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2
3 <!--
4 BIRD documentation
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10 This is a slightly modified linuxdoc dtd. Anything in <descrip> tags is considered definition of
11 configuration primitives, <cf> is fragment of configuration within normal text, <m> is
12 "meta" information within fragment of configuration - something in config which is not keyword.
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
20 <book>
21
22 <title>BIRD User's Guide
23 <author>
24 Ondrej Filip <it/&lt;feela@network.cz&gt;/,
25 Pavel Machek <it/&lt;pavel@ucw.cz&gt;/,
26 Martin Mares <it/&lt;mj@ucw.cz&gt;/,
27 Ondrej Zajicek <it/&lt;santiago@crfreenet.org&gt;/
28 </author>
29
30 <abstract>
31 This document contains user documentation for the BIRD Internet Routing Daemon project.
32 </abstract>
33
34 <!-- Table of contents -->
35 <toc>
36
37 <!-- Begin the document -->
38
39 <chapt>Introduction
40
41 <sect>What is BIRD
42
43 <p><label id="intro">
44 The name `BIRD' is actually an acronym standing for `BIRD Internet Routing Daemon'.
45 Let'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
48 for `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)
51 which works as a dynamic router in an Internet type network (that is, in a network running either
52 the IPv4 or the IPv6 protocol). Routers are devices which forward packets between interconnected
53 networks in order to allow hosts not connected directly to the same local area network to
54 communicate with each other. They also communicate with the other routers in the Internet to discover
55 the topology of the network which allows them to find optimal (in terms of some metric) rules for
56 forwarding of packets (which are called routing tables) and to adapt themselves to the
57 changing conditions such as outages of network links, building of new connections and so on. Most of
58 these routers are costly dedicated devices running obscure firmware which is hard to configure and
59 not 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
60 computer to act as a router and forward packets belonging to the other hosts, but only according to
61 a statically configured table.
62
63 <p>A <em/Routing Daemon/ is in UNIX terminology a non-interactive program running on
64 background which does the dynamic part of Internet routing, that is it communicates
65 with the other routers, calculates routing tables and sends them to the OS kernel
66 which does the actual packet forwarding. There already exist other such routing
67 daemons: routed (RIP only), GateD (non-free), Zebra<HTMLURL URL="http://www.zebra.org">
68 and MRTD<HTMLURL URL="http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrt">, but their capabilities are
69 limited and they are relatively hard to configure and maintain.
70
71 <p>BIRD is an Internet Routing Daemon designed to avoid all of these shortcomings,
72 to support all the routing technology used in the today's Internet or planned to be
73 used in near future and to have a clean extensible architecture allowing new routing
74 protocols 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)
80 <item>the Routing Information Protocol (RIPv2)
81 <item>the Open Shortest Path First protocol (OSPFv2, OSPFv3)
82 <item>a virtual protocol for exchange of routes between different routing tables on a single host
83 <item>a command-line interface allowing on-line control and inspection
84 of status of the daemon
85 <item>soft reconfiguration (no need to use complex online commands
86 to change the configuration, just edit the configuration file
87 and notify BIRD to re-read it and it will smoothly switch itself
88 to the new configuration, not disturbing routing protocols
89 unless they are affected by the configuration changes)
90 <item>a powerful language for route filtering
91 </itemize>
92
93 <p>BIRD has been developed at the Faculty of Math and Physics, Charles University, Prague,
94 Czech Republic as a student project. It can be freely distributed under the terms of the GNU General
95 Public License.
96
97 <p>BIRD has been designed to work on all UNIX-like systems. It has been developed and
98 tested under Linux 2.0 to 2.4, and then ported to FreeBSD and NetBSD, porting to other
99 systems (even non-UNIX ones) should be relatively easy due to its highly modular architecture.
100
101 <sect>Installing BIRD
102
103 <p>On a recent UNIX system with GNU development tools (GCC, binutils, m4, make) and Perl, installing BIRD should be as easy as:
104
105 <code>
106 ./configure
107 make
108 make install
109 vi /usr/local/etc/bird.conf
110 bird
111 </code>
112
113 <p>You can use <tt>./configure --help</tt> to get a list of configure
114 options. The most important ones are:
115 <tt/--enable-ipv6/ which enables building of an IPv6 version of BIRD,
116 <tt/--with-protocols=/ to produce a slightly smaller BIRD executable by configuring out routing protocols you don't use, and
117 <tt/--prefix=/ to install BIRD to a place different from.
118 <file>/usr/local</file>.
119
120 <sect>Running BIRD
121
122 <p>You can pass several command-line options to bird:
123
124 <descrip>
125 <tag>-c <m/config name/</tag>
126 use given configuration file instead of <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file>.
127
128 <tag>-d</tag>
129 enable debug messages and run bird in foreground.
130
131 <tag>-D <m/filename of debug log/</tag>
132 log debugging information to given file instead of stderr.
133
134 <tag>-p</tag>
135 just parse the config file and exit. Return value is zero if the config file is valid,
136 nonzero if there are some errors.
137
138 <tag>-s <m/name of communication socket/</tag>
139 use given filename for a socket for communications with the client, default is <it/prefix/<file>/var/run/bird.ctl</file>.
140 </descrip>
141
142 <p>BIRD writes messages about its work to log files or syslog (according to config).
143
144 <chapt>About routing tables
145
146 <p>BIRD has one or more routing tables which may or may not be
147 synchronized with OS kernel and which may or may not be synchronized with
148 each other (see the Pipe protocol). Each routing table contains a list of
149 known routes. Each route consists of:
150
151 <itemize>
152 <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)
153 <item>preference of this route
154 <item>IP address of router which told us about this route
155 <item>IP address of router we should forward the packets to
156 using this route
157 <item>other attributes common to all routes
158 <item>dynamic attributes defined by protocols which may or
159 may not be present (typically protocol metrics)
160 </itemize>
161
162 Routing table maintains multiple entries
163 for a network, but at most one entry for one network and one
164 protocol. The entry with the highest preference is used for routing (we
165 will call such an entry the <it/selected route/). If
166 there are more entries with the same preference and they are from the same
167 protocol, the protocol decides (typically according to metrics). If they aren't,
168 an internal ordering is used to break the tie. You can
169 get the list of route attributes in the Route attributes section.
170
171 <p>Each protocol is connected to a routing table through two filters
172 which can accept, reject and modify the routes. An <it/export/
173 filter checks routes passed from the routing table to the protocol,
174 an <it/import/ filter checks routes in the opposite direction.
175 When the routing table gets a route from a protocol, it recalculates
176 the selected route and broadcasts it to all protocols connected to
177 the table. The protocols typically send the update to other routers
178 in the network.
179
180 <chapt>Configuration
181
182 <sect>Introduction
183
184 <p>BIRD is configured using a text configuration file. Upon startup, BIRD reads <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file> (unless the
185 <tt/-c/ command line option is given). Configuration may be changed at user's request: if you modify
186 the config file and then signal BIRD with <tt/SIGHUP/, it will adjust to the new
187 config. Then there's the client
188 which allows you to talk with BIRD in an extensive way.
189
190 <p>In the config, everything on a line after <cf/#/ or inside <cf>/*
191 */</cf> is a comment, whitespace characters are treated as a single space. If there's a variable number of options, they are grouped using
192 the <cf/{ }/ brackets. Each option is terminated by a <cf/;/. Configuration
193 is case sensitive.
194
195 <p>Here is an example of a simple config file. It enables
196 synchronization of routing tables with OS kernel, scans for
197 new network interfaces every 10 seconds and runs RIP on all network interfaces found.
198
199
200 <code>
201 protocol kernel {
202 persist; # Don't remove routes on BIRD shutdown
203 scan time 20; # Scan kernel routing table every 20 seconds
204 export all; # Default is export none
205 }
206
207 protocol device {
208 scan time 10; # Scan interfaces every 10 seconds
209 }
210
211 protocol rip {
212 export all;
213 import all;
214 interface "*";
215 }
216 </code>
217
218
219 <sect>Global options
220
221 <p><descrip>
222 <tag>log "<m/filename/"|syslog|stderr all|{ <m/list of classes/ }</tag>
223 Set logging of messages having the given class (either <cf/all/ or <cf/{
224 error, trace }/ etc.) into selected destination. Classes are:
225 <cf/info/, <cf/warning/, <cf/error/ and <cf/fatal/ for messages about local problems,
226 <cf/debug/ for debugging messages,
227 <cf/trace/ when you want to know what happens in the network,
228 <cf/remote/ for messages about misbehavior of remote machines,
229 <cf/auth/ about authentication failures,
230 <cf/bug/ for internal BIRD bugs. You may specify more than one <cf/log/ line to establish logging to multiple
231 destinations. Default: log everything to the system log.
232
233 <tag>debug protocols all|off|{ states, routes, filters, interfaces, events, packets }</tag>
234 Set global defaults of protocol debugging options. See <cf/debug/ in the following section. Default: off.
235
236 <tag>debug commands <m/number/</tag>
237 Control logging of client connections (0 for no logging, 1 for
238 logging of connects and disconnects, 2 and higher for logging of
239 all client commands). Default: 0.
240
241 <tag>mrtdump "<m/filename/"</tag>
242 Set MRTdump file name. This option must be specified to allow MRTdump feature.
243 Default: no dump file.
244
245 <tag>mrtdump protocols all|off|{ states, messages }</tag>
246 Set global defaults of MRTdump options. See <cf/mrtdump/ in the following section.
247 Default: off.
248
249 <tag>filter <m/name local variables/{ <m/commands/ }</tag> Define a filter. You can learn more about filters
250 in the following chapter.
251
252 <tag>function <m/name/ (<m/parameters/) <m/local variables/ { <m/commands/ }</tag> Define a function. You can learn more
253 about functions in the following chapter.
254
255 <tag>protocol rip|ospf|bgp|... <m/[name]/ { <m>protocol options</m> }</tag> Define a protocol
256 instance called <cf><m/name/</cf> (or with a name like "rip5" generated automatically if you don't specify any <cf><m/name/</cf>). You can learn more
257 about configuring protocols in their own chapters. You can run more than one instance of
258 most protocols (like RIP or BGP). By default, no instances are configured.
259
260 <tag>define <m/constant/ = (<m/expression/)|<m/number/|<m/IP address/</tag> Define a constant. You can use it later in every place
261 you could use a simple integer or an IP address.
262
263 <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.
264
265 <tag>listen bgp [address <m/address/] [port <m/port/] [v6only]</tag>
266 This option allows to specify address and port where BGP
267 protocol should listen. It is global option as listening
268 socket is common to all BGP instances. Default is to listen on
269 all addresses (0.0.0.0) and port 179. In IPv6 mode, option
270 <cf/v6only/ can be used to specify that BGP socket should
271 listen to IPv6 connections only. This is needed if you want to
272 run both bird and bird6 on the same port.
