Provided by: ovn-central_22.09.0-0ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ovn-northd and ovn-northd-ddlog - Open Virtual Network central control daemon

SYNOPSIS

       ovn-northd [options]

DESCRIPTION

       ovn-northd  is  a  centralized  daemon  responsible  for  translating  the  high-level OVN
       configuration into logical configuration consumable by daemons such as ovn-controller.  It
       translates  the  logical  network configuration in terms of conventional network concepts,
       taken from the OVN Northbound Database (see ovn-nb(5)), into logical datapath flows in the
       OVN Southbound Database (see ovn-sb(5)) below it.

       ovn-northd is implemented in C. ovn-northd-ddlog is a compatible implementation written in
       DDlog, a language for incremental database processing. This documentation applies to  both
       implementations, with differences indicated where relevant.

OPTIONS

       --ovnnb-db=database
              The  OVSDB  database  containing  the  OVN  Northbound  Database.  If the OVN_NB_DB
              environment variable is set, its value is  used  as  the  default.  Otherwise,  the
              default is unix:/ovnnb_db.sock.

       --ovnsb-db=database
              The  OVSDB  database  containing  the  OVN  Southbound  Database.  If the OVN_SB_DB
              environment variable is set, its value is  used  as  the  default.  Otherwise,  the
              default is unix:/ovnsb_db.sock.

       --ddlog-record=file
              This option is for ovn-north-ddlog only. It causes the daemon to record the initial
              database state and later changes to file in the text-based  DDlog  command  format.
              The  ovn_northd_cli  program can later replay these changes for debugging purposes.
              This  option  has  a  performance  impact.  See  debugging-ddlog.rst  in  the   OVN
              documentation for more details.

       --dry-run
              Causes  ovn-northd  to start paused. In the paused state, ovn-northd does not apply
              any changes to the databases, although it  continues  to  monitor  them.  For  more
              information, see the pause command, under Runtime Management Commands below.

              For  ovn-northd-ddlog,  one could use this option with --ddlog-record to generate a
              replay log without restarting a process or disturbing a running system.

       n-threads N
              In certain situations, it may be desirable to enable parallelization on a system to
              decrease latency (at the potential cost of increasing CPU usage).

              This  option  will  cause  ovn-northd to use N threads when building logical flows,
              when N is  within  [2-256].  If  N  is  1,  parallelization  is  disabled  (default
              behavior). If N is less than 1, then N is set to 1, parallelization is disabled and
              a warning is logged. If N is more than 256, then N is set to  256,  parallelization
              is enabled (with 256 threads) and a warning is logged.

              ovn-northd-ddlog does not support this option.

       database  in  the  above  options must be an OVSDB active or passive connection method, as
       described in ovsdb(7).

   Daemon Options
       --pidfile[=pidfile]
              Causes a file (by default, program.pid) to be created indicating  the  PID  of  the
              running  process. If the pidfile argument is not specified, or if it does not begin
              with /, then it is created in .

              If --pidfile is not specified, no pidfile is created.

       --overwrite-pidfile
              By default, when --pidfile is specified and the specified  pidfile  already  exists
              and  is  locked  by  a  running  process,  the  daemon  refuses  to  start. Specify
              --overwrite-pidfile to cause it to instead overwrite the pidfile.

              When --pidfile is not specified, this option has no effect.

       --detach
              Runs this program as a background process. The process forks, and in the  child  it
              starts  a  new  session,  closes  the standard file descriptors (which has the side
              effect of disabling logging to the console), and changes its current  directory  to
              the   root  (unless  --no-chdir  is  specified).  After  the  child  completes  its
              initialization, the parent exits.

       --monitor
              Creates an additional process to monitor this program. If it dies due to  a  signal
              that  indicates  a  programming  error  (SIGABRT,  SIGALRM, SIGBUS, SIGFPE, SIGILL,
              SIGPIPE, SIGSEGV, SIGXCPU, or SIGXFSZ) then the monitor process starts a  new  copy
              of it. If the daemon dies or exits for another reason, the monitor process exits.

              This option is normally used with --detach, but it also functions without it.

       --no-chdir
              By  default,  when  --detach  is  specified, the daemon changes its current working
              directory to the root directory after it detaches. Otherwise, invoking  the  daemon
              from  a carelessly chosen directory would prevent the administrator from unmounting
              the file system that holds that directory.

              Specifying --no-chdir suppresses this behavior, preventing the daemon from changing
              its  current working directory. This may be useful for collecting core files, since
              it is common behavior to write core dumps into the current  working  directory  and
              the root directory is not a good directory to use.

              This option has no effect when --detach is not specified.

       --no-self-confinement
              By  default  this  daemon  will try to self-confine itself to work with files under
              well-known directories determined at build time. It is better to  stick  with  this
              default  behavior and not to use this flag unless some other Access Control is used
              to confine daemon. Note that in contrast to other  access  control  implementations
              that  are  typically enforced from kernel-space (e.g. DAC or MAC), self-confinement
              is imposed from the user-space daemon itself and hence should not be considered  as
              a full confinement strategy, but instead should be viewed as an additional layer of
              security.

       --user=user:group
              Causes this program to run as  a  different  user  specified  in  user:group,  thus
              dropping most of the root privileges. Short forms user and :group are also allowed,
              with current user or group assumed, respectively. Only daemons started by the  root
              user accepts this argument.

              On  Linux,  daemons  will  be granted CAP_IPC_LOCK and CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICES before
              dropping  root  privileges.  Daemons  that  interact  with  a  datapath,  such   as
              ovs-vswitchd,  will be granted three additional capabilities, namely CAP_NET_ADMIN,
              CAP_NET_BROADCAST and CAP_NET_RAW. The capability change will apply even if the new
              user is root.

              On  Windows,  this  option  is  not  currently  supported.  For  security  reasons,
              specifying this option will cause the daemon process not to start.

   Logging Options
       -v[spec]
       --verbose=[spec]
            Sets logging levels. Without any spec, sets  the  log  level  for  every  module  and
            destination  to dbg. Otherwise, spec is a list of words separated by spaces or commas
            or colons, up to one from each category below:

            •      A valid module name, as displayed by the vlog/list command  on  ovs-appctl(8),
                   limits the log level change to the specified module.

            •      syslog,  console, or file, to limit the log level change to only to the system
                   log, to the console, or to a file, respectively. (If  --detach  is  specified,
                   the  daemon  closes  its  standard file descriptors, so logging to the console
                   will have no effect.)

                   On Windows platform, syslog is accepted as a word and  is  only  useful  along
                   with the --syslog-target option (the word has no effect otherwise).

            •      off,  emer, err, warn, info, or dbg, to control the log level. Messages of the
                   given severity or higher will be logged, and messages of lower  severity  will
                   be  filtered  out.  off  filters  out  all  messages.  See ovs-appctl(8) for a
                   definition of each log level.

            Case is not significant within spec.

            Regardless of the log levels set for file, logging to a  file  will  not  take  place
            unless --log-file is also specified (see below).

            For  compatibility  with  older versions of OVS, any is accepted as a word but has no
            effect.

       -v
       --verbose
            Sets the maximum logging verbosity level, equivalent to --verbose=dbg.

       -vPATTERN:destination:pattern
       --verbose=PATTERN:destination:pattern
            Sets the log pattern for  destination  to  pattern.  Refer  to  ovs-appctl(8)  for  a
            description of the valid syntax for pattern.

       -vFACILITY:facility
       --verbose=FACILITY:facility
            Sets  the  RFC5424  facility  of  the log message. facility can be one of kern, user,
            mail, daemon, auth, syslog, lpr, news, uucp, clock, ftp, ntp, audit,  alert,  clock2,
            local0,  local1,  local2, local3, local4, local5, local6 or local7. If this option is
            not specified, daemon is used as the default for the local system syslog  and  local0
            is  used  while  sending  a  message  to  the target provided via the --syslog-target
            option.

       --log-file[=file]
            Enables logging to a file. If file is specified, then it is used as  the  exact  name
            for   the  log  file.  The  default  log  file  name  used  if  file  is  omitted  is
            /var/log/ovn/program.log.

       --syslog-target=host:port
            Send syslog messages to UDP port on host, in addition to the system syslog. The  host
            must be a numerical IP address, not a hostname.

       --syslog-method=method
            Specify  method as how syslog messages should be sent to syslog daemon. The following
            forms are supported:

            •      libc, to use the libc syslog() function. Downside of  using  this  options  is
                   that libc adds fixed prefix to every message before it is actually sent to the
                   syslog daemon over /dev/log UNIX domain socket.

            •      unix:file, to use a UNIX domain socket directly. It  is  possible  to  specify
                   arbitrary  message  format  with  this option. However, rsyslogd 8.9 and older
                   versions use hard coded parser function anyway that limits UNIX domain  socket
                   use. If you want to use arbitrary message format with older rsyslogd versions,
                   then use UDP socket to localhost IP address instead.

            •      udp:ip:port, to use a UDP socket. With this  method  it  is  possible  to  use
                   arbitrary  message  format  also  with  older  rsyslogd.  When  sending syslog
                   messages over UDP socket extra precaution needs to be taken into account,  for
                   example,  syslog  daemon needs to be configured to listen on the specified UDP
                   port, accidental iptables rules could be interfering with local syslog traffic
                   and  there  are some security considerations that apply to UDP sockets, but do
                   not apply to UNIX domain sockets.

            •      null, to discard all messages logged to syslog.

            The default is taken from the OVS_SYSLOG_METHOD environment variable; if it is unset,
            the default is libc.

   PKI Options
       PKI  configuration  is  required in order to use SSL for the connections to the Northbound
       and Southbound databases.

              -p privkey.pem
              --private-key=privkey.pem
                   Specifies a PEM file containing the private key used as identity for  outgoing
                   SSL connections.

              -c cert.pem
              --certificate=cert.pem
                   Specifies  a  PEM file containing a certificate that certifies the private key
                   specified on -p or --private-key to be trustworthy. The  certificate  must  be
                   signed by the certificate authority (CA) that the peer in SSL connections will
                   use to verify it.

              -C cacert.pem
              --ca-cert=cacert.pem
                   Specifies a PEM file containing the CA certificate for verifying  certificates
                   presented to this program by SSL peers. (This may be the same certificate that
                   SSL peers use to verify the certificate specified on -c or  --certificate,  or
                   it may be a different one, depending on the PKI design in use.)

              -C none
              --ca-cert=none
                   Disables  verification of certificates presented by SSL peers. This introduces
                   a security risk, because it means that certificates cannot be verified  to  be
                   those of known trusted hosts.

   Other Options
       --unixctl=socket
              Sets the name of the control socket on which program listens for runtime management
              commands (see RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS, below). If socket does not begin with /,
              it  is  interpreted  as  relative to . If --unixctl is not used at all, the default
              socket is /program.pid.ctl, where pid is program’s process ID.

              On Windows a local named pipe is used to listen for runtime management commands.  A
              file  is  created  in the absolute path as pointed by socket or if --unixctl is not
              used at all, a file is created as program in the configured  OVS_RUNDIR  directory.
              The file exists just to mimic the behavior of a Unix domain socket.

              Specifying none for socket disables the control socket feature.

       -h
       --help
            Prints a brief help message to the console.

       -V
       --version
            Prints version information to the console.

RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS

       ovs-appctl  can  send  commands  to  a running ovn-northd process. The currently supported
       commands are described below.

              exit   Causes ovn-northd to gracefully terminate.

              pause  Pauses ovn-northd. When it is paused, ovn-northd receives changes  from  the
                     Northbound  and  Southbound  database changes as usual, but it does not send
                     any updates. A paused ovn-northd also drops database locks, which allows any
                     other non-paused instance of ovn-northd to take over.

              resume Resumes  the  ovn-northd  operation  to  process  Northbound  and Southbound
                     database contents and generate logical flows. This will also  instruct  ovn-
                     northd to aspire for the lock on SB DB.

              is-paused
                     Returns "true" if ovn-northd is currently paused, "false" otherwise.

              status Prints  this  server’s  status.  Status  will  be "active" if ovn-northd has
                     acquired OVSDB lock on SB DB, "standby" if it has not or  "paused"  if  this
                     instance is paused.

              sb-cluster-state-reset
                     Reset  southbound  database  cluster status when databases are destroyed and
                     rebuilt.

                     If all databases in a clustered southbound database are removed  from  disk,
                     then  the  stored  index  of  all databases will be reset to zero. This will
                     cause ovn-northd to be unable to read or write to the  southbound  database,
                     because  it  will  always detect the data as stale. In such a case, run this
                     command so that ovn-northd will  reset  its  local  index  so  that  it  can
                     interact with the southbound database again.

              nb-cluster-state-reset
                     Reset  northbound  database  cluster status when databases are destroyed and
                     rebuilt.

                     This performs  the  same  task  as  sb-cluster-state-reset  except  for  the
                     northbound database client.

              set-n-threads N
                     Set  the number of threads used for building logical flows. When N is within
                     [2-256],  parallelization  is  enabled.  When  N  is  1  parallelization  is
                     disabled.  When  N is less than 1 or more than 256, an error is returned. If
                     ovn-northd fails to start parallelization (e.g. fails to  setup  semaphores,
                     parallelization is disabled and an error is returned.

              get-n-threads
                     Return the number of threads used for building logical flows.

       Only ovn-northd-ddlog supports the following commands:

              enable-cpu-profiling
              disable-cpu-profiling
                   Enables  or  disables profiling of CPU time used by the DDlog engine. When CPU
                   profiling is enabled, the profile command (see below) will include  DDlog  CPU
                   usage   statistics   in   its   output.   Enabling  CPU  profiling  will  slow
                   ovn-northd-ddlog. Disabling  CPU  profiling  does  not  clear  any  previously
                   recorded statistics.

              profile
                   Outputs  a profile of the current and peak sizes of arrangements inside DDlog.
                   This profiling data can be useful for optimizing DDlog code. If CPU  profiling
                   was  previously  enabled  (even  if  it  was  later disabled), the output also
                   includes a CPU time profile. See Profiling inside the tutorial  in  the  DDlog
                   repository for an introduction to profiling DDlog.

ACTIVE-STANDBY FOR HIGH AVAILABILITY

       You may run ovn-northd more than once in an OVN deployment. When connected to a standalone
       or clustered DB setup, OVN will automatically ensure that only one of them is active at  a
       time. If multiple instances of ovn-northd are running and the active ovn-northd fails, one
       of the hot standby instances of ovn-northd will automatically take over.

   Active-Standby with multiple OVN DB servers
       You may run multiple OVN DB servers in an OVN deployment with:

              •      OVN DB servers deployed in active/passive mode with one active and  multiple
                     passive ovsdb-servers.

              •      ovn-northd  also  deployed  on  all  these  nodes, using unix ctl sockets to
                     connect to the local OVN DB servers.

       In such deployments, the ovn-northds on the passive nodes will process the DB changes  and
       compute  logical  flows to be thrown out later, because write transactions are not allowed
       by the passive ovsdb-servers. It results in unnecessary CPU usage.

       With the help of runtime management command pause,  you  can  pause  ovn-northd  on  these
       nodes.  When  a  passive  node  becomes master, you can use the runtime management command
       resume to resume the ovn-northd to process the DB changes.

LOGICAL FLOW TABLE STRUCTURE

       One of the main purposes of ovn-northd is  to  populate  the  Logical_Flow  table  in  the
       OVN_Southbound  database.  This  section describes how ovn-northd does this for switch and
       router logical datapaths.

   Logical Switch Datapaths
     Ingress Table 0: Admission Control and Ingress Port Security check

       Ingress table 0 contains these logical flows:

              •      Priority 100 flows to drop packets with  VLAN  tags  or  multicast  Ethernet
                     source addresses.

              •      For  each  disabled logical port, a priority 100 flow is added which matches
                     on all packets and applies the action REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP" = 1;  next;"  so
                     that the packets are dropped in the next stage.

              •      For  each  (enabled)  vtep  logical  port, a priority 70 flow is added which
                     matches  on  all  packets  and  applies  the  action  next(pipeline=ingress,
                     table=S_SWITCH_IN_L2_LKUP)  = 1; to skip most stages of ingress pipeline and
                     go directly to ingress L2 lookup table to determine the output port. Packets
                     from  VTEP  (RAMP)  switch should not be subjected to any ACL checks. Egress
                     pipeline will do the ACL checks.

