Provided by: openvswitch-common_3.6.0-6build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ovs-actions - OpenFlow actions and instructions with Open vSwitch extensions

INTRODUCTION

       This  document  aims  to  comprehensively  document  all  of  the OpenFlow actions and instructions, both
       standard and non-standard, supported by Open  vSwitch,  regardless  of  origin.   The  document  includes
       information  of  interest  to  Open vSwitch users, such as the semantics of each supported action and the
       syntax used by Open vSwitch tools, and to developers seeking to build controllers and switches compatible
       with Open vSwitch, such as the wire format for each supported message.

   Actions
       In this document, we define an action as an OpenFlow action, which is a kind of  command  that  specifies
       what  to  do  with  a  packet.   Actions  are used in OpenFlow flows to describe what to do when the flow
       matches a packet, and in a few other places in OpenFlow.  Each  version  of  the  OpenFlow  specification
       defines  standard  actions,  and  beyond  that  many OpenFlow switches, including Open vSwitch, implement
       extensions to the standard.

       OpenFlow groups actions in two ways: as an action list or an action set, described below.

   Action Lists
       An action list, a concept present in every version of OpenFlow, is simply an ordered sequence of actions.
       The OpenFlow specifications require a switch to execute actions  within  an  action  list  in  the  order
       specified,  and  to  refuse to execute an action list entirely if it cannot implement the actions in that
       order [OpenFlow 1.0, section 3.3], with one exception: when an action list outputs multiple packets,  the
       switch  may output the packets in an order different from that specified.  Usually, this exception is not
       important, especially in the common case when the packets are output to different ports.

   Action Sets
       OpenFlow 1.1 introduced the concept of an action set.  An action set is also a sequence of  actions,  but
       the  switch  reorders  the  actions  and  drops  duplicates  according to rules specified in the OpenFlow
       specifications.  Because of these semantics, some standard OpenFlow actions cannot usefully  be  included
       in  an  action  set.  For some, but not all, Open vSwitch extension actions, Open vSwitch defines its own
       action set semantics and ordering.

       The OpenFlow pipeline has an action set associated with it as a  packet  is  processed.   After  pipeline
       processing is otherwise complete, the switch executes the actions in the action set.

       Open  vSwitch  applies  actions in an action set in the following order: Except as noted otherwise below,
       the action set only executes at most a single action of each type, and when more than  one  action  of  a
       given type is present, the one added to the set later replaces the earlier action:

          1.  strip_vlan

          2.  pop_mpls

          3.  decap

          4.  encap

          5.  push_mpls

          6.  push_vlan

          7.  dec_ttl

          8.  dec_mpls_ttl

          9.  dec_nsh_ttl

          10. All  of  the  following actions are executed in the order added to the action set, with cumulative
              effect.  That is, when multiple actions modify the same part of a field,  the  later  modification
              takes  effect,  and  when  they modify different parts of a field (or different fields), then both
              modifications are applied:

                  • loadmovemod_dl_dstmod_dl_srcmod_nw_dstmod_nw_srcmod_nw_tosmod_nw_ecnmod_nw_ttlmod_tp_dstmod_tp_srcmod_vlan_pcpmod_vlan_vidset_fieldset_tunnelset_tunnel64

          11. set_queue

          12. group, output, resubmit, ct_clear, or ct.  If more than one of these actions is present, then  the
              one listed earliest above is executed and the others are ignored, regardless of the order in which
              they  were  added  to the action set.  (If none of these actions is present, the action set has no
              real effect, because the modified packet is not sent anywhere and thus the modifications  are  not
              visible.)

       An action set may only contain the actions listed above.

   Error Handling
       Packet processing can encounter a variety of errors:

       Bridge not found
              Open  vSwitch  supports  an  extension  to  the  standard  OpenFlow  controller  action  called  a
              continuation, which allows the controller to interrupt and later resume the processing of a packet
              through the switch pipeline.  This error occurs when such a packet’s processing cannot be resumed,
              e.g.  because the bridge processing it has been destroyed.  Open vSwitch reports this error to the
              controller as Open vSwitch extension error NXR_STALE.

              This error prevents packet processing entirely.

       Recursion too deep
              While processing a given packet, Open vSwitch limits the flow table  recursion  depth  to  64,  to
              ensure  that packet processing uses a finite amount of time and space.  Actions that count against
              the recursion limit include resubmit from a given OpenFlow table to the same or an earlier  table,
              group, and output to patch ports.

              A  resubmit  from  one  table to a later one (or, equivalently, a goto_table instruction) does not
              count against the depth limit because resubmits to strictly monotonically increasing  tables  will
              eventually  terminate.   OpenFlow  tables  are  most  commonly traversed in numerically increasing
              order, so this limit has little effect on conventionally designed OpenFlow pipelines.

              This error terminates packet processing.  Any previous side  effects  (e.g.  output  actions)  are
              retained.

              Usually  this  error  indicates  a  loop  or  other  bug  in  the OpenFlow flow tables.  To assist
              debugging, when this error occurs, Open vSwitch  2.10  and  later  logs  a  trace  of  the  packet
              execution,  as  if  by  ovs-appctl ofproto/trace, rate-limited to one per minute to reduce the log
              volume.

       Too many resubmits
              Open vSwitch limits the total number of resubmit actions that a given packet can execute to 4,096.
              For this purpose, goto_table instructions and output to the table port are treated like  resubmit.
              This limits the amount of time to process a single packet.

              Unlike  the  limit  on recursion depth, the limit on resubmits counts all resubmits, regardless of
              direction.

              This error has the same effect, including logging, as exceeding the recursion depth limit.

       Stack too deep
              Open vSwitch limits the amount of data that the push action can put onto the stack at one time  to
              64 kB of data.

              This  error  terminates  packet  processing.   Any previous side effects (e.g. output actions) are
              retained.

       No recirculation context / Recirculation conflict
              These errors indicate internal errors inside Open vSwitch and should generally not occur.  If  you
              notice recurring log messages about these errors, please report a bug.

       Too many MPLS labels
              Open  vSwitch  can process packets with any number of MPLS labels, but its ability to push and pop
              MPLS labels is limited, currently to 3 labels.  Attempting to push more than the supported  number
              of labels onto a packet, or to pop any number of labels from a packet with more than the supported
              number, raises this error.

              This  error  terminates  packet  processing,  retaining  any  previous  side  effects (e.g. output
              actions).  When this error arises within the execution of a group bucket, it only terminates  that
              bucket’s execution, not packet processing overall.

       Invalid tunnel metadata
              Open  vSwitch  raises  this  error  when it processes a Geneve packet that has TLV options with an
              invalid form, e.g. where the length in a TLV would extend past the end of the options.

              This error prevents packet processing entirely.

       Unsupported packet type
              When a encap action encapsulates a packet, Open vSwitch raises this error if it does  not  support
              the  combination  of  the  new encapsulation with the current packet.  encap(ethernet) raises this
              error if the current packet is not an L3 packet, and encap(nsh) raises this error if  the  current
              packet is not Ethernet, IPv4, IPv6, or NSH.

              The  decap  action  is supported only for packet types ethernet, NSH and MPLS.  Openvswitch raises
              this error for other packet types.  When a decap action decapsulates a packet, Open vSwitch raises
              this error if it does not support the type of inner packet.  decap of an  Ethernet  header  raises
              this  error  if a VLAN header is present, decap of a NSH packet raises this error if the NSH inner
              packet is not Ethernet, IPv4, IPv6, or NSH.

              This error terminates  packet  processing,  retaining  any  previous  side  effects  (e.g.  output
              actions).   When this error arises within the execution of a group bucket, it only terminates that
              bucket’s execution, not packet processing overall.

   Inconsistencies
       OpenFlow 1.0 allows any action to be part of any flow, regardless of the flow’s match.  Some combinations
       do not make sense, e.g. an set_nw_tos action in a flow that matches only ARP packets or strip_vlan  in  a
       flow  that  matches  packets without VLAN tags.  Other combinations have varying results depending on the
       kind of packet that the flow processes, e.g. a set_nw_src action  in  a  flow  that  does  not  match  on
       Ethertype will be treated as a no-op when it processes a non-IPv4 packet.  Nevertheless OVS allows all of
       the above in conformance with OpenFlow 1.0, that is, the following will succeed:

          $ ovs-ofctl -O OpenFlow10 add-flow br0 arp,actions=mod_nw_tos:12
          $ ovs-ofctl -O OpenFlow10 add-flow br0 dl_vlan=0xffff,actions=strip_vlan
          $ ovs-ofctl -O OpenFlow10 add-flow br0 actions=mod_nw_src:1.2.3.4

       Open  vSwitch  calls these kinds of combinations inconsistencies between match and actions.  OpenFlow 1.1
       and later forbid inconsistencies, and disallow the examples described above by preventing such flows from
       being added.  All of the above, for example, will fail with an error message if one  replaces  OpenFlow10
       by OpenFlow11.

       OpenFlow  1.1  and  later cannot detect and disallow all inconsistencies.  For example, the write_actions
       instruction arbitrarily delays execution of the actions inside  it,  which  can  even  be  canceled  with
       clear_actions,  so  that there is no way to ensure that its actions are consistent with the packet at the
       time they execute.  Thus, actions with write_actions and some other contexts are exempt from  consistency
       requirements.

       When OVS executes an action inconsistent with the packet, it treats it as a no-op.

   Inter-Version Compatibility
       Open  vSwitch  supports  multiple  OpenFlow versions simultaneously on a single switch.  When actions are
       added with one OpenFlow version and then retrieved with another, Open vSwitch does its best to  translate
       between them.

       Inter-version  compatibility  issues  can  still  arise when different connections use different OpenFlow
       versions.  Backward compatibility is the most obvious case.  Suppose, for example, that an  OpenFlow  1.1
       session  adds  a  flow  with a push_vlan action, for which there is no equivalent in OpenFlow 1.0.  If an
       OpenFlow 1.0 session retrieves this flow, Open vSwitch must somehow represent the action.

       Forward  compatibility  can  also  be  an  issue,  because  later  OpenFlow  versions  sometimes   remove
       functionality.  The best example is the enqueue action from OpenFlow 1.0, which OpenFlow 1.1 removed.

       In practice, Open vSwitch uses a variety of strategies for inter-version compatibility:

       • Most standard OpenFlow actions, such as output actions, translate without compatibility issues.

       • Open  vSwitch  supports  its  extension  actions  in  every  OpenFlow  version,  so  they  do  not pose
         inter-version compatibility problems.

