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1 <!doctype birddoc system>
2
3 <!--
4 BIRD 2.0 documentation
5
6 This documentation can have 4 forms: sgml (this is master copy), html, ASCII
7 text and dvi/postscript (generated from sgml using sgmltools). You should always
8 edit master copy.
9
10 This is a slightly modified linuxdoc dtd. Anything in <descrip> tags is
11 considered definition of configuration primitives, <cf> is fragment of
12 configuration within normal text, <m> is "meta" information within fragment of
13 configuration - something in config which is not keyword.
14
15 (set-fill-column 80)
16
17 Copyright 1999,2000 Pavel Machek <pavel@ucw.cz>, distribute under GPL version 2 or later.
18
19 -->
20
21 <book>
22
23 <title>BIRD 2.0 User's Guide
24 <author>
25 Ondrej Filip <it/&lt;feela@network.cz&gt;/,
26 Pavel Machek <it/&lt;pavel@ucw.cz&gt;/,
27 Martin Mares <it/&lt;mj@ucw.cz&gt;/,
28 Jan Matejka <it/&lt;mq@jmq.cz&gt;/,
29 Ondrej Zajicek <it/&lt;santiago@crfreenet.org&gt;/
30 </author>
31
32 <abstract>
33 This document contains user documentation for the BIRD Internet Routing Daemon project.
34 </abstract>
35
36 <!-- Table of contents -->
37 <toc>
38
39 <!-- Begin the document -->
40
41
42 <chapt>Introduction
43 <label id="intro">
44
45 <sect>What is BIRD
46 <label id="what-is-bird">
47
48 <p>The name `BIRD' is actually an acronym standing for `BIRD Internet Routing
49 Daemon'. Let's take a closer look at the meaning of the name:
50
51 <p><em/BIRD/: Well, we think we have already explained that. It's an acronym
52 standing for `BIRD Internet Routing Daemon', you remember, don't you? :-)
53
54 <p><em/Internet Routing/: It's a program (well, a daemon, as you are going to
55 discover in a moment) which works as a dynamic router in an Internet type
56 network (that is, in a network running either the IPv4 or the IPv6 protocol).
57 Routers are devices which forward packets between interconnected networks in
58 order to allow hosts not connected directly to the same local area network to
59 communicate with each other. They also communicate with the other routers in the
60 Internet to discover the topology of the network which allows them to find
61 optimal (in terms of some metric) rules for forwarding of packets (which are
62 called routing tables) and to adapt themselves to the changing conditions such
63 as outages of network links, building of new connections and so on. Most of
64 these routers are costly dedicated devices running obscure firmware which is
65 hard to configure and not open to any changes (on the other hand, their special
66 hardware design allows them to keep up with lots of high-speed network
67 interfaces, better than general-purpose computer does). Fortunately, most
68 operating systems of the UNIX family allow an ordinary computer to act as a
69 router and forward packets belonging to the other hosts, but only according to a
70 statically configured table.
71
72 <p>A <em/Routing Daemon/ is in UNIX terminology a non-interactive program
73 running on background which does the dynamic part of Internet routing, that is
74 it communicates with the other routers, calculates routing tables and sends them
75 to the OS kernel which does the actual packet forwarding. There already exist
76 other such routing daemons: routed (RIP only), GateD (non-free),
77 <HTMLURL URL="http://www.zebra.org" name="Zebra"> and
78 <HTMLURL URL="http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrt" name="MRTD">,
79 but their capabilities are limited and they are relatively hard to configure
80 and maintain.
81
82 <p>BIRD is an Internet Routing Daemon designed to avoid all of these shortcomings,
83 to support all the routing technology used in the today's Internet or planned to
84 be used in near future and to have a clean extensible architecture allowing new
85 routing protocols to be incorporated easily. Among other features, BIRD
86 supports:
87
88 <itemize>
89 <item>both IPv4 and IPv6 protocols
90 <item>multiple routing tables
91 <item>the Border Gateway Protocol (BGPv4)
92 <item>the Routing Information Protocol (RIPv2, RIPng)
93 <item>the Open Shortest Path First protocol (OSPFv2, OSPFv3)
94 <item>the Babel Routing Protocol
95 <item>the Router Advertisements for IPv6 hosts
96 <item>a virtual protocol for exchange of routes between different
97 routing tables on a single host
98 <item>a command-line interface allowing on-line control and inspection
99 of status of the daemon
100 <item>soft reconfiguration (no need to use complex online commands to
101 change the configuration, just edit the configuration file and
102 notify BIRD to re-read it and it will smoothly switch itself to
103 the new configuration, not disturbing routing protocols unless
104 they are affected by the configuration changes)
105 <item>a powerful language for route filtering
106 </itemize>
107
108 <p>BIRD has been developed at the Faculty of Math and Physics, Charles
109 University, Prague, Czech Republic as a student project. It can be freely
110 distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
111
112 <p>BIRD has been designed to work on all UNIX-like systems. It has been
113 developed and tested under Linux 2.0 to 2.6, and then ported to FreeBSD, NetBSD
114 and OpenBSD, porting to other systems (even non-UNIX ones) should be relatively
115 easy due to its highly modular architecture.
116
117 <p>BIRD 1.x supported either IPv4 or IPv6 protocol, but had to be compiled separately
118 for each one. BIRD~2 supports both of them with a possibility of further extension.
119 BIRD~2 supports Linux at least 3.16, FreeBSD 10, NetBSD 7.0, and OpenBSD 5.8.
120 Anyway, it will probably work well also on older systems.
121
122 <sect>Installing BIRD
123 <label id="install">
124
125 <p>On a recent UNIX system with GNU development tools (GCC, binutils, m4, make)
126 and Perl, installing BIRD should be as easy as:
127
128 <code>
129 ./configure
130 make
131 make install
132 vi /usr/local/etc/bird.conf
133 bird
134 </code>
135
136 <p>You can use <tt>./configure --help</tt> to get a list of configure
137 options. The most important ones are: <tt/--with-protocols=/ to produce a slightly smaller
138 BIRD executable by configuring out routing protocols you don't use, and
139 <tt/--prefix=/ to install BIRD to a place different from <file>/usr/local</file>.
140
141
142 <sect>Running BIRD
143 <label id="argv">
144
145 <p>You can pass several command-line options to bird:
146
147 <descrip>
148 <tag><label id="argv-config">-c <m/config name/</tag>
149 use given configuration file instead of <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file>.
150
151 <tag><label id="argv-debug">-d</tag>
152 enable debug messages and run bird in foreground.
153
154 <tag><label id="argv-log-file">-D <m/filename of debug log/</tag>
155 log debugging information to given file instead of stderr.
156
157 <tag><label id="argv-foreground">-f</tag>
158 run bird in foreground.
159
160 <tag><label id="argv-group">-g <m/group/</tag>
161 use that group ID, see the next section for details.
162
163 <tag><label id="argv-help">-h, --help</tag>
164 display command-line options to bird.
165
166 <tag><label id="argv-local">-l</tag>
167 look for a configuration file and a communication socket in the current
168 working directory instead of in default system locations. However, paths
169 specified by options <cf/-c/, <cf/-s/ have higher priority.
170
171 <tag><label id="argv-parse">-p</tag>
172 just parse the config file and exit. Return value is zero if the config
173 file is valid, nonzero if there are some errors.
174
175 <tag><label id="argv-pid">-P <m/name of PID file/</tag>
176 create a PID file with given filename.
177
178 <tag><label id="argv-recovery">-R</tag>
179 apply graceful restart recovery after start.
180
181 <tag><label id="argv-socket">-s <m/name of communication socket/</tag>
182 use given filename for a socket for communications with the client,
183 default is <it/prefix/<file>/var/run/bird.ctl</file>.
184
185 <tag><label id="argv-user">-u <m/user/</tag>
186 drop privileges and use that user ID, see the next section for details.
187
188 <tag><label id="argv-version">--version</tag>
189 display bird version.
190 </descrip>
191
192 <p>BIRD writes messages about its work to log files or syslog (according to config).
193
194
195 <sect>Privileges
196 <label id="privileges">
197
198 <p>BIRD, as a routing daemon, uses several privileged operations (like setting
199 routing table and using raw sockets). Traditionally, BIRD is executed and runs
200 with root privileges, which may be prone to security problems. The recommended
201 way is to use a privilege restriction (options <cf/-u/, <cf/-g/). In that case
202 BIRD is executed with root privileges, but it changes its user and group ID to
203 an unprivileged ones, while using Linux capabilities to retain just required
204 privileges (capabilities CAP_NET_*). Note that the control socket is created
205 before the privileges are dropped, but the config file is read after that. The
206 privilege restriction is not implemented in BSD port of BIRD.
