect to having the Guest network card
120directly connected to a new switch on your LAN, the {pve} host playing the role
121of the switch.
122
123{pve} server at hosting provider, with public IP ranges for Guests
124^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
125
126For this setup, you can use either a *Bridged* or *Routed* model, depending on
127what your provider allows.
128
129{pve} server at hosting provider, with a single public IP address
130^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
131
132In that case the only way to get outgoing network accesses for your guest
133systems is to use *Masquerading*. For incoming network access to your guests,
134you will need to configure *Port Forwarding*.
135
136For further flexibility, you can configure
137VLANs (IEEE 802.1q) and network bonding, also known as "link
138aggregation". That way it is possible to build complex and flexible
139virtual networks.
140
141Default Configuration using a Bridge
142~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
143
144[thumbnail="default-network-setup-bridge.svg"]
145Bridges are like physical network switches implemented in software.
146All virtual guests can share a single bridge, or you can create multiple
147bridges to separate network domains. Each host can have up to 4094 bridges.
148
149The installation program creates a single bridge named `vmbr0`, which
150is connected to the first Ethernet card. The corresponding
151configuration in `/etc/network/interfaces` might look like this:
152
153----
154auto lo
155iface lo inet loopback
156
157iface eno1 inet manual
158
159auto vmbr0
160iface vmbr0 inet static
161 address 192.168.10.2
162 netmask 255.255.255.0
163 gateway 192.168.10.1
164 bridge-ports eno1
165 bridge-stp off
166 bridge-fd 0
167----
168
169Virtual machines behave as if they were directly connected to the
170physical network. The network, in turn, sees each virtual machine as
171having its own MAC, even though there is only one network cable
172connecting all of these VMs to the network.
173
174Routed Configuration
175~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
176
177Most hosting providers do not support the above setup. For security
178reasons, they disable networking as soon as they detect multiple MAC
179addresses on a single interface.
180
181TIP: Some providers allow you to register additional MACs through their
182management interface. This avoids the problem, but can be clumsy to
183configure because you need to register a MAC for each of your VMs.
184
185You can avoid the problem by ``routing'' all traffic via a single
186interface. This makes sure that all network packets use the same MAC
187address.
188
189[thumbnail="default-network-setup-routed.svg"]
190A common scenario is that you have a public IP (assume `198.51.100.5`
191for this example), and an additional IP block for your VMs
192(`203.0.113.16/29`). We recommend the following setup for such
193situations:
194
195----
196auto lo
197iface lo inet loopback
198
199auto eno1
200iface eno1 inet static
201 address 198.51.100.5
202 netmask 255.255.255.0
203 gateway 198.51.100.1
204 post-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
205 post-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eno1/proxy_arp
206
207
208auto vmbr0
209iface vmbr0 inet static
210 address 203.0.113.17
211 netmask 255.255.255.248
212 bridge-ports none
213 bridge-stp off
214 bridge-fd 0
215----
216
217
218Masquerading (NAT) with `iptables`
219~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
220
221Masquerading allows guests having only a private IP address to access the
222network by using the host IP address for outgoing traffic. Each outgoing
223packet is rewritten by `iptables` to appear as originating from the host,
224and responses are rewritten accordingly to be routed to the original sender.
225
226----
227auto lo
228iface lo inet loopback
229
230auto eno1
231#real IP address
232iface eno1 inet static
233 address 198.51.100.5
234 netmask 255.255.255.0
235 gateway 198.51.100.1
236
237auto vmbr0
238#private sub network
239iface vmbr0 inet static
240 address 10.10.10.1
241 netmask 255.255.255.0
242 bridge-ports none
243 bridge-stp off
244 bridge-fd 0
245
246 post-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
247 post-up iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s '10.10.10.0/24' -o eno1 -j MASQUERADE
248 post-down iptables -t nat -D POSTROUTING -s '10.10.10.0/24' -o eno1 -j MASQUERADE
249----
250
251NOTE: In some masquerade setups with firewall enabled, conntrack zones might be
252needed for outgoing connections. Otherwise the firewall could block outgoing
253connections since they will prefer the `POSTROUTING` of the VM bridge (and not
254`MASQUERADE`).