              •      For each enabled  logical  port  configured  with  qdisc  queue  id  in  the
                     options:qdisc_queue_id  column of Logical_Switch_Port, a priority 70 flow is
                     added which matches on all packets and  applies  the  action  set_queue(id);
                     REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP" = check_in_port_sec(); next;".

              •      A  priority 1 flow is added which matches on all packets for all the logical
                     ports and applies the action  REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP"  =  check_in_port_sec();
                     next;  to  evaluate  the port security. The action check_in_port_sec applies
                     the  port  security  rules  defined   in   the   port_security   column   of
                     Logical_Switch_Port table.

     Ingress Table 1: Ingress Port Security - Apply

       This  table  drops the packets if the port security check failed in the previous stage i.e
       the register bit REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP is set to 1.

       Ingress table 1 contains these logical flows:

              •      A priority-50 fallback flow that  drops  the  packet  if  the  register  bit
                     REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP is set to 1.

              •      One  priority-0  fallback  flow that matches all packets and advances to the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 2: Lookup MAC address learning table

       This table looks up the MAC learning table of the logical switch datapath to check if  the
       port-mac  pair  is  present  or not. MAC is learnt only for logical switch VIF ports whose
       port security is disabled and ’unknown’ address set.

              •      For each such logical port p whose port security is disabled  and  ’unknown’
                     address set following flow is added.

                     •      Priority  100  flow  with the match inport == p and action reg0[11] =
                            lookup_fdb(inport, eth.src); next;

              •      One priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and  advances  to  the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 3: Learn MAC of ’unknown’ ports.

       This  table  learns  the  MAC  addresses  seen on the logical ports whose port security is
       disabled and ’unknown’ address set if the lookup_fdb action returned false in the previous
       table.

              •      For  each  such logical port p whose port security is disabled and ’unknown’
                     address set following flow is added.

                     •      Priority 100 flow with the match inport == p &&  reg0[11]  ==  0  and
                            action  put_fdb(inport,  eth.src); next; which stores the port-mac in
                            the mac learning table of the logical switch  datapath  and  advances
                            the packet to the next table.

              •      One  priority-0  fallback  flow that matches all packets and advances to the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 4: from-lport Pre-ACLs

       This table prepares flows for possible stateful ACL processing in ingress table  ACLs.  It
       contains  a  priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table. If stateful ACLs
       are used in the logical datapath, a priority-100 flow is added  that  sets  a  hint  (with
       reg0[0]  =  1;  next;) for table Pre-stateful to send IP packets to the connection tracker
       before eventually advancing to ingress table ACLs. If special ports such as route ports or
       localnet  ports  can’t  use ct(), a priority-110 flow is added to skip over stateful ACLs.
       Multicast, IPv6 Neighbor Discovery and MLD traffic also skips stateful ACLs.  For  "allow-
       stateless"  ACLs,  a  flow  is  added  to  bypass  setting the hint for connection tracker
       processing.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match eth.dst == E for all logical switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where E is the service monitor mac defined in
       the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

     Ingress Table 5: Pre-LB

       This table prepares flows for possible stateful load balancing processing in ingress table
       LB  and  Stateful.  It  contains  a  priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next
       table. Moreover it contains two  priority-110  flows  to  move  multicast,  IPv6  Neighbor
       Discovery  and  MLD  traffic  to  the  next table. If load balancing rules with virtual IP
       addresses (and ports) are configured in  OVN_Northbound  database  for  a  logical  switch
       datapath,  a  priority-100 flow is added with the match ip to match on IP packets and sets
       the action reg0[2] = 1; next; to act as a hint for table Pre-stateful to send  IP  packets
       to the connection tracker for packet de-fragmentation (and to possibly do DNAT for already
       established load balanced traffic) before eventually advancing to ingress table  Stateful.
       If  controller_event  has  been  enabled and load balancing rules with empty backends have
       been added in OVN_Northbound, a  130  flow  is  added  to  trigger  ovn-controller  events
       whenever  the  chassis  receives  a packet for that particular VIP. If event-elb meter has
       been previously created, it will be associated to the empty_lb logical flow

       Prior to OVN 20.09 we were setting the reg0[0] = 1 only if the IP destination matches  the
       load  balancer  VIP. However this had few issues cases where a logical switch doesn’t have
       any ACLs with allow-related action. To understand  the  issue  lets  a  take  a  TCP  load
       balancer - 10.0.0.10:80=10.0.0.3:80. If a logical port - p1 with IP - 10.0.0.5 opens a TCP
       connection with the VIP - 10.0.0.10, then the packet in the ingress pipeline  of  ’p1’  is
       sent  to  the  p1’s  conntrack  zone  id  and the packet is load balanced to the backend -
       10.0.0.3. For the reply packet from the backend lport, it is not sent to the conntrack  of
       backend  lport’s zone id. This is fine as long as the packet is valid. Suppose the backend
       lport sends an invalid TCP packet  (like  incorrect  sequence  number),  the  packet  gets
       delivered  to the lport ’p1’ without unDNATing the packet to the VIP - 10.0.0.10. And this
       causes the connection to be reset by the lport p1’s VIF.

       We can’t fix this issue by adding a logical flow to drop  ct.inv  packets  in  the  egress
       pipeline  since  it will drop all other connections not destined to the load balancers. To
       fix this issue, we send all the packets to the conntrack in the ingress pipeline if a load
       balancer is configured. We can now add a lflow to drop ct.inv packets.

       This table also has priority-120 flows that punt all IGMP/MLD packets to ovn-controller if
       the switch is an interconnect switch with multicast snooping enabled.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match eth.dst == E for all logical switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where E is the service monitor mac defined in
       the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match inport == I for all logical  switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where I is the peer of a logical router port.
       This flow is added to skip the connection tracking of packets  which  enter  from  logical
       router datapath to logical switch datapath.

     Ingress Table 6: Pre-stateful

       This table prepares flows for all possible stateful processing in next tables. It contains
       a priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

              •      Priority-120 flows  that  send  the  packets  to  connection  tracker  using
                     ct_lb_mark;  as  the action so that the already established traffic destined
                     to the load balancer VIP gets DNATted. These flows match each  VIPs  IP  and
                     port.  For  IPv4 traffic the flows also load the original destination IP and
                     transport port in registers reg1 and reg2. For IPv6 traffic the  flows  also
                     load  the original destination IP and transport port in registers xxreg1 and
                     reg2.

              •      A priority-110 flow sends the packets that don’t match the  above  flows  to
                     connection  tracker  based on a hint provided by the previous tables (with a
                     match for reg0[2] == 1) by using the ct_lb_mark; action.

              •      A priority-100 flow sends the packets to connection tracker based on a  hint
                     provided by the previous tables (with a match for reg0[0] == 1) by using the
                     ct_next; action.

     Ingress Table 7: from-lport ACL hints

       This table consists of logical flows that set hints (reg0 bits) to be  used  in  the  next
       stage,  in  the  ACL  processing table, if stateful ACLs or load balancers are configured.
       Multiple hints can be set for the same packet. The possible hints are:

              •      reg0[7]: the packet might match an  allow-related  ACL  and  might  have  to
                     commit the connection to conntrack.

              •      reg0[8]:  the  packet  might match an allow-related ACL but there will be no
                     need to commit the connection to conntrack because it already exists.

              •      reg0[9]: the packet might match a drop/reject.

              •      reg0[10]: the packet might match a drop/reject ACL but  the  connection  was
                     previously allowed so it might have to be committed again with ct_label=1/1.

       The table contains the following flows:

              •      A priority-65535 flow to advance to the next table if the logical switch has
                     no ACLs configured, otherwise a priority-0  flow  to  advance  to  the  next
                     table.

              •      A  priority-7 flow that matches on packets that initiate a new session. This
                     flow sets reg0[7] and reg0[9] and then advances to the next table.

              •      A priority-6 flow that matches on packets that are in the request  direction
                     of  an  already  existing session that has been marked as blocked. This flow
                     sets reg0[7] and reg0[9] and then advances to the next table.

              •      A priority-5 flow that matches untracked packets. This flow sets reg0[8] and
                     reg0[9] and then advances to the next table.

              •      A  priority-4 flow that matches on packets that are in the request direction
                     of an already existing session that has not been  marked  as  blocked.  This
                     flow sets reg0[8] and reg0[10] and then advances to the next table.

              •      A  priority-3  flow  that  matches  on  packets  that  are  in  not  part of
                     established sessions. This flow sets reg0[9] and then advances to  the  next
                     table.

              •      A  priority-2  flow  that matches on packets that are part of an established
                     session that has been marked as blocked. This flow  sets  reg0[9]  and  then
                     advances to the next table.

              •      A  priority-1  flow  that matches on packets that are part of an established
                     session that has not been marked as blocked. This  flow  sets  reg0[10]  and
                     then advances to the next table.

     Ingress table 8: from-lport ACLs before LB

       Logical flows in this table closely reproduce those in the ACL table in the OVN_Northbound
       database for the from-lport direction without the option  apply-after-lb  set  or  set  to
       false.  The priority values from the ACL table have a limited range and have 1000 added to
       them to leave room for OVN default flows at both higher and lower priorities.

              •      allow ACLs translate into logical flows with the next; action. If there  are
                     any  stateful ACLs on this datapath, then allow ACLs translate to ct_commit;
                     next; (which acts as a hint for the next tables to commit the connection  to
                     conntrack).  In  case the ACL has a label then reg3 is loaded with the label
                     value and reg0[13] bit is set to 1 (which acts as a hint for the next tables
                     to commit the label to conntrack).

              •      allow-related    ACLs    translate    into    logical    flows    with   the
                     ct_commit(ct_label=0/1); next; actions for new connections and reg0[1] =  1;
                     next;  for  existing  connections.  In case the ACL has a label then reg3 is
                     loaded with the label value and reg0[13] bit is set to 1 (which  acts  as  a
                     hint for the next tables to commit the label to conntrack).

              •      allow-stateless ACLs translate into logical flows with the next; action.

              •      reject  ACLs  translate  into  logical flows with the tcp_reset { output <->
                     inport;      next(pipeline=egress,table=5);}      action       for       TCP
                     connections,icmp4/icmp6  action  for UDP connections, and sctp_abort {output
                     <-%gt; inport; next(pipeline=egress,table=5);} action for SCTP associations.

              •      Other  ACLs  translate  to  drop;  for  new  or  untracked  connections  and
                     ct_commit(ct_label=1/1);  for  known  connections.  Setting ct_label marks a
                     connection as one that was previously  allowed,  but  should  no  longer  be
                     allowed due to a policy change.

       This  table  contains  a  priority-65535  flow to advance to the next table if the logical
       switch has no ACLs configured, otherwise a priority-0 flow to advance to the next table so
       that ACLs allow packets by default if options:default_acl_drop colum of NB_Global is false
       or not set. Otherwise the flow action  is  set  to  drop;  to  implement  a  default  drop
       behavior.

       If  the  logical  datapath  has a stateful ACL or a load balancer with VIP configured, the
       following flows will also be added:

              •      If options:default_acl_drop colum of  NB_Global  is  false  or  not  set,  a
                     priority-1  flow that sets the hint to commit IP traffic that is not part of
                     established sessions to the connection tracker (with  action  reg0[1]  =  1;
                     next;).  This  is  needed  for  the  default allow policy because, while the
                     initiator’s direction may not have any stateful rules, the server’s may  and
                     then its return traffic would not be known and marked as invalid.

              •      If  options:default_acl_drop  colum  of NB_Global is true, a priority-1 flow
                     that drops IP traffic that is not part of established sessions.

              •      A priority-1 flow that sets the hint to commit IP traffic to the  connection
                     tracker  (with  action  reg0[1]  = 1; next;). This is needed for the default
                     allow policy because, while the  initiator’s  direction  may  not  have  any
                     stateful  rules,  the  server’s may and then its return traffic would not be
                     known and marked as invalid.

              •      A priority-65532 flow that allows any traffic in the reply direction  for  a
                     connection  that  has  been  committed  to  the  connection  tracker  (i.e.,
                     established  flows),  as  long  as  the  committed  flow   does   not   have
                     ct_mark.blocked  set.  We  only  handle  traffic in the reply direction here
                     because we want all packets going in  the  request  direction  to  still  go
                     through the flows that implement the currently defined policy based on ACLs.
                     If a connection is no longer allowed by policy, ct_mark.blocked will get set
                     and  packets  in the reply direction will no longer be allowed, either. This
                     flow also clears the register bits reg0[9] and reg0[10]. If ACL logging  and
                     logging  of related packets is enabled, then a companion priority-65533 flow
                     will be installed that  accomplishes  the  same  thing  but  also  logs  the
                     traffic.

              •      A  priority-65532 flow that allows any traffic that is considered related to
                     a committed flow in the connection tracker (e.g., an ICMP  Port  Unreachable
                     from  a non-listening UDP port), as long as the committed flow does not have
                     ct_mark.blocked set. If ACL  logging  and  logging  of  related  packets  is
                     enabled,  then  a  companion  priority-65533  flow  will  be  installed that
                     accomplishes the same thing but also logs the traffic.

              •      A priority-65532 flow that  drops  all  traffic  marked  by  the  connection
                     tracker as invalid.

              •      A  priority-65532  flow  that  drops all traffic in the reply direction with
                     ct_mark.blocked set meaning that the connection should no longer be  allowed
                     due to a policy change. Packets in the request direction are skipped here to
                     let a newly created ACL re-allow this connection.

              •      A priority-65532 flow  that  allows  IPv6  Neighbor  solicitation,  Neighbor
                     discover, Router solicitation, Router advertisement and MLD packets.

       If  the logical datapath has any ACL or a load balancer with VIP configured, the following
       flow will also be added:

              •      A priority 34000 logical flow is added for each logical switch datapath with
                     the  match eth.dst = E to allow the service monitor reply packet destined to
                     ovn-controller with the action next, where E  is  the  service  monitor  mac
                     defined in the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

     Ingress Table 9: from-lport QoS Marking

       Logical  flows  in  this  table  closely  reproduce those in the QoS table with the action
       column set in the OVN_Northbound database for the from-lport direction.

              •      For every qos_rules entry in a logical switch with DSCP marking  enabled,  a
                     flow will be added at the priority mentioned in the QoS table.

              •      One  priority-0  fallback  flow that matches all packets and advances to the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 10: from-lport QoS Meter

       Logical flows in this table closely reproduce those in the QoS table  with  the  bandwidth
       column set in the OVN_Northbound database for the from-lport direction.

              •      For  every qos_rules entry in a logical switch with metering enabled, a flow
                     will be added at the priority mentioned in the QoS table.

              •      One priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and  advances  to  the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 11: LB

              •      For  all  the configured load balancing rules for a switch in OVN_Northbound
                     database that includes a L4 port PORT of protocol P and IP  address  VIP,  a
                     priority-120 flow is added. For IPv4 VIPs , the flow matches ct.new && ip &&
                     ip4.dst == VIP && P && P.dst == PORT. For IPv6 VIPs, the flow matches ct.new
                     &&  ip  &&  ip6.dst  ==  VIP  &&  P  &&  P.dst == PORT. The flow’s action is
                     ct_lb_mark(args) , where args contains comma  separated  IP  addresses  (and
                     optional  port  numbers)  to  load  balance to. The address family of the IP
                     addresses of args is the same as the address family of VIP. If health  check
                     is  enabled,  then  args  will  only  contain  those endpoints whose service
                     monitor status entry in OVN_Southbound db is either  online  or  empty.  For
                     IPv4  traffic  the flow also loads the original destination IP and transport
                     port in registers reg1 and reg2. For IPv6 traffic the flow  also  loads  the
                     original destination IP and transport port in registers xxreg1 and reg2. The
                     above flow is created even if the load balancer is  attached  to  a  logical
                     router    connected    to    the    current    logical    switch   and   the
                     install_ls_lb_from_router variable in options is set to true.

              •      For all the configured load balancing rules for a switch  in  OVN_Northbound
                     database  that  includes  just  an  IP  address  VIP to match on, OVN adds a
                     priority-110 flow. For IPv4 VIPs, the flow matches ct.new && ip  &&  ip4.dst
                     ==  VIP. For IPv6 VIPs, the flow matches ct.new && ip && ip6.dst == VIP. The
                     action on this flow is ct_lb_mark(args), where args contains comma separated
                     IP  addresses  of  the same address family as VIP. For IPv4 traffic the flow
                     also loads the original destination IP and transport port in registers  reg1
                     and  reg2.  For IPv6 traffic the flow also loads the original destination IP
                     and transport port in registers xxreg1 and reg2. The above flow  is  created
                     even  if  the load balancer is attached to a logical router connected to the
                     current logical switch and the install_ls_lb_from_router variable in options
                     is set to true.