207
208 <p>An unprivileged user (as an argument to <cf/-u/ options) may be the user
209 <cf/nobody/, but it is suggested to use a new dedicated user account (like
210 <cf/bird/). The similar considerations apply for the group option, but there is
211 one more condition -- the users in the same group can use <file/birdc/ to
212 control BIRD.
213
214 <p>Finally, there is a possibility to use external tools to run BIRD in an
215 environment with restricted privileges. This may need some configuration, but it
216 is generally easy -- BIRD needs just the standard library, privileges to read
217 the config file and create the control socket and the CAP_NET_* capabilities.
218
219
220 <chapt>Architecture
221 <label id="architecture">
222
223 <sect>Routing tables
224 <label id="routing-tables">
225
226 <p>The heart of BIRD is a routing table. BIRD has several independent routing tables;
227 each of them contains routes of exactly one <m/nettype/ (see below). There are two
228 default tables -- <cf/master4/ for IPv4 routes and <cf/master6/ for IPv6 routes.
229 Other tables must be explicitly configured.
230
231 <p>
232 These routing tables are not kernel forwarding tables. No forwarding is done by
233 BIRD. If you want to forward packets using the routes in BIRD tables, you may
234 use the Kernel protocol (see below) to synchronize them with kernel FIBs.
235
236 <p>
237 Every nettype defines a (kind of) primary key on routes. Every route source can
238 supply one route for every possible primary key; new route announcement replaces
239 the old route from the same source, keeping other routes intact. BIRD always
240 chooses the best route for each primary key among the known routes and keeps the
241 others as suboptimal. When the best route is retracted, BIRD re-runs the best
242 route selection algorithm to find the current best route.
243
244 <p>
245 The global best route selection algorithm is (roughly) as follows:
246
247 <itemize>
248 <item>Preferences of the routes are compared.
249 <item>Source protocol instance preferences are compared.
250 <item>If source protocols are the same (e.g. BGP vs. BGP), the protocol's route selection algorithm is invoked.
251 <item>If source protocols are different (e.g. BGP vs. OSPF), result of the algorithm is undefined.
252 </itemize>
253
254 <p><label id="dsc-table-sorted">Usually, a routing table just chooses a selected
255 route from a list of entries for one network. But if the <cf/sorted/ option is
256 activated, these lists of entries are kept completely sorted (according to
257 preference or some protocol-dependent metric). This is needed for some features
258 of some protocols (e.g. <cf/secondary/ option of BGP protocol, which allows to
259 accept not just a selected route, but the first route (in the sorted list) that
260 is accepted by filters), but it is incompatible with some other features (e.g.
261 <cf/deterministic med/ option of BGP protocol, which activates a way of choosing
262 selected route that cannot be described using comparison and ordering). Minor
263 advantage is that routes are shown sorted in <cf/show route/, minor disadvantage
264 is that it is slightly more computationally expensive.
265
266 <sect>Routes and network types
267 <label id="routes">
268
269 <p>BIRD works with several types of routes. Some of them are typical IP routes,
270 others are better described as forwarding rules. We call them all routes,
271 regardless of this difference.
272
273 <p>Every route consists of several attributes (read more about them in the
274 <ref id="route-attributes" name="Route attributes"> section); the common for all
275 routes are:
276
277 <itemize>
278 <item>IP address of router which told us about this route
279 <item>Source protocol instance
280 <item>Route preference
281 <item>Optional attributes defined by protocols
282 </itemize>
283
284 <p>Other attributes depend on nettypes. Some of them are part of the primary key, these are marked (PK).
285
286 <sect1>IPv4 and IPv6 routes
287 <label id="ip-routes">
288
289 <p>The traditional routes. Configuration keywords are <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/.
290
291 <itemize>
292 <item>(PK) Route destination (IP prefix together with its length)
293 <item>Route next hops (see below)
294 </itemize>
295
296 <sect1>IPv6 source-specific routes
297 <label id="ip-sadr-routes">
298
299 <p>The IPv6 routes containing both destination and source prefix. They are used
300 for source-specific routing (SSR), also called source-address dependent routing
301 (SADR), see <rfc id="8043">. Currently limited mostly to the Babel protocol.
302 Configuration keyword is <cf/ipv6 sadr/.
303
304 <itemize>
305 <item>(PK) Route destination (IP prefix together with its length)
306 <item>(PK) Route source (IP prefix together with its length)
307 <item>Route next hops (see below)
308 </itemize>
309
310 <sect1>VPN IPv4 and IPv6 routes
311 <label id="vpn-routes">
312
313 <p>Routes for IPv4 and IPv6 with VPN Route Distinguisher (<rfc id="4364">).
314 Configuration keywords are <cf/vpn4/ and <cf/vpn6/.
315
316 <itemize>
317 <item>(PK) Route destination (IP prefix together with its length)
318 <item>(PK) Route distinguisher (according to <rfc id="4364">)
319 <item>Route next hops
320 </itemize>
321
322 <sect1>Route Origin Authorization for IPv4 and IPv6
323 <label id="roa-routes">
324
325 <p>These entries can be used to validate route origination of BGP routes.
326 A ROA entry specifies prefixes which could be originated by an AS number.
327 Their keywords are <cf/roa4/ and <cf/roa6/.
328
329 <itemize>
330 <item>(PK) IP prefix together with its length
331 <item>(PK) Matching prefix maximal length
332 <item>(PK) AS number
333 </itemize>
334
335 <sect1>Flowspec for IPv4 and IPv6
336 <label id="flow-routes">
337
338 <p>Flowspec rules are a form of firewall and traffic flow control rules
339 distributed mostly via BGP. These rules may help the operators stop various
340 network attacks in the beginning before eating up the whole bandwidth.
341 Configuration keywords are <cf/flow4/ and <cf/flow6/.
342
343 <itemize>
344 <item>(PK) IP prefix together with its length
345 <item>(PK) Flow definition data
346 <item>Flow action (encoded internally as BGP communities according to <rfc id="5575">)
347 </itemize>
348
349 <sect1>MPLS switching rules
350 <label id="mpls-routes">
351
352 <p>This nettype is currently a stub before implementing more support of <rfc id="3031">.
353 BIRD currently does not support any label distribution protocol nor any label assignment method.
354 Only the Kernel, Pipe and Static protocols can use MPLS tables.
355 Configuration keyword is <cf/mpls/.
356
357 <itemize>
358 <item>(PK) MPLS label
359 <item>Route next hops
360 </itemize>
361
362 <sect1>Route next hops
363 <label id="route-next-hop">
364
365 <p>This is not a nettype. The route next hop is a complex attribute common for many
366 nettypes as you can see before. Every next hop has its assigned device
367 (either assumed from its IP address or set explicitly). It may have also
368 an IP address and an MPLS stack (one or both independently).
369 Maximal MPLS stack depth is set (in compile time) to 8 labels.
370
371 <p>Every route (when eligible to have a next hop) can have more than one next hop.
372 In that case, every next hop has also its weight.
373
374 <sect>Protocols and channels
375 <label id="protocols-concept">
376
377 <p>BIRD protocol is an abstract class of producers and consumers of the routes.
378 Each protocol may run in multiple instances and bind on one side to route
379 tables via channels, on the other side to specified listen sockets (BGP),
380 interfaces (Babel, OSPF, RIP), APIs (Kernel, Direct), or nothing (Static, Pipe).
381
382 <p>There are also two protocols that do not have any channels -- BFD and Device.
383 Both of them are kind of service for other protocols.
384
385 <p>Each protocol is connected to a routing table through a channel. Some protocols
386 support only one channel (OSPF, RIP), some protocols support more channels (BGP, Direct).
387 Each channel has two filters which can accept, reject and modify the routes.
388 An <it/export/ filter is applied to routes passed from the routing table to the protocol,
389 an <it/import/ filter is applied to routes in the opposite direction.
390
391 <sect>Graceful restart
392 <label id="graceful-restart">
393
394 <p>When BIRD is started after restart or crash, it repopulates routing tables in
395 an uncoordinated manner, like after clean start. This may be impractical in some
396 cases, because if the forwarding plane (i.e. kernel routing tables) remains
397 intact, then its synchronization with BIRD would temporarily disrupt packet
398 forwarding until protocols converge. Graceful restart is a mechanism that could
399 help with this issue. Generally, it works by starting protocols and letting them
400 repopulate routing tables while deferring route propagation until protocols
401 acknowledge their convergence. Note that graceful restart behavior have to be
402 configured for all relevant protocols and requires protocol-specific support
403 (currently implemented for Kernel and BGP protocols), it is activated for
404 particular boot by option <cf/-R/.