       • Open vSwitch sometimes adds extension  actions  to  ensure  backward  or  forward  compatibility.   For
         example,  for backward compatibility with the group action added in OpenFlow 1.1, Open vSwitch includes
         an OpenFlow 1.0 extension group action.

       Perfect inter-version compatibility is not possible, so best results require OpenFlow connections to  use
       a  consistent version.  One may enforce use of a particular version by setting the protocols column for a
       bridge, e.g. to force br0 to use only OpenFlow 1.3:

          ovs-vsctl set bridge br0 protocols=OpenFlow13

   Field Specifications
       Many Open vSwitch actions refer to fields.  In such cases, fields may usually be  referred  to  by  their
       common names, such as eth_dst for the Ethernet destination field, or by their full OXM or NXM names, such
       as NXM_OF_ETH_DST or OXM_OF_ETH_DST.  Before Open vSwitch 2.7, only OXM or NXM field names were accepted.

       Many  actions  that  act  on  fields  can  also  act  on  subfields, that is, parts of fields, written as
       field[start..end], where start is the first  bit  and  end  is  the  last  bit  to  use  in  field,  e.g.
       vlan_tci[13..15]  for  the  VLAN  PCP.   A single-bit subfield may also be written as field[offset], e.g.
       vlan_tci[13] for the least-significant bit of the VLAN PCP.  Empty brackets may  be  used  to  explicitly
       designate  an  entire field, e.g.  vlan_tci[] for the entire 16-bit VLAN TCI header.  Before Open vSwitch
       2.7, brackets were required in field specifications.

       See ovs-fields(7) for a list of fields and their names.

   Port Specifications
       Many Open vSwitch actions refer to OpenFlow ports.  In such cases, the port may be specified as a numeric
       port number in the range 0 to 65,535, although Open vSwitch only assigns port  numbers  in  the  range  1
       through  62,279 to ports.  OpenFlow 1.1 and later use 32-bit port numbers, but Open vSwitch never assigns
       a port number that requires more than 16 bits.

       In most contexts, the name of a port may also be used.  (The most obvious context where a port  name  may
       not  be  used  is in an ovs-ofctl command along with the --no-names option.)  When a port’s name contains
       punctuation or could be ambiguous with other actions, the name may be enclosed  in  double  quotes,  with
       JSON-like string escapes supported (see [RFC 8259]).

       Open  vSwitch also supports the following standard OpenFlow port names (even in contexts where port names
       are not otherwise supported).  The corresponding OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.1+ port numbers are listed  alongside
       them but should not be used in flow syntax:

          • in_port (65528 or 0xfff8; 0xfffffff8)

          • table (65529 or 0xfff9; 0xfffffff9)

          • normal (65530 or 0xfffa; 0xfffffffa)

          • flood (65531 or 0xfffb; 0xfffffffb)

          • all (65532 or 0xfffc; 0xfffffffc)

          • controller (65533 or 0xfffd; 0xfffffffd)

          • local (65534 or 0xfffe; 0xfffffffe)

          • any or none (65535 or 0xffff; 0xffffffff)

          • unset (not in OpenFlow 1.0; 0xfffffff7)

OUTPUT ACTIONS

       These actions send a packet to a physical port or a controller.  A packet that never encounters an output
       action  on  its  trip  through  the  Open  vSwitch  pipeline is effectively dropped.  Because actions are
       executed in order, a packet modification action that is not eventually followed by an output action  will
       not have an externally visible effect.

   The output action
       Syntax:
              port
              output:port
              output:field
              output(port=port, max_len=nbytes)

       Outputs  the  packet to an OpenFlow port most commonly specified as port.  Alternatively, the output port
       may be read from field, a field or subfield in the syntax described  under  Field  Specifications  above.
       Either way, if the port is the packet’s input port, the packet is not output.

       The port may be one of the following standard OpenFlow ports:

          local  Outputs  the  packet on the local port that corresponds to the network device that has the same
                 name as the bridge, unless the  packet  was  received  on  the  local  port.   OpenFlow  switch
                 implementations are not required to have a local port, but Open vSwitch bridges always do.

          in_port
                 Outputs  the  packet  on  the  port on which it was received.  This is the only standard way to
                 output the packet to the input port (but see Output to the Input port, below).

       The port may also be one of the following additional OpenFlow ports, unless max_len is specified:

          normal Subjects the packet to the device’s normal L2/L3 processing.  This action is not implemented by
                 all OpenFlow switches, and each switch implements it differently.  The section The  OVS  Normal
                 Pipeline below documents the OVS implementation.

          flood  Outputs  the  packet on all switch physical ports, except the port on which it was received and
                 any ports on which flooding is disabled.  Flooding can be disabled automatically on a  port  by
                 Open  vSwitch when IEEE 802.1D spanning tree (STP) or rapid spanning tree (RSTP) is enabled, or
                 by a controller using an OpenFlow OFPT_MOD_PORT request to set the port’s  OFPPC_NO_FLOOD  flag
                 (ovs-ofctl mod-port provides a command-line interface to set this flag).

          all    Outputs the packet on all switch physical ports except the port on which it was received.

          controller
                 Sends  the  packet and its metadata to an OpenFlow controller or controllers encapsulated in an
                 OpenFlow packet-in message.  The separate controller action,  described  below,  provides  more
                 options for output to a controller.

       Open  vSwitch  rejects  output  to other standard OpenFlow ports, including none, unset, and port numbers
       reserved for future use as standard ports, with the error OFPBAC_BAD_OUT_PORT.

       With max_len, the packet is truncated to at most nbytes bytes before being output.   In  this  case,  the
       output  port  may  not  be  a patch port.  Truncation is just for the single output action, so that later
       actions in the OpenFlow pipeline work with the complete packet.  The truncation feature is meant for  use
       in monitoring applications, e.g. for mirroring packets to a collector.

       When  an  output  action  specifies the number of a port that does not currently exist (and is not in the
       range for standard ports), the OpenFlow specification allows but does  not  require  OVS  to  reject  the
       action.   All  versions  of  Open  vSwitch treat such an action as a no-op.  If a port with the number is
       created later, then the action will be honored at that point.  (OpenFlow requires OVS to reject output to
       a port number that will never be valid, with OFPBAC_BAD_OUT_PORT, but this situation does not arise  when
       OVS is a software switch, since the user can add or renumber ports at any time.)

       A  controller  can  suppress  output  to  a  port  by setting its OFPPC_NO_FORWARD flag using an OpenFlow
       OFPT_MOD_PORT request (ovs-ofctl mod-port provides a command-line interface  to  set  this  flag).   When
       output  is  disabled,  output actions (and other actions that output to the port) are allowed but have no
       effect.

       Open vSwitch allows output to a port that does not exist, although OpenFlow  allows  switches  to  reject
       such actions.

       Conformance
              All  versions of OpenFlow and Open vSwitch support output to a literal port.  Output to a register
              is an OpenFlow extension introduced in Open vSwitch 1.3.  Output with truncation  is  an  OpenFlow
              extension introduced in Open vSwitch 2.6.

   Output to the Input Port
       OpenFlow  requires  a  switch  to  ignore  attempts  to  send  a  packet out its ingress port in the most
       straightforward way.  For example, output:234 has no effect if the packet  has  ingress  port  234.   The
       rationale  is  that  dropping these packets makes it harder to loop the network.  Sometimes this behavior
       can even be convenient, e.g. it is often the desired behavior in a flow that forwards a packet to several
       ports (floods the packet).

       Sometimes one really needs to send a packet out its ingress port (hairpin).  In this case, use in_port to
       explicitly output the packet to its input port, e.g.:

          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 in_port=2,actions=in_port

       This also works in some circumstances where the flow doesn’t match on the input port.   For  example,  if
       you  know  that  your  switch  has  five  ports  numbered 2 through 6, then the following will send every
       received packet out every port, even its ingress port:

          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 actions=2,3,4,5,6,in_port

       or, equivalently:

          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 actions=all,in_port

       Sometimes, in complicated flow tables with multiple levels of resubmit actions, a flow needs to output to
       a particular port that may or may not be the ingress port.  It’s difficult to take advantage of output to
       in_port in this situation.  To help, Open vSwitch provides, as an  OpenFlow  extension,  the  ability  to
       modify  the  in_port  field.   Whatever value is currently in the in_port field is both the port to which
       output will be dropped and the destination for in_port.  This means that the following  adds  flows  that
       reliably output to port 2 or to ports 2 through 6, respectively:

          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 "in_port=2,actions=load:0->in_port,2"
          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 "actions=load:0->in_port,2,3,4,5,6"

       If in_port is important for matching or other reasons, one may save and restore it on the stack:

          $ ovs-ofctl add-flow br0 \
                actions="push:in_port,load:0->in_port,2,3,4,5,6,pop:in_port"

   The OVS Normal Pipeline
       This section documents how Open vSwitch implements output to the normal port.  The OpenFlow specification
       places no requirements on how this port works, so all of this documentation is specific to Open vSwitch.

       Open  vSwitch  uses  the  Open_vSwitch  database,  detailed  in ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5), to determine the
       details of the normal pipeline.

       The normal pipeline executes the following ingress stages for each packet.  Each stage either accepts the
       packet, in which case the packet goes on to the next stage, or drops the  packet,  which  terminates  the
       pipeline.   The  result  of  the  ingress stages is a set of output ports, which is the empty set if some
       ingress stage drops the packet:

       1.  Input port lookup: Looks up the  OpenFlow  in_port  field’s  value  to  the  corresponding  Port  and
           Interface record in the database.

           The  in_port  is normally the OpenFlow port that the packet was received on.  If set_field or another
           actions changes the in_port, the updated value is honored.  Accept the packet if the lookup succeeds,
           which it normally will.  If the lookup fails, for example because in_port was changed to  an  unknown
           value, drop the packet.

       2.  Drop  malformed  packet:  If  the  packet is malformed enough that it contains only part of an 802.1Q
           header, then drop the packet with an error.

       3.  Drop packets sent to a port reserved for mirroring: If the packet was received  on  a  port  that  is
           configured  as  the  output port for a mirror (that is, it is the output_port in some Mirror record),
           then drop the packet.

