Provided by: ovn-common_25.03.1-0ubuntu0.25.04.1_amd64 

NAME
ovn-northd - 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.
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.
--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.
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.
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/TLS 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/TLS
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/TLS 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/TLS peers. (This may be the same certificate that SSL/TLS 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/TLS 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.
inc-engine/show-stats
Display ovn-northd engine counters. For each engine node the following counters have been
added:
• recompute
• compute
• abort
inc-engine/show-stats engine_node_name counter_name
Display the ovn-northd engine counter(s) for the specified engine_node_name. counter_name
is optional and can be one of recompute, compute or abort.
inc-engine/clear-stats
Reset ovn-northd engine counters.
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 logical port that’s defined as a target of routing protocol redirecting (via
routing-protocol-redirect option set on Logical Router Port), a filter is set in place that
disallows following traffic exiting this port:
• ARP replies
• IPv6 Neighbor Discovery - Router Advertisements
• IPv6 Neighbor Discovery - Neighbor Advertisements
Since this port shares IP and MAC addresses with the Logical Router Port, we wan’t to
prevent duplicate replies and advertisements. This is achieved by a rule with priority 80
that sets REGBIT_PORT_SEC_DROP" = 1; next;".
• 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_L3_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
For each logical switch port P of type router connected to a gw router a priority-120 flow that matches
’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet too big’ and eth.src == D && outport == P && flags.tunnel_rx == 1
where D is the peer logical router port RP mac address, swaps inport and outport and applies the action
next.
For each logical switch port P of type router connected to a distributed router a priority-120 flow that
matches ’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet too big’ and eth.dst == D && flags.tunnel_rx == 1 where D
is the peer logical router port RP mac address, swaps inport and outport and applies the action
next(pipeline=S_SWITCH_IN_L2_LKUP).
For each logical switch port P a priority-110 flow that matches ’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet
too big’ and eth.src == D && outport == P && !is_chassis_resident("P") && flags.tunnel_rx == 1
where D is the logical switch port mac address, swaps inport and outport and applies the action next.
This table adds a priority-105 flow that matches ’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet too big’ to drop
the packet.
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 for logical switch VIF ports whose port security is disabled and
’unknown’ address setn as well as for localnet ports with option localnet_learn_fdb. A localnet port
entry does not overwrite a VIF port entry. Logical switch ports with type switch have implicit ’unknown’
addresses and so they are also eligible for MAC learning.
• For each such VIF 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;
• For each such localnet logical port p following flow is added.
• Priority 100 flow with the match inport == p and action flags.localnet = 1; 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 VIF or ’switch’ logical ports whose port security is
disabled and ’unknown’ address set (note: ’switch’ ports have implicit ’unknown’ addresses) as well as on
localnet ports with localnet_learn_fdb option set if the lookup_fdb action returned false in the previous
table. For localnet ports (with flags.localnet = 1), lookup_fdb returns true if (port, mac) is found or
if a mac is found for a port of type vif.
• For each such VIF logical port p whose port security is disabled and ’unknown’ address set
and localnet port 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. This priority-110 flow is not addd for router ports if the option
enable_router_port_acl is set to true in options:enable_router_port_acl column of Logical_Switch_Port.
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 when there are stateful ACLs
or LB rules; REGBIT_ACL_STATELESS is set for traffic matching stateless ACL flows.
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
column 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. It
also contains two priority-110 flows to move stateless traffic, i.e traffic for which
REGBIT_ACL_STATELESS is set, 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
column 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 ACL evaluation 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.
• This table is responsible for evaluating ACLs, and setting a register bit to indicate
whether the ACL decided to allow, drop, or reject the traffic. The allow bit is reg8[16].
The drop bit is reg8[17]. All flows in this table will advance the packet to the next
table, where the bits from before are evaluated to determine what to do with the packet.
Any flows in this table that intend for the packet to pass will set reg8[16] to 1, even if
an ACL with an allow-type action was not matched. This lets the next table know to allow
the traffic to pass. These bits will be referred to as the "allow", "drop", and "reject"
bits in the upcoming paragraphs.
• If the tier column has been configured on the ACL, then OVN will also match the current
tier counter against the configured ACL tier. OVN keeps count of the current tier in
reg8[30..31].