405
406
407 <chapt>Configuration
408 <label id="config">
409
410 <sect>Introduction
411 <label id="config-intro">
412
413 <p>BIRD is configured using a text configuration file. Upon startup, BIRD reads
414 <it/prefix/<file>/etc/bird.conf</file> (unless the <tt/-c/ command line option
415 is given). Configuration may be changed at user's request: if you modify the
416 config file and then signal BIRD with <tt/SIGHUP/, it will adjust to the new
417 config. Then there's the client which allows you to talk with BIRD in an
418 extensive way.
419
420 <p>In the config, everything on a line after <cf/#/ or inside <cf>/* */</cf> is
421 a comment, whitespace characters are treated as a single space. If there's a
422 variable number of options, they are grouped using the <cf/{ }/ brackets. Each
423 option is terminated by a <cf/;/. Configuration is case sensitive. There are two
424 ways how to name symbols (like protocol names, filter names, constants etc.).
425 You can either use a simple string starting with a letter followed by any
426 combination of letters and numbers (e.g. <cf/R123/, <cf/myfilter/, <cf/bgp5/) or
427 you can enclose the name into apostrophes (<cf/'/) and than you can use any
428 combination of numbers, letters. hyphens, dots and colons (e.g.
429 <cf/'1:strange-name'/, <cf/'-NAME-'/, <cf/'cool::name'/).
430
431 <p>Here is an example of a simple config file. It enables synchronization of
432 routing tables with OS kernel, learns network interfaces and runs RIP on all
433 network interfaces found.
434
435 <code>
436 protocol kernel {
437 ipv4 {
438 export all; # Default is export none
439 };
440 persist; # Don't remove routes on BIRD shutdown
441 }
442
443 protocol device {
444 }
445
446 protocol rip {
447 ipv4 {
448 import all;
449 export all;
450 };
451 interface "*";
452 }
453 </code>
454
455
456 <sect>Global options
457 <label id="global-opts">
458
459 <p><descrip>
460 <tag><label id="opt-include">include "<m/filename/";</tag>
461 This statement causes inclusion of a new file. The <m/filename/ could
462 also be a wildcard, in that case matching files are included in
463 alphabetic order. The maximal depth is 8. Note that this statement can
464 be used anywhere in the config file, even inside other options, but
465 always on the beginning of line. In the following example, the first
466 semicolon belongs to the <cf/include/, the second to <cf/ipv6 table/.
467 If the <file/tablename.conf/ contains exactly one token (the name of the
468 table), this construction is correct:
469 <code>
470 ipv6 table
471 include "tablename.conf";;
472 </code>
473
474 <tag><label id="opt-log">log "<m/filename/"|syslog [name <m/name/]|stderr all|{ <m/list of classes/ }</tag>
475 Set logging of messages having the given class (either <cf/all/ or
476 <cf/{ error|trace [, <m/.../] }/ etc.) into selected destination (a file specified
477 as a filename string, syslog with optional name argument, or the stderr
478 output). Classes are:
479 <cf/info/, <cf/warning/, <cf/error/ and <cf/fatal/ for messages about local problems,
480 <cf/debug/ for debugging messages,
481 <cf/trace/ when you want to know what happens in the network,
482 <cf/remote/ for messages about misbehavior of remote machines,
483 <cf/auth/ about authentication failures,
484 <cf/bug/ for internal BIRD bugs.
485 You may specify more than one <cf/log/ line to establish logging to
486 multiple destinations. Default: log everything to the system log.
487
488 <tag><label id="opt-debug-protocols">debug protocols all|off|{ states|routes|filters|interfaces|events|packets [, <m/.../] }</tag>
489 Set global defaults of protocol debugging options. See <cf/debug/ in the
490 following section. Default: off.
491
492 <tag><label id="opt-debug-commands">debug commands <m/number/</tag>
493 Control logging of client connections (0 for no logging, 1 for logging
494 of connects and disconnects, 2 and higher for logging of all client
495 commands). Default: 0.
496
497 <tag><label id="opt-debug-latency">debug latency <m/switch/</tag>
498 Activate tracking of elapsed time for internal events. Recent events
499 could be examined using <cf/dump events/ command. Default: off.
500
501 <tag><label id="opt-debug-latency-limit">debug latency limit <m/time/</tag>
502 If <cf/debug latency/ is enabled, this option allows to specify a limit
503 for elapsed time. Events exceeding the limit are logged. Default: 1 s.
504
505 <tag><label id="opt-watchdog-warn">watchdog warning <m/time/</tag>
506 Set time limit for I/O loop cycle. If one iteration took more time to
507 complete, a warning is logged. Default: 5 s.
508
509 <tag><label id="opt-watchdog-timeout">watchdog timeout <m/time/</tag>
510 Set time limit for I/O loop cycle. If the limit is breached, BIRD is
511 killed by abort signal. The timeout has effective granularity of
512 seconds, zero means disabled. Default: disabled (0).
513
514 <tag><label id="opt-mrtdump">mrtdump "<m/filename/"</tag>
515 Set MRTdump file name. This option must be specified to allow MRTdump
516 feature. Default: no dump file.
517
518 <tag><label id="opt-mrtdump-protocols">mrtdump protocols all|off|{ states|messages [, <m/.../] }</tag>
519 Set global defaults of MRTdump options. See <cf/mrtdump/ in the
520 following section. Default: off.
521
522 <tag><label id="opt-filter">filter <m/name local variables/{ <m/commands/ }</tag>
523 Define a filter. You can learn more about filters in the following
524 chapter.
525
526 <tag><label id="opt-function">function <m/name/ (<m/parameters/) <m/local variables/ { <m/commands/ }</tag>
527 Define a function. You can learn more about functions in the following chapter.
528
529 <tag><label id="opt-protocol">protocol rip|ospf|bgp|<m/.../ [<m/name/ [from <m/name2/]] { <m>protocol options</m> }</tag>
530 Define a protocol instance called <cf><m/name/</cf> (or with a name like
531 "rip5" generated automatically if you don't specify any
532 <cf><m/name/</cf>). You can learn more about configuring protocols in
533 their own chapters. When <cf>from <m/name2/</cf> expression is used,
534 initial protocol options are taken from protocol or template
535 <cf><m/name2/</cf> You can run more than one instance of most protocols
536 (like RIP or BGP). By default, no instances are configured.
537
538 <tag><label id="opt-template">template rip|ospf|bgp|<m/.../ [<m/name/ [from <m/name2/]] { <m>protocol options</m> }</tag>
539 Define a protocol template instance called <m/name/ (or with a name like
540 "bgp1" generated automatically if you don't specify any <m/name/).
541 Protocol templates can be used to group common options when many
542 similarly configured protocol instances are to be defined. Protocol
543 instances (and other templates) can use templates by using <cf/from/
544 expression and the name of the template. At the moment templates (and
545 <cf/from/ expression) are not implemented for OSPF protocol.
546
547 <tag><label id="opt-define">define <m/constant/ = <m/expression/</tag>
548 Define a constant. You can use it later in every place you could use a
549 value of the same type. Besides, there are some predefined numeric
550 constants based on /etc/iproute2/rt_* files. A list of defined constants
551 can be seen (together with other symbols) using 'show symbols' command.
552
553 <tag><label id="opt-router-id">router id <m/IPv4 address/</tag>
554 Set BIRD's router ID. It's a world-wide unique identification of your
555 router, usually one of router's IPv4 addresses. Default: the lowest
556 IPv4 address of a non-loopback interface.
557
558 <tag><label id="opt-router-id-from">router id from [-] [ "<m/mask/" ] [ <m/prefix/ ] [, <m/.../]</tag>
559 Set BIRD's router ID based on an IPv4 address of an interface specified by
560 an interface pattern.
561 See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface"> section for detailed
562 description of interface patterns with extended clauses.
563
564 <tag><label id="opt-graceful-restart">graceful restart wait <m/number/</tag>
565 During graceful restart recovery, BIRD waits for convergence of routing
566 protocols. This option allows to specify a timeout for the recovery to
567 prevent waiting indefinitely if some protocols cannot converge. Default:
568 240 seconds.
569
570 <tag><label id="opt-timeformat">timeformat route|protocol|base|log "<m/format1/" [<m/limit/ "<m/format2/"]</tag>
571 This option allows to specify a format of date/time used by BIRD. The
572 first argument specifies for which purpose such format is used.
573 <cf/route/ is a format used in 'show route' command output,
574 <cf/protocol/ is used in 'show protocols' command output, <cf/base/ is
575 used for other commands and <cf/log/ is used in a log file.
576
577 "<m/format1/" is a format string using <it/strftime(3)/ notation (see
578 <it/man strftime/ for details). It is extended to support sub-second
579 time part with variable precision (up to microseconds) using "%f"
580 conversion code (e.g., "%T.%3f" is hh:mm:ss.sss time). <m/limit/ and
581 "<m/format2/" allow to specify the second format string for times in
582 past deeper than <m/limit/ seconds.