       4.  VLAN input processing: This stage determines what VLAN the packet is in.  It also verifies that  this
           VLAN  is  valid for the port; if not, drop the packet.  How the VLAN is determined and which ones are
           valid vary based on the vlan-mode in the input port’s Port record:

              trunk  The packet is in the VLAN specified in its 802.1Q header, or in  VLAN  0  if  there  is  no
                     802.1Q header.  The trunks column in the Port record lists the valid VLANs; if it is empty,
                     all VLANs are valid.

              access The  packet is in the VLAN specified in the tag column of its Port record.  The packet must
                     not have an 802.1Q header with a nonzero VLAN ID; if it does, drop the packet.

              native-tagged / native-untagged
                     Same as trunk except that the VLAN of a packet without an 802.1Q header is not  necessarily
                     zero; instead, it is taken from the tag column.

              dot1q-tunnel
                     The  packet  is in the VLAN specified in the tag column of its Port record, which is a QinQ
                     service VLAN with the Ethertype specified by the Port’s other_config:qinq-ethtype.  If  the
                     packet  has  an  802.1Q  header,  then  it  specifies the customer VLAN.  The cvlans column
                     specifies the valid customer VLANs; if it is empty, all customer VLANs are valid.

       5.  Drop reserved multicast addresses: If the packet  is  addressed  to  a  reserved  Ethernet  multicast
           address and the Bridge record does not have other_config:forward-bpdu set to true, drop the packet.

       6.  LACP  bond admissibility: This step applies only if the input port is a member of a bond (a Port with
           more than one Interface) and that bond is configured to use LACP. Otherwise, skip to the next step.

           The behavior here depends on the state of LACP negotiation:

              • If LACP has been negotiated with the peer, accept the packet if the bond member is enabled (i.e.
                carrier is up and it hasn’t been administratively disabled).  Otherwise, drop the packet.

              • If LACP negotiation is incomplete, then drop the packet.  There is one exception: if fallback to
                active-backup mode is enabled, continue with the next step, pretending  that  the  active-backup
                balancing mode is in use.

       7.  Non-LACP  bond  admissibility: This step applies if the input port is a member of a bond without LACP
           configured, or if a LACP bond falls back to active-backup as described  in  the  previous  step.   If
           neither of these applies, skip to the next step.

           If  the  packet  is an Ethernet multicast or broadcast, and not received on the bond’s active member,
           drop the packet.

           The remaining behavior depends on the bond’s balancing mode:

              L4 (aka TCP balancing)
                     Drop the packet (this balancing mode is only supported with LACP).

              Active-backup
                     Accept the packet only if it was received on the active member.

              SLB (Source Load Balancing)
                     Drop the packet if the bridge has not learned the packet’s source address (in its VLAN)  on
                     the  port  that  received  it.  Otherwise, accept the packet unless it is a gratuitous ARP.
                     Otherwise, accept the packet if the MAC entry we found is ARP-locked.  Otherwise, drop  the
                     packet.   (See the SLB Bonding section in the OVS bonding document for more information and
                     a rationale.)

       8.  Learn source MAC: If the source Ethernet address is not a multicast address, then  insert  a  mapping
           from  packet’s source Ethernet address and VLAN to the input port in the bridge’s MAC learning table.
           (This is skipped if the packet’s VLAN is listed in the switch’s  Bridge  record  in  the  flood_vlans
           column, since there is no use for MAC learning when all packets are flooded.)

           When  learning  happens on a non-bond port, if the packet is a gratuitous ARP, the entry is marked as
           ARP-locked.  The lock expires after 5 seconds.  (See the SLB  Bonding  section  in  the  OVS  bonding
           document for more information and a rationale.)

       9.  IP  multicast  path:  If  multicast  snooping is enabled on the bridge, and the packet is an Ethernet
           multicast but not an Ethernet broadcast, and the packet is an IP packet,  then  the  packet  takes  a
           special processing path.  This path is not yet documented here.

       10. Output  port  set:  Search the MAC learning table for the port corresponding to the packet’s Ethernet
           destination and VLAN.  If the search finds an entry, the output port set is just  the  learned  port.
           Otherwise  (including  the  case  where  the  packet is an Ethernet multicast or in flood_vlans), the
           output port set is all of the ports in the bridge that belong to the packet’s VLAN,  except  for  any
           ports  that  were  disabled  for flooding via OpenFlow or that are configured in a Mirror record as a
           mirror destination port.

       The following egress stages execute once for each element in the  set  of  output  ports.   They  execute
       (conceptually)  in  parallel, so that a decision or action taken for a given output port has no effect on
       those for another one:

       1. Drop loopback: If the output port is the same as the input port, drop the packet.

       2. VLAN output processing: This stage adjusts the packet to represent the VLAN in the correct way for the
          output port.  Its behavior varies based on the vlan-mode in the output port’s Port record:

             trunk / native-tagged / native-untagged
                    If the packet is in VLAN 0 (for native-untagged, if the packet is in the native VLAN)  drops
                    any 802.1Q header.  Otherwise, ensures that there is an 802.1Q header designating the VLAN.

             access Remove any 802.1Q header that was present.

             dot1q-tunnel
                    Ensures that the packet has an outer 802.1Q header with the QinQ Ethertype and the specified
                    configured tag, and an inner 802.1Q header with the packet’s VLAN.

       3. VLAN  priority  tag  processing:  If VLAN output processing discarded the 802.1Q headers, but priority
          tags  are  enabled  with  other_config:priority-tags  in  the  output  port’s  Port  record,  then   a
          priority-only  tag  is  added  (perhaps  only  if  the  priority  would  be  nonzero, depending on the
          configuration).

       4. Bond member choice: If the output port is a bond, the code chooses a particular member.  This step  is
          skipped for non-bonded ports.

          If the bond is configured to use LACP, but LACP negotiation is incomplete, then normally the packet is
          dropped.   The  exception  is  that  if fallback to active-backup mode is enabled, the egress pipeline
          continues choosing a bond member as if active-backup mode was in use.

          For active-backup mode, the output member is the active member.  Other modes hash  appropriate  header
          fields and use the hash value to choose one of the enabled members.

       5. Output: The pipeline sends the packet to the output port.

   The controller action
       Syntax:
              controller
              controller:max_len
              controller(key[=value], ...)

       Sends  the  packet  and its metadata to an OpenFlow controller or controllers encapsulated in an OpenFlow
       packet-in message.  The supported options are:

          max_len=max_len
                 Limit to max_len the number of bytes of the packet to send in the packet-in.  A  max_len  of  0
                 prevents  any of the packet from being sent (thus, only metadata is included).  By default, the
                 entire packet is sent, equivalent to a max_len of 65535.  This option has  no  effect  in  Open
                 vSwith 2.7 and later: the entire packet will always be sent.

          reason=reason
                 Specify  reason  as the reason for sending the message in the packet-in.  The supported reasons
                 are no_match, action, invalid_ttl, action_set, group, and packet_out.  The  default  reason  is
                 action.

          id=controller_id
                 Specify  controller_id,  a  16-bit  integer, as the connection ID of the OpenFlow controller or
                 controllers to which the packet-in message should be sent.  The default is zero.  Zero is  also
                 the  default  connection  ID  for each controller connection, and a given controller connection
                 will only have a nonzero connection ID if its controller uses  the  NXT_SET_CONTROLLER_ID  Open
                 vSwitch extension to OpenFlow.

          userdata=hh...
                 Supplies  the  bytes  represented  as hex digits hh as additional data to the controller in the
                 packet-in message.  Pairs of hex digits may be separated by periods for readability.

          pause  Causes the switch to freeze the packet’s trip through Open vSwitch flow tables  and  serializes
                 that  state  into  the  packet-in  message  as  a  continuation,  an additional property in the
                 NXT_PACKET_IN2 message.  The controller can later send the continuation back to the  switch  in
                 an  NXT_RESUME  message,  which will restart the packet’s traversal from the point where it was
                 interrupted.  This permits an OpenFlow controller to  interpose  on  a  packet  midway  through
                 processing in Open vSwitch.

       Conformance
              All  versions  of OpenFlow and Open vSwitch support controller action and its max_len option.  The
              userdata and pause options require the Open vSwitch NXAST_CONTROLLER2 extension  action  added  in
              Open  vSwitch  2.6.  In  the  absence  of these options, the reason (other than reason=action) and
              controller_id (option than controller_id=0) options  require  the  Open  vSwitch  NXAST_CONTROLLER
              extension action added in Open vSwitch 1.6.

              Open  vSwitch  2.7  and  later  is configured to not buffer packets for the packet-in event.  As a
              result, the full packet is always sent to controllers.  This means that the max_len option has  no
              effect  on  the  controller action, and all values (even 0) are equivalent to the default value of
              65535.

   The enqueue action
       Syntax:
              enqueue(port,queue)
              enqueue:port:queue

       Enqueues the packet on the specified queue within port port.

       port must be an OpenFlow port number or name as described under Port Specifications above.  port  may  be
       in_port or local but the other standard OpenFlow ports are not allowed.

       queue  must  be  a  number  between  0  and  4294967294  (0xfffffffe), inclusive.  The number of actually
       supported queues depends on the switch.  Some OpenFlow implementations do not support queuing at all.  In
       Open vSwitch, the supported queues vary depending on the operating system, datapath, and hardware in use.
       Use the QoS and Queue tables in the Open vSwitch database to configure  queuing  on  individual  OpenFlow
       ports (see ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for more information).

       Conformance
              Only  OpenFlow  1.0 supports enqueue.  OpenFlow 1.1 added the set_queue action to use in its place
              along with output.

              Open vSwitch translates enqueue to  a  sequence  of  three  actions  in  OpenFlow  1.1  or  later:
              set_queue:queue,output:port,pop_queue.   This  is equivalent in behavior as long as the flow table
              does not otherwise use set_queue, but it relies on the pop_queue Open vSwitch extension action.

   The bundle and bundle_load actions
       Syntax:
              bundle(fields,basis,algorithm,ofport,members:port...)
              bundle_load(fields,basis,algorithm,ofport,dst,members:port...)

       These actions choose a port (a member) from a comma-separated OpenFlow port list.   After  selecting  the
       port,  bundle outputs to it, whereas bundle_load writes its port number to dst, which must be a 16-bit or
       wider field or subfield in the syntax described under Field Specifications above.