• allow ACLs translate into logical flows that set the allow bit to 1 and advance the packet
to the next table. If there are any stateful ACLs on this datapath, then allow ACLs set the
allow bit to one and in addition perform ct_commit; (which acts as a hint for future 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 that set the allow bit and additionally
have 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 that set the allow bit and advance to the
next table.
• reject ACLs translate into logical flows with that set the reject bit and advance to the
next table.
• pass ACLs translate into logical flows that do not set the allow, drop, or reject bit and
advance to the next table.
• Other ACLs set the drop bit and advance to the next table for new or untracked connections.
For known connections, they set the drop bit, as well as running the ct_commit {
ct_label=1/1; }; action. 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 set the allow bit and advance to the next table if the
logical switch has no ACLs configured, otherwise a priority-0 flow to advance to the next table is added.
This flow does not set the allow bit, so that the next table can decide whether to allow or drop the
packet based on the value of the options:default_acl_drop column of the NB_Global table.
A priority-65532 flow is added that sets the allow bit for IPv6 Neighbor solicitation, Neighbor discover,
Router solicitation, Router advertisement and MLD packets regardless of other ACLs defined.
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 column 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.
• A priority-1 flow that sets the allow bit and 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 sets the allow bit for 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] and sets register bit reg0[17]. 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 sets the allow bit for 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. This
flow also applies NAT to the related traffic so that ICMP headers and the inner packet have
correct addresses. 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 sets the drop bit for all traffic marked by the connection
tracker as invalid.
• A priority-65532 flow that sets the drop bit for 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.
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 that sets
the allow bit, where E is the service monitor mac defined in the options:svc_monitor_mac
column of NB_Global table.
Ingress Table 9: from-lport ACL sampling
Logical flows in this table sample traffic matched by from-lport ACLs with sampling enabled.
• If no ACLs have sampling enabled, then a priority 0 flow is installed that matches
everything and advances to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_new configured a priority 1100 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value. This flow generates a sample() action and then
advances the packet to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_est configured a priority 1200 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value for established traffic in the original direction.
This flow generates a sample() action and then advances the packet to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_est configured a priority 1200 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value for established traffic in the reply direction. This
flow generates a sample() action and then advances the packet to the next table. Note: this
flow is installed in the opposite pipeline (in the ingress pipeline for ACLs applied in the
egress direction and in the egress pipeline for ACLs applied in the ingress direction).
Ingress Table 10: from-lport ACL action
Logical flows in this table decide how to proceed based on the values of the allow, drop, and reject bits
that may have been set in the previous table.
• If no ACLs are configured, then a priority 0 flow is installed that matches everything and
advances to the next table.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will advance the packet to the next table if the
allow bit is set.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will run the drop; action if the drop bit is set.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will run 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.
• If any ACLs have tiers configured on them, then three priority 500 flows are installed. If
the current tier counter is 0, 1, or 2, then the current tier counter is incremented by one
and the packet is sent back to the previous table for re-evaluation.
Ingress Table 11: from-lport QoS
Logical flows in this table closely reproduce those in the QoS table with the action or bandwidth column
set in the OVN_Northbound database for the from-lport direction.
• For every qos_rules entry in a logical switch with DSCP marking, packet marking or 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 12: Load balancing affinity check
Load balancing affinity check table contains the following logical flows:
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a switch in OVN_Northbound database where a
positive affinity timeout is specified in options column, that includes a L4 port PORT of
protocol P and IP address VIP, a priority-100 flow is added. For IPv4 VIPs, the flow
matches ct.new && ip && ip4.dst == VIP && P.dst == PORT. For IPv6 VIPs, the flow matches
ct.new && ip && ip6.dst == VIP&& P && P.dst == PORT. The flow’s action is reg9[6] =
chk_lb_aff(); next;.
• A priority 0 flow is added which matches on all packets and applies the action next;.
Ingress Table 13: LB
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a switch in OVN_Northbound database where a
positive affinity timeout is specified in options column, that includes a L4 port PORT of
protocol P and IP address VIP, a priority-150 flow is added. For IPv4 VIPs, the flow
matches reg9[6] == 1 && ct.new && ip && ip4.dst == VIP && P.dst == PORT . For IPv6 VIPs,
the flow matches reg9[6] == 1 && 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.