273
274 <tag>timeformat route|protocol|base|log "<m/format1/" [<m/limit> "<m/format2/"]</tag>
275 This option allows to specify a format of date/time used by
276 BIRD. The first argument specifies for which purpose such
277 format is used. <cf/route/ is a format used in 'show route'
278 command output, <cf/protocol/ is used in 'show protocols'
279 command output, <cf/base/ is used for other commands and
280 <cf/log/ is used in a log file.
281
282 "<m/format1/" is a format string using <i/strftime(3)/
283 notation (see <i/man strftime/ for details). <m/limit> and
284 "<m/format2/" allow to specify the second format string for
285 times in past deeper than <m/limit/ seconds. There are two
286 shorthands: <cf/iso long/ is a ISO 8601 date/time format
287 (YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss) that can be also specified using <cf/"%F
288 %T"/. <cf/iso short/ is a variant of ISO 8601 that uses just
289 the time format (hh:mm:ss) for near times (up to 20 hours in
290 the past) and the date format (YYYY-MM-DD) for far times. This
291 is a shorthand for <cf/"%T" 72000 "%F"/.
292
293 By default, BIRD uses an short, ad-hoc format for <cf/route/
294 and <cf/protocol/ times, and a <cf/iso long/ similar format
295 (DD-MM-YYYY hh:mm:ss) for <cf/base/ and <cf/log/. These
296 defaults are here for a compatibility with older versions
297 and might change in the future.
298
299 <tag>table <m/name/</tag> Create a new routing table. The default
300 routing table is created implicitly, other routing tables have
301 to be added by this command.
302
303 <tag>eval <m/expr/</tag> Evaluates given filter expression. It
304 is used by us for testing of filters.
305 </descrip>
306
307 <sect>Protocol options
308
309 <p>For each protocol instance, you can configure a bunch of options.
310 Some of them (those described in this section) are generic, some are
311 specific to the protocol (see sections talking about the protocols).
312
313 <p>Several options use a <cf><m/switch/</cf> argument. It can be either
314 <cf/on/, <cf/yes/ or a numeric expression with a non-zero value for the
315 option to be enabled or <cf/off/, <cf/no/ or a numeric expression evaluating
316 to zero to disable it. An empty <cf><m/switch/</cf> is equivalent to <cf/on/
317 ("silence means agreement").
318
319 <descrip>
320 <tag>preference <m/expr/</tag> Sets the preference of routes generated by this protocol. Default: protocol dependent.
321
322 <tag>disabled <m/switch/</tag> Disables the protocol. You can change the disable/enable status from the command
323 line interface without needing to touch the configuration. Disabled protocols are not activated. Default: protocol is enabled.
324
325 <tag>debug all|off|{ states, routes, filters, interfaces, events, packets }</tag>
326 Set protocol debugging options. If asked, each protocol is capable of
327 writing trace messages about its work to the log (with category
328 <cf/trace/). You can either request printing of <cf/all/ trace messages
329 or only of the types selected: <cf/states/ for protocol state changes
330 (protocol going up, down, starting, stopping etc.),
331 <cf/routes/ for routes exchanged with the routing table,
332 <cf/filters/ for details on route filtering,
333 <cf/interfaces/ for interface change events sent to the protocol,
334 <cf/events/ for events internal to the protocol and
335 <cf/packets/ for packets sent and received by the protocol. Default: off.
336
337 <tag>mrtdump all|off|{ states, messages }</tag>
338
339 Set protocol MRTdump flags. MRTdump is a standard binary
340 format for logging information from routing protocols and
341 daemons. These flags control what kind of information is
342 logged from the protocol to the MRTdump file (which must be
343 specified by global <cf/mrtdump/ option, see the previous
344 section). Although these flags are similar to flags of
345 <cf/debug/ option, their meaning is different and
346 protocol-specific. For BGP protocol, <cf/states/ logs BGP
347 state changes and <cf/messages/ logs received BGP messages.
348 Other protocols does not support MRTdump yet.
349
350 <tag>router id <m/IPv4 address/</tag> This option can be used
351 to override global router id for a given protocol. Default:
352 uses global router id.
353
354 <tag>import all | none | filter <m/name/ | filter { <m/filter commands/ } | where <m/filter expression/</tag>
355 Specify a filter to be used for filtering routes coming from the protocol to the routing table. <cf/all/ is shorthand for <cf/where true/ and <cf/none/ is shorthand for <cf/where false/. Default: <cf/all/.
356
357 <tag>export <m/filter/</tag> This is similar to the <cf>import</cf> keyword, except that it
358 works in the direction from the routing table to the protocol. Default: <cf/none/.
359
360 <tag>description "<m/text/"</tag> This is an optional
361 description of the protocol. It is displayed as a part of the
362 output of 'show route all' command.
363
364 <tag>table <m/name/</tag> Connect this protocol to a non-default routing table.
365 </descrip>
366
367 <p>There are several options that give sense only with certain protocols:
368
369 <descrip>
370 <tag><label id="dsc-iface">interface [-] [ "<m/mask/" ] [ <m/prefix/ ] [, ...] [ { <m/option/ ; [...] } ]</tag>
371
372 Specifies a set of interfaces on which the protocol is activated with
373 given interface-specific options. A set of interfaces specified by one
374 interface option is described using an interface pattern. The
375 interface pattern consists of a sequence of clauses (separated by
376 commas), each clause may contain a mask, a prefix, or both of them. An
377 interface matches the clause if its name matches the mask (if
378 specified) and its address matches the prefix (if specified). Mask is
379 specified as shell-like pattern.
380
381 An interface matches the pattern if it matches any of its
382 clauses. If the clause begins with <cf/-/, matching interfaces are
383 excluded. Patterns are parsed left-to-right, thus
384 <cf/interface "eth0", -"eth*", "*";/ means eth0 and all
385 non-ethernets.
386
387 An interface option can be used more times with different
388 interfaces-specific options, in that case for given interface
389 the first matching interface option is used.
390
391 This option is allowed in Direct, OSPF and RIP protocols,
392 but in OSPF protocol it is used in <cf/area/ subsection.
393
394 Default: none.
395
396 Examples:
397
398 <cf>interface "*" { type broadcast; };</cf> - start the protocol on all interfaces with
399 <cf>type broadcast</cf> option.
400
401 <cf>interface "eth1", "eth4", "eth5" { type pointopoint; };</cf> - start the protocol
402 on enumerated interfaces with <cf>type pointopoint</cf> option.
403
404 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol on all
405 interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not
406 from 192.168.1.0/24.
407
408 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol on all
409 interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not
410 from 192.168.1.0/24.
411
412 <cf>interface "eth*" 192.168.1.0/24;</cf> - start the protocol on all
413 ethernet interfaces that have address from 192.168.1.0/24.
414
415 <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>
416 Specifies a password that can be used by the protocol. Password option can
417 be used more times to specify more passwords. If more passwords are
418 specified, it is a protocol-dependent decision which one is really
419 used. Specifying passwords does not mean that authentication is
420 enabled, authentication can be enabled by separate, protocol-dependent
421 <cf/authentication/ option.
422
423 This option is allowed in OSPF and RIP protocols. BGP has also
424 <cf/password/ option, but it is slightly different and described
425 separately.
426
427 Default: none.
428 </descrip>
429
430 <p>Password option can contain section with some (not necessary all) password sub-options:
431
432 <descrip>
433 <tag>id <M>num</M></tag>
434 ID of the password, (0-255). If it's not used, BIRD will choose
435 ID based on an order of the password item in the interface. For
436 example, second password item in one interface will have default
437 ID 2. ID is used by some routing protocols to identify which
438 password was used to authenticate protocol packets.
439
440 <tag>generate from "<m/time/"</tag>
441 The start time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
442 The format of <cf><m/time/</cf> is <tt>dd-mm-yyyy HH:MM:SS</tt>.
443
444 <tag>generate to "<m/time/"</tag>
445 The last time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
446
447 <tag>accept from "<m/time/"</tag>
448 The start time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
449
450 <tag>accept to "<m/time/"</tag>
451 The last time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
452 </descrip>
453
454 <chapt>Remote control
455
456 <p>You can use the command-line client <file>birdc</file> to talk with
457 a running BIRD. Communication is done using a <file/bird.ctl/ UNIX domain
458 socket (unless changed with the <tt/-s/ option given to both the server and
459 the client). The commands can perform simple actions such as enabling/disabling
460 of protocols, telling BIRD to show various information, telling it to
461 show routing table filtered by filter, or asking BIRD to
462 reconfigure. Press <tt/?/ at any time to get online help. Option
463 <tt/-v/ can be passed to the client, to make it dump numeric return
464 codes along with the messages. You do not necessarily need to use <file/birdc/ to talk to BIRD, your
465 own applications could do that, too -- the format of communication between
466 BIRD and <file/birdc/ is stable (see the programmer's documentation).
467
468 Many commands have the <m/name/ of the protocol instance as an argument.
469 This argument can be omitted if there exists only a single instance.
470
471 <p>Here is a brief list of supported functions:
472
473 <descrip>
474 <tag>dump resources|sockets|interfaces|neighbors|attributes|routes|protocols</tag>
475 Dump contents of internal data structures to the debugging output.
476
477 <tag>show status</tag>
478 Show router status, that is BIRD version, uptime and time from last reconfiguration.
479
480 <tag>show protocols [all]</tag>
481 Show list of protocol instances along with tables they are connected to and protocol status, possibly giving verbose information, if <cf/all/ is specified.
482
483 <tag>show ospf interface [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
484 Show detailed information about OSPF interfaces.
485
486 <tag>show ospf neighbors [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
487 Show a list of OSPF neighbors and a state of adjacency to them.
488
489 <tag>show ospf state [<m/name/]</tag>
490 Show detailed information about OSPF areas based on a content of link-state database.
491 It shows network topology, aggregated networks and routers from other areas and external routes.
492
493 <tag>show ospf topology [<m/name/]</tag>
494 Show a topology of OSPF areas based on a content of link-state database.
495 It is just a stripped-down version of 'show ospf state'.
496
497 <tag>show static [<m/name/]</tag>
498 Show detailed information about static routes.
499
500 <tag>show interfaces [summary]</tag>
501 Show the list of interfaces. For each interface, print its type, state, MTU and addresses assigned.
502
503 <tag>show symbols</tag>
504 Show the list of symbols defined in the configuration (names of protocols, routing tables etc.).
505
506 <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>
507 Show contents of a routing table (by default of the main one),
508 that is routes, their metrics and (in case the <cf/all/ switch is given)
509 all their attributes.
510
511 <p>You can specify a <m/prefix/ if you want to print routes for a
512 specific network. If you use <cf>for <m/prefix or IP/</cf>, you'll get
513 the entry which will be used for forwarding of packets to the given
514 destination. By default, all routes for each network are printed with
515 the selected one at the top, unless <cf/primary/ is given in which case
516 only the selected route is shown.