              •      If  the  load  balancer is created with --reject option and it has no active
                     backends, a TCP reset segment (for tcp) or an ICMP port  unreachable  packet
                     (for  all other kind of traffic) will be sent whenever an incoming packet is
                     received for this load-balancer. Please  note  using  --reject  option  will
                     disable empty_lb SB controller event for this load balancer.

     Ingress table 12: from-lport ACLs after LB

       Logical flows in this table closely reproduce those in the ACL table in the OVN_Northbound
       database for the from-lport direction with the option  apply-after-lb  set  to  true.  The
       priority  values  from  the  ACL table have a limited range and have 1000 added to them to
       leave room for OVN default flows at both higher and lower priorities.

              •      allow apply-after-lb ACLs  translate  into  logical  flows  with  the  next;
                     action.  If there are any stateful ACLs (including both before-lb and after-
                     lb ACLs) on this datapath, then allow ACLs  translate  to  ct_commit;  next;
                     (which  acts  as  a  hint  for  the  next tables to commit the connection to
                     conntrack). In case the ACL has a label then reg3 is loaded with  the  label
                     value and reg0[13] bit is set to 1 (which acts as a hint for the next tables
                     to commit the label to conntrack).

              •      allow-related apply-after-lb ACLs translate  into  logical  flows  with  the
                     ct_commit(ct_label=0/1);  next; actions for new connections and reg0[1] = 1;
                     next; for existing connections. In case the ACL has a  label  then  reg3  is
                     loaded  with  the  label value and reg0[13] bit is set to 1 (which acts as a
                     hint for the next tables to commit the label to conntrack).

              •      allow-stateless apply-after-lb ACLs translate into logical  flows  with  the
                     next; action.

              •      reject apply-after-lb ACLs translate into logical flows with the tcp_reset {
                     output  <->   inport;   next(pipeline=egress,table=5);}   action   for   TCP
                     connections,icmp4/icmp6  action  for UDP connections, and sctp_abort {output
                     <-%gt; inport; next(pipeline=egress,table=5);} action for SCTP associations.

              •      Other  apply-after-lb  ACLs  translate  to  drop;  for  new   or   untracked
                     connections  and  ct_commit(ct_label=1/1);  for  known  connections. Setting
                     ct_label marks a connection as one that was previously allowed,  but  should
                     no longer be allowed due to a policy change.

              •      One  priority-0  fallback  flow that matches all packets and advances to the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 13: Stateful

              •      A priority 100 flow is added which commits the packet to the  conntrack  and
                     sets  the  most significant 32-bits of ct_label with the reg3 value based on
                     the hint provided by previous tables (with a  match  for  reg0[1]  ==  1  &&
                     reg0[13]  ==  1).  This  is  used by the ACLs with label to commit the label
                     value to conntrack.

              •      For ACLs without label,  a  second  priority-100  flow  commits  packets  to
                     connection tracker using ct_commit; next; action based on a hint provided by
                     the previous tables (with a match for reg0[1] == 1 && reg0[13] == 0).

              •      A priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

     Ingress Table 14: Pre-Hairpin

              •      If the logical switch has load balancer(s) configured, then  a  priority-100
                     flow is added with the match ip && ct.trk to check if the packet needs to be
                     hairpinned (if after load balancing the destination IP  matches  the  source
                     IP) or not by executing the actions reg0[6] = chk_lb_hairpin(); and reg0[12]
                     = chk_lb_hairpin_reply(); and advances the packet to the next table.

              •      A priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

     Ingress Table 15: Nat-Hairpin

              •      If the logical switch has load balancer(s) configured, then  a  priority-100
                     flow  is  added  with the match ip && ct.new && ct.trk && reg0[6] == 1 which
                     hairpins the traffic by NATting source  IP  to  the  load  balancer  VIP  by
                     executing  the  action  ct_snat_to_vip  and  advances the packet to the next
                     table.

              •      If the logical switch has load balancer(s) configured, then  a  priority-100
                     flow  is  added  with the match ip && ct.est && ct.trk && reg0[6] == 1 which
                     hairpins the traffic by NATting source  IP  to  the  load  balancer  VIP  by
                     executing the action ct_snat and advances the packet to the next table.

              •      If  the  logical  switch has load balancer(s) configured, then a priority-90
                     flow is added with the match ip &&  reg0[12]  ==  1  which  matches  on  the
                     replies of hairpinned traffic (i.e., destination IP is VIP, source IP is the
                     backend IP and source L4 port is backend port for  L4  load  balancers)  and
                     executes ct_snat and advances the packet to the next table.

              •      A priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

     Ingress Table 16: Hairpin

              •      For  each distributed gateway router port RP attached to the logical switch,
                     a  priority-2000  flow  is  added  with  the  match   reg0[14]   ==   1   &&
                     is_chassis_resident(RP)
                      and  action  next;  to pass the traffic to the next table to respond to the
                     ARP requests for the router port IPs.

                     reg0[14] register bit is set in the ingress L2 port security check table for
                     traffic received from HW VTEP (ramp) ports.

              •      A  priority-1000  flow that matches on reg0[14] register bit for the traffic
                     received from HW VTEP (ramp) ports. This traffic is passed to ingress  table
                     ls_in_l2_lkup.

              •      A  priority-1 flow that hairpins traffic matched by non-default flows in the
                     Pre-Hairpin table. Hairpinning is done at L2, Ethernet addresses are swapped
                     and the packets are looped back on the input port.

              •      A priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

     Ingress Table 17: ARP/ND responder

       This table implements ARP/ND responder in a logical switch for known IPs. The advantage of
       the ARP responder flow is to limit ARP broadcasts by locally responding  to  ARP  requests
       without  the  need  to  send to other hypervisors. One common case is when the inport is a
       logical port associated with a VIF  and  the  broadcast  is  responded  to  on  the  local
       hypervisor  rather  than  broadcast  across  the  whole  network  and  responded to by the
       destination VM. This behavior is proxy ARP.

       ARP requests arrive from VMs from a logical switch inport of type default. For this  case,
       the  logical  switch proxy ARP rules can be for other VMs or logical router ports. Logical
       switch proxy ARP rules may be programmed both for mac binding of  IP  addresses  on  other
       logical  switch VIF ports (which are of the default logical switch port type, representing
       connectivity to VMs or containers), and for mac binding of IP addresses on logical  switch
       router type ports, representing their logical router port peers. In order to support proxy
       ARP for logical router ports, an IP address must  be  configured  on  the  logical  switch
       router  type port, with the same value as the peer logical router port. The configured MAC
       addresses must match as well. When a VM sends an ARP request  for  a  distributed  logical
       router  port and if the peer router type port of the attached logical switch does not have
       an IP address configured, the ARP request will be broadcast on the logical switch. One  of
       the  copies  of the ARP request will go through the logical switch router type port to the
       logical router datapath, where the logical router ARP responder will generate a reply. The
       MAC binding of a distributed logical router, once learned by an associated VM, is used for
       all that VM’s communication needing routing. Hence, the action of a VM re-arping  for  the
       mac binding of the logical router port should be rare.

       Logical  switch  ARP responder proxy ARP rules can also be hit when receiving ARP requests
       externally on a L2 gateway port. In this case, the hypervisor acting  as  an  L2  gateway,
       responds to the ARP request on behalf of a destination VM.

       Note  that  ARP  requests received from localnet logical inports can either go directly to
       VMs, in which case the VM responds or can hit an ARP responder for a logical  router  port
       if  the  packet is used to resolve a logical router port next hop address. In either case,
       logical switch ARP responder rules will not be hit. It contains these logical flows:

              •      Priority-100 flows to skip the ARP responder if inport is of  type  localnet
                     advances directly to the next table. ARP requests sent to localnet ports can
                     be received by multiple hypervisors. Now, because the same mac binding rules
                     are  downloaded  to  all  hypervisors, each of the multiple hypervisors will
                     respond. This will confuse L2 learning on the source of  the  ARP  requests.
                     ARP  requests  received  on an inport of type router are not expected to hit
                     any logical switch ARP responder flows. However, no skip flows are installed
                     for  these packets, as there would be some additional flow cost for this and
                     the value appears limited.

              •      If inport V is of type virtual adds a priority-100 logical flows for each  P
                     configured in the options:virtual-parents column with the match

                     inport == P && && ((arp.op == 1 && arp.spa == VIP && arp.tpa == VIP) || (arp.op == 2 && arp.spa == VIP))
                     inport == P && && ((nd_ns && ip6.dst == {VIP, NS_MULTICAST_ADDR} && nd.target == VIP) || (nd_na && nd.target == VIP))

                     and applies the action

                     bind_vport(V, inport);

                     and advances the packet to the next table.

                     Where  VIP is the virtual ip configured in the column options:virtual-ip and
                     NS_MULTICAST_ADDR is solicited-node multicast address corresponding  to  the
                     VIP.

              •      Priority-50  flows  that  match  ARP  requests to each known IP address A of
                     every logical switch port,  and  respond  with  ARP  replies  directly  with
                     corresponding Ethernet address E:

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     arp.op = 2; /* ARP reply. */
                     arp.tha = arp.sha;
                     arp.sha = E;
                     arp.tpa = arp.spa;
                     arp.spa = A;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     These  flows  are  omitted  for  logical  ports  (other than router ports or
                     localport ports) that are down (unless ignore_lsp_down is configured as true
                     in  options  column  of  NB_Global  table  of  the Northbound database), for
                     logical ports of type virtual, for logical ports with ’unknown’ address  set
                     and    for   logical   ports   of   a   logical   switch   configured   with
                     other_config:vlan-passthru=true.

                     The above ARP responder flows are added for the list of  IPv4  addresses  if
                     defined in options:arp_proxy column of Logical_Switch_Port table for logical
                     switch ports of type router.

              •      Priority-50 flows that match IPv6 ND neighbor solicitations to each known IP
                     address  A  (and  A’s  solicited  node address) of every logical switch port
                     except of type router, and respond  with  neighbor  advertisements  directly
                     with corresponding Ethernet address E:

                     nd_na {
                         eth.src = E;
                         ip6.src = A;
                         nd.target = A;
                         nd.tll = E;
                         outport = inport;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     };

                     Priority-50 flows that match IPv6 ND neighbor solicitations to each known IP
                     address A (and A’s solicited node address) of logical switch  port  of  type
                     router, and respond with neighbor advertisements directly with corresponding
                     Ethernet address E:

                     nd_na_router {
                         eth.src = E;
                         ip6.src = A;
                         nd.target = A;
                         nd.tll = E;
                         outport = inport;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     };

                     These flows are omitted for  logical  ports  (other  than  router  ports  or
                     localport ports) that are down (unless ignore_lsp_down is configured as true
                     in options column of  NB_Global  table  of  the  Northbound  database),  for
                     logical  ports  of type virtual and for logical ports with ’unknown’ address
                     set.

              •      Priority-100 flows with match criteria like the  ARP  and  ND  flows  above,
                     except  that  they  only  match  packets  from  the  inport that owns the IP
                     addresses in question, with action  next;.  These  flows  prevent  OVN  from
                     replying  to,  for  example,  an  ARP request emitted by a VM for its own IP
                     address. A VM only makes this  kind  of  request  to  attempt  to  detect  a
                     duplicate IP address assignment, so sending a reply will prevent the VM from
                     accepting the IP address that it owns.

                     In place of next;, it would be  reasonable  to  use  drop;  for  the  flows’
                     actions.  If  everything  is  working  as  it is configured, then this would
                     produce equivalent results, since no host should reply to the  request.  But
                     ARPing  for  one’s own IP address is intended to detect situations where the
                     network is  not  working  as  configured,  so  dropping  the  request  would
                     frustrate that intent.

              •      For     each    SVC_MON_SRC_IP    defined    in    the    value    of    the
                     ip_port_mappings:ENDPOINT_IP column  of  Load_Balancer  table,  priority-110
                     logical  flow is added with the match arp.tpa == SVC_MON_SRC_IP && && arp.op
                     == 1 and applies the action

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     arp.op = 2; /* ARP reply. */
                     arp.tha = arp.sha;
                     arp.sha = E;
                     arp.tpa = arp.spa;
                     arp.spa = A;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     where   E   is   the   service   monitor   source   mac   defined   in   the
                     options:svc_monitor_mac  column  in the NB_Global table. This mac is used as
                     the source mac in the service monitor packets for the load balancer endpoint
                     IP health checks.

                     SVC_MON_SRC_IP  is used as the source ip in the service monitor IPv4 packets
                     for the load balancer endpoint IP health checks.

                     These  flows  are  required  if  an  ARP  request  is  sent   for   the   IP
                     SVC_MON_SRC_IP.

              •      For  each VIP configured in the table Forwarding_Group a priority-50 logical
                     flow is added with the match arp.tpa == vip && && arp.op == 1
                      and applies the action

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     arp.op = 2; /* ARP reply. */
                     arp.tha = arp.sha;
                     arp.sha = E;
                     arp.tpa = arp.spa;
                     arp.spa = A;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     where E is the forwarding group’s mac defined in the vmac.

                     A is used as either the destination ip for load balancing traffic  to  child
                     ports or as nexthop to hosts behind the child ports.

                     These  flows  are required to respond to an ARP request if an ARP request is
                     sent for the IP vip.

              •      One priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and  advances  to  the
                     next table.

     Ingress Table 18: DHCP option processing

       This  table  adds  the DHCPv4 options to a DHCPv4 packet from the logical ports configured
       with IPv4 address(es) and DHCPv4 options, and similarly for  DHCPv6  options.  This  table
       also adds flows for the logical ports of type external.

              •      A  priority-100  logical flow is added for these logical ports which matches
                     the IPv4 packet with udp.src = 68 and udp.dst = 67 and  applies  the  action
                     put_dhcp_opts and advances the packet to the next table.

                     reg0[3] = put_dhcp_opts(offer_ip = ip, options...);
                     next;

                     For  DHCPDISCOVER  and  DHCPREQUEST,  this transforms the packet into a DHCP
                     reply, adds the DHCP offer IP ip and options to the  packet,  and  stores  1
                     into  reg0[3].  For  other  kinds of packets, it just stores 0 into reg0[3].
                     Either way, it continues to the next table.

              •      A priority-100 logical flow is added for these logical ports  which  matches
                     the  IPv6 packet with udp.src = 546 and udp.dst = 547 and applies the action
                     put_dhcpv6_opts and advances the packet to the next table.

                     reg0[3] = put_dhcpv6_opts(ia_addr = ip, options...);
                     next;

                     For DHCPv6 Solicit/Request/Confirm packets, this transforms the packet  into
                     a  DHCPv6  Advertise/Reply,  adds  the DHCPv6 offer IP ip and options to the
                     packet, and stores 1 into reg0[3]. For  other  kinds  of  packets,  it  just
                     stores 0 into reg0[3]. Either way, it continues to the next table.

              •      A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advances to table 16.

     Ingress Table 19: DHCP responses

       This table implements DHCP responder for the DHCP replies generated by the previous table.

              •      A  priority  100 logical flow is added for the logical ports configured with
                     DHCPv4 options which matches IPv4 packets with udp.src == 68 &&  udp.dst  ==
                     67  &&  reg0[3]  ==  1  and responds back to the inport after applying these
                     actions. If reg0[3] is set to 1, it means that the action put_dhcp_opts  was
                     successful.

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     ip4.src = S;
                     udp.src = 67;
                     udp.dst = 68;
                     outport = P;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     where  E  is the server MAC address and S is the server IPv4 address defined
                     in the DHCPv4 options. Note that ip4.dst field is handled by put_dhcp_opts.

                     (This terminates ingress packet processing; the packet does not  go  to  the
                     next ingress table.)

              •      A  priority  100 logical flow is added for the logical ports configured with
                     DHCPv6 options which matches IPv6 packets with udp.src == 546 && udp.dst  ==
                     547  &&  reg0[3]  ==  1 and responds back to the inport after applying these
                     actions. If reg0[3] is set to 1, it means that  the  action  put_dhcpv6_opts
                     was successful.