583
584 There are several shorthands: <cf/iso long/ is a ISO 8601 date/time
585 format (YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss) that can be also specified using <cf/"%F
586 %T"/. Similarly, <cf/iso long ms/ and <cf/iso long us/ are ISO 8601
587 date/time formats with millisecond or microsecond precision.
588 <cf/iso short/ is a variant of ISO 8601 that uses just the time format
589 (hh:mm:ss) for near times (up to 20 hours in the past) and the date
590 format (YYYY-MM-DD) for far times. This is a shorthand for <cf/"%T"
591 72000 "%F"/. And there are also <cf/iso short ms/ and <cf/iso short us/
592 high-precision variants of that.
593
594 By default, BIRD uses the <cf/iso short ms/ format for <cf/route/ and
595 <cf/protocol/ times, and the <cf/iso long ms/ format for <cf/base/ and
596 <cf/log/ times.
597
598 <tag><label id="opt-table"><m/nettype/ table <m/name/ [sorted]</tag>
599 Create a new routing table. The default routing tables <cf/master4/ and
600 <cf/master6/ are created implicitly, other routing tables have to be
601 added by this command. Option <cf/sorted/ can be used to enable sorting
602 of routes, see <ref id="dsc-table-sorted" name="sorted table">
603 description for details.
604
605 <tag><label id="opt-eval">eval <m/expr/</tag>
606 Evaluates given filter expression. It is used by the developers for testing of filters.
607 </descrip>
608
609
610 <sect>Protocol options
611 <label id="protocol-opts">
612
613 <p>For each protocol instance, you can configure a bunch of options. Some of
614 them (those described in this section) are generic, some are specific to the
615 protocol (see sections talking about the protocols).
616
617 <p>Several options use a <m/switch/ argument. It can be either <cf/on/,
618 <cf/yes/ or a numeric expression with a non-zero value for the option to be
619 enabled or <cf/off/, <cf/no/ or a numeric expression evaluating to zero to
620 disable it. An empty <m/switch/ is equivalent to <cf/on/ ("silence means
621 agreement").
622
623 <descrip>
624 <tag><label id="proto-disabled">disabled <m/switch/</tag>
625 Disables the protocol. You can change the disable/enable status from the
626 command line interface without needing to touch the configuration.
627 Disabled protocols are not activated. Default: protocol is enabled.
628
629 <tag><label id="proto-debug">debug all|off|{ states|routes|filters|interfaces|events|packets [, <m/.../] }</tag>
630 Set protocol debugging options. If asked, each protocol is capable of
631 writing trace messages about its work to the log (with category
632 <cf/trace/). You can either request printing of <cf/all/ trace messages
633 or only of the types selected: <cf/states/ for protocol state changes
634 (protocol going up, down, starting, stopping etc.), <cf/routes/ for
635 routes exchanged with the routing table, <cf/filters/ for details on
636 route filtering, <cf/interfaces/ for interface change events sent to the
637 protocol, <cf/events/ for events internal to the protocol and <cf/packets/
638 for packets sent and received by the protocol. Default: off.
639
640 <tag><label id="proto-mrtdump">mrtdump all|off|{ states|messages [, <m/.../] }</tag>
641 Set protocol MRTdump flags. MRTdump is a standard binary format for
642 logging information from routing protocols and daemons. These flags
643 control what kind of information is logged from the protocol to the
644 MRTdump file (which must be specified by global <cf/mrtdump/ option, see
645 the previous section). Although these flags are similar to flags of
646 <cf/debug/ option, their meaning is different and protocol-specific. For
647 BGP protocol, <cf/states/ logs BGP state changes and <cf/messages/ logs
648 received BGP messages. Other protocols does not support MRTdump yet.
649
650 <tag><label id="proto-router-id">router id <m/IPv4 address/</tag>
651 This option can be used to override global router id for a given
652 protocol. Default: uses global router id.
653
654 <tag><label id="proto-description">description "<m/text/"</tag>
655 This is an optional description of the protocol. It is displayed as a
656 part of the output of 'show route all' command.
657
658 <tag><label id="proto-vrf">vrf "<m/text/"</tag>
659 Associate the protocol with specific VRF. The protocol will be
660 restricted to interfaces assigned to the VRF and will use sockets bound
661 to the VRF. Appropriate VRF interface must exist on OS level. For kernel
662 protocol, an appropriate table still must be explicitly selected by
663 <cf/table/ option. Note that for proper VRF support it is necessary to
664 use Linux kernel version at least 4.14, older versions have limited VRF
665 implementation.
666
667 <tag><label id="proto-channel"><m/channel name/ [{<m/channel config/}]</tag>
668 Every channel must be explicitly stated. See the protocol-specific
669 configuration for the list of supported channel names. See the
670 <ref id="channel-opts" name="channel configuration section"> for channel
671 definition.
672 </descrip>
673
674 <p>There are several options that give sense only with certain protocols:
675
676 <descrip>
677 <tag><label id="proto-iface">interface [-] [ "<m/mask/" ] [ <m/prefix/ ] [, <m/.../] [ { <m/option/; [<m/.../] } ]</tag>
678 Specifies a set of interfaces on which the protocol is activated with
679 given interface-specific options. A set of interfaces specified by one
680 interface option is described using an interface pattern. The interface
681 pattern consists of a sequence of clauses (separated by commas), each
682 clause is a mask specified as a shell-like pattern. Interfaces are
683 matched by their name.
684
685 An interface matches the pattern if it matches any of its clauses. If
686 the clause begins with <cf/-/, matching interfaces are excluded. Patterns
687 are processed left-to-right, thus <cf/interface "eth0", -"eth*", "*";/
688 means eth0 and all non-ethernets.
689
690 Some protocols (namely OSPFv2 and Direct) support extended clauses that
691 may contain a mask, a prefix, or both of them. An interface matches such
692 clause if its name matches the mask (if specified) and its address
693 matches the prefix (if specified). Extended clauses are used when the
694 protocol handles multiple addresses on an interface independently.
695
696 An interface option can be used more times with different interface-specific
697 options, in that case for given interface the first matching interface
698 option is used.
699
700 This option is allowed in Babel, BFD, Device, Direct, OSPF, RAdv and RIP
701 protocols. In OSPF protocol it is used in the <cf/area/ subsection.
702
703 Default: none.
704
705 Examples:
706
707 <cf>interface "*" { type broadcast; };</cf> - start the protocol on all
708 interfaces with <cf>type broadcast</cf> option.
709
710 <cf>interface "eth1", "eth4", "eth5" { type ptp; };</cf> - start the
711 protocol on enumerated interfaces with <cf>type ptp</cf> option.
712
713 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol
714 on all interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not from
715 192.168.1.0/24.
716
717 <cf>interface -192.168.1.0/24, 192.168.0.0/16;</cf> - start the protocol
718 on all interfaces that have address from 192.168.0.0/16, but not from
719 192.168.1.0/24.
720
721 <cf>interface "eth*" 192.168.1.0/24;</cf> - start the protocol on all
722 ethernet interfaces that have address from 192.168.1.0/24.
723
724 <tag><label id="proto-tx-class">tx class|dscp <m/num/</tag>
725 This option specifies the value of ToS/DS/Class field in IP headers of
726 the outgoing protocol packets. This may affect how the protocol packets
727 are processed by the network relative to the other network traffic. With
728 <cf/class/ keyword, the value (0-255) is used for the whole ToS/Class
729 octet (but two bits reserved for ECN are ignored). With <cf/dscp/
730 keyword, the value (0-63) is used just for the DS field in the octet.
731 Default value is 0xc0 (DSCP 0x30 - CS6).
732
733 <tag><label id="proto-tx-priority">tx priority <m/num/</tag>
734 This option specifies the local packet priority. This may affect how the
735 protocol packets are processed in the local TX queues. This option is
736 Linux specific. Default value is 7 (highest priority, privileged traffic).
737
738 <tag><label id="proto-pass">password "<m/password/" [ { <m>password options</m> } ]</tag>
739 Specifies a password that can be used by the protocol as a shared secret
740 key. Password option can be used more times to specify more passwords.
741 If more passwords are specified, it is a protocol-dependent decision
742 which one is really used. Specifying passwords does not mean that
743 authentication is enabled, authentication can be enabled by separate,
744 protocol-dependent <cf/authentication/ option.
745
746 This option is allowed in BFD, OSPF and RIP protocols. BGP has also
747 <cf/password/ option, but it is slightly different and described
748 separately.
749 Default: none.
750 </descrip>
751
752 <p>Password option can contain section with some (not necessary all) password sub-options:
753
754 <descrip>
755 <tag><label id="proto-pass-id">id <M>num</M></tag>
756 ID of the password, (1-255). If it is not used, BIRD will choose ID based
757 on an order of the password item in the interface. For example, second
758 password item in one interface will have default ID 2. ID is used by
759 some routing protocols to identify which password was used to
760 authenticate protocol packets.
