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NAME

       ovsdb - Open vSwitch Database (File Formats)

DESCRIPTION

       OVSDB, the Open vSwitch Database, is a database system whose network protocol is specified
       by  RFC  7047.   The  RFC  does  not  specify  an  on-disk  storage  format.   The   OVSDB
       implementation  in  Open  vSwitch  implements two storage formats: one for standalone (and
       active-backup) databases, and the other for clustered databases.  This  manpage  documents
       both of these formats.

       Most  users  do  not need to be concerned with this specification.  Instead, to manipulate
       OVSDB files, refer to ovsdb-tool(1).  For an  introduction  to  OVSDB  as  a  whole,  read
       ovsdb(7).

       OVSDB  files  explicitly  record  changes  that  are  implied by the database schema.  For
       example, the OVSDB “garbage collection” feature means that when a client removes the  last
       reference  to a garbage-collected row, the database server automatically removes that row.
       The database file explicitly records the deletion of the garbage-collected  row,  so  that
       the reader does not need to infer it.

       OVSDB files do not include the values of ephemeral columns.

       Standalone  and  clustered database files share the common structure described here.  They
       are text files encoded in UTF-8 with LF  (U+000A)  line  ends,  organized  as  append-only
       series of records.  Each record consists of 2 lines of text.

       The  first line in each record has the format OVSDB <magic> <length> <hash>, where <magic>
       is JSON for standalone databases  or  CLUSTER  for  clustered  databases,  <length>  is  a
       positive  decimal  integer,  and  <hash>  is  a SHA-1 checksum expressed as 40 hexadecimal
       digits.  Words in the first line must be separated by exactly one space.

       The second line must be exactly length  bytes  long  (including  the  LF)  and  its  SHA-1
       checksum  (including the LF) must match hash exactly.  The line’s contents must be a valid
       JSON object as specified by RFC 4627.  Strings in the JSON object must be valid UTF-8.  To
       ensure  that  the  second  line  is  exactly  one  line  of text, the OVSDB implementation
       expresses any LF characters within a JSON string as \n.  For the same reason, and to  save
       space,  the  OVSDB  implementation does not “pretty print” the JSON object with spaces and
       LFs.  (The OVSDB implementation tolerates LFs when reading an OVSDB database file, as long
       as length and hash are correct.)

   JSON Notation
       We  use  notation from RFC 7047 here to describe the JSON data in records.  In addition to
       the notation defined there, we add the following:

       <raw-uuid>
              A 36-character JSON string that contains a UUID in  the  format  described  by  RFC
              4122, e.g. "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000"

   Standalone Format
       The  first  record  in a standalone database contains the JSON schema for the database, as
       specified in RFC 7047.  Only this record is mandatory (a  standalone  file  that  contains
       only a schema represents an empty database).

       The  second and subsequent records in a standalone database are transaction records.  Each
       record may have the following optional special members, which do not  have  any  semantics
       but  are  often  useful  to  administrators looking through a database log with ovsdb-tool
       show-log:

       "_date": <integer>
              The time  at  which  the  transaction  was  committed,  as  an  integer  number  of
              milliseconds since the Unix epoch.  Early versions of OVSDB counted seconds instead
              of milliseconds; these can be detected by noticing that their values are less  than
              2**32.

              OVSDB always writes a _date member.

       "_comment": <string>
              A  JSON  string  that  specifies  the  comment  provided  in  a transaction comment
              operation.  If a transaction has multiple comment  operations,  OVSDB  concatenates
              them into a single _comment member, separated by a new-line.

              OVSDB only writes a _comment member if it would be a nonempty string.

       Each of these records also has one or more additional members, each of which maps from the
       name of a database table to a <table-txn>:

       <table-txn>
              A JSON object that describes the effects of a transaction on a database table.  Its
              names are <raw-uuid>s for rows in the table and its values are <row-txn>s.

       <row-txn>
              Either  null,  which  indicates  that  the  transaction deleted this row, or a JSON
              object that describes how the transaction inserted or modified the row, whose names
              are  the  names of columns and whose values are <value>s that give the column’s new
              value.

              For new rows, the OVSDB implementation omits columns whose values have the  default
              values  for  their  types defined in RFC 7047 section 5.2.1; for modified rows, the
              OVSDB implementation omits columns whose values are unchanged.

   Clustered Format
       The clustered format has the following additional notation:

       <uint64>
              A  JSON  integer  that  represents  a  64-bit  unsigned  integer.   The  OVS   JSON
              implementation  only  supports  integers  in  the  range -2**63 through 2**63-1, so
              64-bit unsigned integer values from 2**63 through 2**64-1 are expressed as negative
              numbers.

       <address>
              A  JSON  string  that  represents  a  network address to support clustering, in the
              <protocol>:<ip>:<port> syntax described in ovsdb-tool(1).

       <servers>
              A JSON object whose names are <raw-uuid>s that identify servers  and  whose  values
              are <address>es that specify those servers’ addresses.

       <cluster-txn>
              A JSON array with two elements:

              1. The  first  element  is either a <database-schema> or null.  A <database-schema>
                 element is always present in  the  first  record  of  a  clustered  database  to
                 indicate the database’s initial schema.  If it is not null in a later record, it
                 indicates a change of schema for the database.

              2. The second element is either a transaction record in the format described  under
                 Standalone Format above, or null.