• 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.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 14: Load balancing affinity learn
Load balancing affinity learn table contains the following logical flows:
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a switch in OVN_Northbound database where a
positive affinity timeout T is specified in options column, that includes a L4 port PORT of
protocol P and IP address VIP, a priority-100 flow is added. For IPv4 VIPs, the flow
matches reg9[6] == 0 && ct.new && ip && ip4.dst == VIP && P.dst == PORT. For IPv6 VIPs, the
flow matches ct.new && ip && ip6.dst == VIP && P && P.dst == PORT . The flow’s action is
commit_lb_aff(vip = VIP:PORT, backend = backend ip: backend port, proto = P, timeout = T);
.
• A priority 0 flow is added which matches on all packets and applies the action next;.
Ingress Table 15: 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 16: 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 17: Hairpin
• If logical switch has attached logical switch port of vtep type, then for each distributed
gateway router port RP attached to this logical switch and has chassis redirect port cr-RP,
a priority-2000 flow is added with the match .IP
reg0[14] == 1 && is_chassis_resident(cr-RP)
and action next;.
reg0[14] register bit is set in the ingress L2 port security check table for traffic
received from HW VTEP (ramp) ports.
• If logical switch has attached logical switch port of vtep type, then 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 18: from-lport ACL evaluation after LB
Logical flows in this table closely reproduce those in the ACL eval 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. The flows in this table indicate the ACL verdict by setting reg8[16] for allow-type
ACLs, reg8[17] for drop ACLs, and reg8[17] for reject ACLs, and then advancing the packet to the next
table. These will be reffered to as the allow bit, drop bit, and reject bit throughout the documentation
for this table and the next one.
Like with ACLs that are evaluated before load balancers, if the ACL is configured with a tier value, then
the current tier counter, supplied in reg8[30..31] is matched against the ACL’s configured tier in
addition to the ACL’s match.
• allow apply-after-lb ACLs translate into logical flows that set the allow bit. If there are
any stateful ACLs (including both before-lb and after-lb ACLs) on this datapath, then allow
ACLs also run ct_commit; next; (which acts as a hint for an upcoming table 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 that set the allow bit and
run 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 that set the allow bit and
advance to the next table.
• reject apply-after-lb ACLs translate into logical flows that set the reject bit and advance
to the next table.
• pass apply-after-lb ACLs translate into logical flows that do not set the allow, drop, or
reject bit and advance to the next table.
• Other apply-after-lb ACLs set the drop bit 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-65532 flow matching packets with reg0[17] set (either replies to existing
sessions or traffic related to existing sessions) and allows these by setting the allow bit
and advancing to the next table.
• One priority-0 fallback flow that matches all packets and advances to the next table.
Ingress Table 19: from-lport ACL sampling after LB
Logical flows in this table sample traffic matched by from-lport ACLs (evaluation after LB) with sampling
enabled.
• If no ACLs have sampling enabled, then a priority 0 flow is installed that matches
everything and advances to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_new configured a priority 1100 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value. This flow generates a sample() action and then
advances the packet to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_est configured a priority 1200 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value for established traffic in the original direction.
This flow generates a sample() action and then advances the packet to the next table.
• For each ACL with sample_est configured a priority 1200 flow is installed that matches on
the saved observation_point_id value for established traffic in the reply direction. This
flow generates a sample() action and then advances the packet to the next table. Note: this
flow is installed in the opposite pipeline (in the ingress pipeline for ACLs applied in the
egress direction and in the egress pipeline for ACLs applied in the ingress direction).
Ingress Table 20: from-lport ACL action after LB
Logical flows in this table decide how to proceed based on the values of the allow, drop, and reject bits
that may have been set in the previous table.
• If no ACLs are configured, then a priority 0 flow is installed that matches everything and
advances to the next table.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will advance the packet to the next table if the
allow bit is set.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will run the drop; action if the drop bit is set.
• A priority 1000 flow is installed that will run 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.
• If any ACLs have tiers configured on them, then three priority 500 flows are installed. If
the current tier counter is 0, 1, or 2, then the current tier counter is incremented by one
and the packet is sent back to the previous table for re-evaluation.