761
762 <tag><label id="proto-pass-gen-from">generate from "<m/time/"</tag>
763 The start time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
764 The format of <cf><m/time/</cf> is <tt>dd-mm-yyyy HH:MM:SS</tt>.
765
766 <tag><label id="proto-pass-gen-to">generate to "<m/time/"</tag>
767 The last time of the usage of the password for packet signing.
768
769 <tag><label id="proto-pass-accept-from">accept from "<m/time/"</tag>
770 The start time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
771
772 <tag><label id="proto-pass-accept-to">accept to "<m/time/"</tag>
773 The last time of the usage of the password for packet verification.
774
775 <tag><label id="proto-pass-from">from "<m/time/"</tag>
776 Shorthand for setting both <cf/generate from/ and <cf/accept from/.
777
778 <tag><label id="proto-pass-to">to "<m/time/"</tag>
779 Shorthand for setting both <cf/generate to/ and <cf/accept to/.
780
781 <tag><label id="proto-pass-algorithm">algorithm ( keyed md5 | keyed sha1 | hmac sha1 | hmac sha256 | hmac sha384 | hmac sha512 )</tag>
782 The message authentication algorithm for the password when cryptographic
783 authentication is enabled. The default value depends on the protocol.
784 For RIP and OSPFv2 it is Keyed-MD5 (for compatibility), for OSPFv3
785 protocol it is HMAC-SHA-256.
786
787 </descrip>
788
789
790 <sect>Channel options
791 <label id="channel-opts">
792
793 <p>Every channel belongs to a protocol and is configured inside its block. The
794 minimal channel config is empty, then it uses default values. The name of the
795 channel implies its nettype. Channel definitions can be inherited from protocol
796 templates. Multiple definitions of the same channel are forbidden, but channels
797 inherited from templates can be updated by new definitions.
798
799 <descrip>
800 <tag><label id="proto-table">table <m/name/</tag>
801 Specify a table to which the channel is connected. Default: the first
802 table of given nettype.
803
804 <tag><label id="proto-preference">preference <m/expr/</tag>
805 Sets the preference of routes generated by the protocol and imported
806 through this channel. Default: protocol dependent.
807
808 <tag><label id="proto-import">import all | none | filter <m/name/ | filter { <m/filter commands/ } | where <m/boolean filter expression/</tag>
809 Specify a filter to be used for filtering routes coming from the
810 protocol to the routing table. <cf/all/ is for keeping all routes,
811 <cf/none/ is for dropping all routes. Default: <cf/all/ (except for
812 EBGP).
813
814 <tag><label id="proto-export">export <m/filter/</tag>
815 This is similar to the <cf>import</cf> keyword, except that it works in
816 the direction from the routing table to the protocol. Default: <cf/none/
817 (except for EBGP).
818
819 <tag><label id="proto-import-keep-filtered">import keep filtered <m/switch/</tag>
820 Usually, if an import filter rejects a route, the route is forgotten.
821 When this option is active, these routes are kept in the routing table,
822 but they are hidden and not propagated to other protocols. But it is
823 possible to show them using <cf/show route filtered/. Note that this
824 option does not work for the pipe protocol. Default: off.
825
826 <tag><label id="proto-import-limit">import limit [<m/number/ | off ] [action warn | block | restart | disable]</tag>
827 Specify an import route limit (a maximum number of routes imported from
828 the protocol) and optionally the action to be taken when the limit is
829 hit. Warn action just prints warning log message. Block action discards
830 new routes coming from the protocol. Restart and disable actions shut
831 the protocol down like appropriate commands. Disable is the default
832 action if an action is not explicitly specified. Note that limits are
833 reset during protocol reconfigure, reload or restart. Default: <cf/off/.
834
835 <tag><label id="proto-receive-limit">receive limit [<m/number/ | off ] [action warn | block | restart | disable]</tag>
836 Specify an receive route limit (a maximum number of routes received from
837 the protocol and remembered). It works almost identically to <cf>import
838 limit</cf> option, the only difference is that if <cf/import keep
839 filtered/ option is active, filtered routes are counted towards the
840 limit and blocked routes are forgotten, as the main purpose of the
841 receive limit is to protect routing tables from overflow. Import limit,
842 on the contrary, counts accepted routes only and routes blocked by the
843 limit are handled like filtered routes. Default: <cf/off/.
844
845 <tag><label id="proto-export-limit">export limit [ <m/number/ | off ] [action warn | block | restart | disable]</tag>
846 Specify an export route limit, works similarly to the <cf>import
847 limit</cf> option, but for the routes exported to the protocol. This
848 option is experimental, there are some problems in details of its
849 behavior -- the number of exported routes can temporarily exceed the
850 limit without triggering it during protocol reload, exported routes
851 counter ignores route blocking and block action also blocks route
852 updates of already accepted routes -- and these details will probably
853 change in the future. Default: <cf/off/.
854 </descrip>
855
856 <p>This is a trivial example of RIP configured for IPv6 on all interfaces:
857 <code>
858 protocol rip ng {
859 ipv6;
860 interface "*";
861 }
862 </code>
863
864 <p>This is a non-trivial example.
865 <code>
866 protocol rip ng {
867 ipv6 {
868 table mytable6;
869 import filter { ... };
870 export filter { ... };
871 import limit 50;
872 };
873 interface "*";
874 }
875 </code>
876
877 <p>And this is even more complicated example using templates.
878 <code>
879 template bgp {
880 local 198.51.100.14 as 65000;
881
882 ipv4 {
883 table mytable4;
884 import filter { ... };
885 export none;
886 };
887 ipv6 {
888 table mytable6;
889 import filter { ... };
890 export none;
891 };
892 }
893
894 protocol bgp from {
895 neighbor 198.51.100.130 as 64496;
896
897 # IPv4 channel is inherited as-is, while IPv6
898 # channel is adjusted by export filter option
899 ipv6 {
900 export filter { ... };
901 };
902 }
903 </code>
904
905
906 <chapt>Remote control
907 <label id="remote-control">
908
909 <p>You can use the command-line client <file>birdc</file> to talk with a running
910 BIRD. Communication is done using a <file/bird.ctl/ UNIX domain socket (unless
911 changed with the <tt/-s/ option given to both the server and the client). The
912 commands can perform simple actions such as enabling/disabling of protocols,
913 telling BIRD to show various information, telling it to show routing table
914 filtered by filter, or asking BIRD to reconfigure. Press <tt/?/ at any time to
915 get online help. Option <tt/-r/ can be used to enable a restricted mode of BIRD
916 client, which allows just read-only commands (<cf/show .../). Option <tt/-v/ can
917 be passed to the client, to make it dump numeric return codes along with the
918 messages. You do not necessarily need to use <file/birdc/ to talk to BIRD, your
919 own applications could do that, too -- the format of communication between BIRD
920 and <file/birdc/ is stable (see the programmer's documentation).
921
922 <p>There is also lightweight variant of BIRD client called <file/birdcl/, which
923 does not support command line editing and history and has minimal dependencies.
924 This is useful for running BIRD in resource constrained environments, where
925 Readline library (required for regular BIRD client) is not available.
926
927 <p>Many commands have the <m/name/ of the protocol instance as an argument.
928 This argument can be omitted if there exists only a single instance.
929
930 <p>Here is a brief list of supported functions:
931
932 <descrip>
933 <tag><label id="cli-show-status">show status</tag>
934 Show router status, that is BIRD version, uptime and time from last
935 reconfiguration.
936
937 <tag><label id="cli-show-interfaces">show interfaces [summary]</tag>
938 Show the list of interfaces. For each interface, print its type, state,
939 MTU and addresses assigned.
940
941 <tag><label id="cli-show-protocols">show protocols [all]</tag>
942 Show list of protocol instances along with tables they are connected to
943 and protocol status, possibly giving verbose information, if <cf/all/ is
944 specified.
945
946 <!-- TODO: Move these protocol-specific remote control commands to the protocol sections -->
947 <tag><label id="cli-show-ospf-iface">show ospf interface [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
948 Show detailed information about OSPF interfaces.
949
950 <tag><label id="cli-show-ospf-neighbors">show ospf neighbors [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
951 Show a list of OSPF neighbors and a state of adjacency to them.
952
953 <tag><label id="cli-show-ospf-state">show ospf state [all] [<m/name/]</tag>
954 Show detailed information about OSPF areas based on a content of the
955 link-state database. It shows network topology, stub networks,
956 aggregated networks and routers from other areas and external routes.
957 The command shows information about reachable network nodes, use option
958 <cf/all/ to show information about all network nodes in the link-state
959 database.
