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04a22949 1<!doctype birddoc system>
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2
3<!--
d150c637 4 BIRD documentation
d37f899b 5
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6This documentation can have 4 forms: sgml (this is master copy), html,
7ASCII text and dvi/postscript (generated from sgml using
8sgmltools). You should always edit master copy.
9
4e8ec666 10This is a slightly modified linuxdoc dtd. Anything in <descrip> tags is considered definition of
326e33f5 11configuration primitives, <cf> is fragment of configuration within normal text, <m> is
cd4fecb6 12"meta" information within fragment of configuration - something in config which is not keyword.
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13
14 (set-fill-column 100)
15
16 Copyright 1999,2000 Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>, distribute under GPL version 2 or later.
17
18 -->
19
371adba6 20<book>
d37f899b 21
aa185265 22<title>BIRD User's Guide
d37f899b 23<author>
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24Ondrej Filip <it/&lt;feela@network.cz&gt;/,
25Pavel Machek <it/&lt;pavel@ucw.cz&gt;/,
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26Martin Mares <it/&lt;mj@ucw.cz&gt;/,
27Ondrej Zajicek <it/&lt;santiago@crfreenet.org&gt;/
aa185265 28</author>
d37f899b 29
d37f899b 30<abstract>
aa185265 31This document contains user documentation for the BIRD Internet Routing Daemon project.
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32</abstract>
33
34<!-- Table of contents -->
35<toc>
36
37<!-- Begin the document -->
38
371adba6 39<chapt>Introduction
d37f899b 40
371adba6 41<sect>What is BIRD
d37f899b 42
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43<p><label id="intro">
44The name `BIRD' is actually an acronym standing for `BIRD Internet Routing Daemon'.
45Let's take a closer look at the meaning of the name:
46
47<p><em/BIRD/: Well, we think we have already explained that. It's an acronym standing
48for `BIRD Internet Routing Daemon', you remember, don't you? :-)
49
50<p><em/Internet Routing/: It's a program (well, a daemon, as you are going to discover in a moment)
51which works as a dynamic router in an Internet type network (that is, in a network running either
52the IPv4 or the IPv6 protocol). Routers are devices which forward packets between interconnected
53networks in order to allow hosts not connected directly to the same local area network to
02357f96 54communicate with each other. They also communicate with the other routers in the Internet to discover
897cd7aa 55the topology of the network which allows them to find optimal (in terms of some metric) rules for
96264d4d 56forwarding of packets (which are called routing tables) and to adapt themselves to the
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57changing conditions such as outages of network links, building of new connections and so on. Most of
58these routers are costly dedicated devices running obscure firmware which is hard to configure and
02357f96 59not open to any changes (on the other hand, their special hardware design allows them to keep up with lots of high-speed network interfaces, better than general-purpose computer does). Fortunately, most operating systems of the UNIX family allow an ordinary
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60computer to act as a router and forward packets belonging to the other hosts, but only according to
61a statically configured table.
62
63<p>A <em/Routing Daemon/ is in UNIX terminology a non-interactive program running on
64background which does the dynamic part of Internet routing, that is it communicates
65with the other routers, calculates routing tables and sends them to the OS kernel
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66which does the actual packet forwarding. There already exist other such routing
67daemons: routed (RIP only), GateD (non-free), Zebra<HTMLURL URL="http://www.zebra.org">
68and MRTD<HTMLURL URL="http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrt">, but their capabilities are
69limited and they are relatively hard to configure and maintain.
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70
71<p>BIRD is an Internet Routing Daemon designed to avoid all of these shortcomings,
5459fac6 72to support all the routing technology used in the today's Internet or planned to be
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73used in near future and to have a clean extensible architecture allowing new routing
74protocols to be incorporated easily. Among other features, BIRD supports:
75
76<itemize>
77 <item>both IPv4 and IPv6 protocols
78 <item>multiple routing tables
79 <item>the Border Gateway Protocol (BGPv4)
96264d4d 80 <item>the Routing Information Protocol (RIPv2)
0c75411b 81 <item>the Open Shortest Path First protocol (OSPFv2, OSPFv3)
6bcef225 82 <item>the Router Advertisements for IPv6 hosts
02357f96 83 <item>a virtual protocol for exchange of routes between different routing tables on a single host
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84 <item>a command-line interface allowing on-line control and inspection
85 of status of the daemon
86 <item>soft reconfiguration (no need to use complex online commands
87 to change the configuration, just edit the configuration file
02357f96 88 and notify BIRD to re-read it and it will smoothly switch itself
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89 to the new configuration, not disturbing routing protocols
90 unless they are affected by the configuration changes)
02357f96 91 <item>a powerful language for route filtering
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92</itemize>
93
94<p>BIRD has been developed at the Faculty of Math and Physics, Charles University, Prague,
e9df1bb6 95Czech Republic as a student project. It can be freely distributed under the terms of the GNU General
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96Public License.
97
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98<p>BIRD has been designed to work on all UNIX-like systems. It has
99been developed and tested under Linux 2.0 to 2.6, and then ported to
100FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD, porting to other systems (even non-UNIX
101ones) should be relatively easy due to its highly modular
102architecture.
103
104<p>BIRD supports either IPv4 or IPv6 protocol, but have to be compiled
105separately for each one. Therefore, a dualstack router would run two
106instances of BIRD (one for IPv4 and one for IPv6), with completely
107separate setups (configuration files, tools ...).
d37f899b 108
371adba6 109<sect>Installing BIRD
440439e3 110
02357f96 111<p>On a recent UNIX system with GNU development tools (GCC, binutils, m4, make) and Perl, installing BIRD should be as easy as:
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112
113<code>
114 ./configure
115 make
116 make install
117 vi /usr/local/etc/bird.conf
c184d9d0 118 bird
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119</code>
120
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121<p>You can use <tt>./configure --help</tt> to get a list of configure
122options. The most important ones are:
123<tt/--enable-ipv6/ which enables building of an IPv6 version of BIRD,
124<tt/--with-protocols=/ to produce a slightly smaller BIRD executable by configuring out routing protocols you don't use, and
125<tt/--prefix=/ to install BIRD to a place different from.
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126<file>/usr/local</file>.
127
02357f96 128<sect>Running BIRD
36032ded 129
c184d9d0 130<p>You can pass several command-line options to bird:
d26524fa 131
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132<descrip>
133 <tag>-c <m/config name/</tag>
66701947 134 use given configuration file instead of <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file>.
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135
136 <tag>-d</tag>
02357f96 137 enable debug messages and run bird in foreground.
c184d9d0 138
02357f96 139 <tag>-D <m/filename of debug log/</tag>
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140 log debugging information to given file instead of stderr.
141
142 <tag>-p</tag>
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143 just parse the config file and exit. Return value is zero if the config file is valid,
144 nonzero if there are some errors.
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145
146 <tag>-s <m/name of communication socket/</tag>
66701947 147 use given filename for a socket for communications with the client, default is <it/prefix/<file>/var/run/bird.ctl</file>.
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148
149 <tag>-u <m/user/</tag>
150 drop privileges and use that user ID, see the next section for details.
151
152 <tag>-g <m/group/</tag>
153 use that group ID, see the next section for details.
c184d9d0 154</descrip>
d26524fa 155
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156<p>BIRD writes messages about its work to log files or syslog (according to config).
157
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158<sect>Privileges
159
160<p>BIRD, as a routing daemon, uses several privileged operations (like
161setting routing table and using raw sockets). Traditionally, BIRD is
162executed and runs with root privileges, which may be prone to security
163problems. The recommended way is to use a privilege restriction
164(options <cf/-u/, <cf/-g/). In that case BIRD is executed with root
165privileges, but it changes its user and group ID to an unprivileged
166ones, while using Linux capabilities to retain just required
167privileges (capabilities CAP_NET_*). Note that the control socket is
168created before the privileges are dropped, but the config file is read
169after that. The privilege restriction is not implemented in BSD port
170of BIRD.
171
172<p>A nonprivileged user (as an argument to <cf/-u/ options) may be the
173user <cf/nobody/, but it is suggested to use a new dedicated user
174account (like <cf/bird/). The similar considerations apply for
175the group option, but there is one more condition -- the users
176in the same group can use <file/birdc/ to control BIRD.
177
178<p>Finally, there is a possibility to use external tools to run BIRD in
179an environment with restricted privileges. This may need some
180configuration, but it is generally easy -- BIRD needs just the
181standard library, privileges to read the config file and create the
182control socket and the CAP_NET_* capabilities.
183
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184<chapt>About routing tables
185
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186<p>BIRD has one or more routing tables which may or may not be
187synchronized with OS kernel and which may or may not be synchronized with
188each other (see the Pipe protocol). Each routing table contains a list of
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189known routes. Each route consists of:
190
191<itemize>
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192 <item>network prefix this route is for (network address and prefix length -- the number of bits forming the network part of the address; also known as a netmask)
193 <item>preference of this route
194 <item>IP address of router which told us about this route
02357f96 195 <item>IP address of router we should forward the packets to
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196 using this route
197 <item>other attributes common to all routes
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198 <item>dynamic attributes defined by protocols which may or
199 may not be present (typically protocol metrics)
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200</itemize>
201
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202Routing table maintains multiple entries
203for a network, but at most one entry for one network and one
204protocol. The entry with the highest preference is used for routing (we
205will call such an entry the <it/selected route/). If
02357f96 206there are more entries with the same preference and they are from the same
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207protocol, the protocol decides (typically according to metrics). If they aren't,
208an internal ordering is used to break the tie. You can
209get the list of route attributes in the Route attributes section.
210
211<p>Each protocol is connected to a routing table through two filters
212which can accept, reject and modify the routes. An <it/export/
213filter checks routes passed from the routing table to the protocol,
214an <it/import/ filter checks routes in the opposite direction.
215When the routing table gets a route from a protocol, it recalculates
216the selected route and broadcasts it to all protocols connected to
217the table. The protocols typically send the update to other routers
218in the network.
a852c139 219
371adba6 220<chapt>Configuration
af0b25d2 221
371adba6 222<sect>Introduction
d37f899b 223
66701947 224<p>BIRD is configured using a text configuration file. Upon startup, BIRD reads <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file> (unless the
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225<tt/-c/ command line option is given). Configuration may be changed at user's request: if you modify
226the config file and then signal BIRD with <tt/SIGHUP/, it will adjust to the new
227config. Then there's the client
228which allows you to talk with BIRD in an extensive way.
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229
230<p>In the config, everything on a line after <cf/#/ or inside <cf>/*
231*/</cf> is a comment, whitespace characters are treated as a single space. If there's a variable number of options, they are grouped using
232the <cf/{ }/ brackets. Each option is terminated by a <cf/;/. Configuration
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233is case sensitive.
234
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235<p>Here is an example of a simple config file. It enables
236synchronization of routing tables with OS kernel, scans for
237new network interfaces every 10 seconds and runs RIP on all network interfaces found.
4a5bb2bf 238
d37f899b 239
a0dd1c74 240<code>
d37f899b 241protocol kernel {
d150c637 242 persist; # Don't remove routes on BIRD shutdown
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243 scan time 20; # Scan kernel routing table every 20 seconds
244 export all; # Default is export none
245}
246
247protocol device {
248 scan time 10; # Scan interfaces every 10 seconds
249}
250
251protocol rip {
252 export all;
253 import all;
f434d191 254 interface "*";
d37f899b 255}
a0dd1c74 256</code>
d37f899b 257
326e33f5 258
371adba6 259<sect>Global options
af0b25d2 260
a0dd1c74 261<p><descrip>
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262 <tag>include "<m/filename/"</tag>
263 This statement causes inclusion of a new file. The maximal depth is set to 5.
264
44d4ab7a 265 <tag>log "<m/filename/"|syslog [name <m/name/]|stderr all|{ <m/list of classes/ }</tag>
1632f1fe 266 Set logging of messages having the given class (either <cf/all/ or <cf/{
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267 error, trace }/ etc.) into selected destination (a file specified as a filename string,
268 syslog with optional name argument, or the stderr output). Classes are:
1632f1fe 269 <cf/info/, <cf/warning/, <cf/error/ and <cf/fatal/ for messages about local problems,
98627595 270 <cf/debug/ for debugging messages,
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271 <cf/trace/ when you want to know what happens in the network,
272 <cf/remote/ for messages about misbehavior of remote machines,
273 <cf/auth/ about authentication failures,
4e8ec666 274 <cf/bug/ for internal BIRD bugs. You may specify more than one <cf/log/ line to establish logging to multiple
5a203dac 275 destinations. Default: log everything to the system log.
02357f96 276
7581b81b 277 <tag>debug protocols all|off|{ states, routes, filters, interfaces, events, packets }</tag>
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278 Set global defaults of protocol debugging options. See <cf/debug/ in the following section. Default: off.
279
280 <tag>debug commands <m/number/</tag>
281 Control logging of client connections (0 for no logging, 1 for
282 logging of connects and disconnects, 2 and higher for logging of
283 all client commands). Default: 0.
249d238c 284
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285 <tag>mrtdump "<m/filename/"</tag>
286 Set MRTdump file name. This option must be specified to allow MRTdump feature.
287 Default: no dump file.
288
289 <tag>mrtdump protocols all|off|{ states, messages }</tag>
290 Set global defaults of MRTdump options. See <cf/mrtdump/ in the following section.
291 Default: off.
292
02357f96 293 <tag>filter <m/name local variables/{ <m/commands/ }</tag> Define a filter. You can learn more about filters
5a203dac 294 in the following chapter.
326e33f5 295
96264d4d 296 <tag>function <m/name/ (<m/parameters/) <m/local variables/ { <m/commands/ }</tag> Define a function. You can learn more
02357f96 297 about functions in the following chapter.
bfd71178 298
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299 <tag>protocol rip|ospf|bgp|... [<m/name/ [from <m/name2/]] { <m>protocol options</m> }</tag>
300 Define a protocol instance called <cf><m/name/</cf> (or with a name like "rip5" generated
301 automatically if you don't specify any <cf><m/name/</cf>). You can learn more about
302 configuring protocols in their own chapters. When <cf>from <m/name2/</cf> expression is
303 used, initial protocol options are taken from protocol or template <cf><m/name2/</cf>
304 You can run more than one instance of most protocols (like RIP or BGP). By default, no
305 instances are configured.
306
307 <tag>template rip|bgp|... [<m/name/ [from <m/name2/]] { <m>protocol options</m> }</tag>
308 Define a protocol template instance called <cf><m/name/</cf> (or with a name like "bgp1"
309 generated automatically if you don't specify any <cf><m/name/</cf>). Protocol templates can
310 be used to group common options when many similarly configured protocol instances are to be
311 defined. Protocol instances (and other templates) can use templates by using <cf/from/
312 expression and the name of the template. At the moment templates (and <cf/from/ expression)
313 are not implemented for OSPF protocol.
249d238c 314
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315 <tag>define <m/constant/ = (<m/expression/)|<m/number/|<m/IP address/</tag>
316 Define a constant. You can use it later in every place you could use a simple integer or an IP address.
317 Besides, there are some predefined numeric constants based on /etc/iproute2/rt_* files.
318 A list of defined constants can be seen (together with other symbols) using 'show symbols' command.
249d238c 319
5a203dac 320 <tag>router id <m/IPv4 address/</tag> Set BIRD's router ID. It's a world-wide unique identification of your router, usually one of router's IPv4 addresses. Default: in IPv4 version, the lowest IP address of a non-loopback interface. In IPv6 version, this option is mandatory.
249d238c 321
fcf5a4f4 322 <tag>listen bgp [address <m/address/] [port <m/port/] [dual]</tag>
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323 This option allows to specify address and port where BGP
324 protocol should listen. It is global option as listening
325 socket is common to all BGP instances. Default is to listen on
326 all addresses (0.0.0.0) and port 179. In IPv6 mode, option
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327 <cf/dual/ can be used to specify that BGP socket should accept
328 both IPv4 and IPv6 connections (but even in that case, BIRD
329 would accept IPv6 routes only). Such behavior was default in
330 older versions of BIRD.
27579857 331
9be9a264 332 <tag>timeformat route|protocol|base|log "<m/format1/" [<m/limit/ "<m/format2/"]</tag>
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333 This option allows to specify a format of date/time used by
334 BIRD. The first argument specifies for which purpose such
335 format is used. <cf/route/ is a format used in 'show route'
336 command output, <cf/protocol/ is used in 'show protocols'
337 command output, <cf/base/ is used for other commands and
338 <cf/log/ is used in a log file.