517
518 <p>You can also ask for printing only routes processed and accepted by
519 a given filter (<cf>filter <m/name/</cf> or <cf>filter { <m/filter/ }
520 </cf> or matching a given condition (<cf>where <m/condition/</cf>).
521 The <cf/export/ and <cf/preexport/ switches ask for printing of entries
522 that are exported to the specified protocol. With <cf/preexport/, the
523 export filter of the protocol is skipped.
524
525 <p>You can also select just routes added by a specific protocol.
526 <cf>protocol <m/p/</cf>.
527
528 <p>The <cf/stats/ switch requests showing of route statistics (the
529 number of networks, number of routes before and after filtering). If
530 you use <cf/count/ instead, only the statistics will be printed.
531
532 <tag>configure [soft] ["<m/config file/"]</tag>
533 Reload configuration from a given file. BIRD will smoothly
534 switch itself to the new configuration, protocols are
535 reconfigured if possible, restarted otherwise. Changes in
536 filters usually lead to restart of affected protocols. If
537 <cf/soft/ option is used, changes in filters does not cause
538 BIRD to restart affected protocols, therefore already accepted
539 routes (according to old filters) would be still propagated,
540 but new routes would be processed according to the new
541 filters.
542
543 <tag>enable|disable|restart <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
544 Enable, disable or restart a given protocol instance, instances matching the <cf><m/pattern/</cf> or <cf/all/ instances.
545
546 <tag>reload [in|out] <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
547
548 Reload a given protocol instance, that means re-import routes
549 from the protocol instance and re-export preferred routes to
550 the instance. If <cf/in/ or <cf/out/ options are used, the
551 command is restricted to one direction (re-import or
552 re-export).
553
554 This command is useful if appropriate filters have changed but
555 the protocol instance was not restarted (or reloaded),
556 therefore it still propagates the old set of routes. For example
557 when <cf/configure soft/ command was used to change filters.
558
559 Re-export always succeeds, but re-import is protocol-dependent
560 and might fail (for example, if BGP neighbor does not support
561 route-refresh extension). In that case, re-export is also
562 skipped. Note that for the pipe protocol, both directions are
563 always reloaded together (<cf/in/ or <cf/out/ options are
564 ignored in that case).
565
566 <tag/down/
567 Shut BIRD down.
568
569 <tag>debug <m/protocol/|<m/pattern/|all all|off|{ states | routes | filters | events | packets }</tag>
570 Control protocol debugging.
571 </descrip>
572
573 <chapt>Filters
574
575 <sect>Introduction
576
577 <p>BIRD contains a simple programming language. (No, it can't yet read mail :-). There are
578 two objects in this language: filters and functions. Filters are interpreted by BIRD core when a route is
579 being passed between protocols and routing tables. The filter language contains control structures such
580 as 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>.
581
582 <p>Filter gets the route, looks at its attributes and
583 modifies some of them if it wishes. At the end, it decides whether to
584 pass the changed route through (using <cf/accept/) or whether to <cf/reject/ it. A simple filter looks
585 like this:
586
587 <code>
588 filter not_too_far
589 int var;
590 {
591 if defined( rip_metric ) then
592 var = rip_metric;
593 else {
594 var = 1;
595 rip_metric = 1;
596 }
597 if rip_metric &gt; 10 then
598 reject "RIP metric is too big";
599 else
600 accept "ok";
601 }
602 </code>
603
604 <p>As you can see, a filter has a header, a list of local variables, and a body. The header consists of
605 the <cf/filter/ keyword followed by a (unique) name of filter. The list of local variables consists of
606 <cf><M>type name</M>;</cf> pairs where each pair defines one local variable. The body consists of
607 <cf> { <M>statements</M> }</cf>. Each <m/statement/ is terminated by a <cf/;/. You can group
608 several statements to a single compound statement by using braces (<cf>{ <M>statements</M> }</cf>) which is useful if
609 you want to make a bigger block of code conditional.
610
611 <p>BIRD supports functions, so that you don't have to repeat the same blocks of code over and
612 over. Functions can have zero or more parameters and they can have local variables. Recursion is not allowed. Function definitions
613 look like this:
614
615 <code>
616 function name ()
617 int local_variable;
618 {
619 local_variable = 5;
620 }
621
622 function with_parameters (int parameter)
623 {
624 print parameter;
625 }
626 </code>
627
628 <p>Unlike in C, variables are declared after the <cf/function/ line, but before the first <cf/{/. You can't declare
629 variables in nested blocks. Functions are called like in C: <cf>name();
630 with_parameters(5);</cf>. Function may return values using the <cf>return <m/[expr]/</cf>
631 command. Returning a value exits from current function (this is similar to C).
632
633 <p>Filters are declared in a way similar to functions except they can't have explicit
634 parameters. They get a route table entry as an implicit parameter, it is also passed automatically
635 to any functions called. The filter must terminate with either
636 <cf/accept/ or <cf/reject/ statement. If there's a runtime error in filter, the route
637 is rejected.
638
639 <p>A nice trick to debug filters is to use <cf>show route filter
640 <m/name/</cf> from the command line client. An example session might look
641 like:
642
643 <code>
644 pavel@bug:~/bird$ ./birdc -s bird.ctl
645 BIRD 0.0.0 ready.
646 bird> show route
647 10.0.0.0/8 dev eth0 [direct1 23:21] (240)
648 195.113.30.2/32 dev tunl1 [direct1 23:21] (240)
649 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
650 bird> show route ?
651 show route [<prefix>] [table <t>] [filter <f>] [all] [primary]...
652 bird> show route filter { if 127.0.0.5 &tilde; net then accept; }
653 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
654 bird>
655 </code>
656
657 <sect>Data types
658
659 <p>Each variable and each value has certain type. Booleans, integers and enums are
660 incompatible with each other (that is to prevent you from shooting in the foot).
661
662 <descrip>
663 <tag/bool/ This is a boolean type, it can have only two values, <cf/true/ and
664 <cf/false/. Boolean is the only type you can use in <cf/if/
665 statements.
666
667 <tag/int/ This is a general integer type, you can expect it to store signed values from -2000000000
668 to +2000000000. Overflows are not checked. You can use <cf/0x1234/ syntax to write hexadecimal values.
669
670 <tag/pair/ This is a pair of two short integers. Each component can have values from 0 to
671 65535. Literals of this type are written as <cf/(1234,5678)/. The same syntax can also be
672 used to construct a pair from two arbitrary integer expressions (for example <cf/(1+2,a)/).
673
674 <tag/quad/ This is a dotted quad of numbers used to represent
675 router IDs (and others). Each component can have a value
676 from 0 to 255. Literals of this type are written like IPv4
677 addresses.
678
679 <tag/string/ This is a string of characters. There are no ways to modify strings in
680 filters. You can pass them between functions, assign them to variables of type <cf/string/, print
681 such variables, but you can't concatenate two strings. String literals
682 are written as <cf/"This is a string constant"/.
683
684 <tag/ip/ This type can hold a single IP address. Depending on the compile-time configuration of BIRD you are using, it
685 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>
686 on values of type ip. It masks out all but first <cf><M>num</M></cf> bits from the IP
687 address. So <cf/1.2.3.4.mask(8) = 1.0.0.0/ is true.
688
689 <tag/prefix/ This type can hold a network prefix consisting of IP address and prefix length. Prefix literals are written as
690 <cf><M>ipaddress</M>/<M>pxlen</M></cf>, or
691 <cf><m>ipaddress</m>/<m>netmask</m></cf>. There are two special
692 operators on prefixes:
693 <cf/.ip/ which extracts the IP address from the pair, and <cf/.len/, which separates prefix
694 length from the pair. So <cf>1.2.0.0/16.pxlen = 16</cf> is true.
695
696 <tag/int|pair|quad|ip|prefix|enum set/
697 Filters recognize four types of sets. Sets are similar to strings: you can pass them around
698 but you can't modify them. Literals of type <cf>int set</cf> look like <cf>
699 [ 1, 2, 5..7 ]</cf>. As you can see, both simple values and ranges are permitted in
700 sets.
701
702 Sets of prefixes are special: their literals does not allow ranges, but allows
703 prefix patterns that are written as <cf><M>ipaddress</M>/<M>pxlen</M>{<M>low</M>,<M>high</M>}</cf>.
704 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> iff
705 the first <cf>min(len1, len2)</cf> bits of <cf/ip1/ and <cf/ip2/ are identical and <cf>len1 &lt;= ip1 &lt;= len2</cf>.
706 A valid prefix pattern has to satisfy <cf>low &lt;= high</cf>, but <cf/pxlen/ is not constrained by <cf/low/
707 or <cf/high/. Obviously, a prefix matches a prefix set literal iff it matches any prefix pattern in the
708 prefix set literal.
709
710 There are also two shorthands for prefix patterns: <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/+</cf> is a shorthand for
711 <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),
712 that means network prefix <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/</cf> and all its subnets. <cf><m>address</m>/<m/len/-</cf>
713 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>
714 and all its supernets (network prefixes that contain it).
715
716 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
717 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
718 <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
719 IP address) whose prefix length is 20 to 24, <cf>[ 1.2.3.4/32- ]</cf> matches any prefix that contains IP address
720 <cf>1.2.3.4</cf>. <cf>1.2.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8{15,17} ]</cf> is true,
721 but <cf>1.0.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8- ]</cf> is false.
722
723 Cisco-style patterns like <cf>10.0.0.0/8 ge 16 le 24</cf> can be expressed
724 in BIRD as <cf>10.0.0.0/8{16,24}</cf>, <cf>192.168.0.0/16 le 24</cf> as
725 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{16,24}</cf> and <cf>192.168.0.0/16 ge 24</cf> as
726 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{24,32}</cf>.
727
728 <tag/enum/
729 Enumeration types are fixed sets of possibilities. You can't define your own
730 variables of such type, but some route attributes are of enumeration
731 type. Enumeration types are incompatible with each other.
732
733 <tag/bgppath/
734 BGP path is a list of autonomous system numbers. You can't write literals of this type.
735 There are several special operators on bgppaths:
736
737 <cf><m/P/.first</cf> returns the first ASN (the neighbor ASN) in path <m/P/.
738
739 <cf><m/P/.last</cf> returns the last ASN (the source ASN) in path <m/P/.
740
741 Both <cf/first/ and <cf/last/ return zero if there is no appropriate ASN,
742 for example if the path contains an AS set element as the first (or the last) part.
743
744 <cf><m/P/.len</cf> returns the length of path <m/P/.
745
746 <cf>prepend(<m/P/,<m/A/)</cf> prepends ASN <m/A/ to path <m/P/ and returns the result.