Ingress Table 21: 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 22: 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:
• If packet was received from HW VTEP (ramp switch), and this packet is ARP or Neighbor
Solicitation, such packet is passed to next table with max proirity. ARP/ND requests from
HW VTEP must be handled in logical router ingress pipeline.
• If the logical switch has no router ports with options:arp_proxy configured add a
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 only broadcast ARP requests to each known IPv4 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, for logical ports with the options:disable_arp_nd_rsp=true 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.
The above NDP responder flows are added for the list of IPv6 addresses if defined in
options:arp_proxy column of Logical_Switch_Port table for logical switch ports of type
router.
• 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 IPv6 the similar flow is added with the following action
nd_na {
eth.dst = eth.src;
eth.src = E;
ip6.src = A;
nd.target = A;
nd.tll = E;
outport = inport;
flags.loopback = 1;
output;
};
• 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 23: 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 24: 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 25 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 26 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 27 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 28 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 column 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.
• A priority-100 flow that forwards all DHCP broadcast packets coming from VIFs to the
logical router port’s MAC when DHCP relay is enabled on the logical switch.
• For any logical port that’s defined as a target of routing protocol redirecting (via
routing-protocol-redirect option set on Logical Router Port), we redirect the traffic
related to protocols specified in routing-protocols option. It’s acoomplished with
following priority-100 flows:
• Flows that match Logical Router Port’s IPs and destination port of the routing
daemon are redirected to this port to allow external peers’ connection to the daemon
listening on this port.
• Flows that match Logical Router Port’s IPs and source port of the routing daemon are
redirected to this port to allow replies from the peers.
In addition to this, we add priority-100 rules that clone ARP replies and IPv6 Neighbor
Advertisements to this port as well. These allow to build proper ARP/IPv6 neighbor list on
this port.
• Priority-90 flows for transit switches that forward registered IP multicast traffic to
their corresponding multicast group , which ovn-northd creates based on learnt IGMP_Group
entries.
• 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/RARP request/ND packets. These packets are flooded to the MC_FLOOD_L2 which
contains all non-router logical ports.
• A priority-72 flow that outputs all ARP requests and ND packets with an Ethernet broadcast
or multicast eth.dst to the MC_FLOOD_L2 multicast group if
other_config:broadcast-arps-to-all-routers=true.
• 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. If the logical switch port of type VIF has the option
options:pkt_clone_type is set to the value mc_unknown, then the packet is also forwarded to
the MC_UNKNOWN multicast group.
The above flow is not added if the logical switch port is of type VIF, has unknown as one
of its address and has the option options:force_fdb_lookup set to true.
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 29 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: Lookup MAC address learning table
This is similar to ingress table Lookup MAC address learning table
with the difference that MAC address learning lookup is only happening for ports with type remote whose
port security is disabled and ’unknown’ address set. This stage facilitates MAC learning on a transit
switch connecting multiple availability zones.
Egress Table 1: Learn MAC of ’unknown’ ports.
This is similar to ingress table Learn MAC of ’unknown’ ports
with the difference that MAC address learning is only happening for ports with type remote whose port
security is disabled and ’unknown’ address set. This stage facilitates MAC learning on a transit switch
connecting multiple availability zones.
Egress Table 2: 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
column 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 3: 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 committed 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
column 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, and, if there are no stateful_acl, clear the ct_state. 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 4: 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 5: from-lport ACL hints
This is similar to ingress table ACL hints.
Egress Table 6: to-lport ACL evaluation
This is similar to ingress table ACL eval except for to-lport ACLs. As a reminder, these flows use the
following register bits to indicate their verdicts. Allow-type ACLs set reg8[16], drop ACLs set reg8[17],
and reject ACLs set reg8[18].
Also like with ingress ACLs, egress ACLs can have a configured tier. If a tier is configured, then the
current tier counter is evaluated against the ACL’s configured tier in addition to the ACL’s match. The
current tier counter is stored in reg8[30..31].
Similar to ingress table, a priority-65532 flow is added to allow IPv6 Neighbor solicitation, Neighbor
discover, Router solicitation, Router advertisement and MLD packets regardless of other ACLs defined.
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. This is indicated by setting
the allow bit.
• 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. This is indicated by setting the allow bit.
• 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
column of NB_Global table. This is indicated by setting the allow bit.
Egress Table 7: to-lport ACL sampling
This is similar to ingress table ACL sampling.