       These actions hash a set of fields using basis as a universal hash parameter, then apply the bundle  link
       selection algorithm to choose a port.

       fields  must  be  one of the following.  For the options with symmetric in the name, reversing source and
       destination addresses yields the same hash:

          eth_src
                 Ethernet source address.

          nw_src IPv4 or IPv6 source address.

          nw_dst IPv4 or IPv6 destination address.

          symmetric_l4
                 Ethernet source and destination, Ethernet type, VLAN ID or IDs (if any), IPv4  or  IPv6  source
                 and destination, IP protocol, TCP or SCTP (but not UDP) source and destination.

          symmetric_l3l4
                 IPv4  or  IPv6  source  and  destination,  IP  protocol,  TCP  or SCTP (but not UDP) source and
                 destination.

          symmetric_l3l4+udp
                 Like symmetric_l3l4 but include UDP ports.

       algorithm must be one of the following:

          active_backup
                 Chooses the first live port listed in members.

          hrw (Highest Random Weight)
                 Computes the following, considering only the live ports in members:

                     for i in [1, n_members]:
                         weights[i] = hash(flow, i)
                     member = { i such that weights[i] >= weights[j] for all j != i }

                 This algorithm is specified by RFC 2992.

       The algorithms take port liveness into account when selecting members.  The definition of whether a  port
       is  live  is  subject  to  change.   It  currently  takes into account carrier status and link monitoring
       protocols such as BFD and CFM.  If none of the members is live, bundle does not  output  the  packet  and
       bundle_load stores OFPP_NONE (65535) in the output field.

       Example:  bundle(eth_src,0,hrw,ofport,members:4,8)  uses  an Ethernet source hash with basis 0, to select
       between OpenFlow ports 4 and 8 using the Highest Random Weight algorithm.

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.2 introduced the bundle and bundle_load OpenFlow extension actions.

   The group action
       Syntax:
              group:group

       Outputs the packet to the OpenFlow group group, which must be a number  in  the  range  0  to  4294967040
       (0xffffff00).   The  group  must  exist  or  Open  vSwitch  will refuse to add the flow.  When a group is
       deleted, Open vSwitch also deletes all of the flows that output to it.

       Groups contain action sets, whose semantics  are  described  above  in  the  section  Action  Sets.   The
       semantics  of  action sets can be surprising to users who expect action list semantics, since action sets
       reorder and sometimes ignore actions.

       A group action usually executes the action set or sets in one or more group buckets.  Open vSwitch  saves
       the  packet  and  metadata  before it executes each bucket, and then restores it afterward.  Thus, when a
       group executes more than one bucket, this means  that  each  bucket  executes  on  the  same  packet  and
       metadata.   Moreover,  regardless of the number of buckets executed, the packet and metadata are the same
       before and after executing the group.

       Sometimes saving and restoring the  packet  and  metadata  can  be  undesirable.   In  these  situations,
       workarounds  are  possible.  For example, consider a pipeline design in which a select group bucket is to
       communicate to a later stage of processing a value based on which bucket was selected.  An obvious design
       would be for the bucket to communicate the value via set_field on a register.  This does not work because
       registers are part of the metadata that group saves  and  restores.   The  following  alternative  bucket
       designs do work:

          • Recursively invoke the rest of the pipeline with resubmit.

          • Use  resubmit  into  a table that uses push to put the value on the stack for the caller to pop off.
            This works because group preserves only packet data and metadata, not the stack.

            (This design requires indirection through resubmit because actions sets may not contain push or  pop
            actions.)

       An  exit  action within a group bucket terminates only execution of that bucket, not other buckets or the
       overall pipeline.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced group.  Open vSwitch 2.6 and later also supports group as an extension  to
              OpenFlow 1.0.

ENCAPSULATION AND DECAPSULATION ACTIONS

   The strip_vlan and pop actions
       Syntax:
              strip_vlan
              pop_vlan

       Removes the outermost VLAN tag, if any, from the packet.

       The  two  names for this action are synonyms with no semantic difference.  The OpenFlow 1.0 specification
       uses the name strip_vlan and later versions use pop_vlan, but  OVS  accepts  either  name  regardless  of
       version.

       In  OpenFlow  1.1  and later, consistency rules allow strip_vlan only in a flow that matches only packets
       with a VLAN tag (or following an action that pushes a VLAN tag, such as push_vlan).  See Inconsistencies,
       above, for more information.

       Conformance
              All versions of OpenFlow and Open vSwitch support this action.

   The push_vlan action
       Syntax:
              push_vlan:ethertype

       Pushes a new outermost VLAN onto the packet.  Uses TPID ethertype, which must be  0x8100  for  an  802.1Q
       C-tag or 0x88a8 for a 802.1ad S-tag.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow  1.1  and  later  supports this action.  Open vSwitch 2.8 added support for multiple VLAN
              tags (with a limit of 2) and 802.1ad S-tags.

   The push_mpls action
       Syntax:
              push_mpls:ethertype

       Pushes a new outermost MPLS label stack entry (LSE) onto the packet and changes the packet’s Ethertype to
       ethertype, which must be either B0x8847 or 0x8848.  If the  packet  did  not  already  contain  any  MPLS
       labels, initializes the new LSE as:

          Label  2, if the packet contains IPv6, 0 otherwise.

          TC     The low 3 bits of the packet’s DSCP value, or 0 if the packet is not IP.

          TTL    Copied from the IP TTL, or 64 if the packet is not IP.

       If  the  packet  did  already contain an MPLS label, initializes the new outermost label as a copy of the
       existing outermost label.

       OVS currently supports at most 3 MPLS labels.

       This action applies only to Ethernet packets.

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.11 introduced support for MPLS.  OpenFlow 1.1 and later  support  push_mpls.   Open
              vSwitch implements push_mpls as an extension to OpenFlow 1.0.

   The pop_mpls action
       Syntax:
              pop_mpls:ethertype

       Strips the outermost MPLS label stack entry and changes the packet’s Ethertype to ethertype.  This action
       applies  only  to  Ethernet  packets with at least one MPLS label.  If there is more than one MPLS label,
       then ethertype should be an MPLS Ethertype (B0x8847 or 0x8848).

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.11 introduced support for MPLS.  OpenFlow 1.1 and  later  support  pop_mpls.   Open
              vSwitch implements pop_mpls as an extension to OpenFlow 1.0.

   The encap action
       Syntax:
              encap(nsh([md_type=md_type], [tlv(class,type,value)]...))
              encap(ethernet)
              encap(mpls)
              encap(mpls_mc)

       The  encap  action encapsulates a packet with a specified header.  It has variants for different kinds of
       encapsulation.

       The encap(nsh(...)) variant encapsulates an Ethernet frame with NSH.  The md_type  may  be  1  or  2  for
       metadata type 1 or 2, defaulting to 1.  For metadata type 2, TLVs may be specified with class as a 16-bit
       hexadecimal integer beginning with 0x, type as an 8-bit decimal integer, and value a sequence of pairs of
       hex digits beginning with 0x.  For example:

          encap(nsh(md_type=1))
                 Encapsulates the packet with an NSH header with metadata type 1.

          encap(nsh(md_type=2,tlv(0x1000,10,0x12345678)))
                 Encapsulates  the  packet  with  an  NSH header, NSH metadata type 2, and an NSH TLV with class
                 0x1000, type 10, and the 4-byte value 0x12345678.

       The encap(ethernet) variant encapsulate a bare L3 packet in an Ethernet  frame.   The  Ethernet  type  is
       initialized  to  the  L3  packet’s  type,  e.g. 0x0800 if the L3 packet is IPv4.  The Ethernet source and
       destination are initially zeroed.

       The encap(mpls) variant adds a MPLS header at the start of the packet.  When encap(ethernet)  is  applied
       after  this  action,  the  ethertype  of  ethernet  header  will be populated with MPLS unicast ethertype
       (0x8847).

       The encap(mpls_mc) variant adds a MPLS header at the  start  of  the  packet.   When  encap(ethernet)  is
       applied  after  this  action,  the  ethertype  of  ethernet  header will be populated with MPLS multicast
       ethertype (0x8848).

       Conformance
              This action is an Open vSwitch extension to OpenFlow 1.3 and later,  introduced  in  Open  vSwitch
              2.8.

              The MPLS support for this action is added in Open vSwitch 2.17.

   The decap action
       Syntax:
              decap
              decap(packet_type(ns=namespace,type=type))

       Removes an outermost encapsulation from the packet:

          • If  the  packet  is an Ethernet packet, removes the Ethernet header, which changes the packet into a
            bare L3 packet.  If the packet has VLAN tags, raises an unsupported packet  type  error  (see  Error
            Handling, above).

          • Otherwise, if the packet is an NSH packet, removes the NSH header, revealing the inner packet.  Open
            vSwitch  supports  Ethernet,  IPv4, IPv6, and NSH inner packet types.  Other types raise unsupported
            packet type errors.

          • Otherwise, if the packet is  encapsulated  inside  a  MPLS  header,  removes  the  MPLS  header  and
            classifies  the inner packet as mentioned in the packet type argument of the decap.  The packet_type
            field specifies the type of the packet in the format specified  in  OpenFlow  1.5  chapter  7.2.3.11
            Packet  Type  Match  Field.  The inner packet will be incorrectly classified, if the inner packet is
            different from mentioned in the packet_type field.

          • Otherwise, raises an unsupported packet type error.

       Conformance
              This action is an Open vSwitch extension to OpenFlow 1.3 and later,  introduced  in  Open  vSwitch
              2.8.

              The MPLS support for this action is added in Open vSwitch 2.17.

FIELD MODIFICATION ACTIONS

       These actions modify packet data and metadata fields.

   The set_field and load actions
       Syntax:
              set_field:value[/mask]->dst
              load:value->dst

       These actions loads a literal value into a field or part of a field.  The set_field action takes value in
       the  customary  syntax  for  field  dst,  e.g.  00:11:22:33:44:55 for an Ethernet address, and dst as the
       field’s name.  The optional mask allows part of a field to be set.

       The load action takes value as an integer value (in decimal or prefixed by 0x for hexadecimal) and dst as
       a field or subfield in the syntax described under Field Specifications above.

       The following all set the Ethernet source address to 00:11:22:33:44:55:

          • set_field:00:11:22:33:44:55->eth_srcload:0x001122334455->eth_srcload:0x001122334455->OXM_OF_ETH_SRC[]

       The following all set the multicast bit in the Ethernet destination address:

          • set_field:01:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00->eth_dstload:1->eth_dst[40]

       Open vSwitch prohibits a set_field or load action whose dst is not guaranteed to be part of  the  packet;
       for  example, set_field of nw_dst is only allowed in a flow that matches on Ethernet type 0x800.  In some
       cases, such as in an action set, Open vSwitch can’t statically check that dst is part of the packet,  and
       in that case if it is not then Open vSwitch treats the action as a no-op.