747 Statement <cf><m/P/ = prepend(<m/P/, <m/A/);</cf> can be shortened to
748 <cf><m/P/.prepend(<m/A/);</cf> if <m/P/ is appropriate route attribute
749 (for example <cf/bgp_path/).
750
751 <tag/bgpmask/
752 BGP masks are patterns used for BGP path matching
753 (using <cf>path &tilde; [= 2 3 5 * =]</cf> syntax). The masks
754 resemble wildcard patterns as used by UNIX shells. Autonomous
755 system numbers match themselves, <cf/*/ matches any (even empty)
756 sequence of arbitrary AS numbers and <cf/?/ matches one arbitrary AS number.
757 For example, if <cf>bgp_path</cf> is 4 3 2 1, then:
758 <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 3 * =]</tt> is true, but
759 <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 5 * =]</tt> is false.
760 BGP mask expressions can also contain integer expressions enclosed in parenthesis
761 and integer variables, for example <tt>[= * 4 (1+2) a =]</tt>.
762 There is also old syntax that uses / .. / instead of [= .. =] and ? instead of *.
763
764 <tag/clist/
765 Clist is similar to a set, except that unlike other sets, it
766 can be modified. The type is used for community list (a set
767 of pairs) and for cluster list (a set of quads). There exist
768 no literals of this type. There are two special operators on
769 clists:
770
771 <cf>add(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> adds pair (or quad) <m/P/ to clist <m/C/ and returns the result.
772
773 <cf>delete(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> deletes pair (or quad) <m/P/ from clist <m/C/ and returns the result.
774
775 Statement <cf><m/C/ = add(<m/C/, <m/P/);</cf> can be shortened to
776 <cf><m/C/.add(<m/P/);</cf> if <m/C/ is appropriate route attribute
777 (for example <cf/bgp_community/). Similarly for <cf/delete/.
778
779 </descrip>
780
781 <sect>Operators
782
783 <p>The filter language supports common integer operators <cf>(+,-,*,/)</cf>, parentheses <cf/(a*(b+c))/, comparison
784 <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;/).
785 Special operators include <cf/&tilde;/ for "is element of a set" operation - it can be
786 used on element and set of elements of the same type (returning true if element is contained in the given set), or
787 on 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
788 prefix 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 pair and clist (returning true if the pair (or quad) is element of the clist).
789
790
791 <sect>Control structures
792
793 <p>Filters support two control structures: conditions and case switches.
794
795 <p>Syntax of a condition is: <cf>if
796 <M>boolean expression</M> then <M>command1</M>; else <M>command2</M>;</cf> and you can use <cf>{
797 <M>command_1</M>; <M>command_2</M>; <M>...</M> }</cf> instead of either command. The <cf>else</cf>
798 clause 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.
799
800 <p>The <cf>case</cf> is similar to case from Pascal. Syntax is <cf>case <m/expr/ { else |
801 <m/num_or_prefix [ .. num_or_prefix]/: <m/statement/ ; [ ... ] }</cf>. The expression after
802 <cf>case</cf> can be of any type which can be on the left side of the &tilde; operator and anything that could
803 be a member of a set is allowed before <cf/:/. Multiple commands are allowed without <cf/{}/ grouping.
804 If <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.
805
806 <p>Here is example that uses <cf/if/ and <cf/case/ structures:
807
808 <code>
809 case arg1 {
810 2: print "two"; print "I can do more commands without {}";
811 3 .. 5: print "three to five";
812 else: print "something else";
813 }
814
815 if 1234 = i then printn "."; else {
816 print "not 1234";
817 print "You need {} around multiple commands";
818 }
819 </code>
820
821 <sect>Route attributes
822
823 <p>A filter is implicitly passed a route, and it can access its
824 attributes just like it accesses variables. Attempts to access undefined
825 attribute result in a runtime error; you can check if an attribute is
826 defined by using the <cf>defined( <m>attribute</m> )</cf> operator.
827 One notable exception to this rule are attributes of clist type, where
828 undefined value is regarded as empty clist for most purposes.
829
830 <descrip>
831 <tag><m/prefix/ net</tag>
832 Network the route is talking about. Read-only. (See the chapter about routing tables.)
833
834 <tag><m/enum/ scope</tag>
835 The scope of the route. Possible values: <cf/SCOPE_HOST/ for
836 routes local to this host, <cf/SCOPE_LINK/ for those specific
837 for a physical link, <cf/SCOPE_SITE/ and
838 <cf/SCOPE_ORGANIZATION/ for private routes and
839 <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/ for globally visible routes. This
840 attribute is not interpreted by BIRD and can be used to mark
841 routes in filters. The default value for new routes is
842 <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/.
843
844 <tag><m/int/ preference</tag>
845 Preference of the route. Valid values are 0-65535. (See the chapter about routing tables.)
846
847 <tag><m/ip/ from</tag>
848 The router which the route has originated from. Read-only.
849
850 <tag><m/ip/ gw</tag>
851 Next hop packets routed using this route should be forwarded to.
852
853 <tag><m/string/ proto</tag>
854 The name of the protocol which the route has been imported from. Read-only.
855
856 <tag><m/enum/ source</tag>
857 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_EXT/, <cf/RTS_BGP/, <cf/RTS_PIPE/.
858
859 <tag><m/enum/ cast</tag>
860
861 Route type (Currently <cf/RTC_UNICAST/ for normal routes,
862 <cf/RTC_BROADCAST/, <cf/RTC_MULTICAST/, <cf/RTC_ANYCAST/ will
863 be used in the future for broadcast, multicast and anycast
864 routes). Read-only.
865
866 <tag><m/enum/ dest</tag>
867 Type of destination the packets should be sent to (<cf/RTD_ROUTER/ for forwarding to a neighboring router, <cf/RTD_NETWORK/ for routing to a directly-connected network, <cf/RTD_BLACKHOLE/ for packets to be silently discarded, <cf/RTD_UNREACHABLE/, <cf/RTD_PROHIBIT/ for packets that should be returned with ICMP host unreachable / ICMP administratively prohibited messages). Read-only.
868 </descrip>
869
870 <p>There also exist some protocol-specific attributes which are described in the corresponding protocol sections.
871
872 <sect>Other statements
873
874 <p>The following statements are available:
875
876 <descrip>
877 <tag><m/variable/ = <m/expr/</tag> Set variable to a given value.
878
879 <tag>accept|reject [ <m/expr/ ]</tag> Accept or reject the route, possibly printing <cf><m>expr</m></cf>.
880
881 <tag>return <m/expr/</tag> Return <cf><m>expr</m></cf> from the current function, the function ends at this point.
882
883 <tag>print|printn <m/expr/ [<m/, expr.../]</tag>
884 Prints given expressions; useful mainly while debugging
885 filters. The <cf/printn/ variant does not terminate the line.
886
887 <tag>quitbird</tag>
888 Terminates BIRD. Useful when debugging the filter interpreter.
889 </descrip>
890
891 <chapt>Protocols
892
893 <sect>BGP
894
895 <p>The Border Gateway Protocol is the routing protocol used for backbone
896 level routing in the today's Internet. Contrary to the other protocols, its convergence
897 doesn't rely on all routers following the same rules for route selection,
898 making it possible to implement any routing policy at any router in the
899 network, the only restriction being that if a router advertises a route,
900 it must accept and forward packets according to it.
901
902 <p>BGP works in terms of autonomous systems (often abbreviated as AS). Each
903 AS is a part of the network with common management and common routing policy. It is identified by a unique 16-bit number.
904 Routers within each AS usually communicate with each other using either a interior routing
905 protocol (such as OSPF or RIP) or an interior variant of BGP (called iBGP).
906 Boundary routers at the border of the AS communicate with their peers
907 in the neighboring AS'es via exterior BGP (eBGP).
908
909 <p>Each BGP router sends to its neighbors updates of the parts of its
910 routing table it wishes to export along with complete path information
911 (a list of AS'es the packet will travel through if it uses the particular
912 route) in order to avoid routing loops.
913
914 <p>BIRD supports all requirements of the BGP4 standard as defined in
915 RFC 4271<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4271.txt">
916 It also supports the community attributes
917 (RFC 1997<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1997.txt">),
918 capability negotiation
919 (RFC 3392<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3392.txt">),
920 MD5 password authentication
921 (RFC 2385<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2385.txt">),
922 route reflectors
923 (RFC 4456<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4456.txt">),
924 multiprotocol extensions
925 (RFC 4760<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4760.txt">),
926 and 4B AS numbers
927 (RFC 4893<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4893.txt">).
928
929
930 For IPv6, it uses the standard multiprotocol extensions defined in
931 RFC 2283<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2283.txt">
932 including changes described in the
933 latest draft<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-idr-bgp4-multiprotocol-v2-05.txt">
934 and applied to IPv6 according to
935 RFC 2545<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2545.txt">.
936
937 <sect1>Route selection rules
938
939 <p>BGP doesn't have any simple metric, so the rules for selection of an optimal
940 route among multiple BGP routes with the same preference are a bit more complex
941 and they are implemented according to the following algorithm. It starts the first
942 rule, if there are more "best" routes, then it uses the second rule to choose
943 among them and so on.
944
945 <itemize>
946 <item>Prefer route with the highest Local Preference attribute.
947 <item>Prefer route with the shortest AS path.
948 <item>Prefer IGP origin over EGP and EGP over incomplete.
949 <item>Prefer the lowest value of the Multiple Exit Discriminator.
950 <item>Prefer internal routes over external ones.
951 <item>Prefer the route with the lowest value of router ID of the
952 advertising router.
953 </itemize>
954
955 <sect1>Configuration
956
957 <p>Each instance of the BGP corresponds to one neighboring router.
958 This allows to set routing policy and all the other parameters differently
959 for each neighbor using the following configuration parameters:
960
961 <descrip>
962 <tag>local as <m/number/</tag> Define which AS we are part of. (Note that
963 contrary to other IP routers, BIRD is able to act as a router located
964 in multiple AS'es simultaneously, but in such cases you need to tweak
965 the BGP paths manually in the filters to get consistent behavior.)
966 This parameter is mandatory.
967
968 <tag>neighbor <m/ip/ as <m/number/</tag> Define neighboring router
969 this instance will be talking to and what AS it's located in. Unless
970 you use the <cf/multihop/ clause, it must be directly connected to one
971 of your router's interfaces. In case the neighbor is in the same AS
972 as we are, we automatically switch to iBGP. This parameter is mandatory.
973
974 <tag>multihop <m/number/ via <m/ip/</tag> Configure multihop BGP to a
975 neighbor which is connected at most <m/number/ hops far and to which
976 we should route via our direct neighbor with address <m/ip/.
977 Default: switched off.
978
979 <tag>next hop self</tag> Avoid calculation of the Next Hop
980 attribute and always advertise our own source address (see
981 below) as a next hop. This needs to be used only occasionally
982 to circumvent misconfigurations of other routers.