339
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340 "<m/format1/" is a format string using <it/strftime(3)/
341 notation (see <it/man strftime/ for details). <m/limit> and
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342 "<m/format2/" allow to specify the second format string for
343 times in past deeper than <m/limit/ seconds. There are two
344 shorthands: <cf/iso long/ is a ISO 8601 date/time format
345 (YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss) that can be also specified using <cf/"%F
346 %T"/. <cf/iso short/ is a variant of ISO 8601 that uses just
347 the time format (hh:mm:ss) for near times (up to 20 hours in
348 the past) and the date format (YYYY-MM-DD) for far times. This
349 is a shorthand for <cf/"%T" 72000 "%F"/.
350
351 By default, BIRD uses an short, ad-hoc format for <cf/route/
352 and <cf/protocol/ times, and a <cf/iso long/ similar format
353 (DD-MM-YYYY hh:mm:ss) for <cf/base/ and <cf/log/. These
354 defaults are here for a compatibility with older versions
355 and might change in the future.
356
02357f96 357 <tag>table <m/name/</tag> Create a new routing table. The default
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358 routing table is created implicitly, other routing tables have
359 to be added by this command.
af0b25d2 360
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361 <tag>roa table [ { roa table options ... } ] <m/name/</tag>
362 Create a new ROA (Route Origin Authorization) table. ROA
363 tables can be used to validate route origination of BGP
364 routes. A ROA table contains ROA entries, each consist of a
365 network prefix, a max prefix length and an AS number. A ROA
366 entry specifies prefixes which could be originated by that AS
367 number. ROA tables could be filled with data from RPKI (RFC
368 6480) or from public databases like Whois. ROA tables are
369 examined by <cf/roa_check()/ operator in filters.
370
371 Currently, there is just one option,
372 <cf>roa <m/prefix/ max <m/num/ as <m/num/</cf>, which
373 can be used to populate the ROA table with static ROA
374 entries. The option may be used multiple times. Other entries
375 can be added dynamically by <cf/add roa/ command.
376
02357f96 377 <tag>eval <m/expr/</tag> Evaluates given filter expression. It
1632f1fe 378 is used by us for testing of filters.
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379</descrip>
380
371adba6 381<sect>Protocol options
bfd71178 382
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383<p>For each protocol instance, you can configure a bunch of options.
384Some of them (those described in this section) are generic, some are
385specific to the protocol (see sections talking about the protocols).
7581b81b 386
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387<p>Several options use a <cf><m/switch/</cf> argument. It can be either
388<cf/on/, <cf/yes/ or a numeric expression with a non-zero value for the
389option to be enabled or <cf/off/, <cf/no/ or a numeric expression evaluating
390to zero to disable it. An empty <cf><m/switch/</cf> is equivalent to <cf/on/
391("silence means agreement").
7581b81b 392
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393<descrip>
394 <tag>preference <m/expr/</tag> Sets the preference of routes generated by this protocol. Default: protocol dependent.
395
396 <tag>disabled <m/switch/</tag> Disables the protocol. You can change the disable/enable status from the command
397 line interface without needing to touch the configuration. Disabled protocols are not activated. Default: protocol is enabled.
398
399 <tag>debug all|off|{ states, routes, filters, interfaces, events, packets }</tag>
400 Set protocol debugging options. If asked, each protocol is capable of
401 writing trace messages about its work to the log (with category
402 <cf/trace/). You can either request printing of <cf/all/ trace messages
403 or only of the types selected: <cf/states/ for protocol state changes
404 (protocol going up, down, starting, stopping etc.),
405 <cf/routes/ for routes exchanged with the routing table,
406 <cf/filters/ for details on route filtering,
407 <cf/interfaces/ for interface change events sent to the protocol,
408 <cf/events/ for events internal to the protocol and
409 <cf/packets/ for packets sent and received by the protocol. Default: off.
410
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411 <tag>mrtdump all|off|{ states, messages }</tag>
412
413 Set protocol MRTdump flags. MRTdump is a standard binary
414 format for logging information from routing protocols and
415 daemons. These flags control what kind of information is
416 logged from the protocol to the MRTdump file (which must be
417 specified by global <cf/mrtdump/ option, see the previous
418 section). Although these flags are similar to flags of
419 <cf/debug/ option, their meaning is different and
420 protocol-specific. For BGP protocol, <cf/states/ logs BGP
421 state changes and <cf/messages/ logs received BGP messages.
422 Other protocols does not support MRTdump yet.
423
424 <tag>router id <m/IPv4 address/</tag> This option can be used
425 to override global router id for a given protocol. Default:
426 uses global router id.
4cdd0784 427
5a203dac 428 <tag>import all | none | filter <m/name/ | filter { <m/filter commands/ } | where <m/filter expression/</tag>
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429 Specify a filter to be used for filtering routes coming from
430 the protocol to the routing table. <cf/all/ is shorthand for
431 <cf/where true/ and <cf/none/ is shorthand for
432 <cf/where false/. Default: <cf/all/.
bfd71178 433
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434 <tag>export <m/filter/</tag>
435 This is similar to the <cf>import</cf> keyword, except that it
436 works in the direction from the routing table to the protocol.
437 Default: <cf/none/.
af0b25d2 438
bf422073 439 <tag>import limit <m/number/ [action warn | block | restart | disable]</tag>
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440 Specify an import route limit (a maximum number of routes
441 imported from the protocol) and optionally the action to be
442 taken when the limit is hit. Warn action just prints warning
443 log message. Block action ignores new routes coming from the
444 protocol. Restart and disable actions shut the protocol down
445 like appropriate commands. Disable is the default action if an
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446 action is not explicitly specified. Note that limits are reset
447 during protocol reconfigure, reload or restart.
448 Default: <cf/none/.
d9b77cc2 449
bf422073 450 <tag>export limit <m/number/ [action warn | block | restart | disable]</tag>
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451 Specify an export route limit, works similarly to
452 the <cf>import limit</cf> option, but for the routes exported
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453 to the protocol. This option is experimental, there are some
454 problems in details of its behavior -- the number of exported
455 routes can temporarily exceed the limit without triggering it
456 during protocol reload, exported routes counter ignores route
457 blocking and block action also blocks route updates of alread
458 accepted routes -- and these details will probably change in
459 the future. Default: <cf/none/.
ebecb6f6 460
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461 <tag>description "<m/text/"</tag> This is an optional
462 description of the protocol. It is displayed as a part of the
463 output of 'show route all' command.
464
a7c9f7c0 465 <tag>table <m/name/</tag> Connect this protocol to a non-default routing table.
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466</descrip>
467
a7c9f7c0 468<p>There are several options that give sense only with certain protocols:
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469
470<descrip>
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471 <tag><label id="dsc-iface">interface [-] [ "<m/mask/" ] [ <m/prefix/ ] [, ...] [ { <m/option/ ; [...] } ]</tag>
472
473 Specifies a set of interfaces on which the protocol is activated with
474 given interface-specific options. A set of interfaces specified by one
475 interface option is described using an interface pattern. The
0c75411b 476 interface pattern consists of a sequence of clauses (separated by
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477 commas), each clause may contain a mask, a prefix, or both of them. An
478 interface matches the clause if its name matches the mask (if
479 specified) and its address matches the prefix (if specified). Mask is
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480 specified as shell-like pattern. For IPv6, the prefix part of a clause
481 is generally ignored and interfaces are matched just by their name.
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482
483 An interface matches the pattern if it matches any of its
484 clauses. If the clause begins with <cf/-/, matching interfaces are
485 excluded. Patterns are parsed left-to-right, thus
486 <cf/interface "eth0", -"eth*", "*";/ means eth0 and all
487 non-ethernets.
488
489 An interface option can be used more times with different
490 interfaces-specific options, in that case for given interface
491 the first matching interface option is used.
492
6bcef225 493 This option is allowed in Direct, OSPF, RIP and RAdv protocols,
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494 but in OSPF protocol it is used in <cf/area/ subsection.
495
496 Default: none.
497
498 Examples:
499
500 <cf>interface "*" { type broadcast; };</cf> - start the protocol on all interfaces with
501 <cf>type broadcast</cf> option.
502
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503 <cf>interface "eth1", "eth4", "eth5" { type ptp; };</cf> - start the protocol
504 on enumerated interfaces with <cf>type ptp</cf> option.
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505
506 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol on all
507 interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not
508 from 192.168.1.0/24.
509
510 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol on all
511 interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not
512 from 192.168.1.0/24.
513
514 <cf>interface "eth*" 192.168.1.0/24;</cf> - start the protocol on all
515 ethernet interfaces that have address from 192.168.1.0/24.
516
517 <tag><label id="dsc-pass">password "<m/password/" [ { id <m/num/; generate from <m/time/; generate to <m/time/; accept from <m/time/; accept to <m/time/; } ]</tag>
518 Specifies a password that can be used by the protocol. Password option can
519 be used more times to specify more passwords. If more passwords are
520 specified, it is a protocol-dependent decision which one is really
521 used. Specifying passwords does not mean that authentication is
522 enabled, authentication can be enabled by separate, protocol-dependent
523 <cf/authentication/ option.
524
525 This option is allowed in OSPF and RIP protocols. BGP has also
526 <cf/password/ option, but it is slightly different and described
527 separately.
528
529 Default: none.
530</descrip>
531
532<p>Password option can contain section with some (not necessary all) password sub-options:
533
534<descrip>
535 <tag>id <M>num</M></tag>
536 ID of the password, (0-255). If it's not used, BIRD will choose
537 ID based on an order of the password item in the interface. For
538 example, second password item in one interface will have default
539 ID 2. ID is used by some routing protocols to identify which
540 password was used to authenticate protocol packets.
541
542 <tag>generate from "<m/time/"</tag>
543 The start time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
544 The format of <cf><m/time/</cf> is <tt>dd-mm-yyyy HH:MM:SS</tt>.
545
546 <tag>generate to "<m/time/"</tag>
547 The last time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
548
549 <tag>accept from "<m/time/"</tag>
550 The start time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
5a203dac 551
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552 <tag>accept to "<m/time/"</tag>
553 The last time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
7581b81b 554</descrip>
d37f899b 555
5a203dac 556<chapt>Remote control
36032ded 557
a7c9f7c0 558<p>You can use the command-line client <file>birdc</file> to talk with
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559a running BIRD. Communication is done using a <file/bird.ctl/ UNIX
560domain socket (unless changed with the <tt/-s/ option given to both
561the server and the client). The commands can perform simple actions
562such as enabling/disabling of protocols, telling BIRD to show various
563information, telling it to show routing table filtered by filter, or
564asking BIRD to reconfigure. Press <tt/?/ at any time to get online
565help. Option <tt/-r/ can be used to enable a restricted mode of BIRD
566client, which allows just read-only commands (<cf/show .../). Option
1632f1fe 567<tt/-v/ can be passed to the client, to make it dump numeric return
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568codes along with the messages. You do not necessarily need to use
569<file/birdc/ to talk to BIRD, your own applications could do that, too
570-- the format of communication between BIRD and <file/birdc/ is stable
571(see the programmer's documentation).
c184d9d0 572
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573Many commands have the <m/name/ of the protocol instance as an argument.
574This argument can be omitted if there exists only a single instance.
575
5a203dac 576<p>Here is a brief list of supported functions:
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577
578<descrip>
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579 <tag>dump resources|sockets|interfaces|neighbors|attributes|routes|protocols</tag>
580 Dump contents of internal data structures to the debugging output.
581
582 <tag>show status</tag>
1632f1fe 583 Show router status, that is BIRD version, uptime and time from last reconfiguration.
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584
585 <tag>show protocols [all]</tag>
1632f1fe 586 Show list of protocol instances along with tables they are connected to and protocol status, possibly giving verbose information, if <cf/all/ is specified.
64722c98 587
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588 <tag>show ospf interface [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
589 Show detailed information about OSPF interfaces.
590
591 <tag>show ospf neighbors [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
592 Show a list of OSPF neighbors and a state of adjacency to them.
593
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594 <tag>show ospf state [all] [<m/name/]</tag>
595 Show detailed information about OSPF areas based on a content
596 of the link-state database. It shows network topology, stub
597 networks, aggregated networks and routers from other areas and
598 external routes. The command shows information about reachable
599 network nodes, use option <cf/all/ to show information about
600 all network nodes in the link-state database.
601
602 <tag>show ospf topology [all] [<m/name/]</tag>
603 Show a topology of OSPF areas based on a content of the
604 link-state database. It is just a stripped-down version of
605 'show ospf state'.
64722c98 606
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607 <tag>show ospf lsadb [global | area <m/id/ | link] [type <m/num/] [lsid <m/id/] [self | router <m/id/] [<m/name/] </tag>
608 Show contents of an OSPF LSA database. Options could be used to filter entries.
609
5a203dac 610 <tag>show static [<m/name/]</tag>
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611 Show detailed information about static routes.
612
5a203dac 613 <tag>show interfaces [summary]</tag>
1632f1fe 614 Show the list of interfaces. For each interface, print its type, state, MTU and addresses assigned.
5a203dac 615
89647357 616 <tag>show symbols [table|filter|function|protocol|template|roa|<m/symbol/]</tag>
1632f1fe 617 Show the list of symbols defined in the configuration (names of protocols, routing tables etc.).
5a203dac 618
ea2ae6dd 619 <tag>show route [[for] <m/prefix/|<m/IP/] [table <m/sym/] [filter <m/f/|where <m/c/] [(export|preexport) <m/p/] [protocol <m/p/] [<m/options/]</tag>
5a203dac 620 Show contents of a routing table (by default of the main one),
1632f1fe 621 that is routes, their metrics and (in case the <cf/all/ switch is given)
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622 all their attributes.
623
624 <p>You can specify a <m/prefix/ if you want to print routes for a
625 specific network. If you use <cf>for <m/prefix or IP/</cf>, you'll get
626 the entry which will be used for forwarding of packets to the given
627 destination. By default, all routes for each network are printed with
628 the selected one at the top, unless <cf/primary/ is given in which case
629 only the selected route is shown.
630
631 <p>You can also ask for printing only routes processed and accepted by
632 a given filter (<cf>filter <m/name/</cf> or <cf>filter { <m/filter/ }
633 </cf> or matching a given condition (<cf>where <m/condition/</cf>).
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634 The <cf/export/ and <cf/preexport/ switches ask for printing of entries
635 that are exported to the specified protocol. With <cf/preexport/, the
636 export filter of the protocol is skipped.
5a203dac 637
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638 <p>You can also select just routes added by a specific protocol.
639 <cf>protocol <m/p/</cf>.
640
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641 <p>The <cf/stats/ switch requests showing of route statistics (the
642 number of networks, number of routes before and after filtering). If
643 you use <cf/count/ instead, only the statistics will be printed.
644
c47d037e 645 <tag>show roa [<m/prefix/ | in <m/prefix/ | for <m/prefix/] [as <m/num/] [table <m/t/>]</tag>
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646 Show contents of a ROA table (by default of the first one).
647 You can specify a <m/prefix/ to print ROA entries for a
648 specific network. If you use <cf>for <m/prefix/</cf>, you'll
649 get all entries relevant for route validation of the network
650 prefix; i.e., ROA entries whose prefixes cover the network
651 prefix. Or you can use <cf>in <m/prefix/</cf> to get ROA entries
652 covered by the network prefix. You could also use <cf/as/ option
653 to show just entries for given AS.
654
655 <tag>add roa <m/prefix/ max <m/num/] as <m/num/ [table <m/t/>]</tag>
656 Add a new ROA entry to a ROA table. Such entry is called
657 <it/dynamic/ compared to <it/static/ entries specified in the
658 config file. These dynamic entries survive reconfiguration.
659
660 <tag>delete roa <m/prefix/ max <m/num/] as <m/num/ [table <m/t/>]</tag>
661 Delete the specified ROA entry from a ROA table. Only dynamic
662 ROA entries (i.e., the ones added by <cf/add roa/ command) can
663 be deleted.
664
665 <tag>flush roa [table <m/t/>]</tag>
666 Remove all dynamic ROA entries from a ROA table.
667
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668 <tag>configure [soft] ["<m/config file/"]</tag>
669 Reload configuration from a given file. BIRD will smoothly
670 switch itself to the new configuration, protocols are
671 reconfigured if possible, restarted otherwise. Changes in
0c75411b 672 filters usually lead to restart of affected protocols. If
4cdd0784 673 <cf/soft/ option is used, changes in filters does not cause
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674 BIRD to restart affected protocols, therefore already accepted
675 routes (according to old filters) would be still propagated,
676 but new routes would be processed according to the new
677 filters.
5a203dac 678
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679 <tag>enable|disable|restart <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
680 Enable, disable or restart a given protocol instance, instances matching the <cf><m/pattern/</cf> or <cf/all/ instances.