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.1 introduced NXAST_REG_LOAD as a extension to OpenFlow 1.0 and used load to express
              it.   Later,  OpenFlow  1.2  introduced  a  standard OFPAT_SET_FIELD action that was restricted to
              loading entire fields, so Open vSwitch added the form set_field with this  restriction.   OpenFlow
              1.5  extended  OFPAT_SET_FIELD  to  the  point  that it became a superset of NXAST_REG_LOAD.  Open
              vSwitch translates either syntax as necessary for the OpenFlow version in use: in OpenFlow 1.0 and
              1.1, NXAST_REG_LOAD; in OpenFlow 1.2, 1.3, and 1.4, NXAST_REG_LOAD  for  load  or  for  loading  a
              subfield, OFPAT_SET_FIELD otherwise; and OpenFlow 1.5 and later, OFPAT_SET_FIELD.

   The move action
       Syntax:
              move:src->dst

       Copies  the named bits from field or subfield src to field or subfield dst.  src and dst should fields or
       subfields in the syntax described under Field Specifications above.  The two  fields  or  subfields  must
       have the same width.

       Examples:

          • move:reg0[0..5]->reg1[26..31]  copies  the  six bits numbered 0 through 5 in register 0 into bits 26
            through 31 of register 1.

          • move:reg0[0..15]->vlan_tci copies the least significant 16 bits of register  0  into  the  VLAN  TCI
            field.

       Conformance
              In  OpenFlow  1.0  through  1.4,  move  ordinarily uses an Open vSwitch extension to OpenFlow.  In
              OpenFlow 1.5, move uses the OpenFlow 1.5 standard OFPAT_COPY_FIELD action.  The ONF has also  made
              OFPAT_COPY_FIELD  available  as  an  extension  to  OpenFlow  1.3.   Open  vSwitch  2.4  and later
              understands this extension and uses it if a controller uses it,  but  for  backward  compatibility
              with older versions of Open vSwitch, ovs-ofctl does not use it.

   The mod_dl_src and mod_dl_dst actions
       Syntax:
              mod_dl_src:mac
              mod_dl_dst:mac

       Sets  the  Ethernet source or destination address, respectively, to mac, which should be expressed in the
       form xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx.

       For L3-only packets, that is, those that lack an Ethernet header, this action has no effect.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.1 have specialized actions for these purposes.  OpenFlow 1.2 and later do  not,
              so Open vSwitch translates them to appropriate OFPAT_SET_FIELD actions for those versions,

   The mod_nw_src and mod_nw_dst actions
       Syntax:
              mod_nw_src:ip
              mod_nw_dst:ip

       Sets  the  IPv4 source or destination address, respectively, to ip, which should be expressed in the form
       w.x.y.z.

       In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow these actions only in a flow that matches only packets
       that contain an IPv4 header (or following an action that adds an IPv4 header, e.g. pop_mpls:0x0800).  See
       Inconsistencies, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.0 and 1.1 have specialized actions for these purposes.  OpenFlow 1.2 and later do  not,
              so Open vSwitch translates them to appropriate OFPAT_SET_FIELD actions for those versions,

   The mod_nw_tos and mod_nw_ecn actions
       Syntax:
              mod_nw_tos:tos
              mod_nw_ecn:ecn

       The  mod_nw_tos  action sets the DSCP bits in the IPv4 ToS/DSCP or IPv6 traffic class field to tos, which
       must be a multiple of 4 between 0 and 255.  This action does not modify the two least significant bits of
       the ToS field (the ECN bits).

       The mod_nw_ecn action sets the ECN bits in the IPv4 ToS or IPv6 traffic class field to ecn, which must be
       a value between 0 and 3, inclusive.  This action does not modify the six most  significant  bits  of  the
       field (the DSCP bits).

       In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow these actions only in a flow that matches only packets
       that  contain  an  IPv4  or  IPv6  header  (or  following  an  action  that  adds  such  a  header).  See
       Inconsistencies, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.0 has a mod_nw_tos action but not mod_nw_ecn.  Open vSwitch implements  the  latter  in
              OpenFlow 1.0 as an extension using NXAST_REG_LOAD.  OpenFlow 1.1 has specialized actions for these
              purposes.   OpenFlow  1.2  and  later  do  not,  so  Open  vSwitch  translates them to appropriate
              OFPAT_SET_FIELD actions for those versions.

   The mod_tp_src and mod_tp_dst actions
       Syntax:
              mod_tp_src:port
              mod_tp_dst:port

       Sets the TCP or UDP or SCTP source or destination port, respectively, to port.  Both IPv4  and  IPv6  are
       supported.

       In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow these actions only in a flow that matches only packets
       that contain a TCP or UDP or SCTP header.  See Inconsistencies, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow  1.0 and 1.1 have specialized actions for these purposes.  OpenFlow 1.2 and later do not,
              so Open vSwitch translates them to appropriate OFPAT_SET_FIELD actions for those versions,

   The dec_ttl action
       Syntax:
              dec_ttl
              dec_ttl(id1[,id2[, ...]])

       Decrement TTL of IPv4 packet or hop limit of IPv6 packet.  If the TTL or hop limit is initially 0  or  1,
       no  decrement  occurs,  as  packets  reaching  TTL  zero must be rejected.  Instead, Open vSwitch sends a
       packet-in message with reason code  OFPR_INVALID_TTL  to  each  connected  controller  that  has  enabled
       receiving  such  messages, and stops processing the current set of actions.  (However, if the current set
       of actions was reached through resubmit, the remaining actions in outer levels resume processing.)

       As an Open vSwitch extension to OpenFlow,  this  action  supports  the  ability  to  specify  a  list  of
       controller  IDs.   Open  vSwitch  will  only  send  the  message to controllers with the given ID or IDs.
       Specifying no list is equivalent to specifying a single controller ID of zero.

       In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow these actions only in a flow that matches only packets
       that contain an IPv4 or IPv6 header.  See Inconsistencies, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              All versions of OpenFlow and Open vSwitch support this action.

   The set_mpls_label, set_mpls_tc, and set_mpls_ttl actions
       Syntax:
              set_mpls_label:label
              set_mpls_tc:tc
              set_mpls_ttl:ttl

       The set_mpls_label action sets the label of the packet’s outer MPLS label stack entry.  label should be a
       20-bit value that is decimal by default; use a 0x prefix to specify the value in hexadecimal.

       The set_mpls_tc action sets the traffic class of the packet’s outer MPLS label stack entry.  tc should be
       in the range 0 to 7, inclusive.

       The set_mpls_ttl action sets the TTL of the packet’s outer MPLS label stack entry.  ttl should be in  the
       range  0  to  255  inclusive.  In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow these actions only in a
       flow that matches only packets that contain an MPLS label (or following  an  action  that  adds  an  MPLS
       label, e.g. push_mpls:0x8847).  See Inconsistencies, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow  1.0  does  not  support  MPLS,  but Open vSwitch implements these actions as extensions.
              OpenFlow 1.1 has specialized actions for these purposes.  OpenFlow 1.2 and later do not,  so  Open
              vSwitch translates them to appropriate OFPAT_SET_FIELD actions for those versions,

   The dec_mpls_ttl and dec_nsh_ttl actions
       Syntax:
              dec_mpls_ttl
              dec_nsh_ttl

       These  actions  decrement  the  TTL  of  the  packet’s  outer  MPLS  label stack entry or its NSH header,
       respectively.  If the TTL is initially 0 or 1, no  decrement  occurs.   Instead,  Open  vSwitch  sends  a
       packet-in message with reason code BOFPR_INVALID_TTL to OpenFlow controllers with ID 0, if it has enabled
       receiving  them.   Processing  the  current  set  of actions then stops.  (However, if the current set of
       actions was reached through resubmit, remaining actions in outer levels resume processing.)

       In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, consistency rules allow this actions only in a flow that matches only  packets
       that  contain  an  MPLS  label  or  an  NSH  header,  respectively.  See Inconsistencies, above, for more
       information.

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.11 introduced support for MPLS.  OpenFlow 1.1 and later support dec_mpls_ttl.  Open
              vSwitch implements dec_mpls_ttl as an extension to OpenFlow 1.0.

              Open vSwitch 2.8 introduced support for NSH, although the NSH draft changed after release so  that
              only  Open  vSwitch  2.9  and  later conform to the final protocol specification.  The dec_nsh_ttl
              action and NSH support in general is an Open vSwitch extension not supported  by  any  version  of
              OpenFlow.

   The check_pkt_larger action
       Syntax:
              check_pkt_larger(pkt_len)->dst

       Checks  if  the  packet  is  larger  than the specified length in pkt_len.  If so, stores 1 in dst, which
       should be a 1-bit field; if not, stores 0.

       The packet length to check against the argument pkt_len includes the L2 header  and  L2  payload  of  the
       packet, but not the VLAN tag (if present).

       Examples:

          • check_pkt_larger(1500)->reg0[0]check_pkt_larger(8000)->reg9[10]

       This action was added in Open vSwitch 2.12.

   The delete_field action
       Syntax:
              delete_field:field

       The  delete_field  action  deletes  a  field  in  the  syntax described under Field Specifications above.
       Currently, only the tun_metadata fields are supported.

       This action was added in Open vSwitch 2.14.

METADATA ACTIONS

   The set_tunnel action
       Syntax:
              set_tunnel:id
              set_tunnel64:id

       Many kinds of tunnels support a tunnel ID, e.g. VXLAN and Geneve have  a  24-bit  VNI,  and  GRE  has  an
       optional  32-bit  key.   This action sets the value used for tunnel ID in such tunneled packets, although
       whether it is used for a particular tunnel depends on the tunnel’s  configuration.   See  the  tunnel  ID
       documentation in ovs-fields(7) for more information.

       Conformance
              These   actions  are  OpenFlow  extensions.   set_tunnel  was  introduced  in  Open  vSwitch  1.0.
              set_tunnel64, which is needed if id is wider than 32 bits, was added in Open  vSwitch  1.1.   Both
              actions  always  set  the  entire  tunnel  ID  field.   Open vSwitch supports these actions in all
              versions of OpenFlow, but in  OpenFlow  1.2  and  later  it  translates  them  to  an  appropriate
              standardized OFPAT_SET_FIELD action.

   The set_queue and pop_queue actions
       Syntax:
              set_queue:queue
              pop_queue

       The set_queue action sets the queue ID to be used for subsequent output actions to queue, which must be a
       32-bit  integer.   The  range  of meaningful values of queue, and their meanings, varies greatly from one
       OpenFlow implementation to another.  Even within a single implementation, there is no guarantee that  all
       OpenFlow  ports  have  the  same queues configured or that all OpenFlow ports in an implementation can be
       configured the same way queue-wise.  For more information, see the documentation  for  the  output  queue
       field in ovs-fields(7).