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     ip6.dst = A;
                     ip6.src = S;
                     udp.src = 547;
                     udp.dst = 546;
                     outport = P;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     where  E  is  the  server  MAC  address and S is the server IPv6 LLA address
                     generated from the server_id defined in the DHCPv6 options and A is the IPv6
                     address defined in the logical port’s addresses column.

                     (This  terminates  packet  processing;  the  packet  does not go on the next
                     ingress table.)

              •      A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advances to table 17.

     Ingress Table 20 DNS Lookup

       This table looks up and  resolves  the  DNS  names  to  the  corresponding  configured  IP
       address(es).

              •      A  priority-100  logical  flow  for  each  logical  switch datapath if it is
                     configured with DNS records, which matches the IPv4 and  IPv6  packets  with
                     udp.dst  =  53  and applies the action dns_lookup and advances the packet to
                     the next table.

                     reg0[4] = dns_lookup(); next;

                     For valid DNS packets, this transforms the packet into a DNS  reply  if  the
                     DNS  name  can  be  resolved,  and  stores  1  into  reg0[4]. For failed DNS
                     resolution or other kinds of packets, it just stores 0 into reg0[4].  Either
                     way, it continues to the next table.

     Ingress Table 21 DNS Responses

       This table implements DNS responder for the DNS replies generated by the previous table.

              •      A  priority-100  logical  flow  for  each  logical  switch datapath if it is
                     configured with DNS records, which matches the IPv4 and  IPv6  packets  with
                     udp.dst  = 53 && reg0[4] == 1 and responds back to the inport after applying
                     these actions. If reg0[4] is set to 1, it means that the  action  dns_lookup
                     was successful.

                     eth.dst <-> eth.src;
                     ip4.src <-> ip4.dst;
                     udp.dst = udp.src;
                     udp.src = 53;
                     outport = P;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     (This  terminates  ingress  packet processing; the packet does not go to the
                     next ingress table.)

     Ingress table 22 External ports

       Traffic from the external logical ports  enter  the  ingress  datapath  pipeline  via  the
       localnet  port.  This  table adds the below logical flows to handle the traffic from these
       ports.

              •      A priority-100 flow is added for each external logical  port  which  doesn’t
                     reside  on a chassis to drop the ARP/IPv6 NS request to the router IP(s) (of
                     the logical switch) which matches on the inport of the external logical port
                     and the valid eth.src address(es) of the external logical port.

                     This  flow  guarantees that the ARP/NS request to the router IP address from
                     the external ports is responded by only the chassis which has claimed  these
                     external ports. All the other chassis, drops these packets.

                     A  priority-100  flow  is added for each external logical port which doesn’t
                     reside on a chassis to drop any packet destined to the router mac - with the
                     match   inport   ==   external   &&   eth.src  ==  E  &&  eth.dst  ==  R  &&
                     !is_chassis_resident("external") where E is the external port mac and  R  is
                     the router port mac.

              •      A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advances to table 20.

     Ingress Table 23 Destination Lookup

       This table implements switching behavior. It contains these logical flows:

              •      A  priority-110  flow  with  the  match  eth.src == E for all logical switch
                     datapaths and applies the action handle_svc_check(inport). Where  E  is  the
                     service   monitor  mac  defined  in  the  options:svc_monitor_mac  colum  of
                     NB_Global table.

              •      A priority-100 flow that punts all IGMP/MLD  packets  to  ovn-controller  if
                     multicast snooping is enabled on the logical switch.

              •      Priority-90  flows  that  forward  registered  IP multicast traffic to their
                     corresponding multicast group, which  ovn-northd  creates  based  on  learnt
                     IGMP_Group  entries.  The flows also forward packets to the MC_MROUTER_FLOOD
                     multicast group, which ovn-nortdh populates with all the logical ports  that
                     are connected to logical routers with options:mcast_relay=’true’.

              •      A  priority-85  flow  that  forwards  all  IP  multicast traffic destined to
                     224.0.0.X to the MC_FLOOD_L2 multicast  group,  which  ovn-northd  populates
                     with all non-router logical ports.

              •      A  priority-85  flow  that  forwards  all  IP  multicast traffic destined to
                     reserved multicast IPv6 addresses (RFC  4291,  2.7.1,  e.g.,  Solicited-Node
                     multicast)  to the MC_FLOOD multicast group, which ovn-northd populates with
                     all enabled logical ports.

              •      A priority-80 flow that forwards all unregistered IP  multicast  traffic  to
                     the  MC_STATIC  multicast  group,  which  ovn-northd  populates with all the
                     logical ports that have options :mcast_flood=’true’. The flow also  forwards
                     unregistered  IP  multicast traffic to the MC_MROUTER_FLOOD multicast group,
                     which ovn-northd populates with all the logical ports connected  to  logical
                     routers that have options :mcast_relay=’true’.

              •      A  priority-80  flow  that  drops  all  unregistered IP multicast traffic if
                     other_config          :mcast_snoop=’true’          and          other_config
                     :mcast_flood_unregistered=’false’  and  the  switch  is  not  connected to a
                     logical router that has options :mcast_relay=’true’ and the  switch  doesn’t
                     have any logical port with options :mcast_flood=’true’.

              •      Priority-80 flows for each IP address/VIP/NAT address owned by a router port
                     connected to the switch. These flows match ARP requests and ND  packets  for
                     the  specific IP addresses. Matched packets are forwarded only to the router
                     that owns the IP address  and  to  the  MC_FLOOD_L2  multicast  group  which
                     contains all non-router logical ports.

              •      Priority-75  flows for each port connected to a logical router matching self
                     originated  ARP  request/ND  packets.  These  packets  are  flooded  to  the
                     MC_FLOOD_L2 which contains all non-router logical ports.

              •      A  priority-70  flow  that outputs all packets with an Ethernet broadcast or
                     multicast eth.dst to the MC_FLOOD multicast group.

              •      One priority-50 flow  that  matches  each  known  Ethernet  address  against
                     eth.dst.  Action  of  this  flow outputs the packet to the single associated
                     output port if it is enabled. drop; action is applied if LSP is disabled.

                     For the Ethernet address on a logical switch port of type router, when  that
                     logical  switch  port’s  addresses column is set to router and the connected
                     logical router port has a gateway chassis:

                     •      The flow for the connected logical router port’s Ethernet address  is
                            only programmed on the gateway chassis.

                     •      If  the  logical router has rules specified in nat with external_mac,
                            then  those  addresses  are  also  used  to  populate  the   switch’s
                            destination lookup on the chassis where logical_port is resident.

                     For  the Ethernet address on a logical switch port of type router, when that
                     logical switch port’s addresses column is set to router  and  the  connected
                     logical  router  port specifies a reside-on-redirect-chassis and the logical
                     router to  which  the  connected  logical  router  port  belongs  to  has  a
                     distributed gateway LRP:

                     •      The  flow for the connected logical router port’s Ethernet address is
                            only programmed on the gateway chassis.

                     For each forwarding group configured  on  the  logical  switch  datapath,  a
                     priority-50 flow that matches on eth.dst == VIP
                      with  an  action  of fwd_group(childports=args ), where args contains comma
                     separated logical switch child ports to load  balance  to.  If  liveness  is
                     enabled, then action also includes  liveness=true.

              •      One  priority-0  fallback  flow  that  matches  all  packets with the action
                     outport = get_fdb(eth.dst); next;. The action get_fdb gets the port for  the
                     eth.dst  in  the MAC learning table of the logical switch datapath. If there
                     is no entry for eth.dst in the MAC learning table, then it  stores  none  in
                     the outport.

     Ingress Table 24 Destination unknown

       This table handles the packets whose destination was not found or and looked up in the MAC
       learning table of the logical switch datapath. It contains the following flows.

              •      Priority 50 flow with the match outport == P  is  added  for  each  disabled
                     Logical Switch Port P. This flow has action drop;.

              •      If  the  logical switch has logical ports with ’unknown’ addresses set, then
                     the below logical flow is added

                     •      Priority 50 flow with the match outport == "none" then  outputs  them
                            to  the  MC_UNKNOWN  multicast group, which ovn-northd populates with
                            all enabled logical ports that accept unknown destination packets. As
                            a  small optimization, if no logical ports accept unknown destination
                            packets, ovn-northd omits this multicast group and logical flow.

                     If the logical switch has no logical ports with ’unknown’ address set,  then
                     the below logical flow is added

                     •      Priority  50  flow  with  the  match  outport  ==  none and drops the
                            packets.

              •      One priority-0 fallback flow that outputs the packet  to  the  egress  stage
                     with the outport learnt from get_fdb action.

     Egress Table 0: Pre-LB

       This  table  is similar to ingress table Pre-LB. It contains a priority-0 flow that simply
       moves traffic to the next table. Moreover it  contains  two  priority-110  flows  to  move
       multicast,  IPv6  Neighbor  Discovery  and  MLD  traffic  to  the  next table. If any load
       balancing rules exist for the datapath, a priority-100 flow is added with a  match  of  ip
       and  action  of  reg0[2]  =  1;  next;  to act as a hint for table Pre-stateful to send IP
       packets to the connection tracker  for  packet  de-fragmentation  and  possibly  DNAT  the
       destination VIP to one of the selected backend for already commited load balanced traffic.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match eth.src == E for all logical switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where E is the service monitor mac defined in
       the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

     Egress Table 1: to-lport Pre-ACLs

       This is similar to ingress table Pre-ACLs except for to-lport traffic.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match eth.src == E for all logical switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where E is the service monitor mac defined in
       the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

       This table also has a priority-110 flow with the match outport == I for all logical switch
       datapaths to move traffic to the next table. Where I is the peer of a logical router port.
       This  flow  is  added  to  skip  the connection tracking of packets which will be entering
       logical router datapath from logical switch datapath for routing.

     Egress Table 2: Pre-stateful

       This is similar to ingress table Pre-stateful. This table adds the below 3 logical flows.

              •      A Priority-120 flow that  send  the  packets  to  connection  tracker  using
                     ct_lb_mark;  as  the  action  so  that  the already established traffic gets
                     unDNATted from the backend IP to the load  balancer  VIP  based  on  a  hint
                     provided by the previous tables with a match for reg0[2] == 1. If the packet
                     was not DNATted earlier, then ct_lb_mark functions like ct_next.

              •      A priority-100 flow sends the packets to connection tracker based on a  hint
                     provided by the previous tables (with a match for reg0[0] == 1) by using the
                     ct_next; action.

              •      A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advance to the next table.

     Egress Table 3: from-lport ACL hints

       This is similar to ingress table ACL hints.

     Egress Table 4: to-lport ACLs

       This is similar to ingress table ACLs except for to-lport ACLs.

       In addition, the following flows are added.

              •      A priority 34000 logical flow is added  for  each  logical  port  which  has
                     DHCPv4 options defined to allow the DHCPv4 reply packet and which has DHCPv6
                     options defined to allow the DHCPv6 reply packet from the Ingress Table  18:
                     DHCP responses.

              •      A  priority  34000  logical  flow  is added for each logical switch datapath
                     configured with DNS records with the match udp.dst = 53  to  allow  the  DNS
                     reply packet from the Ingress Table 20: DNS responses.

              •      A priority 34000 logical flow is added for each logical switch datapath with
                     the match eth.src = E to allow the service monitor request packet  generated
                     by  ovn-controller  with the action next, where E is the service monitor mac
                     defined in the options:svc_monitor_mac colum of NB_Global table.

     Egress Table 5: to-lport QoS Marking

       This is similar to ingress table QoS marking except they apply to to-lport QoS rules.

     Egress Table 6: to-lport QoS Meter

       This is similar to ingress table QoS meter except they apply to to-lport QoS rules.

     Egress Table 7: Stateful

       This is similar to ingress table Stateful except that there are no rules  added  for  load
       balancing new connections.

     Egress Table 8: Egress Port Security - check

       This  is  similar  to  the port security logic in table Ingress Port Security check except
       that action check_out_port_sec is used to check the port security rules. This  table  adds
       the below logical flows.

              •      A  priority  100 flow which matches on the multicast traffic and applies the
                     action REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP" = 0; next;"  to  skip  the  out  port  security
                     checks.

              •      A  priority  0  logical  flow  is added which matches on all the packets and
                     applies the action REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP" = check_out_port_sec(); next;". The
                     action  check_out_port_sec  applies  the  port  security  rules based on the
                     addresses defined in the port_security column of  Logical_Switch_Port  table
                     before delivering the packet to the outport.

     Egress Table 9: Egress Port Security - Apply

       This  is  similar  to  the  ingress  port  security  logic in ingress table A Ingress Port
       Security - Apply. This table drops the packets if the port security check  failed  in  the
       previous stage i.e the register bit REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP is set to 1.

       The following flows are added.

              •      For    each    localnet   port   configured   with   egress   qos   in   the
                     options:qdisc_queue_id column of Logical_Switch_Port, a priority 100 flow is
                     added  which  matches  on  the  localnet  outport  and  applies  the  action
                     set_queue(id); output;".

                     Please  remember  to  mark  the  corresponding   physical   interface   with
                     ovn-egress-iface set to true in external_ids.

              •      A   priority-50   flow   that   drops   the   packet  if  the  register  bit
                     REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP is set to 1.

              •      A priority-0 flow that outputs the packet to the outport.

   Logical Router Datapaths
       Logical router datapaths will only exist for Logical_Router  rows  in  the  OVN_Northbound
       database that do not have enabled set to false

     Ingress Table 0: L2 Admission Control

       This  table  drops  packets  that  the router shouldn’t see at all based on their Ethernet
       headers. It contains the following flows:

              •      Priority-100 flows to drop packets with  VLAN  tags  or  multicast  Ethernet
                     source addresses.

              •      For  each  enabled router port P with Ethernet address E, a priority-50 flow
                     that matches inport == P && (eth.mcast || eth.dst == E), stores  the  router
                     port   ethernet   address   and   advances   to   next  table,  with  action
                     xreg0[0..47]=E; next;.

                     For the gateway port on a distributed  logical  router  (where  one  of  the
                     logical  router  ports specifies a gateway chassis), the above flow matching
                     eth.dst == E is only programmed on the gateway port instance on the  gateway
                     chassis.  If  LRP’s  logical  switch  has  attached  LSP  of  vtep type, the
                     is_chassis_resident() part is not added to lflow to allow traffic originated
                     from logical switch to reach LR services (LBs, NAT).

                     For  a  distributed  logical  router or for gateway router where the port is
                     configured with options:gateway_mtu the action of the above flow is modified
                     adding    check_pkt_larger   in   order   to   mark   the   packet   setting
                     REGBIT_PKT_LARGER if the size is greater than the MTU. If the port  is  also
                     configured  with options:gateway_mtu_bypass then another flow is added, with
                     priority-55, to bypass the check_pkt_larger flow. This is useful for traffic
                     that  normally doesn’t need to be fragmented and for which check_pkt_larger,
                     which might not be offloadable, is not really needed. One  such  example  is
                     TCP traffic.

              •      For  each  dnat_and_snat  NAT rule on a distributed router that specifies an
                     external Ethernet address E, a priority-50 flow that matches inport == GW &&
                     eth.dst  ==  E,  where  GW  is  the  logical router distributed gateway port
                     corresponding  to  the  NAT  rule  (specified  or  inferred),  with   action
                     xreg0[0..47]=E; next;.

                     This  flow  is  only  programmed on the gateway port instance on the chassis
                     where the logical_port specified in the NAT rule resides.

       Other packets are implicitly dropped.

     Ingress Table 1: Neighbor lookup

       For ARP and IPv6 Neighbor Discovery packets, this table looks into the MAC_Binding records
       to determine if OVN needs to learn the mac bindings. Following flows are added:

              •      For  each  router  port  P that owns IP address A, which belongs to subnet S
                     with prefix length L, if the option  always_learn_from_arp_request  is  true
                     for  this  router, a priority-100 flow is added which matches inport == P &&
                     arp.spa == S/L && arp.op == 1 (ARP request) with the following actions:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_arp(inport, arp.spa, arp.sha);
                     next;

                     If the option always_learn_from_arp_request  is  false,  the  following  two
                     flows are added.