960
961 <tag><label id="cli-show-ospf-topology">show ospf topology [all] [<m/name/]</tag>
962 Show a topology of OSPF areas based on a content of the link-state
963 database. It is just a stripped-down version of 'show ospf state'.
964
965 <tag><label id="cli-show-ospf-lsadb">show ospf lsadb [global | area <m/id/ | link] [type <m/num/] [lsid <m/id/] [self | router <m/id/] [<m/name/] </tag>
966 Show contents of an OSPF LSA database. Options could be used to filter
967 entries.
968
969 <tag><label id="cli-show-rip-interfaces">show rip interfaces [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
970 Show detailed information about RIP interfaces.
971
972 <tag><label id="cli-show-rip-neighbors">show rip neighbors [<m/name/] ["<m/interface/"]</tag>
973 Show a list of RIP neighbors and associated state.
974
975 <tag><label id="cli-show-static">show static [<m/name/]</tag>
976 Show detailed information about static routes.
977
978 <tag><label id="cli-show-bfd-sessions">show bfd sessions [<m/name/]</tag>
979 Show information about BFD sessions.
980
981 <tag><label id="cli-show-symbols">show symbols [table|filter|function|protocol|template|roa|<m/symbol/]</tag>
982 Show the list of symbols defined in the configuration (names of
983 protocols, routing tables etc.).
984
985 <tag><label id="cli-show-route">show route [[for] <m/prefix/|<m/IP/] [table (<m/t/ | all)] [filter <m/f/|where <m/c/] [(export|preexport|noexport) <m/p/] [protocol <m/p/] [(stats|count)] [<m/options/]</tag>
986 Show contents of specified routing tables, that is routes, their metrics
987 and (in case the <cf/all/ switch is given) all their attributes.
988
989 <p>You can specify a <m/prefix/ if you want to print routes for a
990 specific network. If you use <cf>for <m/prefix or IP/</cf>, you'll get
991 the entry which will be used for forwarding of packets to the given
992 destination. By default, all routes for each network are printed with
993 the selected one at the top, unless <cf/primary/ is given in which case
994 only the selected route is shown.
995
996 <p>The <cf/show route/ command can process one or multiple routing
997 tables. The set of selected tables is determined on three levels: First,
998 tables can be explicitly selected by <cf/table/ switch, which could be
999 used multiple times, all tables are specified by <cf/table all/. Second,
1000 tables can be implicitly selected by channels or protocols that are
1001 arguments of several other switches (e.g., <cf/export/, <cf/protocol/).
1002 Last, the set of default tables is used: <cf/master4/, <cf/master6/ and
1003 each first table of any other network type.
1004
1005 <p>You can also ask for printing only routes processed and accepted by
1006 a given filter (<cf>filter <m/name/</cf> or <cf>filter { <m/filter/ }
1007 </cf> or matching a given condition (<cf>where <m/condition/</cf>).
1008
1009 The <cf/export/, <cf/preexport/ and <cf/noexport/ switches ask for
1010 printing of routes that are exported to the specified protocol or
1011 channel. With <cf/preexport/, the export filter of the channel is
1012 skipped. With <cf/noexport/, routes rejected by the export filter are
1013 printed instead. Note that routes not exported for other reasons
1014 (e.g. secondary routes or routes imported from that protocol) are not
1015 printed even with <cf/noexport/. These switches also imply that
1016 associated routing tables are selected instead of default ones.
1017
1018 <p>You can also select just routes added by a specific protocol.
1019 <cf>protocol <m/p/</cf>. This switch also implies that associated
1020 routing tables are selected instead of default ones.
1021
1022 <p>If BIRD is configured to keep filtered routes (see <cf/import keep
1023 filtered/ option), you can show them instead of routes by using
1024 <cf/filtered/ switch.
1025
1026 <p>The <cf/stats/ switch requests showing of route statistics (the
1027 number of networks, number of routes before and after filtering). If
1028 you use <cf/count/ instead, only the statistics will be printed.
1029
1030 <tag><label id="cli-configure">configure [soft] ["<m/config file/"] [timeout [<m/num/]]</tag>
1031 Reload configuration from a given file. BIRD will smoothly switch itself
1032 to the new configuration, protocols are reconfigured if possible,
1033 restarted otherwise. Changes in filters usually lead to restart of
1034 affected protocols.
1035
1036 If <cf/soft/ option is used, changes in filters does not cause BIRD to
1037 restart affected protocols, therefore already accepted routes (according
1038 to old filters) would be still propagated, but new routes would be
1039 processed according to the new filters.
1040
1041 If <cf/timeout/ option is used, config timer is activated. The new
1042 configuration could be either confirmed using <cf/configure confirm/
1043 command, or it will be reverted to the old one when the config timer
1044 expires. This is useful for cases when reconfiguration breaks current
1045 routing and a router becomes inaccessible for an administrator. The
1046 config timeout expiration is equivalent to <cf/configure undo/
1047 command. The timeout duration could be specified, default is 300 s.
1048
1049 <tag><label id="cli-configure-confirm">configure confirm</tag>
1050 Deactivate the config undo timer and therefore confirm the current
1051 configuration.
1052
1053 <tag><label id="cli-configure-undo">configure undo</tag>
1054 Undo the last configuration change and smoothly switch back to the
1055 previous (stored) configuration. If the last configuration change was
1056 soft, the undo change is also soft. There is only one level of undo, but
1057 in some specific cases when several reconfiguration requests are given
1058 immediately in a row and the intermediate ones are skipped then the undo
1059 also skips them back.
1060
1061 <tag><label id="cli-configure-check">configure check ["<m/config file/"]</tag>
1062 Read and parse given config file, but do not use it. useful for checking
1063 syntactic and some semantic validity of an config file.
1064
1065 <tag><label id="cli-enable-disable-restart">enable|disable|restart <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
1066 Enable, disable or restart a given protocol instance, instances matching
1067 the <cf><m/pattern/</cf> or <cf/all/ instances.
1068
1069 <tag><label id="cli-reload">reload [in|out] <m/name/|"<m/pattern/"|all</tag>
1070 Reload a given protocol instance, that means re-import routes from the
1071 protocol instance and re-export preferred routes to the instance. If
1072 <cf/in/ or <cf/out/ options are used, the command is restricted to one
1073 direction (re-import or re-export).
1074
1075 This command is useful if appropriate filters have changed but the
1076 protocol instance was not restarted (or reloaded), therefore it still
1077 propagates the old set of routes. For example when <cf/configure soft/
1078 command was used to change filters.
1079
1080 Re-export always succeeds, but re-import is protocol-dependent and might
1081 fail (for example, if BGP neighbor does not support route-refresh
1082 extension). In that case, re-export is also skipped. Note that for the
1083 pipe protocol, both directions are always reloaded together (<cf/in/ or
1084 <cf/out/ options are ignored in that case).
1085
1086 <tag><label id="cli-down">down</tag>
1087 Shut BIRD down.
1088
1089 <tag><label id="cli-debug">debug <m/protocol/|<m/pattern/|all all|off|{ states|routes|filters|events|packets [, <m/.../] }</tag>
1090 Control protocol debugging.
1091
1092 <tag><label id="cli-dump">dump resources|sockets|interfaces|neighbors|attributes|routes|protocols</tag>
1093 Dump contents of internal data structures to the debugging output.
1094
1095 <tag><label id="cli-echo">echo all|off|{ <m/list of log classes/ } [ <m/buffer-size/ ]</tag>
1096 Control echoing of log messages to the command-line output.
1097 See <ref id="opt-log" name="log option"> for a list of log classes.
1098
1099 <tag><label id="cli-eval">eval <m/expr/</tag>
1100 Evaluate given expression.
1101 </descrip>
1102
1103
1104 <chapt>Filters
1105 <label id="filters">
1106
1107 <sect>Introduction
1108 <label id="filters-intro">
1109
1110 <p>BIRD contains a simple programming language. (No, it can't yet read mail :-).
1111 There are two objects in this language: filters and functions. Filters are
1112 interpreted by BIRD core when a route is being passed between protocols and
1113 routing tables. The filter language contains control structures such as if's and
1114 switches, but it allows no loops. An example of a filter using many features can
1115 be found in <file>filter/test.conf</file>.
1116
1117 <p>Filter gets the route, looks at its attributes and modifies some of them if
1118 it wishes. At the end, it decides whether to pass the changed route through
1119 (using <cf/accept/) or whether to <cf/reject/ it. A simple filter looks like
1120 this:
1121
1122 <code>
1123 filter not_too_far
1124 int var;
1125 {
1126 if defined( rip_metric ) then
1127 var = rip_metric;
1128 else {
1129 var = 1;
1130 rip_metric = 1;
1131 }
1132 if rip_metric &gt; 10 then
1133 reject "RIP metric is too big";
1134 else
1135 accept "ok";
1136 }
1137 </code>
1138
1139 <p>As you can see, a filter has a header, a list of local variables, and a body.