       The  pop_queue  restores  the output queue to the default that was set when the packet entered the switch
       (generally 0).

       Four billion queues ought to be enough for anyone: <https://mailman.stanford.edu/pipermail/openflow-spec/
       2009-August/000394.html>

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced the set_queue action.  Open vSwitch also supports it as  an  extension  in
              OpenFlow 1.0.

              The pop_queue action is an Open vSwitch extension.

FIREWALLING ACTIONS

       Open  vSwitch  is  often  used  to  implement  a  firewall.  The preferred way to implement a firewall is
       connection tracking, that is, to keep track of the connection state of individual TCP sessions.   The  ct
       action  described  in  this  section, added in Open vSwitch 2.5, implements connection tracking.  For new
       deployments, it is the recommended way to implement firewalling with Open vSwitch.

       Before ct was added, Open vSwitch did not have built-in support for connection tracking.   Instead,  Open
       vSwitch  supported  the  learn  action,  which allows a received packet to add a flow to an OpenFlow flow
       table.  This could be used to implement a primitive form of connection tracking: packets passing  through
       the  firewall in one direction could create flows that allowed response packets back through the firewall
       in the other direction.  The additional fin_timeout action allowed the learned flows  to  expire  quickly
       after TCP session termination.

   The ct action
       Syntax:
              ct([argument]...)
              ct(commit[,argument]...)

       The  action  has  two  modes  of  operation,  distinguished  by whether commit is present.  The following
       arguments may be present in either mode:

          zone=value
                 A zone is a 16-bit id that isolates connections into  separate  domains,  allowing  overlapping
                 network  addresses  in  different zones.  If a zone is not provided, then the default is 0. The
                 value may be specified either as a 16-bit integer literal or a field or subfield in the  syntax
                 described under Field Specifications above.

       Without  commit,  this  action  sends  the packet through the connection tracker.  The connection tracker
       keeps track of the state of TCP connections for packets passed through it.  For  each  packet  through  a
       connection,  it checks that it satisfies TCP invariants and signals the connection state to later actions
       using the ct_state metadata field, which is documented in ovs-fields(7).

       In this form, ct forks the OpenFlow pipeline:

          • In one fork, ct passes the packet to the connection tracker.  Afterward,  it  reinjects  the  packet
            into  the  OpenFlow pipeline with the connection tracking fields initialized.  The ct_state field is
            initialized with connection state and ct_zone to the connection tracking zone specified on the  zone
            argument.   If  the  connection is one that is already tracked, ct_mark and ct_label to its existing
            mark and label, respectively; otherwise they  are  zeroed.   In  addition,  ct_nw_proto,  ct_nw_src,
            ct_nw_dst,  ct_ipv6_src, ct_ipv6_dst, ct_tp_src, and ct_tp_dst are initialized appropriately for the
            original direction connection.  See the resubmit action for a way to search the flow table with  the
            connection  tracking  original  direction  fields  swapped  with  the  packet  5-tuple  fields.  See
            ovs-fields(7) for details on the connection tracking fields.

          • In the other fork, the original instance of the packet continues  independent  processing  following
            the ct action.  The ct_state field and other connection tracking metadata are cleared.

       Without commit, the ct action accepts the following arguments:

          table=table
                 Sets  the  OpenFlow table where the packet is reinjected.  The table must be a number between 0
                 and 254 inclusive, or a table’s name.  If table is  not  specified,  then  the  packet  is  not
                 reinjected.

          nat

          nat(type=addrs[:ports][,flag]...)
                 Specify  address and port translation for the connection being  tracked.  The type must be src,
                 for source address/port translation (SNAT), or dst, for  destination  address/port  translation
                 (DNAT).   Setting  up  address  translation  for  a  new  connection  takes  effect only if the
                 connection is later committed with ct(commit ...).

                 The src and dst options take the following arguments:

                     addrs  The IP address addr or range addr1-addr2 from which the translated address should be
                            selected.  If only one address is given, then that address will always be  selected,
                            otherwise  the  address selection can be informed by the optional persistent flag as
                            described below.  Either IPv4 or IPv6 addresses can be provided, but both  addresses
                            must  be  of  the  same  type,  and  the  datapath  behavior is undefined in case of
                            providing IPv4 address range for an IPv6 packet, or IPv6 address range for  an  IPv4
                            packet.   IPv6  addresses  must  be  bracketed  with [ and ] if a port range is also
                            given.

                     ports  The L4 port or range port1-port2 from which the translated port should be  selected.
                            When  a  port range is specified, fallback to ephemeral ports does not happen, else,
                            it will.  The port number selection can be informed by the optional random and  hash
                            flags described below.

                 The optional flags are:

                     random The  selection  of the port from the given range should be done using a fresh random
                            number.  This flag is mutually exclusive with hash.

                     hash   The selection of the port from the given range  should  be  done  using  a  datapath
                            specific  hash  of  the packet’s IP addresses and the other, non-mapped port number.
                            This flag is mutually exclusive with random.

                     persistent
                            The selection of the IP address from the given range should be done so that the same
                            mapping can be provided after the system restarts.

                 If alg is specified for the committing ct action that also includes  nat  with  a  src  or  dst
                 attribute, then the datapath tries to set up the helper to be NAT-aware.  This functionality is
                 datapath specific and may not be supported by all datapaths.

                 A  bare  nat argument with no options will only translate the packet being processed in the way
                 the connection has been set up with an earlier, committed ct action.  A nat action with src  or
                 dst,  when  applied  to a packet belonging to an established (rather than new) connection, will
                 behave the same as a bare nat.

                 For SNAT, there is a special case when the src IP address  is  configured  as  all  0’s,  i.e.,
                 nat(src=0.0.0.0). In this case, when a source port collision is detected during the commit, the
                 source  port  will  be  translated  to  an ephemeral port. If there is no collision, no SNAT is
                 performed.

                 Open vSwitch 2.6 introduced nat.  Linux 4.6 was the earliest upstream kernel  that  implemented
                 ct support for nat.

       With commit, the connection tracker commits the connection to the connection tracking module.  The commit
       flag should only be used from the pipeline within the first fork of ct without commit.  Information about
       the connection is stored beyond the lifetime of the packet in the pipeline.  Some ct_state flags are only
       available for committed connections.

       The following options are available only with commit:

          force  A  committed  connection always has the directionality of the packet that caused the connection
                 to be committed in the first place.  This is the original direction of the connection, and  the
                 opposite  direction is the reply direction.  If a connection is already committed, but it is in
                 the wrong direction, force effectively terminates the existing connection and starts a new  one
                 in  the current direction.  This flag has no effect if the original direction of the connection
                 is already the same as that of the current packet.

          exec(action...)
                 Perform each action within the context of connection tracking.  Only actions which  modify  the
                 ct_mark  or  ct_label  fields  are  accepted  within  exec action, and these fields may only be
                 modified with this option. For example:

                 set_field:value[/mask]->ct_mark
                        Store a 32-bit metadata value with the connection.  Subsequent lookups  for  packets  in
                        this  connection will populate ct_mark when the packet is sent to the connection tracker
                        with the table specified.

                 set_field:value[/mask]->ct_label
                        Store a 128-bit metadata value with the connection.  Subsequent lookups for  packets  in
                        this connection will populate ct_label when the packet is sent to the connection tracker
                        with the table specified.

          alg=alg
                 Specify  application  layer  gateway  alg  to  track  specific connection types.  If subsequent
                 related connections are sent through the ct action, then the rel flag  in  the  ct_state  field
                 will be set.  Supported types include:

                 ftp    Look  for  negotiation  of  FTP  data  connections.  Specify this option for FTP control
                        connections to detect related data connections and populate the rel flag  for  the  data
                        connections.

                 tftp   Look  for  negotiation  of  TFTP data connections.  Specify this option for TFTP control
                        connections to detect related data connections and populate the rel flag  for  the  data
                        connections.

                 Related  connections  inherit  ct_mark  from that stored with the original connection (i.e. the
                 connection created by ct(alg=...).

       With  the  Linux  datapath,  global   sysctl   options   affect   ct   behavior.    In   particular,   if
       net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_helper  is  enabled,  which it is by default until Linux 4.7, then application
       layer gateway helpers may be executed even if alg is not specified.  For security reasons, the  netfilter
       team  recommends  users  disable this option.  For further details, please see <http://www.netfilter.org/
       news.html#2012-04-03> .

       The ct action may be used as a primitive to construct stateful firewalls by selectively  committing  some
       traffic,  then  matching  ct_state  to  allow established connections while denying new connections.  The
       following flows provide an example of how to implement a simple firewall that allows new connections from
       port 1 to port 2, and only allows established connections to send traffic from port 2 to port 1:

          table=0,priority=1,action=drop
          table=0,priority=10,arp,action=normal
          table=0,priority=100,ip,ct_state=-trk,action=ct(table=1)
          table=1,in_port=1,ip,ct_state=+trk+new,action=ct(commit),2
          table=1,in_port=1,ip,ct_state=+trk+est,action=2
          table=1,in_port=2,ip,ct_state=+trk+new,action=drop
          table=1,in_port=2,ip,ct_state=+trk+est,action=1

       If ct is executed on IPv4 (or IPv6) fragments, then the message is implicitly reassembled before  sending
       to  the  connection tracker and refragmented upon output, to the original maximum received fragment size.
       Reassembly occurs within the context of the zone, meaning that IP fragments in different  zones  are  not
       assembled together.  Pipeline processing for the initial fragments is halted.  When the final fragment is
       received,  the  message is assembled and pipeline processing continues for that flow.  Packet ordering is
       not guaranteed by IP protocols, so it is not possible to determine which IP fragment will  cause  message
       reassembly  (and  therefore  continue  pipeline  processing).  As  such,  it is strongly recommended that
       multiple flows should not execute ct to reassemble fragments from the same IP message.

       Conformance
              The ct action was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.5.  Some of its  features  were  introduced  later,
              noted individually above.

   The ct_clear action
       Syntax:
              ct_clear

       Clears connection tracking state from the flow, zeroing ct_state, ct_zone, ct_mark, and ct_label.

       This action was introduced in Open vSwitch 2.7.

   The learn action
       Syntax:
              learn(argument...)

       The  learn  action adds or modifies a flow in an OpenFlow table, similar to ovs-ofctl --strict mod-flows.
       The arguments specify the match fields, actions, and  other  properties  of  the  flow  to  be  added  or
       modified.