681
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682 <tag>reload [in|out] <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
683
684 Reload a given protocol instance, that means re-import routes
685 from the protocol instance and re-export preferred routes to
686 the instance. If <cf/in/ or <cf/out/ options are used, the
687 command is restricted to one direction (re-import or
688 re-export).
689
690 This command is useful if appropriate filters have changed but
691 the protocol instance was not restarted (or reloaded),
692 therefore it still propagates the old set of routes. For example
693 when <cf/configure soft/ command was used to change filters.
694
695 Re-export always succeeds, but re-import is protocol-dependent
696 and might fail (for example, if BGP neighbor does not support
697 route-refresh extension). In that case, re-export is also
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698 skipped. Note that for the pipe protocol, both directions are
699 always reloaded together (<cf/in/ or <cf/out/ options are
700 ignored in that case).
8a7fb885 701
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702 <tag/down/
703 Shut BIRD down.
64722c98 704
a4601845 705 <tag>debug <m/protocol/|<m/pattern/|all all|off|{ states | routes | filters | events | packets }</tag>
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706 Control protocol debugging.
707</descrip>
36032ded 708
371adba6 709<chapt>Filters
d37f899b 710
371adba6 711<sect>Introduction
d37f899b 712
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713<p>BIRD contains a simple programming language. (No, it can't yet read mail :-). There are
714two objects in this language: filters and functions. Filters are interpreted by BIRD core when a route is
715being passed between protocols and routing tables. The filter language contains control structures such
716as if's and switches, but it allows no loops. An example of a filter using many features can be found in <file>filter/test.conf</file>.
d37f899b 717
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718<p>Filter gets the route, looks at its attributes and
719modifies some of them if it wishes. At the end, it decides whether to
1632f1fe 720pass the changed route through (using <cf/accept/) or whether to <cf/reject/ it. A simple filter looks
0e5373fd 721like this:
d37f899b 722
a0dd1c74 723<code>
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724filter not_too_far
725int var;
726{
727 if defined( rip_metric ) then
728 var = rip_metric;
729 else {
730 var = 1;
731 rip_metric = 1;
732 }
733 if rip_metric &gt; 10 then
734 reject "RIP metric is too big";
735 else
736 accept "ok";
737}
a0dd1c74 738</code>
d37f899b 739
a7c9f7c0 740<p>As you can see, a filter has a header, a list of local variables, and a body. The header consists of
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741the <cf/filter/ keyword followed by a (unique) name of filter. The list of local variables consists of
742<cf><M>type name</M>;</cf> pairs where each pair defines one local variable. The body consists of
743<cf> { <M>statements</M> }</cf>. Each <m/statement/ is terminated by a <cf/;/. You can group
744several statements to a single compound statement by using braces (<cf>{ <M>statements</M> }</cf>) which is useful if
745you want to make a bigger block of code conditional.
746
747<p>BIRD supports functions, so that you don't have to repeat the same blocks of code over and
748over. Functions can have zero or more parameters and they can have local variables. Recursion is not allowed. Function definitions
326e33f5 749look like this:
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750
751<code>
752function name ()
753int local_variable;
754{
755 local_variable = 5;
756}
757
758function with_parameters (int parameter)
759{
760 print parameter;
761}
762</code>
763
1632f1fe 764<p>Unlike in C, variables are declared after the <cf/function/ line, but before the first <cf/{/. You can't declare
0e5373fd 765variables in nested blocks. Functions are called like in C: <cf>name();
1632f1fe 766with_parameters(5);</cf>. Function may return values using the <cf>return <m/[expr]/</cf>
a7c9f7c0 767command. Returning a value exits from current function (this is similar to C).
0e5373fd 768
a7c9f7c0 769<p>Filters are declared in a way similar to functions except they can't have explicit
1632f1fe 770parameters. They get a route table entry as an implicit parameter, it is also passed automatically
a7c9f7c0 771to any functions called. The filter must terminate with either
1632f1fe 772<cf/accept/ or <cf/reject/ statement. If there's a runtime error in filter, the route
2f647f3f 773is rejected.
0e5373fd 774
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775<p>A nice trick to debug filters is to use <cf>show route filter
776<m/name/</cf> from the command line client. An example session might look
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777like:
778
779<code>
780pavel@bug:~/bird$ ./birdc -s bird.ctl
781BIRD 0.0.0 ready.
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782bird> show route
78310.0.0.0/8 dev eth0 [direct1 23:21] (240)
784195.113.30.2/32 dev tunl1 [direct1 23:21] (240)
785127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
786bird> show route ?
1632f1fe 787show route [<prefix>] [table <t>] [filter <f>] [all] [primary]...
66701947 788bird> show route filter { if 127.0.0.5 &tilde; net then accept; }
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789127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
790bird>
791</code>
792
371adba6 793<sect>Data types
d37f899b 794
a7c9f7c0 795<p>Each variable and each value has certain type. Booleans, integers and enums are
326e33f5 796incompatible with each other (that is to prevent you from shooting in the foot).
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797
798<descrip>
a7c9f7c0 799 <tag/bool/ This is a boolean type, it can have only two values, <cf/true/ and
1632f1fe 800 <cf/false/. Boolean is the only type you can use in <cf/if/
7581b81b 801 statements.
d37f899b 802
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803 <tag/int/ This is a general integer type, you can expect it to store signed values from -2000000000
804 to +2000000000. Overflows are not checked. You can use <cf/0x1234/ syntax to write hexadecimal values.
d37f899b 805
a7c9f7c0 806 <tag/pair/ This is a pair of two short integers. Each component can have values from 0 to
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807 65535. Literals of this type are written as <cf/(1234,5678)/. The same syntax can also be
808 used to construct a pair from two arbitrary integer expressions (for example <cf/(1+2,a)/).
d37f899b 809
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810 <tag/quad/ This is a dotted quad of numbers used to represent
811 router IDs (and others). Each component can have a value
812 from 0 to 255. Literals of this type are written like IPv4
813 addresses.
814
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815 <tag/string/ This is a string of characters. There are no ways to modify strings in
816 filters. You can pass them between functions, assign them to variables of type <cf/string/, print
817 such variables, but you can't concatenate two strings. String literals
0e5373fd 818 are written as <cf/"This is a string constant"/.
d37f899b 819
a7c9f7c0 820 <tag/ip/ This type can hold a single IP address. Depending on the compile-time configuration of BIRD you are using, it
5a203dac 821 is either an IPv4 or IPv6 address. IP addresses are written in the standard notation (<cf/10.20.30.40/ or <cf/fec0:3:4::1/). You can apply special operator <cf>.mask(<M>num</M>)</cf>
1632f1fe 822 on values of type ip. It masks out all but first <cf><M>num</M></cf> bits from the IP
5a203dac 823 address. So <cf/1.2.3.4.mask(8) = 1.0.0.0/ is true.
d37f899b 824
a7c9f7c0 825 <tag/prefix/ This type can hold a network prefix consisting of IP address and prefix length. Prefix literals are written as
0e5373fd 826 <cf><M>ipaddress</M>/<M>pxlen</M></cf>, or
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827 <cf><m>ipaddress</m>/<m>netmask</m></cf>. There are two special
828 operators on prefixes:
829 <cf/.ip/ which extracts the IP address from the pair, and <cf/.len/, which separates prefix
830 length from the pair. So <cf>1.2.0.0/16.pxlen = 16</cf> is true.
d37f899b 831
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832 <tag/ec/ This is a specialized type used to represent BGP
833 extended community values. It is essentially a 64bit value,
834 literals of this type are usually written as <cf>(<m/kind/,
835 <m/key/, <m/value/)</cf>, where <cf/kind/ is a kind of
836 extended community (e.g. <cf/rt/ / <cf/ro/ for a route
837 target / route origin communities), the format and possible
838 values of <cf/key/ and <cf/value/ are usually integers, but
839 it depends on the used kind. Similarly to pairs, ECs can be
840 constructed using expressions for <cf/key/ and
841 <cf/value/ parts, (e.g. <cf/(ro, myas, 3*10)/, where
842 <cf/myas/ is an integer variable).
843
844 <tag/int|pair|quad|ip|prefix|ec|enum set/
a7c9f7c0 845 Filters recognize four types of sets. Sets are similar to strings: you can pass them around
126683fe 846 but you can't modify them. Literals of type <cf>int set</cf> look like <cf>
d37f899b 847 [ 1, 2, 5..7 ]</cf>. As you can see, both simple values and ranges are permitted in
946dc15c 848 sets.
8815d846 849
946dc15c 850 For pair sets, expressions like <cf/(123,*)/ can be used to denote ranges (in
0ef69b1c 851 that case <cf/(123,0)..(123,65535)/). You can also use <cf/(123,5..100)/ for range
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852 <cf/(123,5)..(123,100)/. You can also use <cf/*/ and <cf/a..b/ expressions
853 in the first part of a pair, note that such expressions are translated to a set
854 of intervals, which may be memory intensive. E.g. <cf/(*,4..20)/ is translated to
855 <cf/(0,4..20), (1,4..20), (2,4..20), ... (65535, 4..20)/.
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856
857 EC sets use similar expressions like pair sets, e.g. <cf/(rt, 123, 10..20)/
858 or <cf/(ro, 123, *)/. Expressions requiring the translation (like <cf/(rt, *, 3)/)
859 are not allowed (as they usually have 4B range for ASNs).
860
861 You can also use expressions for int, pair and EC set values. However it must
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862 be possible to evaluate these expressions before daemon boots. So you can use
863 only constants inside them. E.g.
864 <code>
865 define one=1;
8815d846 866 define myas=64500;
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867 int set odds;
868 pair set ps;
8815d846 869 ec set es;
946dc15c 870
8815d846 871 odds = [ one, 2+1, 6-one, 2*2*2-1, 9, 11 ];
b54ad333 872 ps = [ (1,one+one), (3,4)..(4,8), (5,*), (6,3..6), (7..9,*) ];
8815d846 873 es = [ (rt, myas, 3*10), (rt, myas+one, 0..16*16*16-1), (ro, myas+2, *) ];
946dc15c 874 </code>
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875
876 Sets of prefixes are special: their literals does not allow ranges, but allows
877 prefix patterns that are written as <cf><M>ipaddress</M>/<M>pxlen</M>{<M>low</M>,<M>high</M>}</cf>.
e0e8c04a 878 Prefix <cf><m>ip1</m>/<m>len1</m></cf> matches prefix pattern <cf><m>ip2</m>/<m>len2</m>{<m>l</m>,<m>h</m>}</cf> if
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879 the first <cf>min(len1, len2)</cf> bits of <cf/ip1/ and <cf/ip2/ are identical and <cf>len1 &lt;= ip1 &lt;= len2</cf>.
880 A valid prefix pattern has to satisfy <cf>low &lt;= high</cf>, but <cf/pxlen/ is not constrained by <cf/low/
e0e8c04a 881 or <cf/high/. Obviously, a prefix matches a prefix set literal if it matches any prefix pattern in the
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882 prefix set literal.
883
884 There are also two shorthands for prefix patterns: <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/+</cf> is a shorthand for
e755986a 885 <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/{<m/len/,<m/maxlen/}</cf> (where <cf><m>maxlen</m></cf> is 32 for IPv4 and 128 for IPv6),
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886 that means network prefix <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/</cf> and all its subnets. <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/-</cf>
887 is a shorthand for <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/{0,<m/len/}</cf>, that means network prefix <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/</cf>
888 and all its supernets (network prefixes that contain it).
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889
890 For example, <cf>[ 1.0.0.0/8, 2.0.0.0/8+, 3.0.0.0/8-, 4.0.0.0/8{16,24} ]</cf> matches
891 prefix <cf>1.0.0.0/8</cf>, all subprefixes of <cf>2.0.0.0/8</cf>, all superprefixes of <cf>3.0.0.0/8</cf> and prefixes
892 <cf/4.X.X.X/ whose prefix length is 16 to 24. <cf>[ 0.0.0.0/0{20,24} ]</cf> matches all prefixes (regardless of
893 IP address) whose prefix length is 20 to 24, <cf>[ 1.2.3.4/32- ]</cf> matches any prefix that contains IP address
e755986a 894 <cf>1.2.3.4</cf>. <cf>1.2.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8{15,17} ]</cf> is true,
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895 but <cf>1.0.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8- ]</cf> is false.
896
897 Cisco-style patterns like <cf>10.0.0.0/8 ge 16 le 24</cf> can be expressed
3f9b7bfe 898 in BIRD as <cf>10.0.0.0/8{16,24}</cf>, <cf>192.168.0.0/16 le 24</cf> as
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899 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{16,24}</cf> and <cf>192.168.0.0/16 ge 24</cf> as
900 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{24,32}</cf>.
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901
902 <tag/enum/
66701947 903 Enumeration types are fixed sets of possibilities. You can't define your own
1632f1fe 904 variables of such type, but some route attributes are of enumeration
a7c9f7c0 905 type. Enumeration types are incompatible with each other.
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906
907 <tag/bgppath/
a7c9f7c0 908 BGP path is a list of autonomous system numbers. You can't write literals of this type.
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909 There are several special operators on bgppaths:
910
911 <cf><m/P/.first</cf> returns the first ASN (the neighbor ASN) in path <m/P/.
912
913 <cf><m/P/.last</cf> returns the last ASN (the source ASN) in path <m/P/.
914
915 Both <cf/first/ and <cf/last/ return zero if there is no appropriate ASN,
916 for example if the path contains an AS set element as the first (or the last) part.
917
918 <cf><m/P/.len</cf> returns the length of path <m/P/.
919
920 <cf>prepend(<m/P/,<m/A/)</cf> prepends ASN <m/A/ to path <m/P/ and returns the result.
921 Statement <cf><m/P/ = prepend(<m/P/, <m/A/);</cf> can be shortened to
922 <cf><m/P/.prepend(<m/A/);</cf> if <m/P/ is appropriate route attribute
923 (for example <cf/bgp_path/).
4a5bb2bf 924
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925 <tag/bgpmask/
926 BGP masks are patterns used for BGP path matching
ad586334 927 (using <cf>path &tilde; [= 2 3 5 * =]</cf> syntax). The masks
5a203dac 928 resemble wildcard patterns as used by UNIX shells. Autonomous
e312bb40 929 system numbers match themselves, <cf/*/ matches any (even empty)
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930 sequence of arbitrary AS numbers and <cf/?/ matches one arbitrary AS number.
931 For example, if <cf>bgp_path</cf> is 4 3 2 1, then:
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932 <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 3 * =]</tt> is true, but
933 <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 5 * =]</tt> is false.
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934 BGP mask expressions can also contain integer expressions enclosed in parenthesis
935 and integer variables, for example <tt>[= * 4 (1+2) a =]</tt>.
ad586334 936 There is also old syntax that uses / .. / instead of [= .. =] and ? instead of *.
4cdd0784 937
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938 <tag/clist/
939 Clist is similar to a set, except that unlike other sets, it
940 can be modified. The type is used for community list (a set
941 of pairs) and for cluster list (a set of quads). There exist
8815d846 942 no literals of this type. There are three special operators on
126683fe 943 clists:
4cdd0784 944
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945 <cf>add(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> adds pair (or quad) <m/P/ to clist
946 <m/C/ and returns the result. If item <m/P/ is already in
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947 clist <m/C/, it does nothing. <m/P/ may also be a clist,
948 in that case all its members are added; i.e., it works as clist union.
4cdd0784 949
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950 <cf>delete(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> deletes pair (or quad)
951 <m/P/ from clist <m/C/ and returns the result. If clist
952 <m/C/ does not contain item <m/P/, it does nothing.
953 <m/P/ may also be a pair (or quad) set, in that case the
954 operator deletes all items from clist <m/C/ that are also
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955 members of set <m/P/. Moreover, <m/P/ may also be a clist,
956 which works analogously; i.e., it works as clist difference.
4cdd0784 957
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958 <cf>filter(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> deletes all items from clist
959 <m/C/ that are not members of pair (or quad) set <m/P/.
960 I.e., <cf/filter/ do the same as <cf/delete/ with inverted
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961 set <m/P/. <m/P/ may also be a clist, which works analogously;
962 i.e., it works as clist intersection.
0e5373fd 963
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964 Statement <cf><m/C/ = add(<m/C/, <m/P/);</cf> can be shortened to
965 <cf><m/C/.add(<m/P/);</cf> if <m/C/ is appropriate route
966 attribute (for example <cf/bgp_community/). Similarly for
967 <cf/delete/ and <cf/filter/.
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968
969 <tag/eclist/
970 Eclist is a data type used for BGP extended community lists.
971 Eclists are very similar to clists, but they are sets of ECs
972 instead of pairs. The same operations (like <cf/add/,
973 <cf/delete/, or <cf/&tilde;/ membership operator) can be
974 used to modify or test eclists, with ECs instead of pairs as
975 arguments.