                     A  priority-110 flow is added which matches inport == P && arp.spa == S/L &&
                     arp.tpa == A && arp.op == 1 (ARP request) with the following actions:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_arp(inport, arp.spa, arp.sha);
                     reg9[3] = 1;
                     next;

                     A priority-100 flow is added which matches inport == P && arp.spa == S/L  &&
                     arp.op == 1 (ARP request) with the following actions:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_arp(inport, arp.spa, arp.sha);
                     reg9[3] = lookup_arp_ip(inport, arp.spa);
                     next;

                     If  the  logical  router  port  P  is  a  distributed  gateway  router port,
                     additional match is_chassis_resident(cr-P) is added for all these flows.

              •      A priority-100 flow which matches on  ARP  reply  packets  and  applies  the
                     actions if the option always_learn_from_arp_request is true:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_arp(inport, arp.spa, arp.sha);
                     next;

                     If the option always_learn_from_arp_request is false, the above actions will
                     be:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_arp(inport, arp.spa, arp.sha);
                     reg9[3] = 1;
                     next;

              •      A priority-100 flow which matches on IPv6 Neighbor  Discovery  advertisement
                     packet  and  applies the actions if the option always_learn_from_arp_request
                     is true:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_nd(inport, nd.target, nd.tll);
                     next;

                     If the option always_learn_from_arp_request is false, the above actions will
                     be:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_nd(inport, nd.target, nd.tll);
                     reg9[3] = 1;
                     next;

              •      A  priority-100  flow  which matches on IPv6 Neighbor Discovery solicitation
                     packet and applies the actions if the  option  always_learn_from_arp_request
                     is true:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_nd(inport, ip6.src, nd.sll);
                     next;

                     If the option always_learn_from_arp_request is false, the above actions will
                     be:

                     reg9[2] = lookup_nd(inport, ip6.src, nd.sll);
                     reg9[3] = lookup_nd_ip(inport, ip6.src);
                     next;

              •      A priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and applies  the  action
                     reg9[2] = 1; next; advancing the packet to the next table.

     Ingress Table 2: Neighbor learning

       This  table  adds  flows  to  learn  the  mac  bindings  from  the  ARP  and IPv6 Neighbor
       Solicitation/Advertisement packets if it is needed according to the  lookup  results  from
       the previous stage.

       reg9[2]  will  be  1  if  the lookup_arp/lookup_nd in the previous table was successful or
       skipped, meaning no need to learn mac binding from the packet.

       reg9[3] will be 1 if the lookup_arp_ip/lookup_nd_ip in the previous table  was  successful
       or skipped, meaning it is ok to learn mac binding from the packet (if reg9[2] is 0).

              •      A priority-100 flow with the match reg9[2] == 1 || reg9[3] == 0 and advances
                     the packet to the next table as there is no need to learn the neighbor.

              •      A priority-95 flow with the match nd_ns && (ip6.src == 0 || nd.sll == 0) and
                     applies the action next;

              •      A priority-90 flow with the match arp and applies the action put_arp(inport,
                     arp.spa, arp.sha); next;

              •      A priority-95 flow with the match nd_na  && nd.tll  ==  0  and  applies  the
                     action put_nd(inport, nd.target, eth.src); next;

              •      A   priority-90   flow   with   the  match  nd_na  and  applies  the  action
                     put_nd(inport, nd.target, nd.tll); next;

              •      A  priority-90  flow  with  the  match  nd_ns   and   applies   the   action
                     put_nd(inport, ip6.src, nd.sll); next;

     Ingress Table 3: IP Input

       This  table  is  the  core  of  the logical router datapath functionality. It contains the
       following flows to implement very basic IP host functionality.

              •      For each dnat_and_snat NAT rule on a distributed logical routers or  gateway
                     routers  with  gateway  port  configured with options:gateway_mtu to a valid
                     integer value M, a priority-160  flow  with  the  match  inport  ==  LRP  &&
                     REGBIT_PKT_LARGER  &&  REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK == 0, where LRP is the logical
                     router port and applies the following action for ipv4 and ipv6 respectively:

                     icmp4_error {
                         icmp4.type = 3; /* Destination Unreachable. */
                         icmp4.code = 4;  /* Frag Needed and DF was Set. */
                         icmp4.frag_mtu = M;
                         eth.dst = eth.src;
                         eth.src = E;
                         ip4.dst = ip4.src;
                         ip4.src = I;
                         ip.ttl = 255;
                         REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
                         REGBIT_PKT_LARGER 0;
                         outport = LRP;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     };
                     icmp6_error {
                         icmp6.type = 2;
                         icmp6.code = 0;
                         icmp6.frag_mtu = M;
                         eth.dst = eth.src;
                         eth.src = E;
                         ip6.dst = ip6.src;
                         ip6.src = I;
                         ip.ttl = 255;
                         REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
                         REGBIT_PKT_LARGER 0;
                         outport = LRP;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     };

                     where E and I are the NAT rule external mac and IP respectively.

              •      For distributed  logical  routers  or  gateway  routers  with  gateway  port
                     configured with options:gateway_mtu to a valid integer value, a priority-150
                     flow   with   the   match   inport   ==   LRP   &&   REGBIT_PKT_LARGER    &&
                     REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK  ==  0,  where  LRP  is  the  logical router port and
                     applies the following action for ipv4 and ipv6 respectively:

                     icmp4_error {
                         icmp4.type = 3; /* Destination Unreachable. */
                         icmp4.code = 4;  /* Frag Needed and DF was Set. */
                         icmp4.frag_mtu = M;
                         eth.dst = E;
                         ip4.dst = ip4.src;
                         ip4.src = I;
                         ip.ttl = 255;
                         REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
                         REGBIT_PKT_LARGER 0;
                         next(pipeline=ingress, table=0);
                     };
                     icmp6_error {
                         icmp6.type = 2;
                         icmp6.code = 0;
                         icmp6.frag_mtu = M;
                         eth.dst = E;
                         ip6.dst = ip6.src;
                         ip6.src = I;
                         ip.ttl = 255;
                         REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
                         REGBIT_PKT_LARGER 0;
                         next(pipeline=ingress, table=0);
                     };

              •      For each NAT entry of a distributed logical router (with distributed gateway
                     router port(s)) of type snat, a priority-120 flow with the match inport == P
                     && ip4.src == A advances the packet to the next pipeline,  where  P  is  the
                     distributed logical router port corresponding to the NAT entry (specified or
                     inferred) and A is the external_ip set in the NAT entry. If  A  is  an  IPv6
                     address, then ip6.src is used for the match.

                     The  above  flow  is  required  to  handle  the routing of the East/west NAT
                     traffic.

              •      For each BFD port the two following priority-110 flows are added  to  manage
                     BFD traffic:

                     •      if  ip4.src or ip6.src is any IP address owned by the router port and
                            udp.dst == 3784 , the packet is advanced to the next pipeline stage.

                     •      if ip4.dst or ip6.dst is any IP address owned by the router port  and
                            udp.dst == 3784 , the handle_bfd_msg action is executed.

              •      L3  admission control: Priority-120 flows allows IGMP and MLD packets if the
                     router has logical ports that have options :mcast_flood=’true’.

              •      L3 admission control: A priority-100 flow drops packets that  match  any  of
                     the following:

                     •      ip4.src[28..31] == 0xe (multicast source)

                     •      ip4.src == 255.255.255.255 (broadcast source)

                     •      ip4.src == 127.0.0.0/8 || ip4.dst == 127.0.0.0/8 (localhost source or
                            destination)

                     •      ip4.src == 0.0.0.0/8 || ip4.dst == 0.0.0.0/8 (zero network source  or
                            destination)

                     •      ip4.src  or ip6.src is any IP address owned by the router, unless the
                            packet was recirculated  due  to  egress  loopback  as  indicated  by
                            REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK.

                     •      ip4.src  is  the  broadcast  address  of  any IP network known to the
                            router.

              •      A priority-100 flow  parses  DHCPv6  replies  from  IPv6  prefix  delegation
                     routers  (udp.src == 547 && udp.dst == 546). The handle_dhcpv6_reply is used
                     to send IPv6 prefix delegation messages to the delegation router.

              •      ICMP echo reply. These flows reply to ICMP echo requests  received  for  the
                     router’s  IP  address.  Let A be an IP address owned by a router port. Then,
                     for each A that is an IPv4 address, a priority-90 flow matches on ip4.dst ==
                     A  and  icmp4.type  ==  8 && icmp4.code == 0 (ICMP echo request). For each A
                     that is an IPv6 address, a priority-90 flow matches  on  ip6.dst  ==  A  and
                     icmp6.type  == 128 && icmp6.code == 0 (ICMPv6 echo request). The port of the
                     router that receives the echo request does not matter. Also, the  ip.ttl  of
                     the  echo  request  packet  is  not  checked,  so it complies with RFC 1812,
                     section 4.2.2.9. Flows for ICMPv4 echo requests use the following actions:

                     ip4.dst <-> ip4.src;
                     ip.ttl = 255;
                     icmp4.type = 0;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     next;

                     Flows for ICMPv6 echo requests use the following actions:

                     ip6.dst <-> ip6.src;
                     ip.ttl = 255;
                     icmp6.type = 129;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     next;

              •      Reply to ARP requests.

                     These flows reply to ARP requests for the router’s own IP address.  The  ARP
                     requests  are handled only if the requestor’s IP belongs to the same subnets
                     of the logical router port. For each router port P that owns IP  address  A,
                     which  belongs  to  subnet S with prefix length L, and Ethernet address E, a
                     priority-90 flow matches inport == P && arp.spa == S/L &&  arp.op  ==  1  &&
                     arp.tpa == A (ARP request) with the following actions:

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = xreg0[0..47];
                     arp.op = 2; /* ARP reply. */
                     arp.tha = arp.sha;
                     arp.sha = xreg0[0..47];
                     arp.tpa = arp.spa;
                     arp.spa = A;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     For  the  gateway  port  on  a  distributed logical router (where one of the
                     logical router ports specifies a gateway chassis), the above flows are  only
                     programmed  on  the  gateway  port  instance  on  the  gateway chassis. This
                     behavior avoids generation of multiple ARP responses from different chassis,
                     and allows upstream MAC learning to point to the gateway chassis.

                     For  the  logical router port with the option reside-on-redirect-chassis set
                     (which is centralized), the above flows are only programmed on  the  gateway
                     port  instance  on  the  gateway  chassis  (if  the  logical  router  has  a
                     distributed gateway port). This behavior avoids generation of  multiple  ARP
                     responses  from different chassis, and allows upstream MAC learning to point
                     to the gateway chassis.

              •      Reply  to  IPv6  Neighbor  Solicitations.  These  flows  reply  to  Neighbor
                     Solicitation  requests  for  the  router’s own IPv6 address and populate the
                     logical router’s mac binding table.

                     For each router port P that owns IPv6 address A, solicited node  address  S,
                     and  Ethernet  address E, a priority-90 flow matches inport == P && nd_ns &&
                     ip6.dst == {A, E} && nd.target == A with the following actions:

                     nd_na_router {
                         eth.src = xreg0[0..47];
                         ip6.src = A;
                         nd.target = A;
                         nd.tll = xreg0[0..47];
                         outport = inport;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     };

                     For the gateway port on a distributed  logical  router  (where  one  of  the
                     logical  router ports specifies a gateway chassis), the above flows replying
                     to IPv6 Neighbor Solicitations are  only  programmed  on  the  gateway  port
                     instance on the gateway chassis. This behavior avoids generation of multiple
                     replies from different chassis, and allows upstream MAC learning to point to
                     the gateway chassis.

              •      These  flows  reply  to  ARP  requests or IPv6 neighbor solicitation for the
                     virtual IP addresses configured in the router for NAT (both DNAT  and  SNAT)
                     or load balancing.

                     IPv4:  For  a  configured  NAT  (both  DNAT  and  SNAT) IP address or a load
                     balancer IPv4 VIP A, for each router port  P  with  Ethernet  address  E,  a
                     priority-90  flow matches arp.op == 1 && arp.tpa == A (ARP request) with the
                     following actions:

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = xreg0[0..47];
                     arp.op = 2; /* ARP reply. */
                     arp.tha = arp.sha;
                     arp.sha = xreg0[0..47];
                     arp.tpa <-> arp.spa;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     IPv4: For a configured load balancer IPv4 VIP, a similar flow is added  with
                     the  additional  match  inport == P if the VIP is reachable from any logical
                     router port of the logical router.

                     If the router port  P  is  a  distributed  gateway  router  port,  then  the
                     is_chassis_resident(P)  is  also  added  in the match condition for the load
                     balancer IPv4 VIP A.

                     IPv6: For a configured NAT (both  DNAT  and  SNAT)  IP  address  or  a  load
                     balancer IPv6 VIP A (if the VIP is reachable from any logical router port of
                     the logical router), solicited node address S, for each router port  P  with
                     Ethernet  address  E,  a  priority-90  flow  matches inport == P && nd_ns &&
                     ip6.dst == {A, S} && nd.target == A with the following actions:

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     nd_na {
                         eth.src = xreg0[0..47];
                         nd.tll = xreg0[0..47];
                         ip6.src = A;
                         nd.target = A;
                         outport = inport;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         output;
                     }

                     If the router port  P  is  a  distributed  gateway  router  port,  then  the
                     is_chassis_resident(P)  is  also  added  in the match condition for the load
                     balancer IPv6 VIP A.

                     For the gateway port on a distributed logical router with NAT (where one  of
                     the logical router ports specifies a gateway chassis):

                     •      If  the  corresponding  NAT  rule  cannot be handled in a distributed
                            manner, then a priority-92 flow is programmed  on  the  gateway  port
                            instance   on  the  gateway  chassis.  A  priority-91  drop  flow  is
                            programmed on the other chassis  when  ARP  requests/NS  packets  are
                            received  on  the  gateway  port.  This behavior avoids generation of
                            multiple ARP responses from different chassis,  and  allows  upstream
                            MAC learning to point to the gateway chassis.

                     •      If the corresponding NAT rule can be handled in a distributed manner,
                            then this flow is only programmed on the gateway port instance  where
                            the logical_port specified in the NAT rule resides.

                            Some   of  the  actions  are  different  for  this  case,  using  the
                            external_mac specified in the NAT rule rather than the gateway port’s
                            Ethernet address E:

                            eth.src = external_mac;
                            arp.sha = external_mac;

                            or in the case of IPv6 neighbor solicition:

                            eth.src = external_mac;
                            nd.tll = external_mac;

                            This  behavior  avoids  generation  of  multiple  ARP  responses from
                            different chassis, and allows upstream MAC learning to point  to  the
                            correct chassis.

              •      Priority-85 flows which drops the ARP and IPv6 Neighbor Discovery packets.

              •      A priority-84 flow explicitly allows IPv6 multicast traffic that is supposed
                     to  reach  the  router  pipeline  (i.e.,  router  solicitation  and   router
                     advertisement packets).

              •      A  priority-83 flow explicitly drops IPv6 multicast traffic that is destined
                     to reserved multicast groups.

              •      A    priority-82     flow     allows     IP     multicast     traffic     if
                     options:mcast_relay=’true’, otherwise drops it.

              •      UDP  port  unreachable.  Priority-80  flows  generate  ICMP port unreachable
                     messages in reply to UDP datagrams directed  to  the  router’s  IP  address,
                     except  in  the special case of gateways, which accept traffic directed to a
                     router IP for load balancing and NAT purposes.

                     These flows should not match IP fragments with nonzero offset.

              •      TCP reset. Priority-80 flows generate TCP reset messages  in  reply  to  TCP
                     datagrams directed to the router’s IP address, except in the special case of
                     gateways, which accept traffic directed to a router IP  for  load  balancing
                     and NAT purposes.

                     These flows should not match IP fragments with nonzero offset.

              •      Protocol or address unreachable. Priority-70 flows generate ICMP protocol or
                     address unreachable messages for IPv4 and  IPv6  respectively  in  reply  to
                     packets  directed to the router’s IP address on IP protocols other than UDP,
                     TCP, and ICMP, except in the special case of gateways, which accept  traffic
                     directed to a router IP for load balancing purposes.

                     These flows should not match IP fragments with nonzero offset.

              •      Drop  other  IP  traffic  to this router. These flows drop any other traffic
                     destined to an IP address of this router that is not already handled by  one
                     of  the  flows  above,  which amounts to ICMP (other than echo requests) and
                     fragments with nonzero offsets. For each IP address A owned by the router, a
                     priority-60 flow matches ip4.dst == A or ip6.dst == A and drops the traffic.
                     An exception is made and the above flow is not added if  the  router  port’s
                     own  IP address is used to SNAT packets passing through that router or if it
                     is used as a load balancer VIP.