983 Default: disabled.
984
985 <tag>missing lladdr self|drop|ignore</tag>Next Hop attribute
986 in BGP-IPv6 sometimes contains just the global IPv6 address,
987 but sometimes it has to contain both global and link-local
988 IPv6 addresses. This option specifies what to do if BIRD have
989 to send both addresses but does not know link-local address.
990 This situation might happen when routes from other protocols
991 are exported to BGP, or when improper updates are received
992 from BGP peers. <cf/self/ means that BIRD advertises its own
993 local address instead. <cf/drop/ means that BIRD skips that
994 prefixes and logs error. <cf/ignore/ means that BIRD ignores
995 the problem and sends just the global address (and therefore
996 forms improper BGP update). Default: <cf/self/, unless BIRD
997 is configured as a route server (option <cf/rs client/), in
998 that case default is <cf/drop/, because route servers usually
999 does not forward packets ifselves.
1000
1001 <tag>source address <m/ip/</tag> Define local address we should use
1002 for next hop calculation. Default: the address of the local end
1003 of the interface our neighbor is connected to.
1004
1005 <tag>password <m/string/</tag> Use this password for MD5 authentication
1006 of BGP sessions. Default: no authentication. Password has to be set by
1007 external utility (e.g. setkey(8)) on BSD systems.
1008
1009 <tag>passive <m/switch/</tag> Standard BGP behavior is both
1010 initiating outgoing connections and accepting incoming
1011 connections. In passive mode, outgoing connections are not
1012 initiated. Default: off.
1013
1014 <tag>rr client</tag> Be a route reflector and treat the neighbor as
1015 a route reflection client. Default: disabled.
1016
1017 <tag>rr cluster id <m/IPv4 address/</tag> Route reflectors use cluster id
1018 to avoid route reflection loops. When there is one route reflector in a cluster
1019 it usually uses its router id as a cluster id, but when there are more route
1020 reflectors in a cluster, these need to be configured (using this option) to
1021 use a common cluster id. Clients in a cluster need not know their cluster
1022 id and this option is not allowed for them. Default: the same as router id.
1023
1024 <tag>rs client</tag> Be a route server and treat the neighbor
1025 as a route server client. A route server is used as a
1026 replacement for full mesh EBGP routing in Internet exchange
1027 points in a similar way to route reflectors used in IBGP routing.
1028 BIRD does not implement obsoleted RFC 1863, but uses ad-hoc implementation,
1029 which behaves like plain EBGP but reduces modifications to advertised route
1030 attributes to be transparent (for example does not prepend its AS number to
1031 AS PATH attribute and keep MED attribute). Default: disabled.
1032
1033 <tag>enable route refresh <m/switch/</tag> When BGP speaker
1034 changes its import filter, it has to re-examine all routes
1035 received from its neighbor against the new filter. As these
1036 routes might not be available, there is a BGP protocol
1037 extension Route Refresh (specified in RFC 2918) that allows
1038 BGP speaker to request re-advertisement of all routes from its
1039 neighbor. This option specifies whether BIRD advertises this
1040 capability and accepts such requests. Even when disabled, BIRD
1041 can send route refresh requests. Default: on.
1042
1043 <tag>interpret communities <m/switch/</tag> RFC 1997 demands
1044 that BGP speaker should process well-known communities like
1045 no-export (65535, 65281) or no-advertise (65535, 65282). For
1046 example, received route carrying a no-adverise community
1047 should not be advertised to any of its neighbors. If this
1048 option is enabled (which is by default), BIRD has such
1049 behavior automatically (it is evaluated when a route is
1050 exported to the BGP protocol just before the export filter).
1051 Otherwise, this integrated processing of well-known
1052 communities is disabled. In that case, similar behavior can be
1053 implemented in the export filter. Default: on.
1054
1055 <tag>enable as4 <m/switch/</tag> BGP protocol was designed to use 2B AS numbers
1056 and was extended later to allow 4B AS number. BIRD supports 4B AS extension,
1057 but by disabling this option it can be persuaded not to advertise it and
1058 to maintain old-style sessions with its neighbors. This might be useful for
1059 circumventing bugs in neighbor's implementation of 4B AS extension.
1060 Even when disabled (off), BIRD behaves internally as AS4-aware BGP router.
1061 Default: on.
1062
1063 <tag>capabilities <m/switch/</tag> Use capability advertisement
1064 to advertise optional capabilities. This is standard behavior
1065 for newer BGP implementations, but there might be some older
1066 BGP implementations that reject such connection attempts.
1067 When disabled (off), features that request it (4B AS support)
1068 are also disabled. Default: on, with automatic fallback to
1069 off when received capability-related error.
1070
1071 <tag>advertise ipv4 <m/switch/</tag> Advertise IPv4 multiprotocol capability.
1072 This is not a correct behavior according to the strict interpretation
1073 of RFC 4760, but it is widespread and required by some BGP
1074 implementations (Cisco and Quagga). This option is relevant
1075 to IPv4 mode with enabled capability advertisement only. Default: on.
1076
1077 <tag>route limit <m/number/</tag> The maximal number of routes
1078 that may be imported from the protocol. If the route limit is
1079 exceeded, the connection is closed with error. Default: no limit.
1080
1081 <tag>disable after error <m/switch/</tag> When an error is encountered (either
1082 locally or by the other side), disable the instance automatically
1083 and wait for an administrator to fix the problem manually. Default: off.
1084
1085 <tag>hold time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds to wait for a Keepalive
1086 message from the other side before considering the connection stale.
1087 Default: depends on agreement with the neighboring router, we prefer
1088 240 seconds if the other side is willing to accept it.
1089
1090 <tag>startup hold time <m/number/</tag> Value of the hold timer used
1091 before the routers have a chance to exchange open messages and agree
1092 on the real value. Default: 240 seconds.
1093
1094 <tag>keepalive time <m/number/</tag> Delay in seconds between sending
1095 of two consecutive Keepalive messages. Default: One third of the hold time.
1096
1097 <tag>connect retry time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds to wait before
1098 retrying a failed attempt to connect. Default: 120 seconds.
1099
1100 <tag>start delay time <m/number/</tag> Delay in seconds between protocol
1101 startup and the first attempt to connect. Default: 5 seconds.
1102
1103 <tag>error wait time <m/number/,<m/number/</tag> Minimum and maximum delay in seconds between a protocol
1104 failure (either local or reported by the peer) and automatic restart.
1105 Doesn't apply when <cf/disable after error/ is configured. If consecutive
1106 errors happen, the delay is increased exponentially until it reaches the maximum. Default: 60, 300.
1107
1108 <tag>error forget time <m/number/</tag> Maximum time in seconds between two protocol
1109 failures to treat them as a error sequence which makes the <cf/error wait time/
1110 increase exponentially. Default: 300 seconds.
1111
1112 <tag>path metric <m/switch/</tag> Enable comparison of path lengths
1113 when deciding which BGP route is the best one. Default: on.
1114
1115 <tag>prefer older <m/switch/</tag> Standard route selection algorithm
1116 breaks ties by comparing router IDs. This changes the behavior
1117 to prefer older routes (when both are external and from different
1118 peer). For details, see RFC 5004. Default: off.
1119
1120 <tag>default bgp_med <m/number/</tag> Value of the Multiple Exit
1121 Discriminator to be used during route selection when the MED attribute
1122 is missing. Default: 0.
1123
1124 <tag>default bgp_local_pref <m/number/</tag> A default value
1125 for the Local Preference attribute. It is used when a new
1126 Local Preference attribute is attached to a route by the BGP
1127 protocol itself (for example, if a route is received through
1128 eBGP and therefore does not have such attribute). Default: 100
1129 (0 in pre-1.2.0 versions of BIRD).
1130 </descrip>
1131
1132 <sect1>Attributes
1133
1134 <p>BGP defines several route attributes. Some of them (those marked with `<tt/I/' in the
1135 table below) are available on internal BGP connections only, some of them (marked
1136 with `<tt/O/') are optional.
1137
1138 <descrip>
1139 <tag>bgppath <cf/bgp_path/</tag> Sequence of AS numbers describing the AS path
1140 the packet will travel through when forwarded according to the particular route. In case of
1141 internal BGP it doesn't contain the number of the local AS.
1142
1143 <tag>int <cf/bgp_local_pref/ [I]</tag> Local preference value used for
1144 selection among multiple BGP routes (see the selection rules above). It's
1145 used as an additional metric which is propagated through the whole local AS.
1146
1147 <tag>int <cf/bgp_med/ [O]</tag> The Multiple Exit Discriminator of the route
1148 is an optional attribute which is used on on external (inter-AS) links to
1149 convey to an adjacent AS the optimal entry point into the local AS.
1150 The received attribute may be also propagated over internal BGP links
1151 (and this is default behavior). The attribute value is zeroed when a route
1152 is exported from a routing table to a BGP instance to ensure that the attribute
1153 received from a neighboring AS is not propagated to other neighboring ASes.
1154 A new value might be set in the export filter of a BGP instance.
1155 See RFC 4451<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc4451.txt">
1156 for further discussion of BGP MED attribute.
1157
1158 <tag>enum <cf/bgp_origin/</tag> Origin of the route: either <cf/ORIGIN_IGP/
1159 if the route has originated in an interior routing protocol or
1160 <cf/ORIGIN_EGP/ if it's been imported from the <tt>EGP</tt> protocol
1161 (nowadays it seems to be obsolete) or <cf/ORIGIN_INCOMPLETE/ if the origin
1162 is unknown.
1163
1164 <tag>ip <cf/bgp_next_hop/</tag> Next hop to be used for forwarding of packets
1165 to this destination. On internal BGP connections, it's an address of the
1166 originating router if it's inside the local AS or a boundary router the
1167 packet will leave the AS through if it's an exterior route, so each BGP
1168 speaker within the AS has a chance to use the shortest interior path
1169 possible to this point.
1170
1171 <tag>void <cf/bgp_atomic_aggr/ [O]</tag> This is an optional attribute
1172 which carries no value, but the sole presence of which indicates that the route
1173 has been aggregated from multiple routes by some router on the path from
1174 the originator.
1175
1176 <!-- we don't handle aggregators right since they are of a very obscure type
1177 <tag>bgp_aggregator</tag>
1178 -->
1179 <tag>clist <cf/bgp_community/ [O]</tag> List of community values associated
1180 with the route. Each such value is a pair (represented as a <cf/pair/ data
1181 type inside the filters) of 16-bit integers, the first of them containing the number of the AS which defines
1182 the community and the second one being a per-AS identifier. There are lots
1183 of uses of the community mechanism, but generally they are used to carry
1184 policy information like "don't export to USA peers". As each AS can define
1185 its own routing policy, it also has a complete freedom about which community
1186 attributes it defines and what will their semantics be.