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976</descrip>
977
a7c9f7c0 978<sect>Operators
d37f899b 979
a7c9f7c0 980<p>The filter language supports common integer operators <cf>(+,-,*,/)</cf>, parentheses <cf/(a*(b+c))/, comparison
66701947 981<cf/(a=b, a!=b, a&lt;b, a&gt;=b)/. Logical operations include unary not (<cf/!/), and (<cf/&amp;&amp;/) and or (<cf/&verbar;&verbar;/).
1632f1fe 982Special operators include <cf/&tilde;/ for "is element of a set" operation - it can be
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983used on element and set of elements of the same type (returning true if element is contained in the given set), or
984on two strings (returning true if first string matches a shell-like pattern stored in second string) or on IP and prefix (returning true if IP is within the range defined by that prefix), or on
0888a737 985prefix and prefix (returning true if first prefix is more specific than second one) or on bgppath and bgpmask (returning true if the path matches the mask) or on number and bgppath (returning true if the number is in the path) or on pair/quad and clist (returning true if the pair/quad is element of the clist) or on clist and pair/quad set (returning true if there is an element of the clist that is also a member of the pair/quad set).
25696edb 986
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987<p>There is one operator related to ROA infrastructure -
988<cf/roa_check()/. It examines a ROA table and does RFC 6483 route
989origin validation for a given network prefix. The basic usage
990is <cf>roa_check(<m/table/)</cf>, which checks current route (which
991should be from BGP to have AS_PATH argument) in the specified ROA
992table and returns ROA_UNKNOWN if there is no relevant ROA, ROA_VALID
993if there is a matching ROA, or ROA_INVALID if there are some relevant
994ROAs but none of them match. There is also an extended variant
995<cf>roa_check(<m/table/, <m/prefix/, <m/asn/)</cf>, which allows to
996specify a prefix and an ASN as arguments.
997
d37f899b 998
371adba6 999<sect>Control structures
d37f899b 1000
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1001<p>Filters support two control structures: conditions and case switches.
1002
1632f1fe 1003<p>Syntax of a condition is: <cf>if
074a166d 1004<M>boolean expression</M> then <M>command1</M>; else <M>command2</M>;</cf> and you can use <cf>{
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1005<M>command_1</M>; <M>command_2</M>; <M>...</M> }</cf> instead of either command. The <cf>else</cf>
1006clause may be omitted. If the <cf><m>boolean expression</m></cf> is true, <cf><m>command1</m></cf> is executed, otherwise <cf><m>command2</m></cf> is executed.
d37f899b 1007
26d92bb8 1008<p>The <cf>case</cf> is similar to case from Pascal. Syntax is <cf>case <m/expr/ { else: |
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1009<m/num_or_prefix [ .. num_or_prefix]/: <m/statement/ ; [ ... ] }</cf>. The expression after
1010<cf>case</cf> can be of any type which can be on the left side of the &tilde; operator and anything that could
1011be a member of a set is allowed before <cf/:/. Multiple commands are allowed without <cf/{}/ grouping.
1012If <cf><m/expr/</cf> matches one of the <cf/:/ clauses, statements between it and next <cf/:/ statement are executed. If <cf><m/expr/</cf> matches neither of the <cf/:/ clauses, the statements after <cf/else:/ are executed.
d37f899b 1013
a7c9f7c0 1014<p>Here is example that uses <cf/if/ and <cf/case/ structures:
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1015
1016<code>
1017case arg1 {
1018 2: print "two"; print "I can do more commands without {}";
1019 3 .. 5: print "three to five";
1020 else: print "something else";
a7c9f7c0 1021}
af0b25d2 1022
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1023if 1234 = i then printn "."; else {
1024 print "not 1234";
1025 print "You need {} around multiple commands";
1026}
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1027</code>
1028
371adba6 1029<sect>Route attributes
0e5373fd 1030
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1031<p>A filter is implicitly passed a route, and it can access its
1032attributes just like it accesses variables. Attempts to access undefined
a7c9f7c0 1033attribute result in a runtime error; you can check if an attribute is
1632f1fe 1034defined by using the <cf>defined( <m>attribute</m> )</cf> operator.
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1035One notable exception to this rule are attributes of clist type, where
1036undefined value is regarded as empty clist for most purposes.
a7c9f7c0 1037
36032ded 1038<descrip>
cd4fecb6 1039 <tag><m/prefix/ net</tag>
1632f1fe 1040 Network the route is talking about. Read-only. (See the chapter about routing tables.)
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1041
1042 <tag><m/enum/ scope</tag>
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1043 The scope of the route. Possible values: <cf/SCOPE_HOST/ for
1044 routes local to this host, <cf/SCOPE_LINK/ for those specific
1045 for a physical link, <cf/SCOPE_SITE/ and
1046 <cf/SCOPE_ORGANIZATION/ for private routes and
1047 <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/ for globally visible routes. This
1048 attribute is not interpreted by BIRD and can be used to mark
1049 routes in filters. The default value for new routes is
1050 <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/.
0e5373fd 1051
cd4fecb6 1052 <tag><m/int/ preference</tag>
f4c6ca8c 1053 Preference of the route. Valid values are 0-65535. (See the chapter about routing tables.)
c184d9d0 1054
cd4fecb6 1055 <tag><m/ip/ from</tag>
25696edb 1056 The router which the route has originated from. Read-only.
0e5373fd 1057
cd4fecb6 1058 <tag><m/ip/ gw</tag>
a7c9f7c0 1059 Next hop packets routed using this route should be forwarded to.
0e5373fd 1060
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1061 <tag><m/string/ proto</tag>
1062 The name of the protocol which the route has been imported from. Read-only.
1063
cd4fecb6 1064 <tag><m/enum/ source</tag>
7873e982 1065 what protocol has told me about this route. Possible values: <cf/RTS_DUMMY/, <cf/RTS_STATIC/, <cf/RTS_INHERIT/, <cf/RTS_DEVICE/, <cf/RTS_STATIC_DEVICE/, <cf/RTS_REDIRECT/, <cf/RTS_RIP/, <cf/RTS_OSPF/, <cf/RTS_OSPF_IA/, <cf/RTS_OSPF_EXT1/, <cf/RTS_OSPF_EXT2/, <cf/RTS_BGP/, <cf/RTS_PIPE/.
c184d9d0 1066
cd4fecb6 1067 <tag><m/enum/ cast</tag>
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1068
1069 Route type (Currently <cf/RTC_UNICAST/ for normal routes,
1070 <cf/RTC_BROADCAST/, <cf/RTC_MULTICAST/, <cf/RTC_ANYCAST/ will
1071 be used in the future for broadcast, multicast and anycast
1072 routes). Read-only.
c184d9d0 1073
cd4fecb6 1074 <tag><m/enum/ dest</tag>
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1075 Type of destination the packets should be sent to
1076 (<cf/RTD_ROUTER/ for forwarding to a neighboring router,
1077 <cf/RTD_DEVICE/ for routing to a directly-connected network,
1078 <cf/RTD_MULTIPATH/ for multipath destinations,
1079 <cf/RTD_BLACKHOLE/ for packets to be silently discarded,
1080 <cf/RTD_UNREACHABLE/, <cf/RTD_PROHIBIT/ for packets that
1081 should be returned with ICMP host unreachable / ICMP
1082 administratively prohibited messages). Can be changed, but
1083 only to <cf/RTD_BLACKHOLE/, <cf/RTD_UNREACHABLE/ or
1084 <cf/RTD_PROHIBIT/.
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1085
1086 <tag><m/int/ igp_metric</tag>
1087 The optional attribute that can be used to specify a distance
1088 to the network for routes that do not have a native protocol
1089 metric attribute (like <cf/ospf_metric1/ for OSPF routes). It
1090 is used mainly by BGP to compare internal distances to boundary
1091 routers (see below). It is also used when the route is exported
1092 to OSPF as a default value for OSPF type 1 metric.
ba1dda49 1093</descrip>
0e5373fd 1094
1632f1fe 1095<p>There also exist some protocol-specific attributes which are described in the corresponding protocol sections.
0e5373fd 1096
1632f1fe 1097<sect>Other statements
69477cad 1098
a7c9f7c0 1099<p>The following statements are available:
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1100
1101<descrip>
a7c9f7c0 1102 <tag><m/variable/ = <m/expr/</tag> Set variable to a given value.
326e33f5 1103
a7c9f7c0 1104 <tag>accept|reject [ <m/expr/ ]</tag> Accept or reject the route, possibly printing <cf><m>expr</m></cf>.
326e33f5 1105
1632f1fe 1106 <tag>return <m/expr/</tag> Return <cf><m>expr</m></cf> from the current function, the function ends at this point.
326e33f5 1107
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1108 <tag>print|printn <m/expr/ [<m/, expr.../]</tag>
1109 Prints given expressions; useful mainly while debugging
1110 filters. The <cf/printn/ variant does not terminate the line.
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1111
1112 <tag>quitbird</tag>
1632f1fe 1113 Terminates BIRD. Useful when debugging the filter interpreter.
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1114</descrip>
1115
371adba6 1116<chapt>Protocols
d37f899b 1117
371adba6 1118<sect>BGP
1b55b1a3 1119
56ab03c7 1120<p>The Border Gateway Protocol is the routing protocol used for backbone
5a203dac 1121level routing in the today's Internet. Contrary to the other protocols, its convergence
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1122doesn't rely on all routers following the same rules for route selection,
1123making it possible to implement any routing policy at any router in the
1124network, the only restriction being that if a router advertises a route,
1125it must accept and forward packets according to it.
1126
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1127<p>BGP works in terms of autonomous systems (often abbreviated as
1128AS). Each AS is a part of the network with common management and
1129common routing policy. It is identified by a unique 16-bit number
1130(ASN). Routers within each AS usually exchange AS-internal routing
1131information with each other using an interior gateway protocol (IGP,
1132such as OSPF or RIP). Boundary routers at the border of
1133the AS communicate global (inter-AS) network reachability information with
1134their neighbors in the neighboring AS'es via exterior BGP (eBGP) and
1135redistribute received information to other routers in the AS via
1136interior BGP (iBGP).
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1137
1138<p>Each BGP router sends to its neighbors updates of the parts of its
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1139routing table it wishes to export along with complete path information
1140(a list of AS'es the packet will travel through if it uses the particular
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1141route) in order to avoid routing loops.
1142
5459fac6 1143<p>BIRD supports all requirements of the BGP4 standard as defined in
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1144RFC 4271<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4271.txt">
1145It also supports the community attributes
1146(RFC 1997<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1997.txt">),
1147capability negotiation
1148(RFC 3392<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3392.txt">),
1149MD5 password authentication
1150(RFC 2385<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2385.txt">),
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1151extended communities
1152(RFC 4360<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4360.txt">),
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1153route reflectors
1154(RFC 4456<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4456.txt">),
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1155multiprotocol extensions
1156(RFC 4760<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4760.txt">),
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11574B AS numbers
1158(RFC 4893<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4893.txt">),
1159and 4B AS numbers in extended communities
1160(RFC 5668<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc5668.txt">).
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1161
1162
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1163For IPv6, it uses the standard multiprotocol extensions defined in
1164RFC 2283<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2283.txt">
1165including changes described in the
5a203dac 1166latest draft<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-idr-bgp4-multiprotocol-v2-05.txt">
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1167and applied to IPv6 according to
1168RFC 2545<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2545.txt">.
1169
371adba6 1170<sect1>Route selection rules
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1171
1172<p>BGP doesn't have any simple metric, so the rules for selection of an optimal
1173route among multiple BGP routes with the same preference are a bit more complex
5a203dac 1174and they are implemented according to the following algorithm. It starts the first
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1175rule, if there are more "best" routes, then it uses the second rule to choose
1176among them and so on.
1177
1178<itemize>
5a203dac 1179 <item>Prefer route with the highest Local Preference attribute.
5459fac6 1180 <item>Prefer route with the shortest AS path.
b74f45f8 1181 <item>Prefer IGP origin over EGP and EGP origin over incomplete.
5459fac6 1182 <item>Prefer the lowest value of the Multiple Exit Discriminator.
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1183 <item>Prefer routes received via eBGP over ones received via iBGP.
1184 <item>Prefer routes with lower internal distance to a boundary router.
5a203dac 1185 <item>Prefer the route with the lowest value of router ID of the
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1186 advertising router.
1187</itemize>
56ab03c7 1188
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1189<sect1>IGP routing table
1190
1191<p>BGP is mainly concerned with global network reachability and with
1192routes to other autonomous systems. When such routes are redistributed
1193to routers in the AS via BGP, they contain IP addresses of a boundary
1194routers (in route attribute NEXT_HOP). BGP depends on existing IGP
1195routing table with AS-internal routes to determine immediate next hops
1196for routes and to know their internal distances to boundary routers
1197for the purpose of BGP route selection. In BIRD, there is usually
1198one routing table used for both IGP routes and BGP routes.
1199
371adba6 1200<sect1>Configuration
56ab03c7 1201
5459fac6 1202<p>Each instance of the BGP corresponds to one neighboring router.
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1203This allows to set routing policy and all the other parameters differently
1204for each neighbor using the following configuration parameters:
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1205
1206<descrip>
489c308a 1207 <tag>local [<m/ip/] as <m/number/</tag> Define which AS we
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1208 are part of. (Note that contrary to other IP routers, BIRD is
1209 able to act as a router located in multiple AS'es
1210 simultaneously, but in such cases you need to tweak the BGP
1211 paths manually in the filters to get consistent behavior.)
1212 Optional <cf/ip/ argument specifies a source address,
1213 equivalent to the <cf/source address/ option (see below).
5459fac6 1214 This parameter is mandatory.
5a203dac 1215
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1216 <tag>neighbor <m/ip/ as <m/number/</tag> Define neighboring router
1217 this instance will be talking to and what AS it's located in. Unless
1218 you use the <cf/multihop/ clause, it must be directly connected to one
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1219 of your router's interfaces. In case the neighbor is in the same AS
1220 as we are, we automatically switch to iBGP. This parameter is mandatory.
5a203dac 1221
489c308a 1222 <tag>multihop [<m/number/]</tag> Configure multihop BGP
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1223 session to a neighbor that isn't directly connected.
1224 Accurately, this option should be used if the configured
1225 neighbor IP address does not match with any local network
1226 subnets. Such IP address have to be reachable through system
1227 routing table. For multihop BGP it is recommended to
1228 explicitly configure <cf/source address/ to have it
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1229 stable. Optional <cf/number/ argument can be used to specify
1230 the number of hops (used for TTL). Note that the number of
1231 networks (edges) in a path is counted, i.e. if two BGP
1232 speakers are separated by one router, the number of hops is
1233 2. Default: switched off.
5a203dac 1234
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1235 <tag>source address <m/ip/</tag> Define local address we
1236 should use for next hop calculation and as a source address
1237 for the BGP session. Default: the address of the local
1238 end of the interface our neighbor is connected to.
1239
3f9b7bfe 1240 <tag>next hop self</tag> Avoid calculation of the Next Hop
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1241 attribute and always advertise our own source address as a
1242 next hop. This needs to be used only occasionally to
1243 circumvent misconfigurations of other routers. Default:
1244 disabled.
5a203dac 1245
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1246 <tag>missing lladdr self|drop|ignore</tag>Next Hop attribute
1247 in BGP-IPv6 sometimes contains just the global IPv6 address,
1248 but sometimes it has to contain both global and link-local
1249 IPv6 addresses. This option specifies what to do if BIRD have
1250 to send both addresses but does not know link-local address.
1251 This situation might happen when routes from other protocols
1252 are exported to BGP, or when improper updates are received
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1253 from BGP peers. <cf/self/ means that BIRD advertises its own
1254 local address instead. <cf/drop/ means that BIRD skips that
1255 prefixes and logs error. <cf/ignore/ means that BIRD ignores
3f9b7bfe 1256 the problem and sends just the global address (and therefore
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1257 forms improper BGP update). Default: <cf/self/, unless BIRD
1258 is configured as a route server (option <cf/rs client/), in
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1259 that case default is <cf/ignore/, because route servers usually
1260 do not forward packets themselves.
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1261
1262 <tag>gateway direct|recursive</tag>For received routes, their
1263 <cf/gw/ (immediate next hop) attribute is computed from
1264 received <cf/bgp_next_hop/ attribute. This option specifies
1265 how it is computed. Direct mode means that the IP address from
1266 <cf/bgp_next_hop/ is used if it is directly reachable,
1267 otherwise the neighbor IP address is used. Recursive mode
b74f45f8 1268 means that the gateway is computed by an IGP routing table
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1269 lookup for the IP address from <cf/bgp_next_hop/. Recursive
1270 mode is the behavior specified by the BGP standard. Direct
1271 mode is simpler, does not require any routes in a routing
1272 table, and was used in older versions of BIRD, but does not
1273 handle well nontrivial iBGP setups and multihop. Default:
1274 <cf/direct/ for singlehop eBGP, <cf/recursive/ otherwise.