       Match  fields  for  the new flow are specified as follows.  At least one match field should ordinarily be
       specified:

          field=value
                 Specifies that field, in the new flow,  must  match  the  literal  value,  e.g.  dl_type=0x800.
                 Shorthand match syntax, such as ip in place of dl_type=0x800, is not supported.

          field=src
                 Specifies  that  field  in  the  new  flow must match src taken from the packet currently being
                 processed.  For example, udp_dst=udp_src, applied to a UDP packet with source port 53,  creates
                 a flow which matches udp_dst=53.  field and src must have the same width.

          field  Shorthand for the previous form when field and src are the same.  For example, udp_dst, applied
                 to a UDP packet with destination port 53, creates a flow which matches udp_dst=53.

       The  field  and  src  arguments  above  should be fields or subfields in the syntax described under Field
       Specifications above.

       Match field specifications must honor prerequisites for both the flow with the learn  and  the  new  flow
       that  it  creates.   Consider  the  following complete flow, in the syntax accepted by ovs-ofctl.  If the
       flow’s match on udp were omitted, then the flow  would  not  satisfy  the  prerequisites  for  the  learn
       action’s  use  of udp_src.  If dl_type=0x800 or nw_proto were omitted from learn, then the new flow would
       not satisfy the prerequisite for its match on udp_dst.  For more  information  on  prerequisites,  please
       refer to ovs-fields(7):

          udp, actions=learn(dl_type=0x800, nw_proto=17, udp_dst=udp_src)

       Actions for the new flow are specified as follows.  At least one action should ordinarily be specified:

          load:value->dst
                 Adds  a  load  action to the new flow that loads the literal value into dst.  The syntax is the
                 same as the load action explained in the Field Modification Actions section.

          load:src->dst
                 Adds a load action to the new flow that loads src, a field or subfield from  the  packet  being
                 processed, into dst.

          output:field
                 Adds  an  output  action to the new flow’s actions that outputs to the OpenFlow port taken from
                 field, which must be a field as described above.

          fin_idle_timeout=seconds / fin_hard_timeout=seconds
                 Adds a fin_timeout action with the specified arguments to the new flow.  This feature was added
                 in Open vSwitch 1.6.

       The following additional arguments are optional:
          idle_timeout=seconds

          hard_timeout=seconds

          priority=value

          cookie=value

          send_flow_rem
                 These arguments have the same meaning as in the usual flow syntax documented in ovs-ofctl(8).

          table=table
                 The table in which the new flow should be inserted.  Specify a decimal number between 0 and 254
                 inclusive or the name of a table.  The default, if table is unspecified, is table 1 (not 0).

          delete_learned
                 When this flag is specified, deleting the flow that contains the learn action will also  delete
                 the  flows  created  by  learn.   Specifically,  when  the last learn action with this flag and
                 particular table and cookie values is removed, the switch deletes  all  of  the  flows  in  the
                 specified table with the specified cookie.

                 This flag was added in Open vSwitch 2.4.

          limit=number
                 If  the number of flows in the new flow’s table with the same cookie exceeds number, the action
                 will not add a new flow.  By default, or with limit=0, there is no limit.

                 This flag was added in Open vSwitch 2.8.

          result_dst=field[bit]
                 If learn fails (because the number of flows exceeds limit), the action sets  field[bit]  to  0,
                 otherwise it will be set to 1.  field[bit] must be a single bit.

                 This flag was added in Open vSwitch 2.8.

       By  itself,  the  learn action can only put two kinds of actions into the flows that it creates: load and
       output actions.  If learn is used in isolation, these are severe limits.

       However, learn is not meant to be used in isolation.  It is a primitive meant to be  used  together  with
       other  Open  vSwitch  features to accomplish a task.  Its existing features are enough to accomplish most
       tasks.

       Here is an outline of a typical pipeline structure that allows for versatile behavior using learn:

          • Flows in table A contain a learn action, that populates flows in table L, that use a load action  to
            populate register R with information about what was learned.

          • Flows  in table B contain two sequential resubmit actions: one to table L and another one to table B
            + 1.

          • Flows in table B + 1 match on register R and act differently depending on what the flows in table  L
            loaded into it.

       This approach can be used to implement many learn-based features.  For example:

          • Resubmit  to  a table selected based on learned information, e.g. see <https://mail.openvswitch.org/
            pipermail/ovs-discuss/2016-June/021694.html> .

          • MAC learning in the middle of a pipeline,  as  described  in  the  Open  vSwitch  Advanced  Features
            Tutorial in the OVS documentation.

          • TCP state based firewalling, by learning outgoing connections based on SYN packets and matching them
            up with incoming packets.  (This is usually better implemented using the ct action.)

          • At least some of the features described in T. A. Hoff, Extending Open vSwitch to Facilitate Creation
            of Stateful SDN Applications.

       Conformance
              The  learn  action  is  an  Open  vSwitch  extension  to OpenFlow added in Open vSwitch 1.3.  Some
              features of learn were added in later versions, as noted individually above.

   The fin_timeout action
       Syntax:
              fin_timeout(key=value...)

       This action changes the idle timeout or hard timeout, or both, of the OpenFlow  flow  that  contains  it,
       when  the flow matches a TCP packet with the FIN or RST flag.  When such a packet is observed, the action
       reduces the rule’s timeouts to those specified on the action.  If the rule’s existing timeout is  already
       shorter than the one that the action specifies, then that timeout is unaffected.

       The timeouts are specified as key-value pairs:

          idle_timeout=seconds
                 Causes the flow to expire after the given number of seconds of inactivity.

          hard_timeout=seconds
                 Causes  the flow to expire after the given number of seconds, regardless of activity.  (seconds
                 specifies time since the flow’s creation, not since the receipt of the FIN or RST.)

       This action is normally added to a learned flow by the  learn  action.   It  is  unlikely  to  be  useful
       otherwise.

       Conformance
              This Open vSwitch extension action was added in Open vSwitch 1.6.

PROGRAMMING AND CONTROL FLOW ACTIONS

   The resubmit action
       Syntax:
              resubmit:port
              resubmit([port],[table][,ct])``

       Searches  an  OpenFlow  flow  table  for  a  matching flow and executes the actions found, if any, before
       continuing to the following action in the current flow entry.  Arguments can customize the search:

          • If port is given as an OpenFlow port number or name, then it specifies a value to use for the  input
            port  metadata  field  as  part  of  the  search,  in place of the input port currently in the flow.
            Specifying in_port as port is equivalent to omitting it.

          • If table is given as an integer between 0 and 254 or a table name, it specifies the  OpenFlow  table
            to search.  If it is not specified, the table from the current flow is used.

          • If  ct  is  specified,  then  the  search  is  done  with  packet  5-tuple  fields  swapped with the
            corresponding conntrack original direction tuple fields.  See the documentation for  ct  above,  for
            more  information  about  connection  tracking,  or  ovs-fields(7)  for details about the connection
            tracking fields.

            This flag requires a valid connection tracking state as a match prerequisite in the flow where  this
            action  is  placed.   Examples  of  valid  connection  tracking state matches include ct_state=+new,
            ct_state=+est, ct_state=+rel, and ct_state=+trk-inv.

       The changes, if any, to the input port and connection tracking fields are just  for  searching  the  flow
       table.  The changes are not visible to actions or to later flow table lookups.

       The  most  common  use  of  resubmit  is  to  visit  another  flow  table  without port or ct, like this:
       resubmit(,table).

       Recursive resubmit actions are permitted.

       Conformance
              The resubmit action is an Open vSwitch extension.  However, the goto_table instruction in OpenFlow
              1.1 and later can be viewed as a kind of restricted resubmit.

              Open vSwitch 1.3 added table.  Open vSwitch 2.7 added ct.

              Open vSwitch imposes a limit on resubmit recursion that varies among version:

                 • Open vSwitch 1.0.1 and earlier did not support recursion.

                 • Open vSwitch 1.0.2 and 1.0.3 limited recursion to 8 levels.

                 • Open vSwitch 1.1 and 1.2 limited recursion to 16 levels.

                 • Open vSwitch 1.2 through 1.8 limited recursion to 32 levels.

                 • Open vSwitch 1.9 through 2.0 limited recursion to 64 levels.

                 • Open vSwitch 2.1 through 2.5 limited recursion to 64 levels and impose a total limit of 4,096
                   resubmits per flow translation (earlier versions did not impose any total limit).

                 • Open vSwitch 2.6 and later imposes the same limits as 2.5, with one exception: resubmit  from
                   table x to any table y > x does not count against the recursion depth limit.

   The clone action
       Syntax:
              clone(action...)

       Executes  each  nested action, saving much of the packet and pipeline state beforehand and then restoring
       it afterward.  The state that is saved and restored includes all flow data and metadata  (including,  for
       example, in_port and ct_state), the stack accessed by push and pop actions, and the OpenFlow action set.

       This action was added in Open vSwitch 2.7.

   The push and pop actions
       Syntax:
              push:src
              pop:dst

       The  push  action pushes src on a general-purpose stack.  The pop action pops an entry off the stack into
       dst.  src and dst should be fields or subfields in the syntax described under Field Specifications above.

       Controllers can use the stack for saving and restoring data or  metadata  around  resubmit  actions,  for
       swapping or rearranging data and metadata, or for other purposes.  Any data or metadata field, or part of
       one, may be pushed, and any modifiable field or subfield may be popped.

       The number of bits pushed in a stack entry do not have to match the number of bits later popped from that
       entry.   If  more  bits  are  popped  from  an  entry  than  were  pushed, then the entry is conceptually
       left-padded with 0-bits as needed.  If fewer bits are popped than  pushed,  then  bits  are  conceptually
       trimmed from the left side of the entry.

       The  stack’s  size  is  limited.   The  limit is intended to be high enough that normal use will not pose
       problems.  Stack overflow or underflow is an error that stops action execution (see Stack too deep  under
       Error Handling, above).

       Examples:

          • push:reg2[0..5]  or  push:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5]  pushes  on  the  stack  the 6 bits in register 2 bits 0
            through 5.

          • pop:reg2[0..5] or pop:NXM_NX_REG2[0..5] pops the value from top of the stack and copy bits 0 through
            5 of that value into bits 0 through 5 of register 2.

       Conformance
              Open vSwitch 1.2 introduced push and pop as OpenFlow extension actions.