Egress Table 8: to-lport ACL action
This is similar to ingress table ACL action.
Egress Table 9: to-lport QoS
This is similar to ingress table QoS except they apply to to-lport QoS rules.
Egress Table 10: Stateful
This is similar to ingress table Stateful except that there are no rules added for load balancing new
connections.
Egress Table 11: 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 12: 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 port configured with egress qos in the options:qdisc_queue_id column of
Logical_Switch_Port, running a localnet port on the same logical switch, a priority 110
flow is added which matches on the localnet outport and on the port inport and applies the
action set_queue(id); output;".
• 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 each gateway port GW on a distributed logical router a priority-120 flow that matches
’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet too big’ and eth.dst == D && !is_chassis_resident(
cr-GW) where D is the gateway port mac address and cr-GW is the chassis resident port of
GW, swap inport and outport and stores GW as inport.
This table adds a priority-105 flow that matches ’recirculated’ icmp{4,6} error ’packet too
big’ to drop the packet.
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.
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
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;
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
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.
• For each logical router port configured with DHCP relay the following priority-110 flows
are added to manage the DHCP relay traffic:
• if inport is lrp and ip4.src == 0.0.0.0
and ip4.dst == 255.255.255.255 and ip4.frag == 0 and udp.src == 68 and udp.dst ==
67, the dhcp_relay_req_chk
action is executed.
reg9[7] = dhcp_relay_req_chk(lrp_ip,
dhcp_server_ip);next
if action is successful then, GIADDR in the dhcp header is updated with lrp ip and
stores 1 into reg9[7] else stores 0 into reg9[7].
• if ip4.src is DHCP server ip and ip4.dst
is lrp IP and udp.src == 67 and udp.dst == 67, the packet is advanced to the next
pipeline stage.
• 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.
• For each load balancer applied to this logical router configured with VIP template, a
priority-100 flow matching ip4.dst or ip6.dst with the configured load balancer VIP and
action next;. These flows avoid dropping the packet if the VIP is set to one of the router
IPs.
• 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.
• Avoid ICMP time exceeded for multicast. A priority-32 flow with match ip.ttl == {0, 1} &&
!ip.later_frag && (ip4.mcast || ip6.mcast) and actions drop; drops multicast packets whose
TTL has expired without sending ICMP time exceeded.
• ICMP time exceeded. For each router port P, whose IP address is A, a priority-31 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: DHCP Relay Request
This stage process the DHCP request packets on which dhcp_relay_req_chk action is applied in the IP input
stage.
• A priority-100 logical flow is added for each logical router port configured with DHCP
relay that matches inport is lrp and ip4.src == 0.0.0.0 and ip4.dst == 255.255.255.255 and
udp.src == 68
and udp.dst == 67 and reg9[7] == 1 and applies following actions. If reg9[7] is set to 1
then, dhcp_relay_req_chk action was successful.
ip4.src=lrp ip;
ip4.dst=dhcp server ip;
udp.src = 67;
next;
• A priority-1 logical flow is added for each logical router port configured with DHCP relay
that matches inport is lrp and ip4.src == 0.0.0.0 and ip4.dst == 255.255.255.255 and
udp.src == 68
and udp.dst == 67 and reg9[7] == 0 and drops the packet. If reg9[7] is set to 0 then,
dhcp_relay_req_chk action was unsuccessful.
• A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advance to the next table.
Ingress Table 5: 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 5: 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 5: 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 5: 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
or ip && ip6.dst == B && inport == GW where GW is the distributed gateway port
corresponding to the NAT rule (specified or inferred), with an action ct_snat; 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.
A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.
Ingress Table 6: POST USNAT
This is to check whether the packet is already tracked in SNAT zone. It contains a priority-0 flow that
simply moves traffic to the next table.
If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following two flows are configured matching on ip &&
ct.new with an action flags.unsnat_new = 1; next; and ip && !ct.trk with an action
flags.unsnat_not_tracked = 1; next; Which sets one of the flags that is used in later stages. There is
extra match on both when there is configured DGP inport == DGP && is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS).
Ingress Table 7: 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.
For all load balancing rules that 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
ct_dnat; 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.