       The flows above handle all of the traffic that might be directed to the router itself. The
       following  flows  (with  lower  priorities)  handle the remaining traffic, potentially for
       forwarding:

              •      Drop Ethernet local broadcast. A priority-50 flow with match eth.bcast drops
                     traffic destined to the local Ethernet broadcast address. By definition this
                     traffic should not be forwarded.

              •      ICMP time exceeded. For each router  port  P,  whose  IP  address  is  A,  a
                     priority-100   flow  with  match  inport  ==  P  &&  ip.ttl  ==  {0,  1}  &&
                     !ip.later_frag matches packets whose TTL has  expired,  with  the  following
                     actions to send an ICMP time exceeded reply for IPv4 and IPv6 respectively:

                     icmp4 {
                         icmp4.type = 11; /* Time exceeded. */
                         icmp4.code = 0;  /* TTL exceeded in transit. */
                         ip4.dst = ip4.src;
                         ip4.src = A;
                         ip.ttl = 254;
                         next;
                     };
                     icmp6 {
                         icmp6.type = 3; /* Time exceeded. */
                         icmp6.code = 0;  /* TTL exceeded in transit. */
                         ip6.dst = ip6.src;
                         ip6.src = A;
                         ip.ttl = 254;
                         next;
                     };

              •      TTL  discard.  A  priority-30  flow  with match ip.ttl == {0, 1} and actions
                     drop; drops other packets whose TTL has expired, that should not  receive  a
                     ICMP error reply (i.e. fragments with nonzero offset).

              •      Next table. A priority-0 flows match all packets that aren’t already handled
                     and uses actions next; to feed them to the next table.

     Ingress Table 4: UNSNAT

       This is for already established connections’ reverse traffic. i.e., SNAT has already  been
       done  in  egress pipeline and now the packet has entered the ingress pipeline as part of a
       reply. It is unSNATted here.

       Ingress Table 4: UNSNAT on Gateway and Distributed Routers

              •      If the Router (Gateway or Distributed) is configured  with  load  balancers,
                     then below lflows are added:

                     For  each  IPv4  address  A defined as load balancer VIP with the protocol P
                     (and the protocol port T if defined) is also present as  an  external_ip  in
                     the  NAT  table,  a priority-120 logical flow is added with the match ip4 &&
                     ip4.dst == A && P with the action next; to advance the packet  to  the  next
                     table. If the load balancer has protocol port B defined, then the match also
                     has P.dst == B.

                     The above flows are also added for IPv6 load balancers.

       Ingress Table 4: UNSNAT on Gateway Routers

              •      If the Gateway router has been  configured  to  force  SNAT  any  previously
                     DNATted  packets  to B, a priority-110 flow matches ip && ip4.dst == B or ip
                     && ip6.dst == B with an action ct_snat; .

                     If the Gateway router is configured with lb_force_snat_ip=router_ip then for
                     every  logical  router port P attached to the Gateway router with the router
                     ip B, a priority-110 flow is added with the match inport == P && ip4.dst  ==
                     B or inport == P && ip6.dst == B with an action ct_snat; .

                     If the Gateway router has been configured to force SNAT any previously load-
                     balanced packets to B, a priority-100 flow matches ip && ip4.dst == B or  ip
                     && ip6.dst == B with an action ct_snat; .

                     For  each  NAT  configuration  in  the OVN Northbound database, that asks to
                     change the source IP address of a packet from A to  B,  a  priority-90  flow
                     matches  ip  && ip4.dst == B or ip && ip6.dst == B with an action ct_snat; .
                     If the NAT rule is of type  dnat_and_snat  and  has  stateless=true  in  the
                     options, then the action would be next;.

                     A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

       Ingress Table 4: UNSNAT on Distributed Routers

              •      For  each  configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks to change
                     the source IP address of a packet from A to B, two  priority-100  flows  are
                     added.

                     If  the  NAT  rule cannot be handled in a distributed manner, then the below
                     priority-100 flows are only programmed on the gateway chassis.

                     •      The first flow matches ip  &&  ip4.dst  ==  B  &&  inport  ==  GW  &&
                            flags.loopback  ==  0  or  ip  &&  ip6.dst  ==  B  && inport == GW &&
                            flags.loopback  ==  0  where  GW  is  the  distributed  gateway  port
                            corresponding to the NAT rule (specified or inferred), with an action
                            ct_snat_in_czone; to unSNAT in the common zone. If the NAT rule is of
                            type  dnat_and_snat  and  has stateless=true in the options, then the
                            action would be next;.

                            If the NAT entry is of type snat, then there is an  additional  match
                            is_chassis_resident(cr-GW)
                             where cr-GW is the chassis resident port of GW.

                     •      The  second  flow  matches  ip  &&  ip4.dst  ==  B && inport == GW &&
                            flags.loopback == 1 && flags.use_snat_zone == 1 or ip && ip6.dst == B
                            &&  inport  ==  GW && flags.loopback == 0 && flags.use_snat_zone == 1
                            where GW is the distributed gateway port  corresponding  to  the  NAT
                            rule  (specified  or  inferred), with an action ct_snat; to unSNAT in
                            the snat zone. If the NAT rule  is  of  type  dnat_and_snat  and  has
                            stateless=true   in   the   options,   then   the   action  would  be
                            ip4/6.dst=(B).

                            If the NAT entry is of type snat, then there is an  additional  match
                            is_chassis_resident(cr-GW)
                             where cr-GW is the chassis resident port of GW.

                     A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Ingress Table 5: DEFRAG

       This  is  to  send  packets  to  connection  tracker  for tracking and defragmentation. It
       contains a priority-0 flow that simply moves traffic to the next table.

       If load balancing rules with only virtual IP addresses are  configured  in  OVN_Northbound
       database for a Gateway router, a priority-100 flow is added for each configured virtual IP
       address VIP. For IPv4 VIPs the flow matches ip && ip4.dst == VIP. For IPv6 VIPs, the  flow
       matches  ip && ip6.dst == VIP. The flow applies the action reg0 = VIP; ct_dnat; (or xxreg0
       for IPv6) to send IP packets to the connection tracker for packet de-fragmentation and  to
       dnat the destination IP for the committed connection before sending it to the next table.

       If   load  balancing  rules  with  virtual  IP  addresses  and  ports  are  configured  in
       OVN_Northbound database for a Gateway router,  a  priority-110  flow  is  added  for  each
       configured  virtual  IP  address VIP, protocol PROTO and port PORT. For IPv4 VIPs the flow
       matches ip && ip4.dst == VIP && PROTO && PROTO.dst  ==  PORT.  For  IPv6  VIPs,  the  flow
       matches  ip  &&  ip6.dst == VIP && PROTO && PROTO.dst == PORT. The flow applies the action
       reg0 = VIP; reg9[16..31] = PROTO.dst; ct_dnat; (or xxreg0 for IPv6) to send IP packets  to
       the  connection tracker for packet de-fragmentation and to dnat the destination IP for the
       committed connection before sending it to the next table.

       If ECMP routes with symmetric reply are configured in the OVN_Northbound  database  for  a
       gateway  router,  a  priority-100  flow  is  added for each router port on which symmetric
       replies are configured. The matching  logic  for  these  ports  essentially  reverses  the
       configured  logic  of  the ECMP route. So for instance, a route with a destination routing
       policy will instead match if the source IP address matches the static route’s prefix.  The
       flow  uses  the  actions  chk_ecmp_nh_mac();  ct_next or chk_ecmp_nh(); ct_next to send IP
       packets to table 76 or to table 77 in order to check if source info are already stored  by
       OVN  and  then  to  the connection tracker for packet de-fragmentation and tracking before
       sending it to the next table.

     Ingress Table 6: DNAT

       Packets enter the pipeline with destination IP address that needs to  be  DNATted  from  a
       virtual  IP  address  to  a  real IP address. Packets in the reverse direction needs to be
       unDNATed.

       Ingress Table 6: Load balancing DNAT rules

       Following load balancing DNAT flows are added for Gateway router or  Router  with  gateway
       port.  These  flows  are  programmed  only  on the gateway chassis. These flows do not get
       programmed for load balancers with IPv6 VIPs.

              •      If controller_event has been enabled for all the configured  load  balancing
                     rules  for  a  Gateway  router or Router with gateway port in OVN_Northbound
                     database that does not have configured  backends,  a  priority-130  flow  is
                     added  to  trigger  ovn-controller  events  whenever  the chassis receives a
                     packet for that particular VIP.  If  event-elb  meter  has  been  previously
                     created, it will be associated to the empty_lb logical flow

              •      For  all  the configured load balancing rules for a Gateway router or Router
                     with gateway port in OVN_Northbound database that includes a L4 port PORT of
                     protocol P and IPv4 or IPv6 address VIP, a priority-120 flow that matches on
                     ct.new && ip && reg0 == VIP && P && reg9[16..31] ==  PORT (xxreg0 == VIP  in
                     the IPv6 case) with an action of ct_lb_mark(args), where args contains comma
                     separated IPv4 or IPv6 addresses (and optional port numbers) to load balance
                     to. If the router is configured to force SNAT any load-balanced packets, the
                     above  action   will   be   replaced   by   flags.force_snat_for_lb   =   1;
                     ct_lb_mark(args);.  If  the load balancing rule is configured with skip_snat
                     set to true, the above action will be replaced by  flags.skip_snat_for_lb  =
                     1;  ct_lb_mark(args);.  If  health  check  is  enabled,  then args will only
                     contain those endpoints whose service monitor status entry in OVN_Southbound
                     db is either online or empty.

                     The  previous table lr_in_defrag sets the register reg0 (or xxreg0 for IPv6)
                     and does ct_dnat. Hence for established traffic, this  table  just  advances
                     the packet to the next stage.

              •      For  all  the configured load balancing rules for a router in OVN_Northbound
                     database that includes a L4 port PORT of protocol P and IPv4 or IPv6 address
                     VIP,  a  priority-120 flow that matches on ct.est && ip4 && reg0 == VIP && P
                     && reg9[16..31] ==  PORT (ip6 and xxreg0 == VIP in the IPv6  case)  with  an
                     action of next;. If the router is configured to force SNAT any load-balanced
                     packets, the above action will be replaced by flags.force_snat_for_lb  =  1;
                     next;.  If the load balancing rule is configured with skip_snat set to true,
                     the above action will be replaced by flags.skip_snat_for_lb = 1; next;.

                     The previous table lr_in_defrag sets the register reg0 (or xxreg0 for  IPv6)
                     and  does  ct_dnat.  Hence for established traffic, this table just advances
                     the packet to the next stage.

              •      For all the configured load balancing rules for a router  in  OVN_Northbound
                     database  that  includes  just an IP address VIP to match on, a priority-110
                     flow that matches on ct.new && ip4 && reg0 == VIP (ip6 and xxreg0 == VIP  in
                     the IPv6 case) with an action of ct_lb_mark(args), where args contains comma
                     separated IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. If the router is configured to force  SNAT
                     any   load-balanced   packets,   the   above  action  will  be  replaced  by
                     flags.force_snat_for_lb = 1; ct_lb_mark(args);. If the load  balancing  rule
                     is  configured with skip_snat set to true, the above action will be replaced
                     by flags.skip_snat_for_lb = 1; ct_lb_mark(args);.

                     The previous table lr_in_defrag sets the register reg0 (or xxreg0 for  IPv6)
                     and  does  ct_dnat.  Hence for established traffic, this table just advances
                     the packet to the next stage.

              •      For all the configured load balancing rules for a router  in  OVN_Northbound
                     database  that  includes  just an IP address VIP to match on, a priority-110
                     flow that matches on ct.est && ip4 && reg0 == VIP (or ip6 and xxreg0 == VIP)
                     with an action of next;. If the router is configured to force SNAT any load-
                     balanced   packets,   the    above    action    will    be    replaced    by
                     flags.force_snat_for_lb = 1; next;. If the load balancing rule is configured
                     with  skip_snat  set  to  true,  the  above  action  will  be  replaced   by
                     flags.skip_snat_for_lb = 1; next;.

                     The  previous table lr_in_defrag sets the register reg0 (or xxreg0 for IPv6)
                     and does ct_dnat. Hence for established traffic, this  table  just  advances
                     the packet to the next stage.

              •      If  the  load  balancer is created with --reject option and it has no active
                     backends, a TCP reset segment (for tcp) or an ICMP port  unreachable  packet
                     (for  all other kind of traffic) will be sent whenever an incoming packet is
                     received for this load-balancer. Please  note  using  --reject  option  will
                     disable empty_lb SB controller event for this load balancer.

       Ingress Table 6: DNAT on Gateway Routers

              •      For  each  configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks to change
                     the destination IP address of a packet from A  to  B,  a  priority-100  flow
                     matches  ip  &&  ip4.dst  ==  A  or  ip  &&  ip6.dst  ==  A  with  an action
                     flags.loopback = 1; ct_dnat(B);. If the  Gateway  router  is  configured  to
                     force  SNAT  any  DNATed  packet,  the  above  action  will  be  replaced by
                     flags.force_snat_for_dnat = 1; flags.loopback = 1; ct_dnat(B);. If  the  NAT
                     rule  is  of  type dnat_and_snat and has stateless=true in the options, then
                     the action would be ip4/6.dst= (B).

                     If the NAT rule has allowed_ext_ips configured, then there is an  additional
                     match  ip4.src  ==  allowed_ext_ips  .  Similarly,  for IPV6, match would be
                     ip6.src == allowed_ext_ips.

                     If the NAT rule has exempted_ext_ips set, then there is an  additional  flow
                     configured   at   priority  101.  The  flow  matches  if  source  ip  is  an
                     exempted_ext_ip and the action is next; . This flow is used  to  bypass  the
                     ct_dnat action for a packet originating from exempted_ext_ips.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

       Ingress Table 6: DNAT on Distributed Routers

       On  distributed  routers,  the DNAT table only handles packets with destination IP address
       that needs to be DNATted from a virtual IP address  to  a  real  IP  address.  The  unDNAT
       processing in the reverse direction is handled in a separate table in the egress pipeline.

              •      For  each  configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks to change
                     the destination IP address of a packet from A  to  B,  a  priority-100  flow
                     matches  ip  && ip4.dst == B && inport == GW, where GW is the logical router
                     gateway port corresponding to the NAT rule (specified or inferred), with  an
                     action ct_dnat(B);. The match will include ip6.dst == B in the IPv6 case. If
                     the NAT rule is of type dnat_and_snat and has stateless=true in the options,
                     then the action would be ip4/6.dst=(B).

                     If  the  NAT  rule  cannot  be  handled  in  a  distributed manner, then the
                     priority-100 flow above is only programmed on the gateway chassis.

                     If the NAT rule has allowed_ext_ips configured, then there is an  additional
                     match  ip4.src  ==  allowed_ext_ips  .  Similarly,  for IPV6, match would be
                     ip6.src == allowed_ext_ips.

                     If the NAT rule has exempted_ext_ips set, then there is an  additional  flow
                     configured   at   priority  101.  The  flow  matches  if  source  ip  is  an
                     exempted_ext_ip and the action is next; . This flow is used  to  bypass  the
                     ct_dnat action for a packet originating from exempted_ext_ips.

                     A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Ingress Table 7: ECMP symmetric reply processing

              •      If  ECMP  routes  with  symmetric reply are configured in the OVN_Northbound
                     database for a gateway router, a priority-100 flow is added for each  router
                     port on which symmetric replies are configured. The matching logic for these
                     ports essentially reverses the configured logic of the ECMP  route.  So  for
                     instance,  a  route  with a destination routing policy will instead match if
                     the source IP address matches the static route’s prefix. The flow  uses  the
                     action     ct_commit     {    ct_label.ecmp_reply_eth    =    eth.src;"    "
                     ct_mark.ecmp_reply_port = K;}; commit_ecmp_nh(); next;
                      to commit the connection and  storing  eth.src  and  the  ECMP  reply  port
                     binding  tunnel key K in the ct_label and the traffic pattern to table 76 or
                     77.