1275
1276 <tag>igp table <m/name/</tag> Specifies a table that is used
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1277 as an IGP routing table. Default: the same as the table BGP is
1278 connected to.
3f9b7bfe 1279
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1280 <tag>ttl security <m/switch/</tag> Use GTSM (RFC 5082 - the
1281 generalized TTL security mechanism). GTSM protects against
1282 spoofed packets by ignoring received packets with a smaller
1283 than expected TTL. To work properly, GTSM have to be enabled
1284 on both sides of a BGP session. If both <cf/ttl security/ and
1285 <cf/multihop/ options are enabled, <cf/multihop/ option should
1286 specify proper hop value to compute expected TTL. Kernel
1287 support required: Linux: 2.6.34+ (IPv4), 2.6.35+ (IPv6), BSD:
1288 since long ago, IPv4 only. Note that full (ICMP protection,
1289 for example) RFC 5082 support is provided by Linux
1290 only. Default: disabled.
1291
1adc17b4 1292 <tag>password <m/string/</tag> Use this password for MD5 authentication
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1293 of BGP sessions. Default: no authentication. Password has to be set by
1294 external utility (e.g. setkey(8)) on BSD systems.
1adc17b4 1295
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1296 <tag>passive <m/switch/</tag> Standard BGP behavior is both
1297 initiating outgoing connections and accepting incoming
1298 connections. In passive mode, outgoing connections are not
1299 initiated. Default: off.
1300
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1301 <tag>rr client</tag> Be a route reflector and treat the neighbor as
1302 a route reflection client. Default: disabled.
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1303
1304 <tag>rr cluster id <m/IPv4 address/</tag> Route reflectors use cluster id
1305 to avoid route reflection loops. When there is one route reflector in a cluster
1306 it usually uses its router id as a cluster id, but when there are more route
1307 reflectors in a cluster, these need to be configured (using this option) to
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1308 use a common cluster id. Clients in a cluster need not know their cluster
1309 id and this option is not allowed for them. Default: the same as router id.
1adc17b4 1310
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1311 <tag>rs client</tag> Be a route server and treat the neighbor
1312 as a route server client. A route server is used as a
1313 replacement for full mesh EBGP routing in Internet exchange
1314 points in a similar way to route reflectors used in IBGP routing.
3f9b7bfe 1315 BIRD does not implement obsoleted RFC 1863, but uses ad-hoc implementation,
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1316 which behaves like plain EBGP but reduces modifications to advertised route
1317 attributes to be transparent (for example does not prepend its AS number to
73272f04 1318 AS PATH attribute and keeps MED attribute). Default: disabled.
a92fe607 1319
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1320 <tag>enable route refresh <m/switch/</tag> When BGP speaker
1321 changes its import filter, it has to re-examine all routes
1322 received from its neighbor against the new filter. As these
1323 routes might not be available, there is a BGP protocol
1324 extension Route Refresh (specified in RFC 2918) that allows
0c75411b 1325 BGP speaker to request re-advertisement of all routes from its
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1326 neighbor. This option specifies whether BIRD advertises this
1327 capability and accepts such requests. Even when disabled, BIRD
1328 can send route refresh requests. Default: on.
1329
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1330 <tag>interpret communities <m/switch/</tag> RFC 1997 demands
1331 that BGP speaker should process well-known communities like
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1332 no-export (65535, 65281) or no-advertise (65535, 65282). For
1333 example, received route carrying a no-adverise community
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1334 should not be advertised to any of its neighbors. If this
1335 option is enabled (which is by default), BIRD has such
1336 behavior automatically (it is evaluated when a route is
cda2dfb7 1337 exported to the BGP protocol just before the export filter).
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1338 Otherwise, this integrated processing of well-known
1339 communities is disabled. In that case, similar behavior can be
1340 implemented in the export filter. Default: on.
6cb8f742 1341
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1342 <tag>enable as4 <m/switch/</tag> BGP protocol was designed to use 2B AS numbers
1343 and was extended later to allow 4B AS number. BIRD supports 4B AS extension,
1344 but by disabling this option it can be persuaded not to advertise it and
1345 to maintain old-style sessions with its neighbors. This might be useful for
1346 circumventing bugs in neighbor's implementation of 4B AS extension.
1347 Even when disabled (off), BIRD behaves internally as AS4-aware BGP router.
1348 Default: on.
1349
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1350 <tag>capabilities <m/switch/</tag> Use capability advertisement
1351 to advertise optional capabilities. This is standard behavior
1352 for newer BGP implementations, but there might be some older
1353 BGP implementations that reject such connection attempts.
1354 When disabled (off), features that request it (4B AS support)
1355 are also disabled. Default: on, with automatic fallback to
1356 off when received capability-related error.
1357
1358 <tag>advertise ipv4 <m/switch/</tag> Advertise IPv4 multiprotocol capability.
1359 This is not a correct behavior according to the strict interpretation
1360 of RFC 4760, but it is widespread and required by some BGP
1361 implementations (Cisco and Quagga). This option is relevant
1362 to IPv4 mode with enabled capability advertisement only. Default: on.
e3299ab1 1363
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1364 <tag>route limit <m/number/</tag> The maximal number of routes
1365 that may be imported from the protocol. If the route limit is
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1366 exceeded, the connection is closed with error. Limit is currently implemented as
1367 <cf/import limit number exceed restart/. Default: no limit.
2a04b045 1368
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1369 <tag>disable after error <m/switch/</tag> When an error is encountered (either
1370 locally or by the other side), disable the instance automatically
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1371 and wait for an administrator to fix the problem manually. Default: off.
1372
1373 <tag>hold time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds to wait for a Keepalive
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1374 message from the other side before considering the connection stale.
1375 Default: depends on agreement with the neighboring router, we prefer
1376 240 seconds if the other side is willing to accept it.
5a203dac 1377
5459fac6 1378 <tag>startup hold time <m/number/</tag> Value of the hold timer used
5a203dac 1379 before the routers have a chance to exchange open messages and agree
5459fac6 1380 on the real value. Default: 240 seconds.
5a203dac 1381
5459fac6 1382 <tag>keepalive time <m/number/</tag> Delay in seconds between sending
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1383 of two consecutive Keepalive messages. Default: One third of the hold time.
1384
5459fac6 1385 <tag>connect retry time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds to wait before
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1386 retrying a failed attempt to connect. Default: 120 seconds.
1387
5459fac6 1388 <tag>start delay time <m/number/</tag> Delay in seconds between protocol
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1389 startup and the first attempt to connect. Default: 5 seconds.
1390
1391 <tag>error wait time <m/number/,<m/number/</tag> Minimum and maximum delay in seconds between a protocol
1392 failure (either local or reported by the peer) and automatic restart.
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1393 Doesn't apply when <cf/disable after error/ is configured. If consecutive
1394 errors happen, the delay is increased exponentially until it reaches the maximum. Default: 60, 300.
5a203dac 1395
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1396 <tag>error forget time <m/number/</tag> Maximum time in seconds between two protocol
1397 failures to treat them as a error sequence which makes the <cf/error wait time/
1398 increase exponentially. Default: 300 seconds.
5a203dac 1399
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1400 <tag>path metric <m/switch/</tag> Enable comparison of path lengths
1401 when deciding which BGP route is the best one. Default: on.
5a203dac 1402
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1403 <tag>med metric <m/switch/</tag> Enable comparison of MED
1404 attributes (during best route selection) even between routes
1405 received from different ASes. This may be useful if all MED
1406 attributes contain some consistent metric, perhaps enforced in
1407 import filters of AS boundary routers. If this option is
1408 disabled, MED attributes are compared only if routes are
1409 received from the same AS (which is the standard behavior).
1410 Default: off.
1411
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1412 <tag>deterministic med <m/switch/</tag> BGP route selection
1413 algorithm is often viewed as a comparison between individual
1414 routes (e.g. if a new route appears and is better than the
1415 current best one, it is chosen as the new best one). But the
1416 proper route selection, as specified by RFC 4271, cannot be
1417 fully implemented in that way. The problem is mainly in
1418 handling the MED attribute. BIRD, by default, uses an
1419 simplification based on individual route comparison, which in
1420 some cases may lead to temporally dependent behavior (i.e. the
1421 selection is dependent on the order in which routes appeared).
1422 This option enables a different (and slower) algorithm
1423 implementing proper RFC 4271 route selection, which is
1424 deterministic. Alternative way how to get deterministic
1425 behavior is to use <cf/med metric/ option. Default: off.
1426
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1427 <tag>igp metric <m/switch/</tag> Enable comparison of internal
1428 distances to boundary routers during best route selection. Default: on.
1429
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1430 <tag>prefer older <m/switch/</tag> Standard route selection algorithm
1431 breaks ties by comparing router IDs. This changes the behavior
1432 to prefer older routes (when both are external and from different
1433 peer). For details, see RFC 5004. Default: off.
1434
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1435 <tag>default bgp_med <m/number/</tag> Value of the Multiple Exit
1436 Discriminator to be used during route selection when the MED attribute
b6bf284a 1437 is missing. Default: 0.
5a203dac 1438
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1439 <tag>default bgp_local_pref <m/number/</tag> A default value
1440 for the Local Preference attribute. It is used when a new
1441 Local Preference attribute is attached to a route by the BGP
1442 protocol itself (for example, if a route is received through
1443 eBGP and therefore does not have such attribute). Default: 100
1444 (0 in pre-1.2.0 versions of BIRD).
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1445</descrip>
1446
371adba6 1447<sect1>Attributes
56ab03c7 1448
5a203dac 1449<p>BGP defines several route attributes. Some of them (those marked with `<tt/I/' in the
5459fac6 1450table below) are available on internal BGP connections only, some of them (marked
5a203dac 1451with `<tt/O/') are optional.
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1452
1453<descrip>
326e33f5 1454 <tag>bgppath <cf/bgp_path/</tag> Sequence of AS numbers describing the AS path
73272f04
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1455 the packet will travel through when forwarded according to the particular route.
1456 In case of internal BGP it doesn't contain the number of the local AS.
5a203dac 1457
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1458 <tag>int <cf/bgp_local_pref/ [I]</tag> Local preference value used for
1459 selection among multiple BGP routes (see the selection rules above). It's
1460 used as an additional metric which is propagated through the whole local AS.
5a203dac 1461
b6bf284a 1462 <tag>int <cf/bgp_med/ [O]</tag> The Multiple Exit Discriminator of the route
73272f04 1463 is an optional attribute which is used on external (inter-AS) links to
b6bf284a 1464 convey to an adjacent AS the optimal entry point into the local AS.
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1465 The received attribute is also propagated over internal BGP links.
1466 The attribute value is zeroed when a route is exported to an external BGP
1467 instance to ensure that the attribute received from a neighboring AS is
1468 not propagated to other neighboring ASes. A new value might be set in
1469 the export filter of an external BGP instance.
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1470 See RFC 4451<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4451.txt">
1471 for further discussion of BGP MED attribute.
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1472
1473 <tag>enum <cf/bgp_origin/</tag> Origin of the route: either <cf/ORIGIN_IGP/
1474 if the route has originated in an interior routing protocol or
1475 <cf/ORIGIN_EGP/ if it's been imported from the <tt>EGP</tt> protocol
1476 (nowadays it seems to be obsolete) or <cf/ORIGIN_INCOMPLETE/ if the origin
5459fac6 1477 is unknown.
5a203dac 1478
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1479 <tag>ip <cf/bgp_next_hop/</tag> Next hop to be used for forwarding of packets
1480 to this destination. On internal BGP connections, it's an address of the
1481 originating router if it's inside the local AS or a boundary router the
1482 packet will leave the AS through if it's an exterior route, so each BGP
1483 speaker within the AS has a chance to use the shortest interior path
1484 possible to this point.
5a203dac 1485
5459fac6 1486 <tag>void <cf/bgp_atomic_aggr/ [O]</tag> This is an optional attribute
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1487 which carries no value, but the sole presence of which indicates that the route
1488 has been aggregated from multiple routes by some router on the path from
5459fac6 1489 the originator.
5a203dac 1490
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1491<!-- we don't handle aggregators right since they are of a very obscure type
1492 <tag>bgp_aggregator</tag>
1493-->
1494 <tag>clist <cf/bgp_community/ [O]</tag> List of community values associated
1495 with the route. Each such value is a pair (represented as a <cf/pair/ data
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1496 type inside the filters) of 16-bit integers, the first of them containing the number of the AS which defines
1497 the community and the second one being a per-AS identifier. There are lots
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1498 of uses of the community mechanism, but generally they are used to carry
1499 policy information like "don't export to USA peers". As each AS can define
326e33f5 1500 its own routing policy, it also has a complete freedom about which community
5a203dac 1501 attributes it defines and what will their semantics be.
126683fe 1502
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1503 <tag>eclist <cf/bgp_ext_community/ [O]</tag> List of extended community
1504 values associated with the route. Extended communities have similar usage
1505 as plain communities, but they have an extended range (to allow 4B ASNs)
1506 and a nontrivial structure with a type field. Individual community values are
1507 represented using an <cf/ec/ data type inside the filters.
1508
73272f04 1509 <tag>quad <cf/bgp_originator_id/ [I, O]</tag> This attribute is created by the
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1510 route reflector when reflecting the route and contains the router ID of the
1511 originator of the route in the local AS.
1512
73272f04 1513 <tag>clist <cf/bgp_cluster_list/ [I, O]</tag> This attribute contains a list
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1514 of cluster IDs of route reflectors. Each route reflector prepends its
1515 cluster ID when reflecting the route.
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1516</descrip>
1517
371adba6 1518<sect1>Example
56ab03c7 1519
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1520<p><code>
1521protocol bgp {
96264d4d 1522 local as 65000; # Use a private AS number
9491f9f5 1523 neighbor 198.51.100.130 as 64496; # Our neighbor ...
6bcef225 1524 multihop; # ... which is connected indirectly
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1525 export filter { # We use non-trivial export rules
1526 if source = RTS_STATIC then { # Export only static routes
a852c139 1527 # Assign our community
9491f9f5 1528 bgp_community.add((65000,64501));
a852c139 1529 # Artificially increase path length
5a203dac 1530 # by advertising local AS number twice
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1531 if bgp_path ~ [= 65000 =] then
1532 bgp_path.prepend(65000);
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1533 accept;
1534 }
1535 reject;
1536 };
1537 import all;
9491f9f5 1538 source address 198.51.100.14; # Use a non-standard source address
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1539}
1540</code>
1541
371adba6 1542<sect>Device
1b55b1a3 1543
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1544<p>The Device protocol is not a real routing protocol. It doesn't generate
1545any routes and it only serves as a module for getting information about network
79a2b697
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1546interfaces from the kernel.
1547
0e694e04 1548<p>Except for very unusual circumstances, you probably should include
5a203dac
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1549this protocol in the configuration since almost all other protocols
1550require network interfaces to be defined for them to work with.
79a2b697 1551
6f5603ba 1552<sect1>Configuration
79a2b697
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1553
1554<p><descrip>
1555 <tag>scan time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds between two scans
1556 of the network interface list. On systems where we are notified about
1557 interface status changes asynchronously (such as newer versions of
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1558 Linux), we need to scan the list only in order to avoid confusion by lost
1559 notification messages, so the default time is set to a large value.
6f5603ba
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1560
1561 <tag>primary [ "<m/mask/" ] <m/prefix/</tag>
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1562 If a network interface has more than one network address, BIRD
1563 has to choose one of them as a primary one. By default, BIRD
1564 chooses the lexicographically smallest address as the primary
1565 one.
6f5603ba
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1566
1567 This option allows to specify which network address should be
1568 chosen as a primary one. Network addresses that match
1569 <m/prefix/ are preferred to non-matching addresses. If more
1570 <cf/primary/ options are used, the first one has the highest
1571 preference. If "<m/mask/" is specified, then such
1572 <cf/primary/ option is relevant only to matching network
1573 interfaces.
1574
1575 In all cases, an address marked by operating system as
1576 secondary cannot be chosen as the primary one.
79a2b697
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1577</descrip>
1578
79a2b697 1579<p>As the Device protocol doesn't generate any routes, it cannot have
6f5603ba 1580any attributes. Example configuration looks like this:
79a2b697
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1581
1582<p><code>
1583protocol device {
1584 scan time 10; # Scan the interfaces often
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1585 primary "eth0" 192.168.1.1;
1586 primary 192.168.0.0/16;
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1587}
1588</code>
1589
371adba6 1590<sect>Direct
1b55b1a3 1591
79a2b697
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1592<p>The Direct protocol is a simple generator of device routes for all the
1593directly connected networks according to the list of interfaces provided
1594by the kernel via the Device protocol.