255
256Adding these lines in the `/etc/network/interfaces` can fix this problem:
257
258----
259post-up iptables -t raw -I PREROUTING -i fwbr+ -j CT --zone 1
260post-down iptables -t raw -D PREROUTING -i fwbr+ -j CT --zone 1
261----
262
263For more information about this, refer to the following links:
264
265https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Netfilter-packet-flow.svg[Netfilter Packet Flow]
266
267https://lwn.net/Articles/370152/[Patch on netdev-list introducing conntrack zones]
268
269https://blog.lobraun.de/2019/05/19/prox/[Blog post with a good explanation by using TRACE in the raw table]
270
271
272
273Linux Bond
274~~~~~~~~~~
275
276Bonding (also called NIC teaming or Link Aggregation) is a technique
277for binding multiple NIC's to a single network device. It is possible
278to achieve different goals, like make the network fault-tolerant,
279increase the performance or both together.
280
281High-speed hardware like Fibre Channel and the associated switching
282hardware can be quite expensive. By doing link aggregation, two NICs
283can appear as one logical interface, resulting in double speed. This
284is a native Linux kernel feature that is supported by most
285switches. If your nodes have multiple Ethernet ports, you can
286distribute your points of failure by running network cables to
287different switches and the bonded connection will failover to one
288cable or the other in case of network trouble.
289
290Aggregated links can improve live-migration delays and improve the
291speed of replication of data between Proxmox VE Cluster nodes.
292
293There are 7 modes for bonding:
294
295* *Round-robin (balance-rr):* Transmit network packets in sequential
296order from the first available network interface (NIC) slave through
297the last. This mode provides load balancing and fault tolerance.
298
299* *Active-backup (active-backup):* Only one NIC slave in the bond is
300active. A different slave becomes active if, and only if, the active
301slave fails. The single logical bonded interface's MAC address is
302externally visible on only one NIC (port) to avoid distortion in the
303network switch. This mode provides fault tolerance.
304
305* *XOR (balance-xor):* Transmit network packets based on [(source MAC
306address XOR'd with destination MAC address) modulo NIC slave
307count]. This selects the same NIC slave for each destination MAC
308address. This mode provides load balancing and fault tolerance.
309
310* *Broadcast (broadcast):* Transmit network packets on all slave
311network interfaces. This mode provides fault tolerance.
312
313* *IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation (802.3ad)(LACP):* Creates
314aggregation groups that share the same speed and duplex
315settings. Utilizes all slave network interfaces in the active
316aggregator group according to the 802.3ad specification.
317
318* *Adaptive transmit load balancing (balance-tlb):* Linux bonding
319driver mode that does not require any special network-switch
320support. The outgoing network packet traffic is distributed according
321to the current load (computed relative to the speed) on each network
322interface slave. Incoming traffic is received by one currently
323designated slave network interface. If this receiving slave fails,
324another slave takes over the MAC address of the failed receiving
325slave.
326
327* *Adaptive load balancing (balance-alb):* Includes balance-tlb plus receive
328load balancing (rlb) for IPV4 traffic, and does not require any
329special network switch support. The receive load balancing is achieved
330by ARP negotiation. The bonding driver intercepts the ARP Replies sent
331by the local system on their way out and overwrites the source
332hardware address with the unique hardware address of one of the NIC
333slaves in the single logical bonded interface such that different
334network-peers use different MAC addresses for their network packet
335traffic.
336
337If your switch support the LACP (IEEE 802.3ad) protocol then we recommend using
338the corresponding bonding mode (802.3ad). Otherwise you should generally use the
339active-backup mode. +
340// http://lists.linux-ha.org/pipermail/linux-ha/2013-January/046295.html
341If you intend to run your cluster network on the bonding interfaces, then you
342have to use active-passive mode on the bonding interfaces, other modes are
343unsupported.
344
345The following bond configuration can be used as distributed/shared
346storage network. The benefit would be that you get more speed and the
347network will be fault-tolerant.
348
349.Example: Use bond with fixed IP address
350----
351auto lo
352iface lo inet loopback
353
354iface eno1 inet manual
355
356iface eno2 inet manual
357
358iface eno3 inet manual
359
360auto bond0
361iface bond0 inet static
362 bond-slaves eno1 eno2
363 address 192.168.1.2
364 netmask 255.255.255.0
365 bond-miimon 100
366 bond-mode 802.3ad
367 bond-xmit-hash-policy layer2+3
368
369auto vmbr0
370iface vmbr0 inet static
371 address 10.10.10.2
372 netmask 255.255.255.0
373 gateway 10.10.10.1
374 bridge-ports eno3
375 bridge-stp off
376 bridge-fd 0
377
378----
379
380
381[thumbnail="default-network-setup-bond.svg"]
382Another possibility it to use the bond directly as bridge port.
383This can be used to make the guest network fault-tolerant.