     Ingress Table 8: IPv6 ND RA option processing

              •      A priority-50 logical flow is added for each logical router port  configured
                     with IPv6 ND RA options which matches IPv6 ND Router Solicitation packet and
                     applies the action put_nd_ra_opts and advances the packet to the next table.

                     reg0[5] = put_nd_ra_opts(options);next;

                     For a valid IPv6 ND RS packet, this transforms the packet into an IPv6 ND RA
                     reply  and  sets the RA options to the packet and stores 1 into reg0[5]. For
                     other kinds of packets, it just  stores  0  into  reg0[5].  Either  way,  it
                     continues to the next table.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Ingress Table 9: IPv6 ND RA responder

       This  table  implements  IPv6  ND RA responder for the IPv6 ND RA replies generated by the
       previous table.

              •      A priority-50 logical flow is added for each logical router port  configured
                     with  IPv6  ND  RA options which matches IPv6 ND RA packets and reg0[5] == 1
                     and responds back to the inport after applying these actions. If reg0[5]  is
                     set to 1, it means that the action put_nd_ra_opts was successful.

                     eth.dst = eth.src;
                     eth.src = E;
                     ip6.dst = ip6.src;
                     ip6.src = I;
                     outport = P;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     output;

                     where  E  is  the  MAC  address  and I is the IPv6 link local address of the
                     logical router port.

                     (This terminates packet processing in ingress pipeline; the packet does  not
                     go to the next ingress table.)

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Ingress Table 10: IP Routing Pre

       If a packet arrived at this table from Logical Router Port P which has options:route_table
       value set, a logical flow with match inport == "P" with priority 100  and  action  setting
       unique-generated  per-datapath  32-bit value (non-zero) in OVS register 7. This register’s
       value is checked in next table. If packet didn’t match any configured inport (<main> route
       table), register 7 value is set to 0.

       This table contains the following logical flows:

              •      Priority-100  flow  with  match inport == "LRP_NAME" value and action, which
                     set route table identifier in reg7.

                     A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions reg7 = 0; next;.

     Ingress Table 11: IP Routing

       A packet that arrives at this table is an IP packet that should be routed to  the  address
       in ip4.dst or ip6.dst. This table implements IP routing, setting reg0 (or xxreg0 for IPv6)
       to the next-hop IP address (leaving ip4.dst or ip6.dst, the  packet’s  final  destination,
       unchanged)  and  advances  to  the  next  table  for ARP resolution. It also sets reg1 (or
       xxreg1) to the IP address owned by the selected router port  (ingress  table  ARP  Request
       will generate an ARP request, if needed, with reg0 as the target protocol address and reg1
       as the source protocol address).

       For ECMP routes, i.e. multiple static routes with same policy  and  prefix  but  different
       nexthops,  the  above  actions  are  deferred  to  next  table.  This  table,  instead, is
       responsible for determine the ECMP group id and select a member id within the group  based
       on  5-tuple hashing. It stores group id in reg8[0..15] and member id in reg8[16..31]. This
       step is skipped with a priority-10300 rule if the traffic going  out  the  ECMP  route  is
       reply  traffic,  and  the ECMP route was configured to use symmetric replies. Instead, the
       stored values in conntrack is used to choose the destination. The  ct_label.ecmp_reply_eth
       tells   the   destination   MAC   address   to  which  the  packet  should  be  sent.  The
       ct_mark.ecmp_reply_port tells the logical router port on which the packet should be  sent.
       These  values  saved  to the conntrack fields when the initial ingress traffic is received
       over the ECMP route and committed  to  conntrack.  If  REGBIT_KNOWN_ECMP_NH  is  set,  the
       priority-10300  flows  in this stage set the outport, while the eth.dst is set by flows at
       the ARP/ND Resolution stage.

       This table contains the following logical flows:

              •      Priority-10550  flow  that  drops  IPv6  Router   Solicitation/Advertisement
                     packets that were not processed in previous tables.

              •      Priority-10550  flows that drop IGMP and MLD packets with source MAC address
                     owned by the router. These are used to prevent looping statically  forwarded
                     IGMP and MLD packets for which TTL is not decremented (it is always 1).

              •      Priority-10500  flows  that  match  IP  multicast traffic destined to groups
                     registered on  any  of  the  attached  switches  and  sets  outport  to  the
                     associated  multicast  group  that  will eventually flood the traffic to all
                     interested attached logical switches. The flows also decrement TTL.

              •      Priority-10460 flows that match IGMP and MLD control packets, set outport to
                     the  MC_STATIC  multicast group, which ovn-northd populates with the logical
                     ports  that  have  options  :mcast_flood=’true’.  If  no  router  ports  are
                     configured to flood multicast traffic the packets are dropped.

              •      Priority-10450   flow   that   matches  unregistered  IP  multicast  traffic
                     decrements TTL and sets outport to  the  MC_STATIC  multicast  group,  which
                     ovn-northd   populates   with   the   logical   ports   that   have  options
                     :mcast_flood=’true’. If no router ports are configured  to  flood  multicast
                     traffic the packets are dropped.

              •      IPv4  routing  table.  For  each  route to IPv4 network N with netmask M, on
                     router port P with IP address A and Ethernet address E, a logical flow  with
                     match  ip4.dst  == N/M, whose priority is the number of 1-bits in M, has the
                     following actions:

                     ip.ttl--;
                     reg8[0..15] = 0;
                     reg0 = G;
                     reg1 = A;
                     eth.src = E;
                     outport = P;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     next;

                     (Ingress table 1 already verified  that  ip.ttl--;  will  not  yield  a  TTL
                     exceeded error.)

                     If  the  route  has  a gateway, G is the gateway IP address. Instead, if the
                     route is from a configured static route, G is the next hop IP address.  Else
                     it is ip4.dst.

              •      IPv6  routing  table.  For  each  route to IPv6 network N with netmask M, on
                     router port P with IP address A and Ethernet address E, a logical flow  with
                     match  in  CIDR notation ip6.dst == N/M, whose priority is the integer value
                     of M, has the following actions:

                     ip.ttl--;
                     reg8[0..15] = 0;
                     xxreg0 = G;
                     xxreg1 = A;
                     eth.src = E;
                     outport = inport;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     next;

                     (Ingress table 1 already verified  that  ip.ttl--;  will  not  yield  a  TTL
                     exceeded error.)

                     If  the  route  has  a gateway, G is the gateway IP address. Instead, if the
                     route is from a configured static route, G is the next hop IP address.  Else
                     it is ip6.dst.

                     If  the  address  A is in the link-local scope, the route will be limited to
                     sending on the ingress port.

                     For each static route the reg7 == id && is prefixed in  logical  flow  match
                     portion. For routes with route_table value set a unique non-zero id is used.
                     For routes within <main> route table (no route table set), this id value  is
                     0.

                     For  each  connected route (route to the LRP’s subnet CIDR) the logical flow
                     match portion has no reg7 == id && prefix to have route to LRP’s subnets  in
                     all routing tables.

              •      For  ECMP  routes, they are grouped by policy and prefix. An unique id (non-
                     zero) is assigned to each group, and each member is also assigned an  unique
                     id (non-zero) within each group.

                     For  each  IPv4/IPv6 ECMP group with group id GID and member ids MID1, MID2,
                     ..., a logical flow with match in CIDR notation ip4.dst == N/M,  or  ip6.dst
                     == N/M, whose priority is the integer value of M, has the following actions:

                     ip.ttl--;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     reg8[0..15] = GID;
                     select(reg8[16..31], MID1, MID2, ...);

     Ingress Table 12: IP_ROUTING_ECMP

       This table implements the second part of IP routing for ECMP routes following the previous
       table. If a packet matched a ECMP group in the previous  table,  this  table  matches  the
       group  id  and member id stored from the previous table, setting reg0 (or xxreg0 for IPv6)
       to the next-hop IP address (leaving ip4.dst or ip6.dst, the  packet’s  final  destination,
       unchanged)  and  advances  to  the  next  table  for ARP resolution. It also sets reg1 (or
       xxreg1) to the IP address owned by the selected router port  (ingress  table  ARP  Request
       will generate an ARP request, if needed, with reg0 as the target protocol address and reg1
       as the source protocol address).

       This processing is skipped for reply traffic being sent out of an ECMP route if the  route
       was configured to use symmetric replies.

       This table contains the following logical flows:

              •      A priority-150 flow that matches reg8[0..15] == 0 with action next; directly
                     bypasses packets of non-ECMP routes.

              •      For each member with ID MID in each ECMP group with ID GID,  a  priority-100
                     flow  with  match  reg8[0..15]  ==  GID && reg8[16..31] == MID has following
                     actions:

                     [xx]reg0 = G;
                     [xx]reg1 = A;
                     eth.src = E;
                     outport = P;

     Ingress Table 13: Router policies

       This table adds flows for the logical router policies configured on  the  logical  router.
       Please see the OVN_Northbound database Logical_Router_Policy table documentation in ovn-nb
       for supported actions.

              •      For each router policy configured on the logical router, a logical  flow  is
                     added with specified priority, match and actions.

              •      If  the  policy  action is reroute with 2 or more nexthops defined, then the
                     logical flow is added with the following actions:

                     reg8[0..15] = GID;
                     reg8[16..31] = select(1,..n);

                     where GID is the ECMP group id generated by ovn-northd for this policy and n
                     is  the  number of nexthops. select action selects one of the nexthop member
                     id, stores it in the register reg8[16..31] and advances the  packet  to  the
                     next stage.

              •      If  the policy action is reroute with just one nexhop, then the logical flow
                     is added with the following actions:

                     [xx]reg0 = H;
                     eth.src = E;
                     outport = P;
                     reg8[0..15] = 0;
                     flags.loopback = 1;
                     next;

                     where H is the nexthop  defined in the router  policy,  E  is  the  ethernet
                     address of the logical router port from which the nexthop is reachable and P
                     is the logical router port from which the nexthop is reachable.

              •      If a router policy has the option pkt_mark=m set and if the  action  is  not
                     drop, then the action also includes pkt.mark = m to mark the packet with the
                     marker m.

     Ingress Table 14: ECMP handling for router policies

       This table handles the ECMP for the router policies configured with multiple nexthops.

              •      A priority-150 flow is added to advance the packet to the next stage if  the
                     ECMP group id register reg8[0..15] is 0.

              •      For  each  ECMP reroute router policy with multiple nexthops, a priority-100
                     flow is added for each nexthop H  with  the  match  reg8[0..15]  ==  GID  &&
                     reg8[16..31]  ==  M  where  GID  is  the router policy group id generated by
                     ovn-northd and M is the member id of the nexthop H generated by  ovn-northd.
                     The following actions are added to the flow:

                     [xx]reg0 = H;
                     eth.src = E;
                     outport = P
                     "flags.loopback = 1; "
                     "next;"

                     where  H  is  the  nexthop   defined in the router policy, E is the ethernet
                     address of the logical router port from which the nexthop is reachable and P
                     is the logical router port from which the nexthop is reachable.

     Ingress Table 15: ARP/ND Resolution

       Any  packet that reaches this table is an IP packet whose next-hop IPv4 address is in reg0
       or IPv6 address is in xxreg0. (ip4.dst or ip6.dst contains the  final  destination.)  This
       table  resolves  the  IP address in reg0 (or xxreg0) into an output port in outport and an
       Ethernet address in eth.dst, using the following flows:

              •      A priority-500 flow that matches IP multicast traffic that  was  allowed  in
                     the  routing  pipeline. For this kind of traffic the outport was already set
                     so the flow just advances to the next table.

              •      Priority-200 flows that match ECMP reply traffic for the  routes  configured
                     to  use  symmetric  replies,  with  actions push(xxreg1); xxreg1 = ct_label;
                     eth.dst = xxreg1[32..79]; pop(xxreg1); next;. xxreg1 is used here  to  avoid
                     masked access to ct_label, to make the flow HW-offloading friendly.

              •      Static  MAC  bindings. MAC bindings can be known statically based on data in
                     the OVN_Northbound database. For router ports connected to logical switches,
                     MAC  bindings  can  be  known  statically  from  the addresses column in the
                     Logical_Switch_Port table. For  router  ports  connected  to  other  logical
                     routers,  MAC  bindings  can  be  known statically from the mac and networks
                     column in the Logical_Router_Port table. (Note: the flow  is  NOT  installed
                     for  the  IP  addresses that belong to a neighbor logical router port if the
                     current router has the options:dynamic_neigh_routers set to true)

                     For each IPv4 address A whose host is known to have Ethernet  address  E  on
                     router port P, a priority-100 flow with match outport === P && reg0 == A has
                     actions eth.dst = E; next;.

                     For each virtual ip A configured on a logical port of type virtual  and  its
                     virtual  parent set in its corresponding Port_Binding record and the virtual
                     parent with the Ethernet address E and the virtual ip is reachable  via  the
                     router  port  P, a priority-100 flow with match outport === P && xxreg0/reg0
                     == A has actions eth.dst = E; next;.

                     For each virtual ip A configured on a logical port of type virtual  and  its
                     virtual  parent  not  set  in  its corresponding Port_Binding record and the
                     virtual ip A is reachable via the router port P, a  priority-100  flow  with
                     match   outport   ===   P   &&  xxreg0/reg0  ==  A  has  actions  eth.dst  =
                     00:00:00:00:00:00; next;. This flow is added  so  that  the  ARP  is  always
                     resolved  for  the virtual ip A by generating ARP request and not consulting
                     the MAC_Binding table as it can have incorrect value for the virtual ip A.

                     For each IPv6 address A whose host is known to have Ethernet  address  E  on
                     router  port  P, a priority-100 flow with match outport === P && xxreg0 == A
                     has actions eth.dst = E; next;.

                     For each logical router port with an IPv4 address A and a mac address  of  E
                     that is reachable via a different logical router port P, a priority-100 flow
                     with match outport === P && reg0 == A has actions eth.dst = E; next;.

                     For each logical router port with an IPv6 address A and a mac address  of  E
                     that is reachable via a different logical router port P, a priority-100 flow
                     with match outport === P && xxreg0 == A has actions eth.dst = E; next;.

              •      Static MAC bindings from NAT entries. MAC bindings can also be known for the
                     entries in the NAT table. Below flows are programmed for distributed logical
                     routers i.e with a distributed router port.

                     For each row in the NAT table with IPv4 address A in the external_ip  column
                     of  NAT table, a priority-100 flow with the match outport === P && reg0 == A
                     has actions eth.dst = E; next;, where P is the  distributed  logical  router
                     port,  E  is  the  Ethernet address if set in the external_mac column of NAT
                     table for of type dnat_and_snat,  otherwise  the  Ethernet  address  of  the
                     distributed  logical router port. Note that if the external_ip is not within
                     a subnet on the owning  logical  router,  then  OVN  will  only  create  ARP
                     resolution  flows if the options:add_route is set to true. Otherwise, no ARP
                     resolution flows will be added.

                     For IPv6 NAT entries, same flows are added, but using  the  register  xxreg0
                     for the match.

              •      Traffic  with  IP  destination  an  address  owned  by  the router should be
                     dropped. Such traffic is normally dropped in ingress table IP  Input  except
                     for  IPs  that  are  also  shared  with SNAT rules. However, if there was no
                     unSNAT operation that happened successfully until this point in the pipeline
                     and the destination IP of the packet is still a router owned IP, the packets
                     can be safely dropped.

                     A priority-1 logical flow with match  ip4.dst  =  {..}  matches  on  traffic
                     destined  to  router owned IPv4 addresses which are also SNAT IPs. This flow
                     has action drop;.

                     A priority-1 logical flow with match  ip6.dst  =  {..}  matches  on  traffic
                     destined  to  router owned IPv6 addresses which are also SNAT IPs. This flow
                     has action drop;.

              •      Dynamic MAC bindings. These  flows  resolve  MAC-to-IP  bindings  that  have
                     become  known  dynamically  through  ARP or neighbor discovery. (The ingress
                     table ARP Request will issue an ARP or  neighbor  solicitation  request  for
                     cases where the binding is not yet known.)

                     A priority-0 logical flow with match ip4 has actions get_arp(outport, reg0);
                     next;.

                     A priority-0  logical  flow  with  match  ip6  has  actions  get_nd(outport,
                     xxreg0); next;.

              •      For  a  distributed  gateway  LRP  with  redirect-type  set  to  bridged,  a
                     priority-50   flow    will    match    outport    ==    "ROUTER_PORT"    and
                     !is_chassis_resident  ("cr-ROUTER_PORT")  has  actions  eth.dst  = E; next;,
                     where E is the ethernet address of the logical router port.