1595
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1596<p>The question is whether it is a good idea to have such device
1597routes in BIRD routing table. OS kernel usually handles device routes
1598for directly connected networks by itself so we don't need (and don't
1599want) to export these routes to the kernel protocol. OSPF protocol
1600creates device routes for its interfaces itself and BGP protocol is
1601usually used for exporting aggregate routes. Although there are some
1602use cases that use the direct protocol (like abusing eBGP as an IGP
1603routing protocol), in most cases it is not needed to have these device
1604routes in BIRD routing table and to use the direct protocol.
79a2b697 1605
5a203dac 1606<p>The only configurable thing about direct is what interfaces it watches:
79a2b697
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1607
1608<p><descrip>
0e694e04 1609 <tag>interface <m/pattern [, ...]/</tag> By default, the Direct
79a2b697
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1610 protocol will generate device routes for all the interfaces
1611 available. If you want to restrict it to some subset of interfaces
1612 (for example if you're using multiple routing tables for policy
1613 routing and some of the policy domains don't contain all interfaces),
1614 just use this clause.
1615</descrip>
1616
79a2b697
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1617<p>Direct device routes don't contain any specific attributes.
1618
4f88ac47 1619<p>Example config might look like this:
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1620
1621<p><code>
1622protocol direct {
1623 interface "-arc*", "*"; # Exclude the ARCnets
1624}
1625</code>
1626
371adba6 1627<sect>Kernel
1b55b1a3 1628
0e4789c2 1629<p>The Kernel protocol is not a real routing protocol. Instead of communicating
c429d4a4 1630with other routers in the network, it performs synchronization of BIRD's routing
5a203dac 1631tables with the OS kernel. Basically, it sends all routing table updates to the kernel
0e4789c2
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1632and from time to time it scans the kernel tables to see whether some routes have
1633disappeared (for example due to unnoticed up/down transition of an interface)
f8e2d916 1634or whether an `alien' route has been added by someone else (depending on the
c429d4a4 1635<cf/learn/ switch, such routes are either ignored or accepted to our
f8e2d916 1636table).
0e4789c2 1637
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1638<p>Unfortunately, there is one thing that makes the routing table
1639synchronization a bit more complicated. In the kernel routing table
1640there are also device routes for directly connected networks. These
1641routes are usually managed by OS itself (as a part of IP address
1642configuration) and we don't want to touch that. They are completely
1643ignored during the scan of the kernel tables and also the export of
1644device routes from BIRD tables to kernel routing tables is restricted
1645to prevent accidental interference. This restriction can be disabled using
1646<cf/device routes/ switch.
1647
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1648<p>If your OS supports only a single routing table, you can configure
1649only one instance of the Kernel protocol. If it supports multiple
1650tables (in order to allow policy routing; such an OS is for example
1651Linux), you can run as many instances as you want, but each of them
1652must be connected to a different BIRD routing table and to a different
0e4789c2
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1653kernel table.
1654
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1655<p>Because the kernel protocol is partially integrated with the
1656connected routing table, there are two limitations - it is not
1657possible to connect more kernel protocols to the same routing table
c9df01d3 1658and changing route destination/gateway in an export
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1659filter of a kernel protocol does not work. Both limitations can be
1660overcome using another routing table and the pipe protocol.
1661
371adba6 1662<sect1>Configuration
0e4789c2
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1663
1664<p><descrip>
1665 <tag>persist <m/switch/</tag> Tell BIRD to leave all its routes in the
326e33f5 1666 routing tables when it exits (instead of cleaning them up).
5a203dac 1667 <tag>scan time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds between two consecutive scans of the
0e4789c2
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1668 kernel routing table.
1669 <tag>learn <m/switch/</tag> Enable learning of routes added to the kernel
1670 routing tables by other routing daemons or by the system administrator.
1671 This is possible only on systems which support identification of route
1672 authorship.
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1673
1674 <tag>device routes <m/switch/</tag> Enable export of device
1675 routes to the kernel routing table. By default, such routes
1676 are rejected (with the exception of explicitly configured
1677 device routes from the static protocol) regardless of the
1678 export filter to protect device routes in kernel routing table
1679 (managed by OS itself) from accidental overwriting or erasing.
1680
0e4789c2
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1681 <tag>kernel table <m/number/</tag> Select which kernel table should
1682 this particular instance of the Kernel protocol work with. Available
1683 only on systems supporting multiple routing tables.
1684</descrip>
1685
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1686<sect1>Attributes
1687
1688<p>The Kernel protocol defines several attributes. These attributes
1689are translated to appropriate system (and OS-specific) route attributes.
1690We support these attributes:
1691
1692<descrip>
9ba2798c 1693 <tag>int <cf/krt_source/</tag> The original source of the imported
72aed1a0
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1694 kernel route. The value is system-dependent. On Linux, it is
1695 a value of the protocol field of the route. See
1696 /etc/iproute2/rt_protos for common values. On BSD, it is
1697 based on STATIC and PROTOx flags. The attribute is read-only.
1698
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1699 <tag>int <cf/krt_metric/</tag> The kernel metric of
1700 the route. When multiple same routes are in a kernel routing
1701 table, the Linux kernel chooses one with lower metric.
1702
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1703 <tag>ip <cf/krt_prefsrc/</tag> (Linux) The preferred source address.
1704 Used in source address selection for outgoing packets. Have to
1705 be one of IP addresses of the router.
1706
1707 <tag>int <cf/krt_realm/</tag> (Linux) The realm of the route. Can be
1708 used for traffic classification.
1709</descrip>
1710
1711<sect1>Example
1712
326e33f5 1713<p>A simple configuration can look this way:
0e4789c2
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1714
1715<p><code>
1716protocol kernel {
0e4789c2
MM
1717 export all;
1718}
1719</code>
1720
1721<p>Or for a system with two routing tables:
1722
1723<p><code>
1724protocol kernel { # Primary routing table
1725 learn; # Learn alien routes from the kernel
1726 persist; # Don't remove routes on bird shutdown
1727 scan time 10; # Scan kernel routing table every 10 seconds
1728 import all;
1729 export all;
1730}
1731
1732protocol kernel { # Secondary routing table
1733 table auxtable;
1734 kernel table 100;
1735 export all;
a2a3ced8 1736}
0e4789c2
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1737</code>
1738
371adba6 1739<sect>OSPF
1b55b1a3 1740
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1741<sect1>Introduction
1742
3ca3e999 1743<p>Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a quite complex interior gateway
0c75411b
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1744protocol. The current IPv4 version (OSPFv2) is defined in RFC
17452328<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2328.txt"> and
1746the current IPv6 version (OSPFv3) is defined in RFC 5340<htmlurl
1747url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc5340.txt"> It's a link state
1748(a.k.a. shortest path first) protocol -- each router maintains a
1749database describing the autonomous system's topology. Each participating
1750router has an identical copy of the database and all routers run the
1751same algorithm calculating a shortest path tree with themselves as a
1752root. OSPF chooses the least cost path as the best path.
3ca3e999
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1753
1754<p>In OSPF, the autonomous system can be split to several areas in order
1755to reduce the amount of resources consumed for exchanging the routing
1756information and to protect the other areas from incorrect routing data.
1757Topology of the area is hidden to the rest of the autonomous system.
3ca3e999
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1758
1759<p>Another very important feature of OSPF is that
1760it can keep routing information from other protocols (like Static or BGP)
1761in its link state database as external routes. Each external route can
1632f1fe 1762be tagged by the advertising router, making it possible to pass additional
3ca3e999
MM
1763information between routers on the boundary of the autonomous system.
1764
1765<p>OSPF quickly detects topological changes in the autonomous system (such
1632f1fe 1766as router interface failures) and calculates new loop-free routes after a short
f02e4258 1767period of convergence. Only a minimal amount of
1632f1fe 1768routing traffic is involved.
8fd12e6b 1769
3ca3e999
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1770<p>Each router participating in OSPF routing periodically sends Hello messages
1771to all its interfaces. This allows neighbors to be discovered dynamically.
1772Then the neighbors exchange theirs parts of the link state database and keep it
1773identical by flooding updates. The flooding process is reliable and ensures
1774that each router detects all changes.
8fd12e6b
OF
1775
1776<sect1>Configuration
1777
5a64ac70 1778<p>In the main part of configuration, there can be multiple definitions of
6bcef225 1779OSPF areas, each with a different id. These definitions includes many other
f02e4258
OF
1780switches and multiple definitions of interfaces. Definition of interface
1781may contain many switches and constant definitions and list of neighbors
5a64ac70 1782on nonbroadcast networks.
8fd12e6b
OF
1783
1784<code>
088bc8ad 1785protocol ospf &lt;name&gt; {
1632f1fe 1786 rfc1583compat &lt;switch&gt;;
62eee823 1787 tick &lt;num&gt;;
e91f6960 1788 ecmp &lt;switch&gt; [limit &lt;num&gt;];
088bc8ad 1789 area &lt;id&gt; {
2918e610
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1790 stub;
1791 nssa;
bde872bb 1792 summary &lt;switch&gt;;
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1793 default nssa &lt;switch&gt;;
1794 default cost &lt;num&gt;;
1795 default cost2 &lt;num&gt;;
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1796 translator &lt;switch&gt;;
1797 translator stability &lt;num&gt;;
1798
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1799 networks {
1800 &lt;prefix&gt;;
1801 &lt;prefix&gt; hidden;
1802 }
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1803 external {
1804 &lt;prefix&gt;;
1805 &lt;prefix&gt; hidden;
1806 &lt;prefix&gt; tag &lt;num&gt;;
1807 }
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1808 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt;;
1809 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt; {
1810 hidden &lt;switch&gt;;
1811 summary &lt;switch&gt;;
1812 cost &lt;num&gt;;
1813 }
0ec031f7 1814 interface &lt;interface pattern&gt; [instance &lt;num&gt;] {
088bc8ad 1815 cost &lt;num&gt;;
e3bc10fd 1816 stub &lt;switch&gt;;
088bc8ad 1817 hello &lt;num&gt;;
a190e720 1818 poll &lt;num&gt;;
088bc8ad
OF
1819 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
1820 priority &lt;num&gt;;
1821 wait &lt;num&gt;;
1822 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
d8c7d9e8 1823 dead &lt;num&gt;;
94c42054 1824 rx buffer [normal|large|&lt;num&gt;];
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1825 type [broadcast|bcast|pointopoint|ptp|
1826 nonbroadcast|nbma|pointomultipoint|ptmp];
a190e720 1827 strict nonbroadcast &lt;switch&gt;;
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1828 check link &lt;switch&gt;;
1829 ecmp weight &lt;num&gt;;
3242ab43 1830 authentication [none|simple|cryptographic];
088bc8ad 1831 password "&lt;text&gt;";
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1832 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
1833 id &lt;num&gt;;
1834 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
1835 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
1836 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
1837 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
ea357b8b 1838 };
8fd12e6b 1839 neighbors {
088bc8ad 1840 &lt;ip&gt;;
a190e720 1841 &lt;ip&gt; eligible;
8fd12e6b
OF
1842 };
1843 };
0ec031f7 1844 virtual link &lt;id&gt; [instance &lt;num&gt;] {
98ac6176 1845 hello &lt;num&gt;;
98ac6176
OF
1846 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
1847 wait &lt;num&gt;;
1848 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
d8c7d9e8 1849 dead &lt;num&gt;;
3242ab43 1850 authentication [none|simple|cryptographic];
98ac6176
OF
1851 password "&lt;text&gt;";
1852 };
8fd12e6b
OF
1853 };
1854}
1855</code>
1856
1857<descrip>
1632f1fe 1858 <tag>rfc1583compat <M>switch</M></tag>
3ca3e999 1859 This option controls compatibility of routing table
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OF
1860 calculation with RFC 1583<htmlurl
1861 url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1583.txt">. Default
1862 value is no.
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1863
1864 <tag>tick <M>num</M></tag>
1865 The routing table calculation and clean-up of areas' databases
1866 is not performed when a single link state
1867 change arrives. To lower the CPU utilization, it's processed later
1868 at periodical intervals of <m/num/ seconds. The default value is 1.
1869
1870 <tag>ecmp <M>switch</M> [limit <M>number</M>]</tag>
1871 This option specifies whether OSPF is allowed to generate
1872 ECMP (equal-cost multipath) routes. Such routes are used when
1873 there are several directions to the destination, each with
1874 the same (computed) cost. This option also allows to specify
1875 a limit on maximal number of nexthops in one route. By
1876 default, ECMP is disabled. If enabled, default value of the
1877 limit is 16.
1878
8fd12e6b 1879 <tag>area <M>id</M></tag>
3ca3e999 1880 This defines an OSPF area with given area ID (an integer or an IPv4
e91f6960 1881 address, similarly to a router ID). The most important area is
3ca3e999 1882 the backbone (ID 0) to which every other area must be connected.
8fd12e6b 1883
2918e610 1884 <tag>stub</tag>
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1885 This option configures the area to be a stub area. External
1886 routes are not flooded into stub areas. Also summary LSAs can be
2918e610
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1887 limited in stub areas (see option <cf/summary/).
1888 By default, the area is not a stub area.
bde872bb 1889
2918e610 1890 <tag>nssa</tag>
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1891 This option configures the area to be a NSSA (Not-So-Stubby
1892 Area). NSSA is a variant of a stub area which allows a
1893 limited way of external route propagation. Global external
1894 routes are not propagated into a NSSA, but an external route
1895 can be imported into NSSA as a (area-wide) NSSA-LSA (and
1896 possibly translated and/or aggregated on area boundary).
2918e610 1897 By default, the area is not NSSA.
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1898
1899 <tag>summary <M>switch</M></tag>
1900 This option controls propagation of summary LSAs into stub or
1901 NSSA areas. If enabled, summary LSAs are propagated as usual,
1902 otherwise just the default summary route (0.0.0.0/0) is
1903 propagated (this is sometimes called totally stubby area). If
1904 a stub area has more area boundary routers, propagating
1905 summary LSAs could lead to more efficient routing at the cost
1906 of larger link state database. Default value is no.
1907
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1908 <tag>default nssa <M>switch</M></tag>
1909 When <cf/summary/ option is enabled, default summary route is
1910 no longer propagated to the NSSA. In that case, this option
1911 allows to originate default route as NSSA-LSA to the NSSA.
1912 Default value is no.
1913
1914 <tag>default cost <M>num</M></tag>
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1915 This option controls the cost of a default route propagated to
1916 stub and NSSA areas. Default value is 1000.
1917
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1918 <tag>default cost2 <M>num</M></tag>
1919 When a default route is originated as NSSA-LSA, its cost
1920 can use either type 1 or type 2 metric. This option allows
1921 to specify the cost of a default route in type 2 metric.
1922 By default, type 1 metric (option <cf/default cost/) is used.
1923
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1924 <tag>translator <M>switch</M></tag>
1925 This option controls translation of NSSA-LSAs into external
1926 LSAs. By default, one translator per NSSA is automatically
1927 elected from area boundary routers. If enabled, this area
1928 boundary router would unconditionally translate all NSSA-LSAs
1929 regardless of translator election. Default value is no.
1930
1931 <tag>translator stability <M>num</M></tag>
1932 This option controls the translator stability interval (in
1933 seconds). When the new translator is elected, the old one
1934 keeps translating until the interval is over. Default value
1935 is 40.
8fd12e6b 1936
16319aeb 1937 <tag>networks { <m/set/ }</tag>
0c75411b 1938 Definition of area IP ranges. This is used in summary LSA origination.
16319aeb
OF
1939 Hidden networks are not propagated into other areas.
1940
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1941 <tag>external { <m/set/ }</tag>
1942 Definition of external area IP ranges for NSSAs. This is used
1943 for NSSA-LSA translation. Hidden networks are not translated
1944 into external LSAs. Networks can have configured route tag.
1945
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1946 <tag>stubnet <m/prefix/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
1947 Stub networks are networks that are not transit networks
1948 between OSPF routers. They are also propagated through an
1949 OSPF area as a part of a link state database. By default,
1950 BIRD generates a stub network record for each primary network
1951 address on each OSPF interface that does not have any OSPF
1952 neighbors, and also for each non-primary network address on
1953 each OSPF interface. This option allows to alter a set of
1954 stub networks propagated by this router.
1955
1956 Each instance of this option adds a stub network with given
1957 network prefix to the set of propagated stub network, unless
1958 option <cf/hidden/ is used. It also suppresses default stub
1959 networks for given network prefix. When option
1960 <cf/summary/ is used, also default stub networks that are
1961 subnetworks of given stub network are suppressed. This might
1962 be used, for example, to aggregate generated stub networks.