1187
1188 <tag>quad <cf/bgp_originator_id/ [O]</tag> This attribute is created by the
1189 route reflector when reflecting the route and contains the router ID of the
1190 originator of the route in the local AS.
1191
1192 <tag>clist <cf/bgp_cluster_list/ [O]</tag> This attribute contains a list
1193 of cluster IDs of route reflectors. Each route reflector prepends its
1194 cluster ID when reflecting the route.
1195 </descrip>
1196
1197 <sect1>Example
1198
1199 <p><code>
1200 protocol bgp {
1201 local as 65000; # Use a private AS number
1202 neighbor 62.168.0.130 as 5588; # Our neighbor ...
1203 multihop 20 via 62.168.0.13; # ... which is connected indirectly
1204 export filter { # We use non-trivial export rules
1205 if source = RTS_STATIC then { # Export only static routes
1206 # Assign our community
1207 bgp_community.add((65000,5678));
1208 # Artificially increase path length
1209 # by advertising local AS number twice
1210 if bgp_path ~ [= 65000 =] then
1211 bgp_path.prepend(65000);
1212 accept;
1213 }
1214 reject;
1215 };
1216 import all;
1217 source address 62.168.0.1; # Use a non-standard source address
1218 }
1219 </code>
1220
1221 <sect>Device
1222
1223 <p>The Device protocol is not a real routing protocol. It doesn't generate
1224 any routes and it only serves as a module for getting information about network
1225 interfaces from the kernel.
1226
1227 <p>Except for very unusual circumstances, you probably should include
1228 this protocol in the configuration since almost all other protocols
1229 require network interfaces to be defined for them to work with.
1230
1231 <sect1>Configuration
1232
1233 <p><descrip>
1234 <tag>scan time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds between two scans
1235 of the network interface list. On systems where we are notified about
1236 interface status changes asynchronously (such as newer versions of
1237 Linux), we need to scan the list only in order to avoid confusion by lost
1238 notification messages, so the default time is set to a large value.
1239
1240 <tag>primary [ "<m/mask/" ] <m/prefix/</tag>
1241 If a network interface has more than one network address,
1242 BIRD has to choose one of them as a primary one, because some
1243 routing protocols (for example OSPFv2) suppose there is only
1244 one network address per interface. By default, BIRD chooses
1245 the lexicographically smallest address as the primary one.
1246
1247 This option allows to specify which network address should be
1248 chosen as a primary one. Network addresses that match
1249 <m/prefix/ are preferred to non-matching addresses. If more
1250 <cf/primary/ options are used, the first one has the highest
1251 preference. If "<m/mask/" is specified, then such
1252 <cf/primary/ option is relevant only to matching network
1253 interfaces.
1254
1255 In all cases, an address marked by operating system as
1256 secondary cannot be chosen as the primary one.
1257 </descrip>
1258
1259 <p>As the Device protocol doesn't generate any routes, it cannot have
1260 any attributes. Example configuration looks like this:
1261
1262 <p><code>
1263 protocol device {
1264 scan time 10; # Scan the interfaces often
1265 primary "eth0" 192.168.1.1;
1266 primary 192.168.0.0/16;
1267 }
1268 </code>
1269
1270 <sect>Direct
1271
1272 <p>The Direct protocol is a simple generator of device routes for all the
1273 directly connected networks according to the list of interfaces provided
1274 by the kernel via the Device protocol.
1275
1276 <p>It's highly recommended to include this protocol in your configuration
1277 unless you want to use BIRD as a route server or a route reflector, that is
1278 on a machine which doesn't forward packets itself and only participates in
1279 distribution of routing information.
1280
1281 <p>The only configurable thing about direct is what interfaces it watches:
1282
1283 <p><descrip>
1284 <tag>interface <m/pattern [, ...]/</tag> By default, the Direct
1285 protocol will generate device routes for all the interfaces
1286 available. If you want to restrict it to some subset of interfaces
1287 (for example if you're using multiple routing tables for policy
1288 routing and some of the policy domains don't contain all interfaces),
1289 just use this clause.
1290 </descrip>
1291
1292 <p>Direct device routes don't contain any specific attributes.
1293
1294 <p>Example config might look like this:
1295
1296 <p><code>
1297 protocol direct {
1298 interface "-arc*", "*"; # Exclude the ARCnets
1299 }
1300 </code>
1301
1302 <sect>Kernel
1303
1304 <p>The Kernel protocol is not a real routing protocol. Instead of communicating
1305 the with other routers in the network, it performs synchronization of BIRD's routing
1306 tables with the OS kernel. Basically, it sends all routing table updates to the kernel
1307 and from time to time it scans the kernel tables to see whether some routes have
1308 disappeared (for example due to unnoticed up/down transition of an interface)
1309 or whether an `alien' route has been added by someone else (depending on the
1310 <cf/learn/ switch, such routes are either deleted or accepted to our
1311 table).
1312
1313 <p>If your OS supports only a single routing table, you can configure only one
1314 instance of the Kernel protocol. If it supports multiple tables (in order to
1315 allow policy routing; such an OS is for example Linux 2.2), you can run as many instances as you want, but each of
1316 them must be connected to a different BIRD routing table and to a different
1317 kernel table.
1318
1319 <sect1>Configuration
1320
1321 <p><descrip>
1322 <tag>persist <m/switch/</tag> Tell BIRD to leave all its routes in the
1323 routing tables when it exits (instead of cleaning them up).
1324 <tag>scan time <m/number/</tag> Time in seconds between two consecutive scans of the
1325 kernel routing table.
1326 <tag>learn <m/switch/</tag> Enable learning of routes added to the kernel
1327 routing tables by other routing daemons or by the system administrator.
1328 This is possible only on systems which support identification of route
1329 authorship.
1330 <tag>kernel table <m/number/</tag> Select which kernel table should
1331 this particular instance of the Kernel protocol work with. Available
1332 only on systems supporting multiple routing tables.
1333 </descrip>
1334
1335 <p>The Kernel protocol doesn't define any route attributes.
1336 <p>A simple configuration can look this way:
1337
1338 <p><code>
1339 protocol kernel {
1340 import all;
1341 export all;
1342 }
1343 </code>
1344
1345 <p>Or for a system with two routing tables:
1346
1347 <p><code>
1348 protocol kernel { # Primary routing table
1349 learn; # Learn alien routes from the kernel
1350 persist; # Don't remove routes on bird shutdown
1351 scan time 10; # Scan kernel routing table every 10 seconds
1352 import all;
1353 export all;
1354 }
1355
1356 protocol kernel { # Secondary routing table
1357 table auxtable;
1358 kernel table 100;
1359 export all;
1360 }
1361 </code>
1362
1363 <sect>OSPF
1364
1365 <sect1>Introduction
1366
1367 <p>Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a quite complex interior gateway
1368 protocol. The current IPv4 version (OSPFv2) is defined in RFC
1369 2328<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2328.txt"> and
1370 the current IPv6 version (OSPFv3) is defined in RFC 5340<htmlurl
1371 url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc5340.txt"> It's a link state
1372 (a.k.a. shortest path first) protocol -- each router maintains a
1373 database describing the autonomous system's topology. Each participating
1374 router has an identical copy of the database and all routers run the
1375 same algorithm calculating a shortest path tree with themselves as a
1376 root. OSPF chooses the least cost path as the best path.
1377
1378 <p>In OSPF, the autonomous system can be split to several areas in order
1379 to reduce the amount of resources consumed for exchanging the routing
1380 information and to protect the other areas from incorrect routing data.
1381 Topology of the area is hidden to the rest of the autonomous system.
1382
1383 <p>Another very important feature of OSPF is that
1384 it can keep routing information from other protocols (like Static or BGP)
1385 in its link state database as external routes. Each external route can
1386 be tagged by the advertising router, making it possible to pass additional
1387 information between routers on the boundary of the autonomous system.
1388
1389 <p>OSPF quickly detects topological changes in the autonomous system (such
1390 as router interface failures) and calculates new loop-free routes after a short
1391 period of convergence. Only a minimal amount of
1392 routing traffic is involved.
1393
1394 <p>Each router participating in OSPF routing periodically sends Hello messages
1395 to all its interfaces. This allows neighbors to be discovered dynamically.
1396 Then the neighbors exchange theirs parts of the link state database and keep it
1397 identical by flooding updates. The flooding process is reliable and ensures
1398 that each router detects all changes.
1399
1400 <sect1>Configuration
1401
1402 <p>In the main part of configuration, there can be multiple definitions of
1403 OSPF area witch different id included. These definitions includes many other
1404 switches and multiple definitions of interfaces. Definition of interface
1405 may contain many switches and constant definitions and list of neighbors
1406 on nonbroadcast networks.
1407
1408 <code>
1409 protocol ospf &lt;name&gt; {
1410 rfc1583compat &lt;switch&gt;;
1411 tick &lt;num&gt;;
1412 area &lt;id&gt; {
1413 stub cost &lt;num&gt;;
1414 networks {
1415 &lt;prefix&gt;;
1416 &lt;prefix&gt; hidden;
1417 }
1418 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt;;
1419 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt; {
1420 hidden &lt;switch&gt;;
1421 summary &lt;switch&gt;;
1422 cost &lt;num&gt;;
1423 }
1424 interface &lt;interface pattern&gt; {
1425 cost &lt;num&gt;;
1426 stub &lt;switch&gt;;
1427 hello &lt;num&gt;;
1428 poll &lt;num&gt;;
1429 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
1430 priority &lt;num&gt;;
1431 wait &lt;num&gt;;
1432 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
1433 dead &lt;num&gt;;
1434 rx buffer [normal|large|&lt;num&gt;];
1435 type [broadcast|nonbroadcast|pointopoint];
1436 strict nonbroadcast &lt;switch&gt;;
1437 authentication [none|simple|cryptographic];
1438 password "&lt;text&gt;";
1439 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
1440 id &lt;num&gt;;
1441 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
1442 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
1443 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
1444 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
1445 };
1446 neighbors {
1447 &lt;ip&gt;;
1448 &lt;ip&gt; eligible;
1449 };
1450 };
1451 virtual link &lt;id&gt; {
1452 hello &lt;num&gt;;
1453 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
1454 wait &lt;num&gt;;
1455 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
1456 dead &lt;num&gt;;
1457 authentication [none|simple|cryptographic];
1458 password "&lt;text&gt;";
1459 };
1460 };
1461 }
1462 </code>
1463
1464 <descrip>
1465 <tag>rfc1583compat <M>switch</M></tag>
1466 This option controls compatibility of routing table
1467 calculation with RFC 1583<htmlurl
1468 url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1583.txt">. Default
1469 value is no.
1470
1471 <tag>area <M>id</M></tag>
1472 This defines an OSPF area with given area ID (an integer or an IPv4
1473 address, similarly to a router ID).
1474 The most important area is
1475 the backbone (ID 0) to which every other area must be connected.