     Ingress Table 16: Check packet length

       For distributed logical routers or gateway  routers  with  gateway  port  configured  with
       options:gateway_mtu  to  a valid integer value, this table adds a priority-50 logical flow
       with the match outport == GW_PORT where GW_PORT is the gateway router port and applies the
       action check_pkt_larger and advances the packet to the next table.

       REGBIT_PKT_LARGER = check_pkt_larger(L); next;

       where  L is the packet length to check for. If the packet is larger than L, it stores 1 in
       the register bit REGBIT_PKT_LARGER. The value  of  L  is  taken  from  options:gateway_mtu
       column of Logical_Router_Port row.

       If the port is also configured with options:gateway_mtu_bypass then another flow is added,
       with priority-55, to bypass the check_pkt_larger flow.

       This table adds one priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and advances to  the
       next table.

     Ingress Table 17: Handle larger packets

       For  distributed  logical  routers  or  gateway  routers with gateway port configured with
       options:gateway_mtu to a valid integer value, this table adds the  following  priority-150
       logical  flow  for  each  logical  router  port with the match inport == LRP && outport ==
       GW_PORT && REGBIT_PKT_LARGER && !REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK, where LRP is the  logical  router
       port  and  GW_PORT  is the gateway port and applies the following action for ipv4 and ipv6
       respectively:

       icmp4 {
           icmp4.type = 3; /* Destination Unreachable. */
           icmp4.code = 4;  /* Frag Needed and DF was Set. */
           icmp4.frag_mtu = M;
           eth.dst = E;
           ip4.dst = ip4.src;
           ip4.src = I;
           ip.ttl = 255;
           REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
           REGBIT_PKT_LARGER = 0;
           next(pipeline=ingress, table=0);
       };
       icmp6 {
           icmp6.type = 2;
           icmp6.code = 0;
           icmp6.frag_mtu = M;
           eth.dst = E;
           ip6.dst = ip6.src;
           ip6.src = I;
           ip.ttl = 255;
           REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
           REGBIT_PKT_LARGER = 0;
           next(pipeline=ingress, table=0);
       };

              •      Where  M  is  the  (fragment  MTU  -  58)  whose   value   is   taken   from
                     options:gateway_mtu column of Logical_Router_Port row.

              •      E is the Ethernet address of the logical router port.

              •      I is the IPv4/IPv6 address of the logical router port.

       This  table adds one priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and advances to the
       next table.

     Ingress Table 18: Gateway Redirect

       For distributed logical routers where one or more of the logical router ports specifies  a
       gateway  chassis,  this  table  redirects  certain packets to the distributed gateway port
       instances on the gateway chassises. This table has the following flows:

              •      For each NAT rule in the OVN Northbound database that can be  handled  in  a
                     distributed  manner,  a priority-100 logical flow with match ip4.src == B &&
                     outport == GW && is_chassis_resident(P), where GW is the distributed gateway
                     port  specified  in  the  NAT rule and P is the NAT logical port. IP traffic
                     matching the above rule will be  managed  locally  setting  reg1  to  C  and
                     eth.src to D, where C is NAT external ip and D is NAT external mac.

              •      For  each  dnat_and_snat  NAT  rule  with stateless=true and allowed_ext_ips
                     configured, a priority-75 flow is programmed with match  ip4.dst  ==  B  and
                     action outport = CR; next; where B is the NAT rule external IP and CR is the
                     chassisredirect  port  representing  the  instance  of  the  logical  router
                     distributed gateway port on the gateway chassis. Moreover a priority-70 flow
                     is programmed with same match and action drop;. For each  dnat_and_snat  NAT
                     rule with stateless=true and exempted_ext_ips configured, a priority-75 flow
                     is programmed with match ip4.dst == B and action drop; where B  is  the  NAT
                     rule external IP. A similar flow is added for IPv6 traffic.

              •      For  each  NAT  rule in the OVN Northbound database that can be handled in a
                     distributed manner, a priority-80 logical flow with drop action if  the  NAT
                     logical port is a virtual port not claimed by any chassis yet.

              •      A  priority-50  logical  flow with match outport == GW has actions outport =
                     CR; next;, where GW is the logical router distributed gateway port and CR is
                     the  chassisredirect  port  representing  the instance of the logical router
                     distributed gateway port on the gateway chassis.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Ingress Table 19: ARP Request

       In the common case where the Ethernet destination has been resolved,  this  table  outputs
       the packet. Otherwise, it composes and sends an ARP or IPv6 Neighbor Solicitation request.
       It holds the following flows:

              •      Unknown MAC address. A priority-100 flow for IPv4 packets with match eth.dst
                     == 00:00:00:00:00:00 has the following actions:

                     arp {
                         eth.dst = ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff;
                         arp.spa = reg1;
                         arp.tpa = reg0;
                         arp.op = 1;  /* ARP request. */
                         output;
                     };

                     Unknown  MAC  address. For each IPv6 static route associated with the router
                     with the nexthop IP: G, a priority-200 flow  for  IPv6  packets  with  match
                     eth.dst  ==  00:00:00:00:00:00  && xxreg0 == G with the following actions is
                     added:

                     nd_ns {
                         eth.dst = E;
                         ip6.dst = I
                         nd.target = G;
                         output;
                     };

                     Where E is the  multicast  mac  derived  from  the  Gateway  IP,  I  is  the
                     solicited-node multicast address corresponding to the target address G.

                     Unknown MAC address. A priority-100 flow for IPv6 packets with match eth.dst
                     == 00:00:00:00:00:00 has the following actions:

                     nd_ns {
                         nd.target = xxreg0;
                         output;
                     };

                     (Ingress table IP Routing initialized reg1 with  the  IP  address  owned  by
                     outport and (xx)reg0 with the next-hop IP address)

                     The IP packet that triggers the ARP/IPv6 NS request is dropped.

              •      Known MAC address. A priority-0 flow with match 1 has actions output;.

     Egress Table 0: Check DNAT local

       This  table checks if the packet needs to be DNATed in the router ingress table lr_in_dnat
       after it is SNATed and looped back to the ingress pipeline. This check is  done  only  for
       routers  configured  with distributed gateway ports and NAT entries. This check is done so
       that SNAT and DNAT is done in different zones instead of a common zone.

              •      For each NAT rule in the OVN Northbound database on a distributed router,  a
                     priority-50  logical flow with match ip4.dst == E && is_chassis_resident(P),
                     where E is the external IP address specified in the  NAT  rule,  GW  is  the
                     logical  router  distributed  gateway port. For dnat_and_snat NAT rule, P is
                     the logical port specified in the NAT rule. If logical_port  column  of  NAT
                     table is NOT set, then P is the chassisredirect port of GW with the actions:
                     REGBIT_DST_NAT_IP_LOCAL = 1; next;

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions REGBIT_DST_NAT_IP_LOCAL =
                     0; next;.

     Egress Table 1: UNDNAT

       This  is for already established connections’ reverse traffic. i.e., DNAT has already been
       done in ingress pipeline and now the packet has entered the egress pipeline as part  of  a
       reply. This traffic is unDNATed here.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Egress Table 1: UNDNAT on Gateway Routers

              •      For  all  IP  packets, a priority-50 flow with an action flags.loopback = 1;
                     ct_dnat;.

     Egress Table 1: UNDNAT on Distributed Routers

              •      For all the configured load balancing rules for a router with  gateway  port
                     in  OVN_Northbound  database  that  includes  an IPv4 address VIP, for every
                     backend IPv4 address B defined for the VIP a priority-120 flow is programmed
                     on  gateway  chassis that matches ip && ip4.src == B && outport == GW, where
                     GW is the logical router gateway port with an action  ct_dnat_in_czone;.  If
                     the  backend IPv4 address B is also configured with L4 port PORT of protocol
                     P, then the match also includes P.src == PORT. These flows are not added for
                     load balancers with IPv6 VIPs.

                     If  the  router is configured to force SNAT any load-balanced packets, above
                     action will be replaced by flags.force_snat_for_lb = 1; ct_dnat;.

              •      For each configuration in the OVN Northbound database that  asks  to  change
                     the  destination  IP  address  of  a  packet from an IP address of A to B, a
                     priority-100 flow matches ip && ip4.src == B && outport == GW, where  GW  is
                     the  logical  router  gateway port, with an action ct_dnat_in_czone;. If the
                     NAT rule is of type dnat_and_snat and has  stateless=true  in  the  options,
                     then the action would be next;.

                     If  the  NAT  rule  cannot  be  handled  in  a  distributed manner, then the
                     priority-100 flow above is only programmed on the gateway chassis  with  the
                     action ct_dnat_in_czone.

                     If  the  NAT  rule  can be handled in a distributed manner, then there is an
                     additional action eth.src = EA;, where EA is the ethernet address associated
                     with  the IP address A in the NAT rule. This allows upstream MAC learning to
                     point to the correct chassis.

     Egress Table 2: Post UNDNAT

              •      A priority-50 logical flow is added that commits any  untracked  flows  from
                     the  previous  table lr_out_undnat for Gateway routers. This flow matches on
                     ct.new && ip with action ct_commit { } ; next; .

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Egress Table 3: SNAT

       Packets that are configured to be SNATed get their source IP address changed based on  the
       configuration in the OVN Northbound database.

              •      A priority-120 flow to advance the IPv6 Neighbor solicitation packet to next
                     table to skip SNAT.  In  the  case  where  ovn-controller  injects  an  IPv6
                     Neighbor  Solicitation packet (for nd_ns action) we don’t want the packet to
                     go throught conntrack.

       Egress Table 3: SNAT on Gateway Routers

              •      If the Gateway router in the OVN Northbound database has been configured  to
                     force  SNAT a packet (that has been previously DNATted) to B, a priority-100
                     flow  matches  flags.force_snat_for_dnat  ==  1  &&  ip   with   an   action
                     ct_snat(B);.

              •      If  a  load balancer configured to skip snat has been applied to the Gateway
                     router pipeline, a priority-120 flow matches flags.skip_snat_for_lb == 1  &&
                     ip with an action next;.

              •      If  the Gateway router in the OVN Northbound database has been configured to
                     force SNAT a packet (that has been previously load-balanced) using router IP
                     (i.e  options:lb_force_snat_ip=router_ip), then for each logical router port
                     P  attached  to  the   Gateway   router,   a   priority-110   flow   matches
                     flags.force_snat_for_lb == 1 && outport == P
                      with an action ct_snat(R); where R is the IP configured on the router port.
                     If R is an IPv4 address then the match will also include ip4 and if it is an
                     IPv6 address, then the match will also include ip6.

                     If  the  logical router port P is configured with multiple IPv4 and multiple
                     IPv6 addresses, only the first IPv4 and first IPv6 address is considered.

              •      If the Gateway router in the OVN Northbound database has been configured  to
                     force  SNAT  a  packet  (that  has  been  previously  load-balanced) to B, a
                     priority-100 flow matches flags.force_snat_for_lb == 1 && ip with an  action
                     ct_snat(B);.

              •      For  each  configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks to change
                     the source IP address of a packet from an IP address of A or to  change  the
                     source IP address of a packet that belongs to network A to B, a flow matches
                     ip && ip4.src == A && (!ct.trk || !ct.rpl) with an action  ct_snat(B);.  The
                     priority  of  the  flow  is  calculated based on the mask of A, with matches
                     having larger masks getting higher priorities. If the NAT rule  is  of  type
                     dnat_and_snat  and  has stateless=true in the options, then the action would
                     be ip4/6.src= (B).

              •      If the NAT rule has allowed_ext_ips configured, then there is an  additional
                     match  ip4.dst  ==  allowed_ext_ips  .  Similarly,  for IPV6, match would be
                     ip6.dst == allowed_ext_ips.

              •      If the NAT rule has exempted_ext_ips set, then there is an  additional  flow
                     configured  at  the priority + 1 of corresponding NAT rule. The flow matches
                     if destination ip is an exempted_ext_ip and the action is next; . This  flow
                     is  used  to  bypass  the  ct_snat action for a packet which is destinted to
                     exempted_ext_ips.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

       Egress Table 3: SNAT on Distributed Routers

              •      For each configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks  to  change
                     the  source  IP address of a packet from an IP address of A or to change the
                     source IP address of a packet that belongs to network A to B, two flows  are
                     added.  The priority P of these flows are calculated based on the mask of A,
                     with matches having larger masks getting higher priorities.

                     If the NAT rule cannot be handled in a distributed manner,  then  the  below
                     flows are only programmed on the gateway chassis increasing flow priority by
                     128 in order to be run first.

                     •      The first flow is added with the calculated priority P and  match  ip
                            &&  ip4.src  ==  A  &&  outport == GW, where GW is the logical router
                            gateway port, with an action ct_snat_in_czone(B); to  SNATed  in  the
                            common  zone.  If  the  NAT  rule  is  of  type dnat_and_snat and has
                            stateless=true  in  the   options,   then   the   action   would   be
                            ip4/6.src=(B).

                     •      The  second  flow  is  added  with the calculated priority P + 1  and
                            match ip && ip4.src == A && outport == GW &&  REGBIT_DST_NAT_IP_LOCAL
                            ==  0,  where  GW  is the logical router gateway port, with an action
                            ct_snat(B); to SNAT in the snat zone. If the  NAT  rule  is  of  type
                            dnat_and_snat  and has stateless=true in the options, then the action
                            would be ip4/6.src=(B).

                     If the NAT rule can be handled in a distributed manner,  then  there  is  an
                     additional  action  (for  both  the  flows)  eth.src  = EA;, where EA is the
                     ethernet address associated with the IP address A  in  the  NAT  rule.  This
                     allows upstream MAC learning to point to the correct chassis.

                     If  the NAT rule has allowed_ext_ips configured, then there is an additional
                     match ip4.dst == allowed_ext_ips .  Similarly,  for  IPV6,  match  would  be
                     ip6.dst == allowed_ext_ips.

                     If  the  NAT rule has exempted_ext_ips set, then there is an additional flow
                     configured at the priority P +  2   of  corresponding  NAT  rule.  The  flow
                     matches  if  destination  ip is an exempted_ext_ip and the action is next; .
                     This flow is used to bypass the ct_snat action for a flow which is destinted
                     to exempted_ext_ips.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Egress Table 4: Egress Loopback

       For  distributed logical routers where one of the logical router ports specifies a gateway
       chassis.

       While UNDNAT and SNAT processing have already occurred by this point, this  traffic  needs
       to  be  forced through egress loopback on this distributed gateway port instance, in order
       for UNSNAT and DNAT processing to be applied, and also for IP routing and  ARP  resolution
       after all of the NAT processing, so that the packet can be forwarded to the destination.

       This table has the following flows:

              •      For  each NAT rule in the OVN Northbound database on a distributed router, a
                     priority-100 logical flow with match ip4.dst  ==  E  &&  outport  ==  GW  &&
                     is_chassis_resident(P),  where E is the external IP address specified in the
                     NAT rule, GW is the distributed gateway port corresponding to the  NAT  rule
                     (specified  or  inferred). For dnat_and_snat NAT rule, P is the logical port
                     specified in the NAT rule. If logical_port column of NAT table is  NOT  set,
                     then P is the chassisredirect port of GW with the following actions:

                     clone {
                         ct_clear;
                         inport = outport;
                         outport = "";
                         flags = 0;
                         flags.loopback = 1;
                         flags.use_snat_zone = REGBIT_DST_NAT_IP_LOCAL;
                         reg0 = 0;
                         reg1 = 0;
                         ...
                         reg9 = 0;
                         REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK = 1;
                         next(pipeline=ingress, table=0);
                     };

                     flags.loopback  is  set since in_port is unchanged and the packet may return
                     back to that port after NAT processing.  REGBIT_EGRESS_LOOPBACK  is  set  to
                     indicate  that  egress loopback has occurred, in order to skip the source IP
                     address check against the router address.

              •      A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.

     Egress Table 5: Delivery

       Packets that reach this table are ready for delivery. It contains:

              •      Priority-110 logical flows that match IP multicast packets on  each  enabled
                     logical router port and modify the Ethernet source address of the packets to
                     the Ethernet address of the port and then execute action output;.

              •      Priority-100 logical flows that match packets on each enabled logical router
                     port, with action output;.