If load balancing rules are configured in OVN_Northbound database for a Gateway router, a priority 50
flow that matches icmp || icmp6 with an action of ct_dnat;, this allows potentially related ICMP traffic
to pass through CT.
If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following flow is configured matching on ip && (!ct.trk
|| !ct.rpl) with an action ct_next(dnat);. There is extra match when the LR is configured as DGP inport
== DGP && is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS).
Ingress Table 8: Load balancing affinity check
Load balancing affinity check table contains the following logical flows:
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a logical router where a positive affinity
timeout is specified in options column, that includes a L4 port PORT of protocol P and IPv4
or IPv6 address VIP, a priority-100 flow that matches on ct.new && ip && ip.dst == VIP && P
&& P.dst == PORT (xxreg0 == VIP
in the IPv6 case) with an action of reg0 = ip.dst; reg9[16..31] = P.dst; reg9[6] =
chk_lb_aff(); next; (xxreg0 == ip6.dst in the IPv6 case)
• A priority 0 flow is added which matches on all packets and applies the action next;.
Ingress Table 9: 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 8: 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.
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a logical router where a positive affinity
timeout is specified in options column, that includes a L4 port PORT of protocol P and IPv4
or IPv6 address VIP, a priority-150 flow that matches on reg9[6] == 1 && ct.new && ip &&
ip.dst == VIP && P && P.dst == PORT with an action of 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 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 && !ct.rel && ip && ip.dst == VIP
&& P && P.dst ==
PORT 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; force_snat);. 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; skip_snat);. 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 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 &&
!ct.rel && ip4 && ip.dst == VIP 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; force_snat);. 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;
skip_snat);.
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.
• For the related traffic, a priority 50 flow that matches ct.rel && !ct.est && !ct.new with
an action of ct_commit_nat;, if the router has load balancer assigned to it. Along with two
priority 70 flows that match skip_snat and force_snat flags, setting the
flags.force_snat_for_lb = 1 or flags.skip_snat_for_lb = 1 accordingly.
• For the established traffic, a priority 50 flow that matches ct.est && !ct.rel && !ct.new
&& ct_mark.natted with an action of next;, if the router has load balancer assigned to it.
Along with two priority 70 flows that match skip_snat and force_snat flags, setting the
flags.force_snat_for_lb = 1 or flags.skip_snat_for_lb = 1 accordingly.
Ingress Table 9: 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.
For each configuration in the OVN Northbound database, that asks to change the destination
IP address of a packet from A to B, match M and priority P, a logical flow that matches ip
&& ip4.dst == A or ip && ip6.dst == A && (M) with an action flags.loopback = 1;
ct_dnat(B);. The priority of the flow is calculated based as 300 + P. 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 options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following flow is configured matching on ip
&& ct.new with an action ct_commit_to_zone(dnat);.
• A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.
Ingress Table 9: 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.
If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following flow is configured matching on ip
&& ct.new && inport == DGP && is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS) with an action
ct_commit_to_zone(dnat);.
A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.
Ingress Table 10: Load balancing affinity learn
Load balancing affinity learn table contains the following logical flows:
• For all the configured load balancing rules for a logical router where a positive affinity
timeout T is specified in options
column, that includes a L4 port PORT of protocol P and IPv4 or IPv6 address VIP, a
priority-100 flow that matches on reg9[6] == 0 && ct.new && ip && reg0 == VIP && P &&
reg9[16..31] == PORT (xxreg0 == VIP in the IPv6 case) with an action of commit_lb_aff(vip
= VIP:PORT, backend = backend ip: backend port, proto = P, timeout = T);.
• A priority 0 flow is added which matches on all packets and applies the action next;.
Ingress Table 11: 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 12: 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 13: 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 14: 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 15: 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;
reg8[16..31] = select(MID1, MID2, ...);
However, when there is only one route in an ECMP group, group actions will be:
ip.ttl--;
flags.loopback = 1;
reg8[0..15] = GID;
reg8[16..31] = MID1);
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
Ingress Table 16: 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;
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
Ingress Table 17: 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 18: 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.
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
Ingress Table 19: DHCP Relay Response Check
This stage process the DHCP response packets coming from the DHCP server.