1140 The header consists of the <cf/filter/ keyword followed by a (unique) name of
1141 filter. The list of local variables consists of <cf><M>type name</M>;</cf>
1142 pairs where each pair defines one local variable. The body consists of <cf>
1143 { <M>statements</M> }</cf>. Each <m/statement/ is terminated by a <cf/;/. You
1144 can group several statements to a single compound statement by using braces
1145 (<cf>{ <M>statements</M> }</cf>) which is useful if you want to make a bigger
1146 block of code conditional.
1147
1148 <p>BIRD supports functions, so that you don't have to repeat the same blocks of
1149 code over and over. Functions can have zero or more parameters and they can have
1150 local variables. Recursion is not allowed. Function definitions look like this:
1151
1152 <code>
1153 function name ()
1154 int local_variable;
1155 {
1156 local_variable = 5;
1157 }
1158
1159 function with_parameters (int parameter)
1160 {
1161 print parameter;
1162 }
1163 </code>
1164
1165 <p>Unlike in C, variables are declared after the <cf/function/ line, but before
1166 the first <cf/{/. You can't declare variables in nested blocks. Functions are
1167 called like in C: <cf>name(); with_parameters(5);</cf>. Function may return
1168 values using the <cf>return <m/[expr]/</cf> command. Returning a value exits
1169 from current function (this is similar to C).
1170
1171 <p>Filters are declared in a way similar to functions except they can't have
1172 explicit parameters. They get a route table entry as an implicit parameter, it
1173 is also passed automatically to any functions called. The filter must terminate
1174 with either <cf/accept/ or <cf/reject/ statement. If there's a runtime error in
1175 filter, the route is rejected.
1176
1177 <p>A nice trick to debug filters is to use <cf>show route filter <m/name/</cf>
1178 from the command line client. An example session might look like:
1179
1180 <code>
1181 pavel@bug:~/bird$ ./birdc -s bird.ctl
1182 BIRD 0.0.0 ready.
1183 bird> show route
1184 10.0.0.0/8 dev eth0 [direct1 23:21] (240)
1185 195.113.30.2/32 dev tunl1 [direct1 23:21] (240)
1186 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
1187 bird> show route ?
1188 show route [<prefix>] [table <t>] [filter <f>] [all] [primary]...
1189 bird> show route filter { if 127.0.0.5 &tilde; net then accept; }
1190 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo [direct1 23:21] (240)
1191 bird>
1192 </code>
1193
1194
1195 <sect>Data types
1196 <label id="data-types">
1197
1198 <p>Each variable and each value has certain type. Booleans, integers and enums
1199 are incompatible with each other (that is to prevent you from shooting in the
1200 foot).
1201
1202 <descrip>
1203 <tag><label id="type-bool">bool</tag>
1204 This is a boolean type, it can have only two values, <cf/true/ and
1205 <cf/false/. Boolean is the only type you can use in <cf/if/ statements.
1206
1207 <tag><label id="type-int">int</tag>
1208 This is a general integer type. It is an unsigned 32bit type; i.e., you
1209 can expect it to store values from 0 to 4294967295. Overflows are not
1210 checked. You can use <cf/0x1234/ syntax to write hexadecimal values.
1211
1212 <tag><label id="type-pair">pair</tag>
1213 This is a pair of two short integers. Each component can have values
1214 from 0 to 65535. Literals of this type are written as <cf/(1234,5678)/.
1215 The same syntax can also be used to construct a pair from two arbitrary
1216 integer expressions (for example <cf/(1+2,a)/).
1217
1218 <tag><label id="type-quad">quad</tag>
1219 This is a dotted quad of numbers used to represent router IDs (and
1220 others). Each component can have a value from 0 to 255. Literals of
1221 this type are written like IPv4 addresses.
1222
1223 <tag><label id="type-string">string</tag>
1224 This is a string of characters. There are no ways to modify strings in
1225 filters. You can pass them between functions, assign them to variables
1226 of type <cf/string/, print such variables, use standard string
1227 comparison operations (e.g. <cf/=, !=, &lt;, &gt;, &lt;=, &gt;=/), but
1228 you can't concatenate two strings. String literals are written as
1229 <cf/"This is a string constant"/. Additionally matching (<cf/&tilde;,
1230 !&tilde;/) operators could be used to match a string value against
1231 a shell pattern (represented also as a string).
1232
1233 <tag><label id="type-ip">ip</tag>
1234 This type can hold a single IP address. The IPv4 addresses are stored as
1235 IPv4-Mapped IPv6 addresses so one data type for both of them is used.
1236 Whether the address is IPv4 or not may be checked by <cf>.is_ip4</cf>
1237 which returns <cf/bool/. IP addresses are written in the standard
1238 notation (<cf/10.20.30.40/ or <cf/fec0:3:4::1/). You can apply special
1239 operator <cf>.mask(<M>num</M>)</cf> on values of type ip. It masks out
1240 all but first <cf><M>num</M></cf> bits from the IP address. So
1241 <cf/1.2.3.4.mask(8) = 1.0.0.0/ is true.
1242
1243 <tag><label id="type-prefix">prefix</tag>
1244 This type can hold a network prefix consisting of IP address, prefix
1245 length and several other values. This is the key in route tables.
1246
1247 Prefixes may be of several types, which can be determined by the special
1248 operator <cf/.type/. The type may be:
1249
1250 <cf/NET_IP4/ and <cf/NET_IP6/ prefixes hold an IP prefix. The literals
1251 are written as <cf><m/ipaddress//<m/pxlen/</cf>. There are two special
1252 operators on these: <cf/.ip/ which extracts the IP address from the
1253 pair, and <cf/.len/, which separates prefix length from the pair.
1254 So <cf>1.2.0.0/16.len = 16</cf> is true.
1255
1256 <cf/NET_IP6_SADR/ nettype holds both destination and source IPv6
1257 prefix. The literals are written as <cf><m/ipaddress//<m/pxlen/ from
1258 <m/ipaddress//<m/pxlen/</cf>, where the first part is the destination
1259 prefix and the second art is the source prefix. They support the same
1260 operators as IP prefixes, but just for the destination part.
1261
1262 <cf/NET_VPN4/ and <cf/NET_VPN6/ prefixes hold an IP prefix with VPN
1263 Route Distinguisher (<rfc id="4364">). They support the same special
1264 operators as IP prefixes, and also <cf/.rd/ which extracts the Route
1265 Distinguisher. Their literals are written
1266 as <cf><m/vpnrd/ <m/ipprefix/</cf>
1267
1268 <cf/NET_ROA4/ and <cf/NET_ROA6/ prefixes hold an IP prefix range
1269 together with an ASN. They support the same special operators as IP
1270 prefixes, and also <cf/.maxlen/ which extracts maximal prefix length,
1271 and <cf/.asn/ which extracts the ASN.
1272
1273 <cf/NET_FLOW4/ and <cf/NET_FLOW6/ hold an IP prefix together with a
1274 flowspec rule. Filters currently don't support flowspec parsing.
1275
1276 <cf/NET_MPLS/ holds a single MPLS label and its handling is currently
1277 not implemented.
1278
1279 <tag><label id="type-vpnrd">vpnrd</tag>
1280 This is a route distinguisher according to <rfc id="4364">. There are
1281 three kinds of RD's: <cf><m/asn/:<m/32bit int/</cf>, <cf><m/asn4/:<m/16bit int/</cf>
1282 and <cf><m/IPv4 address/:<m/32bit int/</cf>
1283
1284 <tag><label id="type-ec">ec</tag>
1285 This is a specialized type used to represent BGP extended community
1286 values. It is essentially a 64bit value, literals of this type are
1287 usually written as <cf>(<m/kind/, <m/key/, <m/value/)</cf>, where
1288 <cf/kind/ is a kind of extended community (e.g. <cf/rt/ / <cf/ro/ for a
1289 route target / route origin communities), the format and possible values
1290 of <cf/key/ and <cf/value/ are usually integers, but it depends on the
1291 used kind. Similarly to pairs, ECs can be constructed using expressions
1292 for <cf/key/ and <cf/value/ parts, (e.g. <cf/(ro, myas, 3*10)/, where
1293 <cf/myas/ is an integer variable).
1294
1295 <tag><label id="type-lc">lc</tag>
1296 This is a specialized type used to represent BGP large community
1297 values. It is essentially a triplet of 32bit values, where the first
1298 value is reserved for the AS number of the issuer, while meaning of
1299 remaining parts is defined by the issuer. Literals of this type are
1300 written as <cf/(123, 456, 789)/, with any integer values. Similarly to
1301 pairs, LCs can be constructed using expressions for its parts, (e.g.