384
385.Example: Use a bond as bridge port
386----
387auto lo
388iface lo inet loopback
389
390iface eno1 inet manual
391
392iface eno2 inet manual
393
394auto bond0
395iface bond0 inet manual
396 bond-slaves eno1 eno2
397 bond-miimon 100
398 bond-mode 802.3ad
399 bond-xmit-hash-policy layer2+3
400
401auto vmbr0
402iface vmbr0 inet static
403 address 10.10.10.2
404 netmask 255.255.255.0
405 gateway 10.10.10.1
406 bridge-ports bond0
407 bridge-stp off
408 bridge-fd 0
409
410----
411
412
413VLAN 802.1Q
414~~~~~~~~~~~
415
416A virtual LAN (VLAN) is a broadcast domain that is partitioned and
417isolated in the network at layer two. So it is possible to have
418multiple networks (4096) in a physical network, each independent of
419the other ones.
420
421Each VLAN network is identified by a number often called 'tag'.
422Network packages are then 'tagged' to identify which virtual network
423they belong to.
424
425
426VLAN for Guest Networks
427^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
428
429{pve} supports this setup out of the box. You can specify the VLAN tag
430when you create a VM. The VLAN tag is part of the guest network
431configuration. The networking layer supports different modes to
432implement VLANs, depending on the bridge configuration:
433
434* *VLAN awareness on the Linux bridge:*
435In this case, each guest's virtual network card is assigned to a VLAN tag,
436which is transparently supported by the Linux bridge.
437Trunk mode is also possible, but that makes configuration
438in the guest necessary.
439
440* *"traditional" VLAN on the Linux bridge:*
441In contrast to the VLAN awareness method, this method is not transparent
442and creates a VLAN device with associated bridge for each VLAN.
443That is, creating a guest on VLAN 5 for example, would create two
444interfaces eno1.5 and vmbr0v5, which would remain until a reboot occurs.
445
446* *Open vSwitch VLAN:*
447This mode uses the OVS VLAN feature.
448
449* *Guest configured VLAN:*
450VLANs are assigned inside the guest. In this case, the setup is
451completely done inside the guest and can not be influenced from the
452outside. The benefit is that you can use more than one VLAN on a
453single virtual NIC.
454
455
456VLAN on the Host
457^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
458
459To allow host communication with an isolated network. It is possible
460to apply VLAN tags to any network device (NIC, Bond, Bridge). In
461general, you should configure the VLAN on the interface with the least
462abstraction layers between itself and the physical NIC.
463
464For example, in a default configuration where you want to place
465the host management address on a separate VLAN.
466
467
468.Example: Use VLAN 5 for the {pve} management IP with traditional Linux bridge
469----
470auto lo
471iface lo inet loopback
472
473iface eno1 inet manual
474
475iface eno1.5 inet manual
476
477auto vmbr0v5
478iface vmbr0v5 inet static
479 address 10.10.10.2
480 netmask 255.255.255.0
481 gateway 10.10.10.1
482 bridge-ports eno1.5
483 bridge-stp off
484 bridge-fd 0
485
486auto vmbr0
487iface vmbr0 inet manual
488 bridge-ports eno1
489 bridge-stp off
490 bridge-fd 0
491
492----
493
494.Example: Use VLAN 5 for the {pve} management IP with VLAN aware Linux bridge
495----
496auto lo
497iface lo inet loopback
498
499iface eno1 inet manual
500
501
502auto vmbr0.5
503iface vmbr0.5 inet static
504 address 10.10.10.2
505 netmask 255.255.255.0
506 gateway 10.10.10.1
507
508auto vmbr0
509iface vmbr0 inet manual
510 bridge-ports eno1
511 bridge-stp off
512 bridge-fd 0
513 bridge-vlan-aware yes
514----
515
516The next example is the same setup but a bond is used to
517make this network fail-safe.
518
519.Example: Use VLAN 5 with bond0 for the {pve} management IP with traditional Linux bridge
520----
521auto lo
522iface lo inet loopback
523
524iface eno1 inet manual
525
526iface eno2 inet manual
527
528auto bond0
529iface bond0 inet manual
530 bond-slaves eno1 eno2
531 bond-miimon 100
532 bond-mode 802.3ad
533 bond-xmit-hash-policy layer2+3
534
535iface bond0.5 inet manual
536
537auto vmbr0v5
538iface vmbr0v5 inet static
539 address 10.10.10.2
540 netmask 255.255.255.0
541 gateway 10.10.10.1
542 bridge-ports bond0.5
543 bridge-stp off
544 bridge-fd 0
545
546auto vmbr0
547iface vmbr0 inet manual
548 bridge-ports bond0
549 bridge-stp off
550 bridge-fd 0
551
552----
553
554////
555TODO: explain IPv6 support?
556TODO: explain OVS
557////