• A priority 100 logical flow is added for each logical router port configured with DHCP
relay that matches ip4.src is DHCP server ip and ip4.dst is lrp IP and ip4.frag == 0 and
udp.src == 67 and udp.dst == 67 and applies dhcp_relay_resp_chk
action. Original destination ip is stored in reg2.
reg9[8] = dhcp_relay_resp_chk(lrp_ip,
dhcp_server_ip);next
if action is successful then, dest mac and dest IP addresses are updated in the packet and
stores 1 into reg9[8] else stores 0 into reg9[8].
• A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advance to the next table.
Ingress Table 20: DHCP Relay Response
This stage process the DHCP response packets on which dhcp_relay_resp_chk action is applied in the
previous stage.
• A priority 100 logical flow is added for each logical router port configured with DHCP
relay that matches ip4.src is DHCP server ip and reg2 is lrp IP and udp.src == 67 and
udp.dst == 67 and reg9[8] == 1 and applies following actions. If reg9[8] is set to 1 then,
dhcp_relay_resp_chk was successful.
ip4.src = lrp ip;
udp.dst = 68;
outport = lrp port;
output;
• A priority 1 logical flow is added for the logical router port on which DHCP relay is
enabled that matches ip4.src is DHCP server ip and reg2 is lrp IP and udp.src == 67 and
udp.dst == 67 and reg9[8] == 0 and drops the packet. If reg9[8] is set to 0 then,
dhcp_relay_resp_chk was unsuccessful.
• A priority-0 flow that matches all packets to advance to the next table.
Ingress Table 21: 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. (Note: the
flow is not installed for IPs of logical switch ports of type virtual, and dynamic MAC
binding is used for those IPs instead, so that virtual parent failover does not depend on
ovn-northd, to achieve better failover performance.) 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 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,
below two flows are programmed:
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.
Corresponding to the above flow, a priority-150 flow with the match inport == P && outport
== P && ip4.dst == A has actions drop; to exclude packets that have gone through
DNAT/unSNAT stage but failed to convert the destination, to avoid loop.
For IPv6 NAT entries, same flows are added, but using the register xxreg0 and field ip6 for
the match.
• If the router datapath runs a port with redirect-type set to bridged, for each distributed
NAT rule with IP A in the logical_ip column and logical port P in the logical_port column
of NAT table, a priority-90 flow with the match outport == Q && ip.src === A &&
is_chassis_resident(P), where Q is the distributed logical router port and action
get_arp(outport, reg0); next; for IPv4 and get_nd(outport, xxreg0); next; for IPv6.
• 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-2 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-2 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;.
A priority-0 logical that flow matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (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 22: 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 actions check_pkt_larger and ct_state_save and
then advances the packet to the next table.
REGBIT_PKT_LARGER = check_pkt_larger(L);
REG_CT_STATE = ct_state_save();
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 23: 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 24: 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 all the configured load balancing rules that include an IPv4 address VIP, and a list of
IPv4 backend addresses B0, B1 .. Bn defined for the VIP a priority-200 flow is added that
matches ip4 && (ip4.src == B0 || ip4.src == B1 || ... || ip4.src == Bn) with an action
outport = CR; next; where CR is the chassisredirect port representing the instance of the
logical router distributed gateway port on the gateway chassis. If the backend IPv4 address
Bx is also configured with L4 port PORT of protocol P, then the match also includes P.src
== PORT. Similar flows are added for IPv6.
• 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 25: Network ID
This table contains flows that set flags.network_id for IP packets:
• A priority-110 flow with match:
• for IPv4: outport == P && REG_NEXT_HOP_IPV4 == I/C && ip4
• for IPv6: outport == P && REG_NEXT_HOP_IPV6 == I/C && ip6
and actions flags.network_id = N; next;. Where P is the outport, I/C is a network CIDR of
the port P, and N is the network id (index). There is one flow like this per router port’s
network.
flags.network_id is 4 bits, and thus only 16 networks can be indexed. If the number of
networks is greater than 16, networks 17 and up will have the actions flags.network_id = 0;
next; and only the lexicographically first IP will be considered for SNAT for those
networks.
• A lower priority-105 flow with match 1 and actions flags.network_id = 0; next;. This is for
the case that the next-hop doesn’t belong to any of the port networks, so flags.network_id
should be set to zero.
• Catch-all: A priority-0 flow with match 1 has actions next;.