1963
0ec031f7 1964 <tag>interface <M>pattern</M> [instance <m/num/]</tag>
3ca3e999 1965 Defines that the specified interfaces belong to the area being defined.
f434d191 1966 See <ref id="dsc-iface" name="interface"> common option for detailed description.
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1967 In OSPFv3, you can specify instance ID for that interface
1968 description, so it is possible to have several instances of
1969 that interface with different options or even in different areas.
1970
1971 <tag>virtual link <M>id</M> [instance <m/num/]</tag>
1972 Virtual link to router with the router id. Virtual link acts
1973 as a point-to-point interface belonging to backbone. The
1974 actual area is used as transport area. This item cannot be in
1975 the backbone. In OSPFv3, you could also use several virtual
1976 links to one destination with different instance IDs.
98ac6176 1977
8fd12e6b 1978 <tag>cost <M>num</M></tag>
3ca3e999 1979 Specifies output cost (metric) of an interface. Default value is 10.
8fd12e6b 1980
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OF
1981 <tag>stub <M>switch</M></tag>
1982 If set to interface it does not listen to any packet and does not send
1983 any hello. Default value is no.
1984
8fd12e6b 1985 <tag>hello <M>num</M></tag>
3ca3e999
MM
1986 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages. Beware, all
1987 routers on the same network need to have the same hello interval.
8fd12e6b
OF
1988 Default value is 10.
1989
a190e720
OF
1990 <tag>poll <M>num</M></tag>
1991 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages for
f02e4258 1992 some neighbors on NBMA network. Default value is 20.
a190e720 1993
8fd12e6b 1994 <tag>retransmit <M>num</M></tag>
4e8ec666 1995 Specifies interval in seconds between retransmissions of unacknowledged updates.
8fd12e6b
OF
1996 Default value is 5.
1997
1998 <tag>priority <M>num</M></tag>
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MM
1999 On every multiple access network (e.g., the Ethernet) Designed Router
2000 and Backup Designed router are elected. These routers have some
2001 special functions in the flooding process. Higher priority increases
2002 preferences in this election. Routers with priority 0 are not
8fd12e6b
OF
2003 eligible. Default value is 1.
2004
2005 <tag>wait <M>num</M></tag>
3ca3e999 2006 After start, router waits for the specified number of seconds between starting
8fd12e6b
OF
2007 election and building adjacency. Default value is 40.
2008
2009 <tag>dead count <M>num</M></tag>
3ca3e999
MM
2010 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
2011 <m/dead count/*<m/hello/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down.
8fd12e6b 2012
d8c7d9e8
OF
2013 <tag>dead <M>num</M></tag>
2014 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
2015 <m/dead/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down. If both directives
2016 <m/dead count/ and <m/dead/ are used, <m/dead/ has precendence.
2017
94c42054
OF
2018 <tag>rx buffer <M>num</M></tag>
2019 This sets the size of buffer used for receiving packets. The buffer should
2020 be bigger than maximal size of any packets. Value NORMAL (default)
391931d4 2021 means 2*MTU, value LARGE means maximal allowed packet - 65535.
94c42054 2022
919f5411
OZ
2023 <tag>type broadcast|bcast</tag>
2024 BIRD detects a type of a connected network automatically, but
2025 sometimes it's convenient to force use of a different type
2026 manually. On broadcast networks (like ethernet), flooding
2027 and Hello messages are sent using multicasts (a single packet
2028 for all the neighbors). A designated router is elected and it
2029 is responsible for synchronizing the link-state databases and
2030 originating network LSAs. This network type cannot be used on
2031 physically NBMA networks and on unnumbered networks (networks
2032 without proper IP prefix).
2033
2034 <tag>type pointopoint|ptp</tag>
2035 Point-to-point networks connect just 2 routers together. No
2036 election is performed and no network LSA is originated, which
2037 makes it simpler and faster to establish. This network type
2038 is useful not only for physically PtP ifaces (like PPP or
2039 tunnels), but also for broadcast networks used as PtP links.
2040 This network type cannot be used on physically NBMA networks.
2041
2042 <tag>type nonbroadcast|nbma</tag>
2043 On NBMA networks, the packets are sent to each neighbor
3ca3e999 2044 separately because of lack of multicast capabilities.
919f5411
OZ
2045 Like on broadcast networks, a designated router is elected,
2046 which plays a central role in propagation of LSAs.
2047 This network type cannot be used on unnumbered networks.
2048
2049 <tag>type pointomultipoint|ptmp</tag>
2050 This is another network type designed to handle NBMA
2051 networks. In this case the NBMA network is treated as a
2052 collection of PtP links. This is useful if not every pair of
2053 routers on the NBMA network has direct communication, or if
2054 the NBMA network is used as an (possibly unnumbered) PtP
2055 link.
8fd12e6b 2056
e3bc10fd
OF
2057 <tag>strict nonbroadcast <M>switch</M></tag>
2058 If set, don't send hello to any undefined neighbor. This switch
919f5411 2059 is ignored on other than NBMA or PtMP networks. Default value is no.
8fd12e6b 2060
391931d4 2061 <tag>check link <M>switch</M></tag>
e91f6960 2062 If set, a hardware link state (reported by OS) is taken into
391931d4
OZ
2063 consideration. When a link disappears (e.g. an ethernet cable is
2064 unplugged), neighbors are immediately considered unreachable
2065 and only the address of the iface (instead of whole network
2066 prefix) is propagated. It is possible that some hardware
e91f6960
OZ
2067 drivers or platforms do not implement this feature. Default value is no.
2068
2069 <tag>ecmp weight <M>num</M></tag>
2070 When ECMP (multipath) routes are allowed, this value specifies
2071 a relative weight used for nexthops going through the iface.
2072 Allowed values are 1-256. Default value is 1.
391931d4 2073
4e8ec666 2074 <tag>authentication none</tag>
3ca3e999 2075 No passwords are sent in OSPF packets. This is the default value.
8fd12e6b 2076
4e8ec666 2077 <tag>authentication simple</tag>
3ca3e999 2078 Every packet carries 8 bytes of password. Received packets
4e8ec666 2079 lacking this password are ignored. This authentication mechanism is
8fd12e6b
OF
2080 very weak.
2081
ea357b8b 2082 <tag>authentication cryptographic</tag>
b21f68b4 2083 16-byte long MD5 digest is appended to every packet. For the digest
ea357b8b 2084 generation 16-byte long passwords are used. Those passwords are
0c75411b 2085 not sent via network, so this mechanism is quite secure.
ea357b8b
OF
2086 Packets can still be read by an attacker.
2087
5a203dac 2088 <tag>password "<M>text</M>"</tag>
ea357b8b 2089 An 8-byte or 16-byte password used for authentication.
f434d191 2090 See <ref id="dsc-pass" name="password"> common option for detailed description.
8fd12e6b 2091
5a203dac 2092 <tag>neighbors { <m/set/ } </tag>
919f5411
OZ
2093 A set of neighbors to which Hello messages on NBMA or PtMP
2094 networks are to be sent. For NBMA networks, some of them
2095 could be marked as eligible.
a190e720 2096
8fd12e6b
OF
2097</descrip>
2098
2099<sect1>Attributes
2100
c27b2449 2101<p>OSPF defines four route attributes. Each internal route has a <cf/metric/.
f06a219a
OF
2102Metric is ranging from 1 to infinity (65535).
2103External routes use <cf/metric type 1/ or <cf/metric type 2/.
2104A <cf/metric of type 1/ is comparable with internal <cf/metric/, a
2105<cf/metric of type 2/ is always longer
2106than any <cf/metric of type 1/ or any <cf/internal metric/.
126683fe
OZ
2107<cf/Internal metric/ or <cf/metric of type 1/ is stored in attribute
2108<cf/ospf_metric1/, <cf/metric type 2/ is stored in attribute <cf/ospf_metric2/.
94e2bbcc 2109If you specify both metrics only metric1 is used.
126683fe
OZ
2110
2111Each external route can also carry attribute <cf/ospf_tag/ which is a
211232-bit integer which is used when exporting routes to other protocols;
f06a219a 2113otherwise, it doesn't affect routing inside the OSPF domain at all.
126683fe
OZ
2114The fourth attribute <cf/ospf_router_id/ is a router ID of the router
2115advertising that route/network. This attribute is read-only. Default
2116is <cf/ospf_metric2 = 10000/ and <cf/ospf_tag = 0/.
8fd12e6b
OF
2117
2118<sect1>Example
2119
2120<p>
2121
2122<code>
2123protocol ospf MyOSPF {
67b24e7c 2124 rfc1583compat yes;
3b16080c 2125 tick 2;
76c7efec
OF
2126 export filter {
2127 if source = RTS_BGP then {
2128 ospf_metric1 = 100;
2129 accept;
2130 }
98ac6176 2131 reject;
f434d191 2132 };
8fd12e6b 2133 area 0.0.0.0 {
8fd12e6b
OF
2134 interface "eth*" {
2135 cost 11;
2136 hello 15;
2137 priority 100;
2138 retransmit 7;
2139 authentication simple;
2140 password "aaa";
2141 };
2142 interface "ppp*" {
2143 cost 100;
3b16080c 2144 authentication cryptographic;
f434d191
OZ
2145 password "abc" {
2146 id 1;
2147 generate to "22-04-2003 11:00:06";
2148 accept from "17-01-2001 12:01:05";
2149 };
2150 password "def" {
2151 id 2;
2152 generate to "22-07-2005 17:03:21";
2153 accept from "22-02-2001 11:34:06";
3b16080c 2154 };
8fd12e6b 2155 };
e3bc10fd
OF
2156 interface "arc0" {
2157 cost 10;
2158 stub yes;
2159 };
3b16080c 2160 interface "arc1";
8fd12e6b
OF
2161 };
2162 area 120 {
2163 stub yes;
98ac6176
OF
2164 networks {
2165 172.16.1.0/24;
2166 172.16.2.0/24 hidden;
2167 }
8fd12e6b
OF
2168 interface "-arc0" , "arc*" {
2169 type nonbroadcast;
2170 authentication none;
e3bc10fd 2171 strict nonbroadcast yes;
a190e720
OF
2172 wait 120;
2173 poll 40;
2174 dead count 8;
8fd12e6b 2175 neighbors {
a190e720 2176 192.168.120.1 eligible;
8fd12e6b
OF
2177 192.168.120.2;
2178 192.168.120.10;
2179 };
2180 };
2181 };
2182}
2183</code>
2184
371adba6 2185<sect>Pipe
1b55b1a3 2186
371adba6 2187<sect1>Introduction
a2a3ced8
MM
2188
2189<p>The Pipe protocol serves as a link between two routing tables, allowing routes to be
5a203dac 2190passed from a table declared as primary (i.e., the one the pipe is connected to using the
a2a3ced8
MM
2191<cf/table/ configuration keyword) to the secondary one (declared using <cf/peer table/)
2192and vice versa, depending on what's allowed by the filters. Export filters control export
2193of routes from the primary table to the secondary one, import filters control the opposite
2194direction.
2195
7d837aa0
OZ
2196<p>The Pipe protocol may work in the transparent mode mode or in the opaque mode.
2197In the transparent mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits all routes from
2198one table to the other table, retaining their original source and
2199attributes. If import and export filters are set to accept, then both
2200tables would have the same content. The transparent mode is the default mode.
2201
2202<p>In the opaque mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits optimal route
f98e2915
OZ
2203from one table to the other table in a similar way like other
2204protocols send and receive routes. Retransmitted route will have the
2205source set to the Pipe protocol, which may limit access to protocol
7d837aa0
OZ
2206specific route attributes. This mode is mainly for compatibility, it
2207is not suggested for new configs. The mode can be changed by
f98e2915
OZ
2208<tt/mode/ option.
2209
5a203dac 2210<p>The primary use of multiple routing tables and the Pipe protocol is for policy routing,
a2a3ced8
MM
2211where handling of a single packet doesn't depend only on its destination address, but also
2212on its source address, source interface, protocol type and other similar parameters.
f98e2915 2213In many systems (Linux being a good example), the kernel allows to enforce routing policies
a2a3ced8
MM
2214by defining routing rules which choose one of several routing tables to be used for a packet
2215according to its parameters. Setting of these rules is outside the scope of BIRD's work
5a203dac 2216(on Linux, you can use the <tt/ip/ command), but you can create several routing tables in BIRD,
a2a3ced8 2217connect them to the kernel ones, use filters to control which routes appear in which tables
5a203dac 2218and also you can employ the Pipe protocol for exporting a selected subset of one table to
a2a3ced8
MM
2219another one.
2220
371adba6 2221<sect1>Configuration
a2a3ced8
MM
2222
2223<p><descrip>
f98e2915 2224 <tag>peer table <m/table/</tag> Defines secondary routing table to connect to. The
a2a3ced8 2225 primary one is selected by the <cf/table/ keyword.
f98e2915
OZ
2226
2227 <tag>mode opaque|transparent</tag> Specifies the mode for the pipe to work in. Default is opaque.
a2a3ced8
MM
2228</descrip>
2229
371adba6 2230<sect1>Attributes
a2a3ced8
MM
2231
2232<p>The Pipe protocol doesn't define any route attributes.
2233
371adba6 2234<sect1>Example
a2a3ced8
MM
2235
2236<p>Let's consider a router which serves as a boundary router of two different autonomous
2237systems, each of them connected to a subset of interfaces of the router, having its own
2238exterior connectivity and wishing to use the other AS as a backup connectivity in case
2239of outage of its own exterior line.
2240
2241<p>Probably the simplest solution to this situation is to use two routing tables (we'll
2242call them <cf/as1/ and <cf/as2/) and set up kernel routing rules, so that packets having
2243arrived from interfaces belonging to the first AS will be routed according to <cf/as1/
2244and similarly for the second AS. Thus we have split our router to two logical routers,
2245each one acting on its own routing table, having its own routing protocols on its own
2246interfaces. In order to use the other AS's routes for backup purposes, we can pass
2247the routes between the tables through a Pipe protocol while decreasing their preferences
5a203dac 2248and correcting their BGP paths to reflect the AS boundary crossing.
a2a3ced8
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2249
2250<code>
2251table as1; # Define the tables
2252table as2;
2253
2254protocol kernel kern1 { # Synchronize them with the kernel
2255 table as1;
2256 kernel table 1;
2257}
2258
2259protocol kernel kern2 {
2260 table as2;
2261 kernel table 2;
2262}
2263
2264protocol bgp bgp1 { # The outside connections
2265 table as1;
2266 local as 1;
2267 neighbor 192.168.0.1 as 1001;
2268 export all;
2269 import all;
2270}
2271
2272protocol bgp bgp2 {
2273 table as2;
2274 local as 2;
2275 neighbor 10.0.0.1 as 1002;
2276 export all;
2277 import all;
2278}
2279
2280protocol pipe { # The Pipe
2281 table as1;
2282 peer table as2;
2283 export filter {
2284 if net ~ [ 1.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS1 networks
2285 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
2286 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(1);
2287 accept;
2288 }
2289 reject;
2290 };
2291 import filter {
2292 if net ~ [ 2.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS2 networks
2293 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
2294 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(2);
2295 accept;
2296 }
2297 reject;
2298 };
2299}
2300</code>
2301
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2302<sect>RAdv
2303
2304<sect1>Introduction
2305
2306<p>The RAdv protocol is an implementation of Router Advertisements,
2307which are used in the IPv6 stateless autoconfiguration. IPv6 routers
2308send (in irregular time intervals or as an answer to a request)
2309advertisement packets to connected networks. These packets contain
2310basic information about a local network (e.g. a list of network
2311prefixes), which allows network hosts to autoconfigure network
2312addresses and choose a default route. BIRD implements router behavior
2313as defined in RFC 4861<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4861.txt">.
2314
2315<sect1>Configuration
2316
2317<p>There are two classes of definitions in RAdv configuration --
2318interface definitions and prefix definitions:
2319
2320<descrip>
2321 <tag>interface <m/pattern [, ...]/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
2322 Interface definitions specify a set of interfaces on which the
2323 protocol is activated and contain interface specific options.
2324 See <ref id="dsc-iface" name="interface"> common options for
2325 detailed description.
2326
2327 <tag>prefix <m/prefix/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
2328 Prefix definitions allows to modify a list of advertised
2329 prefixes. By default, the advertised prefixes are the same as
2330 the network prefixes assigned to the interface. For each
2331 network prefix, the matching prefix definition is found and
2332 its options are used. If no matching prefix definition is
2333 found, the prefix is used with default options.