1476
1477 <tag>stub cost <M>num</M></tag>
1478 No external (except default) routes are flooded into stub areas.
1479 Setting this value marks area stub with defined cost of default route.
1480 Default value is no. (Area is not stub.)
1481
1482 <tag>tick <M>num</M></tag>
1483 The routing table calculation and clean-up of areas' databases
1484 is not performed when a single link state
1485 change arrives. To lower the CPU utilization, it's processed later
1486 at periodical intervals of <m/num/ seconds. The default value is 1.
1487
1488 <tag>networks { <m/set/ }</tag>
1489 Definition of area IP ranges. This is used in summary LSA origination.
1490 Hidden networks are not propagated into other areas.
1491
1492 <tag>stubnet <m/prefix/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
1493 Stub networks are networks that are not transit networks
1494 between OSPF routers. They are also propagated through an
1495 OSPF area as a part of a link state database. By default,
1496 BIRD generates a stub network record for each primary network
1497 address on each OSPF interface that does not have any OSPF
1498 neighbors, and also for each non-primary network address on
1499 each OSPF interface. This option allows to alter a set of
1500 stub networks propagated by this router.
1501
1502 Each instance of this option adds a stub network with given
1503 network prefix to the set of propagated stub network, unless
1504 option <cf/hidden/ is used. It also suppresses default stub
1505 networks for given network prefix. When option
1506 <cf/summary/ is used, also default stub networks that are
1507 subnetworks of given stub network are suppressed. This might
1508 be used, for example, to aggregate generated stub networks.
1509
1510 <tag>interface <M>pattern</M></tag>
1511 Defines that the specified interfaces belong to the area being defined.
1512 See <ref id="dsc-iface" name="interface"> common option for detailed description.
1513
1514 <tag>virtual link <M>id</M></tag>
1515 Virtual link to router with the router id. Virtual link acts as a
1516 point-to-point interface belonging to backbone. The actual area is
1517 used as transport area. This item cannot be in the backbone.
1518
1519 <tag>cost <M>num</M></tag>
1520 Specifies output cost (metric) of an interface. Default value is 10.
1521
1522 <tag>stub <M>switch</M></tag>
1523 If set to interface it does not listen to any packet and does not send
1524 any hello. Default value is no.
1525
1526 <tag>hello <M>num</M></tag>
1527 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages. Beware, all
1528 routers on the same network need to have the same hello interval.
1529 Default value is 10.
1530
1531 <tag>poll <M>num</M></tag>
1532 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages for
1533 some neighbors on NBMA network. Default value is 20.
1534
1535 <tag>retransmit <M>num</M></tag>
1536 Specifies interval in seconds between retransmissions of unacknowledged updates.
1537 Default value is 5.
1538
1539 <tag>priority <M>num</M></tag>
1540 On every multiple access network (e.g., the Ethernet) Designed Router
1541 and Backup Designed router are elected. These routers have some
1542 special functions in the flooding process. Higher priority increases
1543 preferences in this election. Routers with priority 0 are not
1544 eligible. Default value is 1.
1545
1546 <tag>wait <M>num</M></tag>
1547 After start, router waits for the specified number of seconds between starting
1548 election and building adjacency. Default value is 40.
1549
1550 <tag>dead count <M>num</M></tag>
1551 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
1552 <m/dead count/*<m/hello/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down.
1553
1554 <tag>dead <M>num</M></tag>
1555 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
1556 <m/dead/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down. If both directives
1557 <m/dead count/ and <m/dead/ are used, <m/dead/ has precendence.
1558
1559 <tag>rx buffer <M>num</M></tag>
1560 This sets the size of buffer used for receiving packets. The buffer should
1561 be bigger than maximal size of any packets. Value NORMAL (default)
1562 means 2*MTU, value LARGE means maximal allowed packet - 65536.
1563
1564 <tag>type broadcast</tag>
1565 BIRD detects a type of a connected network automatically, but sometimes it's
1566 convenient to force use of a different type manually.
1567 On broadcast networks, flooding and Hello messages are sent using multicasts
1568 (a single packet for all the neighbors).
1569
1570 <tag>type pointopoint</tag>
1571 Point-to-point networks connect just 2 routers together. No election
1572 is performed there which reduces the number of messages sent.
1573
1574 <tag>type nonbroadcast</tag>
1575 On nonbroadcast networks, the packets are sent to each neighbor
1576 separately because of lack of multicast capabilities.
1577
1578 <tag>strict nonbroadcast <M>switch</M></tag>
1579 If set, don't send hello to any undefined neighbor. This switch
1580 is ignored on any non-NBMA network. Default is No.
1581
1582 <tag>authentication none</tag>
1583 No passwords are sent in OSPF packets. This is the default value.
1584
1585 <tag>authentication simple</tag>
1586 Every packet carries 8 bytes of password. Received packets
1587 lacking this password are ignored. This authentication mechanism is
1588 very weak.
1589
1590 <tag>authentication cryptographic</tag>
1591 16-byte long MD5 digest is appended to every packet. For the digest
1592 generation 16-byte long passwords are used. Those passwords are
1593 not sent via network, so this mechanism is quite secure.
1594 Packets can still be read by an attacker.
1595
1596 <tag>password "<M>text</M>"</tag>
1597 An 8-byte or 16-byte password used for authentication.
1598 See <ref id="dsc-pass" name="password"> common option for detailed description.
1599
1600 <tag>neighbors { <m/set/ } </tag>
1601 A set of neighbors to which Hello messages on nonbroadcast networks
1602 are to be sent. Some of them could be marked as eligible.
1603
1604 </descrip>
1605
1606 <sect1>Attributes
1607
1608 <p>OSPF defines four route attributes. Each internal route has a <cf/metric/.
1609 Metric is ranging from 1 to infinity (65535).
1610 External routes use <cf/metric type 1/ or <cf/metric type 2/.
1611 A <cf/metric of type 1/ is comparable with internal <cf/metric/, a
1612 <cf/metric of type 2/ is always longer
1613 than any <cf/metric of type 1/ or any <cf/internal metric/.
1614 <cf/Internal metric/ or <cf/metric of type 1/ is stored in attribute
1615 <cf/ospf_metric1/, <cf/metric type 2/ is stored in attribute <cf/ospf_metric2/.
1616 If you specify both metrics only metric1 is used.
1617
1618 Each external route can also carry attribute <cf/ospf_tag/ which is a
1619 32-bit integer which is used when exporting routes to other protocols;
1620 otherwise, it doesn't affect routing inside the OSPF domain at all.
1621 The fourth attribute <cf/ospf_router_id/ is a router ID of the router
1622 advertising that route/network. This attribute is read-only. Default
1623 is <cf/ospf_metric2 = 10000/ and <cf/ospf_tag = 0/.
1624
1625 <sect1>Example
1626
1627 <p>
1628
1629 <code>
1630 protocol ospf MyOSPF {
1631 rfc1583compat yes;
1632 tick 2;
1633 export filter {
1634 if source = RTS_BGP then {
1635 ospf_metric1 = 100;
1636 accept;
1637 }
1638 reject;
1639 };
1640 area 0.0.0.0 {
1641 interface "eth*" {
1642 cost 11;
1643 hello 15;
1644 priority 100;
1645 retransmit 7;
1646 authentication simple;
1647 password "aaa";
1648 };
1649 interface "ppp*" {
1650 cost 100;
1651 authentication cryptographic;
1652 password "abc" {
1653 id 1;
1654 generate to "22-04-2003 11:00:06";
1655 accept from "17-01-2001 12:01:05";
1656 };
1657 password "def" {
1658 id 2;
1659 generate to "22-07-2005 17:03:21";
1660 accept from "22-02-2001 11:34:06";
1661 };
1662 };
1663 interface "arc0" {
1664 cost 10;
1665 stub yes;
1666 };
1667 interface "arc1";
1668 };
1669 area 120 {
1670 stub yes;
1671 networks {
1672 172.16.1.0/24;
1673 172.16.2.0/24 hidden;
1674 }
1675 interface "-arc0" , "arc*" {
1676 type nonbroadcast;
1677 authentication none;
1678 strict nonbroadcast yes;
1679 wait 120;
1680 poll 40;
1681 dead count 8;
1682 neighbors {
1683 192.168.120.1 eligible;
1684 192.168.120.2;
1685 192.168.120.10;
1686 };
1687 };
1688 };
1689 }
1690 </code>
1691
1692 <sect>Pipe
1693
1694 <sect1>Introduction
1695
1696 <p>The Pipe protocol serves as a link between two routing tables, allowing routes to be
1697 passed from a table declared as primary (i.e., the one the pipe is connected to using the
1698 <cf/table/ configuration keyword) to the secondary one (declared using <cf/peer table/)
1699 and vice versa, depending on what's allowed by the filters. Export filters control export
1700 of routes from the primary table to the secondary one, import filters control the opposite
1701 direction.
1702
1703 <p>The Pipe protocol may work in the opaque mode or in the transparent
1704 mode. In the opaque mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits optimal route
1705 from one table to the other table in a similar way like other
1706 protocols send and receive routes. Retransmitted route will have the
1707 source set to the Pipe protocol, which may limit access to protocol
1708 specific route attributes. The opaque mode is a default mode.
1709
1710 <p>In transparent mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits all routes from
1711 one table to the other table, retaining their original source and
1712 attributes. If import and export filters are set to accept, then both
1713 tables would have the same content. The mode can be set by
1714 <tt/mode/ option.
1715
1716 <p>The primary use of multiple routing tables and the Pipe protocol is for policy routing,
1717 where handling of a single packet doesn't depend only on its destination address, but also
1718 on its source address, source interface, protocol type and other similar parameters.
1719 In many systems (Linux being a good example), the kernel allows to enforce routing policies
1720 by defining routing rules which choose one of several routing tables to be used for a packet
1721 according to its parameters. Setting of these rules is outside the scope of BIRD's work
1722 (on Linux, you can use the <tt/ip/ command), but you can create several routing tables in BIRD,
1723 connect them to the kernel ones, use filters to control which routes appear in which tables
1724 and also you can employ the Pipe protocol for exporting a selected subset of one table to
1725 another one.
1726
1727 <sect1>Configuration
1728
1729 <p><descrip>
1730 <tag>peer table <m/table/</tag> Defines secondary routing table to connect to. The
1731 primary one is selected by the <cf/table/ keyword.
1732
1733 <tag>mode opaque|transparent</tag> Specifies the mode for the pipe to work in. Default is opaque.
1734 </descrip>
1735
1736 <sect1>Attributes
1737
1738 <p>The Pipe protocol doesn't define any route attributes.
1739
1740 <sect1>Example
1741
1742 <p>Let's consider a router which serves as a boundary router of two different autonomous
1743 systems, each of them connected to a subset of interfaces of the router, having its own
1744 exterior connectivity and wishing to use the other AS as a backup connectivity in case
1745 of outage of its own exterior line.