              When  a schema is present, the transaction record is relative to an empty database.
              That is, a  schema  change  effectively  resets  the  database  to  empty  and  the
              transaction  record  represents the full database contents.  This allows readers to
              be ignorant of the full semantics of schema change.

       The first record in a clustered database contains the following members, all of which  are
       required, except prev_election_timer:

       "server_id": <raw-uuid>
              The server’s own UUID, which must be unique within the cluster.

       "local_address": <address>
              The  address  on which the server listens for connections from other servers in the
              cluster.

       "name": <id>
              The database schema name.  It is only important when a server is in the process  of
              joining  a cluster: a server will only join a cluster if the name matches.  (If the
              database schema name were unique, then we would not also need a cluster ID.)

       "cluster_id": <raw-uuid>
              The cluster’s UUID.  The all-zeros UUID is not a valid cluster ID.

       "prev_term": <uint64> and "prev_index": <uint64>
              The Raft term and index just before the beginning of the log.

       "prev_servers": <servers>
              The set of one or more servers in  the  cluster  at  index  “prev_index”  and  term
              “prev_term”.  It might not include this server, if it was not the initial server in
              the cluster.

       "prev_election_timer": <uint64>
              The election base time before the beginning of the log.  If not exist, the  default
              value 1000 ms is used as if it exists this record.

       "prev_data": <json-value> and "prev_eid": <raw-uuid>
              A  snapshot of the data in the database at index “prev_index” and term “prev_term”,
              and the entry ID for that data.  The snapshot must contain a schema.

       The second and subsequent records, if present, in a clustered database  represent  changes
       to the database, to the cluster state, or both.  There are several types of these records.
       The most important types of records directly represent persistent state described  in  the
       Raft specification:

       Entry  A Raft log entry.

       Term   The start of a new term.

       Vote   The server’s vote for a leader in the current term.

       The  following  additional types of records aid debugging and troubleshooting, but they do
       not affect correctness.

       Leader Identifies a newly elected leader for the current term.

       Commit Index
              An update to the server’s commit_index.

       Note   A human-readable description of some event.

       The table below identifies the members that each type of record contains.  “yes” indicates
       that  a  member  is required, “?” that it is optional, blank that it is forbidden, and [1]
       that data and eid must be either both present or both absent.

                 ┌───────────────┬───────┬──────┬──────┬────────┬──────────────┬──────┐
                 │member         │ Entry │ Term │ Vote │ Leader │ Commit Index │ Note │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │comment        │ ?     │ ?    │ ?    │ ?      │ ?            │ ?    │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │term           │ yes   │ yes  │ yes  │ yes    │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │index          │ yes   │      │      │        │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │servers        │ ?     │      │      │        │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │election_timer │ ?     │      │      │        │              │      │
                 └───────────────┴───────┴──────┴──────┴────────┴──────────────┴──────┘

                 │data           │ [1]   │      │      │        │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │eid            │ [1]   │      │      │        │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │vote           │       │      │ yes  │        │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │leader         │       │      │      │ yes    │              │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │commit_index   │       │      │      │        │ yes          │      │
                 ├───────────────┼───────┼──────┼──────┼────────┼──────────────┼──────┤
                 │note           │       │      │      │        │              │ yes  │
                 └───────────────┴───────┴──────┴──────┴────────┴──────────────┴──────┘

       The members are:

       "comment": <string>
              A human-readable string giving an administrator more information about the reason a
              record was emitted.

       "term": <uint64>
              The term in which the activity occurred.

       "index": <uint64>
              The index of a log entry.

       "servers": <servers>
              Server configuration in a log entry.

       "election_timer": <uint64>
              Leader election timeout base value in a log entry.

       "data": <json-value>
              The data in a log entry.

       "eid": <raw-uuid>
              Entry ID in a log entry.

       "vote": <raw-uuid>
              The server ID for which this server voted.

       "leader": <raw-uuid>
              The server ID of the server.  Emitted by both leaders and followers when  a  leader
              is elected.

       "commit_index": <uint64>
              Updated commit_index value.

       "note": <string>
              One  of  a  few special strings indicating important events.  The currently defined
              strings are:

              "transfer leadership"
                     This server transferred leadership  to  a  different  server  (with  details
                     included in comment).

              "left" This  server  finished  leaving  the cluster.  (This lets subsequent readers
                     know that the server is not part of the cluster and should  not  attempt  to
                     connect to it.)

   Joining a Cluster
       In addition to general format for a clustered database, there is also a special case for a
       database file created by ovsdb-tool  join-cluster.   Such  a  file  contains  exactly  one
       record,  which  conveys  the  information  passed to the join-cluster command.  It has the
       following members:

       "server_id": <raw-uuid> and "local_address": <address> and "name": <id>
              These have the same semantics described above in the  general  description  of  the
              format.

       "cluster_id": <raw-uuid>
              This  is  provided  only if the user gave the --cid option to join-cluster.  It has
              the same semantics described above.

       "remote_addresses"; [<address>*]
              One or more remote servers to contact for joining the cluster.

       When the server successfully joins the cluster, the  database  file  is  replaced  by  one
       described in Clustered Format.

AUTHOR

       The Open vSwitch Development Community

COPYRIGHT

       2016-2022, The Open vSwitch Development Community