2334
2335 Prefix definitions can be either global or interface-specific.
2336 The second ones are part of interface options. The prefix
2337 definition matching is done in the first-match style, when
2338 interface-specific definitions are processed before global
2339 definitions. As expected, the prefix definition is matching if
2340 the network prefix is a subnet of the prefix in prefix
2341 definition.
2342</descrip>
2343
2344<p>Interface specific options:
2345
2346<descrip>
2347 <tag>max ra interval <m/expr/</tag>
2348 Unsolicited router advertisements are sent in irregular time
2349 intervals. This option specifies the maximum length of these
2350 intervals, in seconds. Valid values are 4-1800. Default: 600
2351
2352 <tag>min ra interval <m/expr/</tag>
2353 This option specifies the minimum length of that intervals, in
2354 seconds. Must be at least 3 and at most 3/4 * max ra interval.
2355 Default: about 1/3 * max ra interval.
2356
2357 <tag>min delay <m/expr/</tag>
2358 The minimum delay between two consecutive router advertisements,
2359 in seconds. Default: 3
2360
2361 <tag>managed <m/switch/</tag>
2362 This option specifies whether hosts should use DHCPv6 for
2363 IP address configuration. Default: no
2364
2365 <tag>other config <m/switch/</tag>
2366 This option specifies whether hosts should use DHCPv6 to
2367 receive other configuration information. Default: no
2368
2369 <tag>link mtu <m/expr/</tag>
2370 This option specifies which value of MTU should be used by
2371 hosts. 0 means unspecified. Default: 0
2372
2373 <tag>reachable time <m/expr/</tag>
2374 This option specifies the time (in milliseconds) how long
2375 hosts should assume a neighbor is reachable (from the last
2376 confirmation). Maximum is 3600000, 0 means unspecified.
2377 Default 0.
2378
2379 <tag>retrans timer <m/expr/</tag>
2380 This option specifies the time (in milliseconds) how long
2381 hosts should wait before retransmitting Neighbor Solicitation
2382 messages. 0 means unspecified. Default 0.
2383
2384 <tag>current hop limit <m/expr/</tag>
2385 This option specifies which value of Hop Limit should be used
2386 by hosts. Valid values are 0-255, 0 means unspecified. Default: 64
2387
2388 <tag>default lifetime <m/expr/</tag>
2389 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (after
2390 the receipt of RA) hosts may use the router as a default
2391 router. 0 means do not use as a default router. Default: 3 *
2392 max ra interval.
2393</descrip>
2394
2395
2396<p>Prefix specific options:
2397
2398<descrip>
2399 <tag>onlink <m/switch/</tag>
2400 This option specifies whether hosts may use the advertised
2401 prefix for onlink determination. Default: yes
2402
2403 <tag>autonomous <m/switch/</tag>
2404 This option specifies whether hosts may use the advertised
2405 prefix for stateless autoconfiguration. Default: yes
2406
2407 <tag>valid lifetime <m/expr/</tag>
2408 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (after
2409 the receipt of RA) the prefix information is valid, i.e.,
2410 autoconfigured IP addresses can be assigned and hosts with
2411 that IP addresses are considered directly reachable. 0 means
2412 the prefix is no longer valid. Default: 86400 (1 day)
2413
2414 <tag>preferred lifetime <m/expr/</tag>
2415 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (after
2416 the receipt of RA) IP addresses generated from the prefix
2417 using stateless autoconfiguration remain preferred. Default:
2418 14400 (4 hours)
2419</descrip>
2420
2421<sect1>Example
2422
2423<p><code>
2424protocol radv {
2425 interface "eth2" {
2426 max ra interval 5; # Fast failover with more routers
2427 managed yes; # Using DHCPv6 on eth2
2428 prefix ::/0 {
2429 autonomous off; # So do not autoconfigure any IP
2430 };
2431 };
2432
2433 interface "eth*"; # No need for any other options
2434
2435 prefix 2001:0DB8:1234::/48 {
2436 preferred lifetime 0; # Deprecated address range
2437 };
2438
2439 prefix 2001:0DB8:2000::/48 {
2440 autonomous off; # Do not autoconfigure
2441 };
2442}
2443</code>
2444
1532a244 2445<sect>RIP
d37f899b 2446
371adba6 2447<sect1>Introduction
d37f899b 2448
1532a244
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2449<p>The RIP protocol (also sometimes called Rest In Pieces) is a simple protocol, where each router broadcasts (to all its neighbors)
2450distances to all networks it can reach. When a router hears distance to another network, it increments
d37f899b 2451it and broadcasts it back. Broadcasts are done in regular intervals. Therefore, if some network goes
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2452unreachable, routers keep telling each other that its distance is the original distance plus 1 (actually, plus
2453interface metric, which is usually one). After some time, the distance reaches infinity (that's 15 in
2454RIP) and all routers know that network is unreachable. RIP tries to minimize situations where
a7c9f7c0 2455counting to infinity is necessary, because it is slow. Due to infinity being 16, you can't use
a4601845 2456RIP on networks where maximal distance is higher than 15 hosts. You can read more about RIP at <HTMLURL
074a166d 2457URL="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/rip-charter.html" name="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/rip-charter.html">. Both IPv4
64722c98 2458(RFC 1723<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1723.txt">)
074a166d 2459and IPv6 (RFC 2080<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2080.txt">) versions of RIP are supported by BIRD, historical RIPv1 (RFC 1058<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1058.txt">)is
b21f68b4 2460not currently supported. RIPv4 MD5 authentication (RFC 2082<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2082.txt">) is supported.
440439e3 2461
1532a244
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2462<p>RIP is a very simple protocol, and it has a lot of shortcomings. Slow
2463convergence, big network load and inability to handle larger networks
0c75411b 2464makes it pretty much obsolete. (It is still usable on very small networks.)
d37f899b 2465
371adba6 2466<sect1>Configuration
d37f899b 2467
1532a244 2468<p>In addition to options common for all to other protocols, RIP supports the following ones:
d37f899b
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2469
2470<descrip>
30c34a10
OF
2471 <tag/authentication none|plaintext|md5/ selects authentication method to be used. <cf/none/ means that
2472 packets are not authenticated at all, <cf/plaintext/ means that a plaintext password is embedded
b21f68b4 2473 into each packet, and <cf/md5/ means that packets are authenticated using a MD5 cryptographic
f434d191 2474 hash. If you set authentication to not-none, it is a good idea to add <cf>password</cf>
5a203dac 2475 section. Default: none.
7581b81b 2476
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2477 <tag>honor always|neighbor|never </tag>specifies when should requests for dumping routing table
2478 be honored. (Always, when sent from a host on a directly connected
2479 network or never.) Routing table updates are honored only from
5a203dac 2480 neighbors, that is not configurable. Default: never.
d37f899b
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2481</descrip>
2482
2483<p>There are two options that can be specified per-interface. First is <cf>metric</cf>, with
7581b81b 2484default one. Second is <cf>mode multicast|broadcast|quiet|nolisten|version1</cf>, it selects mode for
1b55b1a3 2485rip to work in. If nothing is specified, rip runs in multicast mode. <cf>version1</cf> is
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2486currently equivalent to <cf>broadcast</cf>, and it makes RIP talk to a broadcast address even
2487through multicast mode is possible. <cf>quiet</cf> option means that RIP will not transmit
2488any periodic messages to this interface and <cf>nolisten</cf> means that RIP will send to this
2489interface but not listen to it.
d37f899b 2490
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2491<p>The following options generally override behavior specified in RFC. If you use any of these
2492options, BIRD will no longer be RFC-compliant, which means it will not be able to talk to anything
2493other than equally configured BIRD. I have warned you.
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2494
2495<descrip>
0e7a720a 2496 <tag>port <M>number</M></tag>
d150c637 2497 selects IP port to operate on, default 520. (This is useful when testing BIRD, if you
1532a244 2498 set this to an address &gt;1024, you will not need to run bird with UID==0).
d37f899b 2499
0e7a720a 2500 <tag>infinity <M>number</M></tag>
1532a244 2501 selects the value of infinity, default is 16. Bigger values will make protocol convergence
d37f899b
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2502 even slower.
2503
0e7a720a 2504 <tag>period <M>number</M>
1532a244 2505 </tag>specifies the number of seconds between periodic updates. Default is 30 seconds. A lower
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2506 number will mean faster convergence but bigger network
2507 load. Do not use values lower than 10.
d37f899b 2508
f3b33928 2509 <tag>timeout time <M>number</M>
1532a244 2510 </tag>specifies how old route has to be to be considered unreachable. Default is 4*<cf/period/.
d37f899b 2511
f3b33928 2512 <tag>garbage time <M>number</M>
1532a244 2513 </tag>specifies how old route has to be to be discarded. Default is 10*<cf/period/.
d37f899b
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2514</descrip>
2515
371adba6 2516<sect1>Attributes
d37f899b 2517
1b55b1a3
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2518<p>RIP defines two route attributes:
2519
2520<descrip>
2521 <tag>int <cf/rip_metric/</tag> RIP metric of the route (ranging from 0 to <cf/infinity/).
2522 When routes from different RIP instances are available and all of them have the same
2523 preference, BIRD prefers the route with lowest <cf/rip_metric/.
5a203dac 2524 When importing a non-RIP route, the metric defaults to 5.
1b55b1a3
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2525
2526 <tag>int <cf/rip_tag/</tag> RIP route tag: a 16-bit number which can be used
2527 to carry additional information with the route (for example, an originating AS number
5a203dac 2528 in case of external routes). When importing a non-RIP route, the tag defaults to 0.
1b55b1a3
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2529</descrip>
2530
371adba6 2531<sect1>Example
1b55b1a3
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2532
2533<p><code>
d37f899b
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2534protocol rip MyRIP_test {
2535 debug all;
2536 port 1520;
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2537 period 10;
2538 garbage time 60;
f434d191
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2539 interface "eth0" { metric 3; mode multicast; };
2540 interface "eth*" { metric 2; mode broadcast; };
326e33f5 2541 honor neighbor;
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2542 authentication none;
2543 import filter { print "importing"; accept; };
2544 export filter { print "exporting"; accept; };
2545}
a0dd1c74 2546</code>
d37f899b 2547
371adba6 2548<sect>Static
1b55b1a3 2549
0e4789c2 2550<p>The Static protocol doesn't communicate with other routers in the network,
f8e2d916 2551but instead it allows you to define routes manually. This is often used for
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2552specifying how to forward packets to parts of the network which don't use
2553dynamic routing at all and also for defining sink routes (i.e., those
2554telling to return packets as undeliverable if they are in your IP block,
2555you don't have any specific destination for them and you don't want to send
2556them out through the default route to prevent routing loops).
2557
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2558<p>There are five types of static routes: `classical' routes telling
2559to forward packets to a neighboring router, multipath routes
2560specifying several (possibly weighted) neighboring routers, device
2561routes specifying forwarding to hosts on a directly connected network,
2562recursive routes computing their nexthops by doing route table lookups
2563for a given IP and special routes (sink, blackhole etc.) which specify
2564a special action to be done instead of forwarding the packet.
79a2b697
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2565
2566<p>When the particular destination is not available (the interface is down or
2567the next hop of the route is not a neighbor at the moment), Static just
326e33f5 2568uninstalls the route from the table it is connected to and adds it again as soon
a00c7a18 2569as the destination becomes adjacent again.
79a2b697 2570
391931d4
OZ
2571<p>The Static protocol does not have many configuration options. The
2572definition of the protocol contains mainly a list of static routes:
79a2b697
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2573
2574<descrip>
2575 <tag>route <m/prefix/ via <m/ip/</tag> Static route through
2576 a neighboring router.
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OZ
2577 <tag>route <m/prefix/ multipath via <m/ip/ [weight <m/num/] [via ...]</tag>
2578 Static multipath route. Contains several nexthops (gateways), possibly
2579 with their weights.
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2580 <tag>route <m/prefix/ via <m/"interface"/</tag> Static device
2581 route through an interface to hosts on a directly connected network.
4116db18
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2582 <tag>route <m/prefix/ recursive <m/ip/</tag> Static recursive route,
2583 its nexthop depends on a route table lookup for given IP address.
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2584 <tag>route <m/prefix/ drop|reject|prohibit</tag> Special routes
2585 specifying to drop the packet, return it as unreachable or return
2586 it as administratively prohibited.
391931d4 2587
4116db18
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2588 <tag>check link <m/switch/</tag>
2589 If set, hardware link states of network interfaces are taken
2590 into consideration. When link disappears (e.g. ethernet cable
2591 is unplugged), static routes directing to that interface are
2592 removed. It is possible that some hardware drivers or
2593 platforms do not implement this feature. Default: off.
2594
2595 <tag>igp table <m/name/</tag> Specifies a table that is used
2596 for route table lookups of recursive routes. Default: the
2597 same table as the protocol is connected to.
79a2b697
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2598</descrip>
2599
79a2b697
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2600<p>Static routes have no specific attributes.
2601
4f88ac47 2602<p>Example static config might look like this:
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2603
2604<p><code>
2605protocol static {
96264d4d 2606 table testable; # Connect to a non-default routing table
9491f9f5 2607 route 0.0.0.0/0 via 198.51.100.130; # Default route
e91f6960 2608 route 10.0.0.0/8 multipath # Multipath route
9491f9f5
OZ
2609 via 198.51.100.10 weight 2
2610 via 198.51.100.20
2611 via 192.0.2.1;
2612 route 203.0.113.0/24 reject; # Sink route
96264d4d 2613 route 10.2.0.0/24 via "arc0"; # Secondary network
79a2b697
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2614}
2615</code>
2616
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2617<chapt>Conclusions
2618
2619<sect>Future work
2620
2621<p>Although BIRD supports all the commonly used routing protocols,
2622there are still some features which would surely deserve to be
2623implemented in future versions of BIRD:
2624
2625<itemize>
55b58d8c 2626<item>Opaque LSA's
96264d4d 2627<item>Route aggregation and flap dampening
96264d4d
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2628<item>Multipath routes
2629<item>Multicast routing protocols
2630<item>Ports to other systems
2631</itemize>
2632
2633<sect>Getting more help
2634
2635<p>If you use BIRD, you're welcome to join the bird-users mailing list
2636(<HTMLURL URL="mailto:bird-users@bird.network.cz" name="bird-users@bird.network.cz">)
2637where you can share your experiences with the other users and consult
2638your problems with the authors. To subscribe to the list, just send a
2639<tt/subscribe bird-users/ command in a body of a mail to
2640(<HTMLURL URL="mailto:majordomo@bird.network.cz" name="majordomo@bird.network.cz">).
2641The home page of BIRD can be found at <HTMLURL URL="http://bird.network.cz/" name="http://bird.network.cz/">.
2642
2643<p>BIRD is a relatively young system and it probably contains some
2644bugs. You can report any problems to the bird-users list and the authors
2645will be glad to solve them, but before you do so,
2646please make sure you have read the available documentation and that you are running the latest version (available at <HTMLURL
2647URL="ftp://bird.network.cz/pub/bird" name="bird.network.cz:/pub/bird">). (Of course, a patch
2648which fixes the bug is always welcome as an attachment.)
2649
2650<p>If you want to understand what is going inside, Internet standards are
2651a good and interesting reading. You can get them from <HTMLURL URL="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/" name="ftp.rfc-editor.org"> (or a nicely sorted version from <HTMLURL URL="ftp://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/pub/rfc" name="atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz:/pub/rfc">).
69477cad 2652
c184d9d0 2653<p><it/Good luck!/
69477cad 2654
371adba6 2655</book>
7581b81b 2656
a0dd1c74 2657<!--
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2658LocalWords: GPL IPv GateD BGPv RIPv OSPFv Linux sgml html dvi sgmltools Pavel
2659LocalWords: linuxdoc dtd descrip config conf syslog stderr auth ospf bgp Mbps
5a203dac 2660LocalWords: router's eval expr num birdc ctl UNIX if's enums bool int ip GCC
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2661LocalWords: len ipaddress pxlen netmask enum bgppath bgpmask clist gw md eth
2662LocalWords: RTS printn quitbird iBGP AS'es eBGP RFC multiprotocol IGP Machek
4e8ec666 2663LocalWords: EGP misconfigurations keepalive pref aggr aggregator BIRD's RTC
5a203dac 2664LocalWords: OS'es AS's multicast nolisten misconfigured UID blackhole MRTD MTU
4e8ec666 2665LocalWords: uninstalls ethernets IP binutils ANYCAST anycast dest RTD ICMP rfc
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64722c98 2667LocalWords: Perl SIGHUP dd mm yy HH MM SS EXT IA UNICAST multihop Discriminator txt
5adc02a6 2668LocalWords: proto wildcard Ondrej Filip
5a64ac70 2669-->