1746
1747 <p>Probably the simplest solution to this situation is to use two routing tables (we'll
1748 call them <cf/as1/ and <cf/as2/) and set up kernel routing rules, so that packets having
1749 arrived from interfaces belonging to the first AS will be routed according to <cf/as1/
1750 and similarly for the second AS. Thus we have split our router to two logical routers,
1751 each one acting on its own routing table, having its own routing protocols on its own
1752 interfaces. In order to use the other AS's routes for backup purposes, we can pass
1753 the routes between the tables through a Pipe protocol while decreasing their preferences
1754 and correcting their BGP paths to reflect the AS boundary crossing.
1755
1756 <code>
1757 table as1; # Define the tables
1758 table as2;
1759
1760 protocol kernel kern1 { # Synchronize them with the kernel
1761 table as1;
1762 kernel table 1;
1763 }
1764
1765 protocol kernel kern2 {
1766 table as2;
1767 kernel table 2;
1768 }
1769
1770 protocol bgp bgp1 { # The outside connections
1771 table as1;
1772 local as 1;
1773 neighbor 192.168.0.1 as 1001;
1774 export all;
1775 import all;
1776 }
1777
1778 protocol bgp bgp2 {
1779 table as2;
1780 local as 2;
1781 neighbor 10.0.0.1 as 1002;
1782 export all;
1783 import all;
1784 }
1785
1786 protocol pipe { # The Pipe
1787 table as1;
1788 peer table as2;
1789 export filter {
1790 if net ~ [ 1.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS1 networks
1791 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
1792 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(1);
1793 accept;
1794 }
1795 reject;
1796 };
1797 import filter {
1798 if net ~ [ 2.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS2 networks
1799 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
1800 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(2);
1801 accept;
1802 }
1803 reject;
1804 };
1805 }
1806 </code>
1807
1808 <sect>RIP
1809
1810 <sect1>Introduction
1811
1812 <p>The RIP protocol (also sometimes called Rest In Pieces) is a simple protocol, where each router broadcasts (to all its neighbors)
1813 distances to all networks it can reach. When a router hears distance to another network, it increments
1814 it and broadcasts it back. Broadcasts are done in regular intervals. Therefore, if some network goes
1815 unreachable, routers keep telling each other that its distance is the original distance plus 1 (actually, plus
1816 interface metric, which is usually one). After some time, the distance reaches infinity (that's 15 in
1817 RIP) and all routers know that network is unreachable. RIP tries to minimize situations where
1818 counting to infinity is necessary, because it is slow. Due to infinity being 16, you can't use
1819 RIP on networks where maximal distance is higher than 15 hosts. You can read more about RIP at <HTMLURL
1820 URL="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/rip-charter.html" name="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/rip-charter.html">. Both IPv4
1821 (RFC 1723<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc1723.txt">)
1822 and 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
1823 not currently supported. RIPv4 MD5 authentication (RFC 2082<htmlurl url="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc2082.txt">) is supported.
1824
1825 <p>RIP is a very simple protocol, and it has a lot of shortcomings. Slow
1826 convergence, big network load and inability to handle larger networks
1827 makes it pretty much obsolete. (It is still usable on very small networks.)
1828
1829 <sect1>Configuration
1830
1831 <p>In addition to options common for all to other protocols, RIP supports the following ones:
1832
1833 <descrip>
1834 <tag/authentication none|plaintext|md5/ selects authentication method to be used. <cf/none/ means that
1835 packets are not authenticated at all, <cf/plaintext/ means that a plaintext password is embedded
1836 into each packet, and <cf/md5/ means that packets are authenticated using a MD5 cryptographic
1837 hash. If you set authentication to not-none, it is a good idea to add <cf>password</cf>
1838 section. Default: none.
1839
1840 <tag>honor always|neighbor|never </tag>specifies when should requests for dumping routing table
1841 be honored. (Always, when sent from a host on a directly connected
1842 network or never.) Routing table updates are honored only from
1843 neighbors, that is not configurable. Default: never.
1844 </descrip>
1845
1846 <p>There are two options that can be specified per-interface. First is <cf>metric</cf>, with
1847 default one. Second is <cf>mode multicast|broadcast|quiet|nolisten|version1</cf>, it selects mode for
1848 rip to work in. If nothing is specified, rip runs in multicast mode. <cf>version1</cf> is
1849 currently equivalent to <cf>broadcast</cf>, and it makes RIP talk to a broadcast address even
1850 through multicast mode is possible. <cf>quiet</cf> option means that RIP will not transmit
1851 any periodic messages to this interface and <cf>nolisten</cf> means that RIP will send to this
1852 interface but not listen to it.
1853
1854 <p>The following options generally override behavior specified in RFC. If you use any of these
1855 options, BIRD will no longer be RFC-compliant, which means it will not be able to talk to anything
1856 other than equally configured BIRD. I have warned you.
1857
1858 <descrip>
1859 <tag>port <M>number</M></tag>
1860 selects IP port to operate on, default 520. (This is useful when testing BIRD, if you
1861 set this to an address &gt;1024, you will not need to run bird with UID==0).
1862
1863 <tag>infinity <M>number</M></tag>
1864 selects the value of infinity, default is 16. Bigger values will make protocol convergence
1865 even slower.
1866
1867 <tag>period <M>number</M>
1868 </tag>specifies the number of seconds between periodic updates. Default is 30 seconds. A lower
1869 number will mean faster convergence but bigger network
1870 load. Do not use values lower than 10.
1871
1872 <tag>timeout time <M>number</M>
1873 </tag>specifies how old route has to be to be considered unreachable. Default is 4*<cf/period/.
1874
1875 <tag>garbage time <M>number</M>
1876 </tag>specifies how old route has to be to be discarded. Default is 10*<cf/period/.
1877 </descrip>
1878
1879 <sect1>Attributes
1880
1881 <p>RIP defines two route attributes:
1882
1883 <descrip>
1884 <tag>int <cf/rip_metric/</tag> RIP metric of the route (ranging from 0 to <cf/infinity/).
1885 When routes from different RIP instances are available and all of them have the same
1886 preference, BIRD prefers the route with lowest <cf/rip_metric/.
1887 When importing a non-RIP route, the metric defaults to 5.
1888
1889 <tag>int <cf/rip_tag/</tag> RIP route tag: a 16-bit number which can be used
1890 to carry additional information with the route (for example, an originating AS number
1891 in case of external routes). When importing a non-RIP route, the tag defaults to 0.
1892 </descrip>
1893
1894 <sect1>Example
1895
1896 <p><code>
1897 protocol rip MyRIP_test {
1898 debug all;
1899 port 1520;
1900 period 10;
1901 garbage time 60;
1902 interface "eth0" { metric 3; mode multicast; };
1903 interface "eth*" { metric 2; mode broadcast; };
1904 honor neighbor;
1905 authentication none;
1906 import filter { print "importing"; accept; };
1907 export filter { print "exporting"; accept; };
1908 }
1909 </code>
1910
1911 <sect>Static
1912
1913 <p>The Static protocol doesn't communicate with other routers in the network,
1914 but instead it allows you to define routes manually. This is often used for
1915 specifying how to forward packets to parts of the network which don't use
1916 dynamic routing at all and also for defining sink routes (i.e., those
1917 telling to return packets as undeliverable if they are in your IP block,
1918 you don't have any specific destination for them and you don't want to send
1919 them out through the default route to prevent routing loops).
1920
1921 <p>There are three types of static routes: `classical' routes telling to
1922 forward packets to a neighboring router, device routes specifying forwarding
1923 to hosts on a directly connected network and special routes (sink, blackhole
1924 etc.) which specify a special action to be done instead of forwarding the
1925 packet.
1926
1927 <p>When the particular destination is not available (the interface is down or
1928 the next hop of the route is not a neighbor at the moment), Static just
1929 uninstalls the route from the table it is connected to and adds it again as soon
1930 as the destination becomes adjacent again.
1931
1932 <p>The Static protocol has no configuration options. Instead, the
1933 definition of the protocol contains a list of static routes:
1934
1935 <descrip>
1936 <tag>route <m/prefix/ via <m/ip/</tag> Static route through
1937 a neighboring router.
1938 <tag>route <m/prefix/ via <m/"interface"/</tag> Static device
1939 route through an interface to hosts on a directly connected network.
1940 <tag>route <m/prefix/ drop|reject|prohibit</tag> Special routes
1941 specifying to drop the packet, return it as unreachable or return
1942 it as administratively prohibited.
1943 </descrip>
1944
1945 <p>Static routes have no specific attributes.
1946
1947 <p>Example static config might look like this:
1948
1949 <p><code>
1950 protocol static {
1951 table testable; # Connect to a non-default routing table
1952 route 0.0.0.0/0 via 62.168.0.13; # Default route
1953 route 62.168.0.0/25 reject; # Sink route
1954 route 10.2.0.0/24 via "arc0"; # Secondary network
1955 }
1956 </code>
1957
1958 <chapt>Conclusions
1959
1960 <sect>Future work
1961
1962 <p>Although BIRD supports all the commonly used routing protocols,
1963 there are still some features which would surely deserve to be
1964 implemented in future versions of BIRD:
1965
1966 <itemize>
1967 <item>OSPF NSSA areas and opaque LSA's
1968 <item>Route aggregation and flap dampening
1969 <item>Generation of IPv6 router advertisements
1970 <item>Multipath routes
1971 <item>Multicast routing protocols
1972 <item>Ports to other systems
1973 </itemize>
1974
1975 <sect>Getting more help
1976
1977 <p>If you use BIRD, you're welcome to join the bird-users mailing list
1978 (<HTMLURL URL="mailto:bird-users@bird.network.cz" name="bird-users@bird.network.cz">)
1979 where you can share your experiences with the other users and consult
1980 your problems with the authors. To subscribe to the list, just send a
1981 <tt/subscribe bird-users/ command in a body of a mail to
1982 (<HTMLURL URL="mailto:majordomo@bird.network.cz" name="majordomo@bird.network.cz">).
1983 The home page of BIRD can be found at <HTMLURL URL="http://bird.network.cz/" name="http://bird.network.cz/">.
1984
1985 <p>BIRD is a relatively young system and it probably contains some
1986 bugs. You can report any problems to the bird-users list and the authors
1987 will be glad to solve them, but before you do so,
1988 please make sure you have read the available documentation and that you are running the latest version (available at <HTMLURL
1989 URL="ftp://bird.network.cz/pub/bird" name="bird.network.cz:/pub/bird">). (Of course, a patch
1990 which fixes the bug is always welcome as an attachment.)
1991
1992 <p>If you want to understand what is going inside, Internet standards are
1993 a 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">).
1994
1995 <p><it/Good luck!/
1996
1997 </book>
1998
1999 <!--
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