Ingress Table 26: 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.
• 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 IPv6 Neighbor Discovery or Router Solicitation/Advertisement traffic, a priority-100
flow with action next;.
• 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;. 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;. 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.
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-70 logical flow is added that initiates CT state for traffic that is configured
to be SNATed on Distributed routers. This allows the next table, lr_out_snat, to
effectively match on various CT states.
• 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; .
• If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following flows are configured matching on
ip && (!ct.trk || !ct.rpl) && flags.unsnat_not_tracked == 1 with an action ct_next(snat);
and ip && flags.unsnat_new == 1 with an action next;. There is extra match when there is
configured DGP outport == DGP && is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS).
• 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 through 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, and for each network configured for this port, a priority-110 flow matches
flags.force_snat_for_lb == 1 && ip4 && flags.network_id == N && outport == P, where N is
the network index, with an action ct_snat(R); where R is the IP configured on the router
port. A similar flow is created for IPv6, with ip6 instead of ip4. N, the network index,
will be 0 for networks 17 and up.
If the logical router port P is configured with multiple IPv4 and multiple IPv6 addresses,
the IPv4 and IPv6 address within the same network as the next-hop will be chosen as R for
SNAT. However, if there are more than 16 networks configured, the lexicographically first
IP will be considered for SNAT for networks 17 and up.
• A priority-105 flow matches the old behavior for if northd is upgraded before controller
and flags.network_id is not recognized. It is only added if there’s at least one network
configured (excluding LLA for IPv6). It matches on: flags.force_snat_for_lb == 1 && ip4 &&
outport == P, with action: ct_snat(R). R is the lexicographically first IP address
configured. There is a similar flow for IPv6 with ip6 instead of ip4.
• 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).
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, match M and priority P, a flow matches ip && ip4.src == A
&& (!ct.trk || !ct.rpl) && (M) with an action ct_snat(B); . The priority of the flow is
calculated based as 300 + P. 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.
• If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following two flows are configured matching
on ip && (!ct.trk || !ct.rpl) && flags.unsnat_new == 1 and ip && ct.new &&
flags.unsnat_not_tracked == 1
both with an action ct_commit_to_zone(snat);.
• 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(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).
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.
• An additional flow is added for traffic that goes in opposite direction (i.e. it enters a
network with configured SNAT). Where the flow above matched on ip4.src == A && outport ==
GW, this flow matches on ip4.dst == A && inport == GW. A CT state is initiated for this
traffic so that the following table, lr_out_post_snat, can identify whether the traffic
flow was initiated from the internal or external network.
• If the options:ct-commit-all is set to true the following two flows are configured matching
on ip && (!ct.trk || !ct.rpl) && flags.unsnat_new == 1 && outport == DGP &&
is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS)
and ip && ct.new && flags.unsnat_not_tracked == 1 && outport == DGP &&
is_chassis_resident(CHASSIS)both with an action ct_commit_to_zone(snat);.
• A priority-0 logical flow with match 1 has actions next;.
Egress Table 4: Post SNAT
Packets reaching this table are processed according to the flows below:
• Traffic that goes directly into a network configured with SNAT on Distributed routers, and
was initiated from an external network (i.e. it matches ct.new), is committed to the SNAT
CT zone. This ensures that replies returning from the SNATed network do not have their
source address translated. For details about match rules and priority see section "Egress
Table 3: SNAT on Distributed Routers".
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and action
next;.
Egress Table 5: 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;
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 6: 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;.
• A priority-0 logical flow that matches all packets not already handled (match 1) and drops
them (action drop;).
DROP SAMPLING
As described in the previous section, there are several places where ovn-northd might decided to drop a
packet by explicitly creating a Logical_Flow with the drop; action.
When debug drop-sampling has been cofigured in the OVN Northbound database, the ovn-northd will replace
all the drop; actions with a sample(priority=65535, collector_set=id, obs_domain=obs_id,
obs_point=@cookie) action, where:
• id is the value the debug_drop_collector_set option configured in the OVN Northbound.
• obs_id has it’s 8 most significant bits equal to the value of the debug_drop_domain_id
option in the OVN Northbound and it’s 24 least significant bits equal to the datapath’s
tunnel key.
OVN 25.03.1 ovn-northd ovn-northd(8)