   The exit action
       Syntax:
              exit

       This action causes Open vSwitch to immediately halt execution of further  actions.   Actions  which  have
       already been executed are unaffected.  Any further actions, including those which may be in other tables,
       or  different  levels  of  the  resubmit call stack, are ignored.  However, an exit action within a group
       bucket terminates only execution of that bucket, not other buckets or the overall pipeline.   Actions  in
       the action set are still executed (specify clear_actions before exit to discard them).

   The multipath action
       Syntax:
              multipath(fields,basis,algorithm,n_links,arg,dst)

       Hashes  fields  using  basis  as  a  universal  hash parameter, then the applies multipath link selection
       algorithm (with parameter arg) to choose one of n_links output links numbered 0 through n_links minus  1,
       and  stores  the  link  into  dst,  which must be a field or subfield in the syntax described under Field
       Specifications above.

       The bundle or bundle_load actions are usually easier to use than multipath.

       fields must be one of the following:

          eth_src
                 Hashes Ethernet source address only.

          symmetric_l4
                 Hashes Ethernet source, destination, and type, VLAN  ID,  IPv4/IPv6  source,  destination,  and
                 protocol,  and  TCP  or  SCTP  (but  not  UDP)  ports.   The  hash is computed so that pairs of
                 corresponding flows in each direction hash to the same value, in environments  where  L2  paths
                 are  the  same  in each direction.  UDP ports are not included in the hash to support protocols
                 such as VXLAN that use asymmetric ports in each direction.

          symmetric_l3l4
                 Hashes IPv4/IPv6 source, destination, and protocol, and TCP or SCTP (but not UDP) ports.   Like
                 symmetric_l4,  this  is  a  symmetric hash, but by excluding L2 headers it is more effective in
                 environments with asymmetric L2 paths (e.g. paths involving VRRP IP  addresses  on  a  router).
                 Not an effective hash function for protocols other than IPv4 and IPv6, which hash to a constant
                 zero.

          symmetric_l3l4+udp
                 Like symmetric_l3l4+udp, but UDP ports are included in the hash.  This is a more effective hash
                 when asymmetric UDP protocols such as VXLAN are not a consideration.

          symmetric_l3
                 Hashes network source address and network destination address.

          nw_src Hashes network source address only.

          nw_dst Hashes network destination address only.

       The algorithm used to compute the final result link must be one of the following:

          modulo_n
                 Computes link = hash(flow) % n_links.

                 This algorithm redistributes all traffic when n_links changes.  It has O(1) performance.

                 Use 65535 for max_link to get a raw hash value.

                 This algorithm is specified by RFC 2992.

          hash_threshold
                 Computes link = hash(flow) / (MAX_HASH / n_links).

                 Redistributes  between  one-quarter  and one-half of traffic when n_links changes.  It has O(1)
                 performance.

                 This algorithm is specified by RFC 2992.

          hrw (Highest Random Weight)
                 Computes the following:

                     for i in [0, n_links]:
                         weights[i] = hash(flow, i)
                     link = { i such that weights[i] >= weights[j] for all j != i }

                 Redistributes 1 / n_links of traffic when n_links changes.  It has O(n_links) performance.   If
                 n_links  is  greater  than a threshold (currently 64, but subject to change), Open vSwitch will
                 substitute another algorithm automatically.

                 This algorithm is specified by RFC 2992.

          iter_hash (Iterative Hash)
                 Computes the following:

                     i = 0
                     repeat:
                         i = i + 1
                         link = hash(flow, i) % arg
                     while link > max_link

                 Redistributes 1 / n_links of traffic  when  n_links  changes.   O(1)  performance  when  arg  /
                 max_link is bounded by a constant.

                 Redistributes all traffic when arg changes.

                 arg must be greater than max_link and for best performance should be no more than approximately
                 max_link  *  2.   If  arg  is  outside  the  acceptable  range, Open vSwitch will automatically
                 substitute the least power of 2 greater than max_link.

                 This algorithm is specific to Open vSwitch.

       Only the iter_hash algorithm uses arg.

       It is an error if max_link is greater than or equal to 2**n_bits.

       Conformance
              This is an OpenFlow extension added in Open vSwitch 1.1.

OTHER ACTIONS

   The conjunction action
       Syntax:
              conjunction(id, k/n)

       This action allows for sophisticated conjunctive match flows.   Refer  to  Conjunctive  Match  Fields  in
       ovs-fields(7) for details.

       A flow that has one or more conjunction actions may not have any other actions except for note actions.

       Conformance
              Open  vSwitch  2.4  introduced  the  conjunction  action and conj_id field.  They are Open vSwitch
              extensions to OpenFlow.

   The note action
       Syntax:
              note:[hh]...

       This action does nothing at all.  OpenFlow controllers may use it to annotate flows with more  data  than
       can fit in a flow cookie.

       The  action  may include any number of bytes represented as hex digits hh.  Periods may separate pairs of
       hex digits, for readability.  The note action’s format doesn’t include an exact length for  its  payload,
       so the provided bytes will be padded on the right by enough bytes with value 0 to make the total number 6
       more than a multiple of 8.

       Conformance
              This action is an extension to OpenFlow introduced in Open vSwitch 1.1.

   The sample action
       Syntax:
              sample(argument...)

       Samples packets and sends one sample for every sampled packet.

       The following argument forms are accepted:

          probability=packets
                 The number of sampled packets out of 65535.  Must be greater or equal to 1.

          collector_set_id=id
                 The  unsigned 32-bit integer identifier of the set of sample collectors to send sampled packets
                 to.  Defaults to 0.

          obs_domain_id=value
                 When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit  integer  Observation  Domain  ID
                 sent  in  every IPFIX flow record. The value may be specified as a 32-bit integer or a field or
                 subfield in the syntax described under Field Specifications above. Defaults to 0.

          obs_point_id=value
                 When sending samples to IPFIX collectors, the unsigned 32-bit integer Observation Point ID sent
                 in every IPFIX flow record. The value may be specified as  a  32-bit  integer  or  a  field  or
                 subfield in the syntax described under Field Specifications above. Defaults to 0.

          sampling_port=port
                 Sample  packets  on  port,  which should be the ingress or egress port.  This option, which was
                 added in Open vSwitch 2.6, allows the IPFIX implementation to export egress tunnel information.

          ingress

          egress Specifies explicitly that the packet is being sampled on ingress to or egress from the  switch.
                 IPFIX  reports  sent  by Open vSwitch before version 2.6 did not include a direction.  From 2.6
                 until 2.7, IPFIX reports inferred a direction from sampling_port: if it was the packet’s output
                 port, then the direction was reported as  egress,  otherwise  as  ingress.   Open  vSwitch  2.7
                 introduced  these  options,  which  allow  the  inferred  direction  to be overridden.  This is
                 particularly useful when the ingress (or egress) port is not a tunnel.

       Refer to ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for more details on configuring sample collector sets.

       Conformance
              This action is an OpenFlow extension added in Open vSwitch 2.4.

              Support for subfields in obs_domain_id and obs_point_id was added in Open vSwitch 3.4.

INSTRUCTIONS

       Every version of OpenFlow includes actions.  OpenFlow 1.1 introduced the higher-level, related concept of
       instructions.  In OpenFlow 1.1 and later, actions  within  a  flow  are  always  encapsulated  within  an
       instruction.   Each  flow  has  at most one instruction of each kind, which are executed in the following
       fixed order defined in the OpenFlow specification:

          1. Meter

          2. Apply-Actions

          3. Clear-Actions

          4. Write-Actions

          5. Write-Metadata

          6. Stat-Trigger (not supported by Open vSwitch)

          7. Goto-Table

       The most important instruction is Apply-Actions.  This instruction encapsulates any  number  of  actions,
       which  the instruction executes.  Open vSwitch does not explicitly represent Apply-Actions.  Instead, any
       action by itself is implicitly part of an Apply-Actions instructions.

       Open vSwitch syntax requires other instructions, if present, to be in the order listed above.   Otherwise
       it will flag an error.

   The meter action and instruction
       Syntax:
              meter:meter_id

       Apply  meter  meter_id.   If  a  meter  band  rate  is  exceeded, the packet may be dropped, or modified,
       depending on the meter band type.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.3 introduced the meter instruction.  OpenFlow 1.5 changes meter from an instruction  to
              an action.

              OpenFlow 1.5 allows implementations to restrict meter to be the first action in an action list and
              to  exclude  meter  from  action  sets,  for better compatibility with OpenFlow 1.3 and 1.4.  Open
              vSwitch restricts the meter action both ways.

              Open vSwitch 2.0 introduced OpenFlow protocol support  for  meters,  but  it  did  not  include  a
              datapath  implementation.   Open  vSwitch 2.7 added meter support to the userspace datapath.  Open
              vSwitch 2.10 added meter support to the kernel datapath.  Open  vSwitch  2.12  added  support  for
              meter as an action in OpenFlow 1.5.

   The clear_actions instruction
       Syntax:
              clear_actions

       Clears the action set.  See Action Sets, above, for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced clear_actions.  Open vSwitch 2.1 added support for clear_actions.

   The write_actions instruction
       Syntax:
              write_actions(action...)

       Adds  each  action to the action set.  The action set is carried between flow tables and then executed at
       the end of the pipeline.  Only certain actions may be written to the action set.  See Action Sets, above,
       for more information.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced write_actions.  Open vSwitch 2.1 added support for write_actions.

   The write_metadata instruction
       Syntax:
              write_metadata:value[/mask]

       Updates the flow’s metadata field.  If mask is omitted, metadata is set exactly  to  value;  if  mask  is
       specified,  then  a  1-bit in mask indicates that the corresponding bit in metadata will be replaced with
       the corresponding bit from value.  Both value and mask are 64-bit values that are decimal by default; use
       a 0x prefix to specify them in hexadecimal.

       The metadata field can also be matched in the flow table and updated with actions such as  set_field  and
       move.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced write_metadata.  Open vSwitch 2.1 added support for write_metadata.

   The goto_table instruction
       Syntax:
              goto_table:table

       Jumps to table as the next table in the process pipeline.  The table may be a number between 0 and 254 or
       a table name.

       It  is  an  error  if  table  is  less  than or equal to the table of the flow that contains it; that is,
       goto_table must move forward in the OpenFlow pipeline.  Since goto_table must be the last instruction  in
       a flow, it never leads to recursion.  The resubmit extension action is more flexible.

       Conformance
              OpenFlow 1.1 introduced goto_table.  Open vSwitch 2.1 added support for goto_table.

Author

       The Open vSwitch Development Community

Copyright

       2016-2024, The Open vSwitch Development Community

3.6                                               Dec 17, 2025                                    OVS-ACTIONS(7)