1302 <cf/(myas, 10+20, 3*10)/, where <cf/myas/ is an integer variable).
1303
1304 <tag><label id="type-set">int|pair|quad|ip|prefix|ec|lc|enum set</tag>
1305 Filters recognize four types of sets. Sets are similar to strings: you
1306 can pass them around but you can't modify them. Literals of type <cf>int
1307 set</cf> look like <cf> [ 1, 2, 5..7 ]</cf>. As you can see, both simple
1308 values and ranges are permitted in sets.
1309
1310 For pair sets, expressions like <cf/(123,*)/ can be used to denote
1311 ranges (in that case <cf/(123,0)..(123,65535)/). You can also use
1312 <cf/(123,5..100)/ for range <cf/(123,5)..(123,100)/. You can also use
1313 <cf/*/ and <cf/a..b/ expressions in the first part of a pair, note that
1314 such expressions are translated to a set of intervals, which may be
1315 memory intensive. E.g. <cf/(*,4..20)/ is translated to <cf/(0,4..20),
1316 (1,4..20), (2,4..20), ... (65535, 4..20)/.
1317
1318 EC sets use similar expressions like pair sets, e.g. <cf/(rt, 123,
1319 10..20)/ or <cf/(ro, 123, *)/. Expressions requiring the translation
1320 (like <cf/(rt, *, 3)/) are not allowed (as they usually have 4B range
1321 for ASNs).
1322
1323 Also LC sets use similar expressions like pair sets. You can use ranges
1324 and wildcards, but if one field uses that, more specific (later) fields
1325 must be wildcards. E.g., <cf/(10, 20..30, *)/ or <cf/(10, 20, 30..40)/
1326 is valid, while <cf/(10, *, 20..30)/ or <cf/(10, 20..30, 40)/ is not
1327 valid.
1328
1329 You can also use expressions for int, pair, EC and LC set values.
1330 However, it must be possible to evaluate these expressions before daemon
1331 boots. So you can use only constants inside them. E.g.
1332
1333 <code>
1334 define one=1;
1335 define myas=64500;
1336 int set odds;
1337 pair set ps;
1338 ec set es;
1339
1340 odds = [ one, 2+1, 6-one, 2*2*2-1, 9, 11 ];
1341 ps = [ (1,one+one), (3,4)..(4,8), (5,*), (6,3..6), (7..9,*) ];
1342 es = [ (rt, myas, 3*10), (rt, myas+one, 0..16*16*16-1), (ro, myas+2, *) ];
1343 </code>
1344
1345 Sets of prefixes are special: their literals does not allow ranges, but
1346 allows prefix patterns that are written
1347 as <cf><M>ipaddress</M>/<M>pxlen</M>{<M>low</M>,<M>high</M>}</cf>.
1348 Prefix <cf><m>ip1</m>/<m>len1</m></cf> matches prefix
1349 pattern <cf><m>ip2</m>/<m>len2</m>{<m>l</m>,<m>h</m>}</cf> if the
1350 first <cf>min(len1, len2)</cf> bits of <cf/ip1/ and <cf/ip2/ are
1351 identical and <cf>len1 &lt;= ip1 &lt;= len2</cf>. A valid prefix pattern
1352 has to satisfy <cf>low &lt;= high</cf>, but <cf/pxlen/ is not
1353 constrained by <cf/low/ or <cf/high/. Obviously, a prefix matches a
1354 prefix set literal if it matches any prefix pattern in the prefix set
1355 literal.
1356
1357 There are also two shorthands for prefix patterns: <cf><m/address//<m/len/+</cf>
1358 is a shorthand for <cf><m/address//<m/len/{<m/len/,<m/maxlen/}</cf>
1359 (where <cf><m/maxlen/</cf> is 32 for IPv4 and 128 for IPv6), that means
1360 network prefix <cf><m/address//<m/len/</cf> and all its subnets.
1361 <cf><m/address//<m/len/-</cf> is a shorthand for
1362 <cf><m/address//<m/len/{0,<m/len/}</cf>, that means network prefix
1363 <cf><m/address//<m/len/</cf> and all its supernets (network prefixes
1364 that contain it).
1365
1366 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}
1367 ]</cf> matches prefix <cf>1.0.0.0/8</cf>, all subprefixes of
1368 <cf>2.0.0.0/8</cf>, all superprefixes of <cf>3.0.0.0/8</cf> and prefixes
1369 <cf/4.X.X.X/ whose prefix length is 16 to 24. <cf>[ 0.0.0.0/0{20,24} ]</cf>
1370 matches all prefixes (regardless of IP address) whose prefix length is
1371 20 to 24, <cf>[ 1.2.3.4/32- ]</cf> matches any prefix that contains IP
1372 address <cf>1.2.3.4</cf>. <cf>1.2.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8{15,17} ]</cf>
1373 is true, but <cf>1.0.0.0/16 &tilde; [ 1.0.0.0/8- ]</cf> is false.
1374
1375 Cisco-style patterns like <cf>10.0.0.0/8 ge 16 le 24</cf> can be expressed
1376 in BIRD as <cf>10.0.0.0/8{16,24}</cf>, <cf>192.168.0.0/16 le 24</cf> as
1377 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{16,24}</cf> and <cf>192.168.0.0/16 ge 24</cf> as
1378 <cf>192.168.0.0/16{24,32}</cf>.
1379
1380 It is possible to mix IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes/addresses in a prefix/ip set
1381 but its behavior may change between versions without any warning; don't do
1382 it unless you are more than sure what you are doing. (Really, don't do it.)
1383
1384 <tag><label id="type-enum">enum</tag>
1385 Enumeration types are fixed sets of possibilities. You can't define your
1386 own variables of such type, but some route attributes are of enumeration
1387 type. Enumeration types are incompatible with each other.
1388
1389 <tag><label id="type-bgppath">bgppath</tag>
1390 BGP path is a list of autonomous system numbers. You can't write
1391 literals of this type. There are several special operators on bgppaths:
1392
1393 <cf><m/P/.first</cf> returns the first ASN (the neighbor ASN) in path <m/P/.
1394
1395 <cf><m/P/.last</cf> returns the last ASN (the source ASN) in path <m/P/.
1396
1397 <cf><m/P/.last_nonaggregated</cf> returns the last ASN in the non-aggregated part of the path <m/P/.
1398
1399 Both <cf/first/ and <cf/last/ return zero if there is no appropriate
1400 ASN, for example if the path contains an AS set element as the first (or
1401 the last) part. If the path ends with an AS set, <cf/last_nonaggregated/
1402 may be used to get last ASN before any AS set.
1403
1404 <cf><m/P/.len</cf> returns the length of path <m/P/.
1405
1406 <cf><m/P/.empty</cf> makes the path <m/P/ empty.
1407
1408 <cf>prepend(<m/P/,<m/A/)</cf> prepends ASN <m/A/ to path <m/P/ and
1409 returns the result.
1410
1411 <cf>delete(<m/P/,<m/A/)</cf> deletes all instances of ASN <m/A/ from
1412 from path <m/P/ and returns the result. <m/A/ may also be an integer
1413 set, in that case the operator deletes all ASNs from path <m/P/ that are
1414 also members of set <m/A/.
1415
1416 <cf>filter(<m/P/,<m/A/)</cf> deletes all ASNs from path <m/P/ that are
1417 not members of integer set <m/A/. I.e., <cf/filter/ do the same as
1418 <cf/delete/ with inverted set <m/A/.
1419
1420 Statement <cf><m/P/ = prepend(<m/P/, <m/A/);</cf> can be shortened to
1421 <cf><m/P/.prepend(<m/A/);</cf> if <m/P/ is appropriate route attribute
1422 (for example <cf/bgp_path/). Similarly for <cf/delete/ and <cf/filter/.
1423
1424 <tag><label id="type-bgpmask">bgpmask</tag>
1425 BGP masks are patterns used for BGP path matching (using <cf>path
1426 &tilde; [= 2 3 5 * =]</cf> syntax). The masks resemble wildcard patterns
1427 as used by UNIX shells. Autonomous system numbers match themselves,
1428 <cf/*/ matches any (even empty) sequence of arbitrary AS numbers and
1429 <cf/?/ matches one arbitrary AS number. For example, if <cf>bgp_path</cf>
1430 is 4 3 2 1, then: <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 3 * =]</tt> is true,
1431 but <tt>bgp_path &tilde; [= * 4 5 * =]</tt> is false. BGP mask
1432 expressions can also contain integer expressions enclosed in parenthesis
1433 and integer variables, for example <tt>[= * 4 (1+2) a =]</tt>. You can
1434 also use ranges, for example <tt>[= * 3..5 2 100..200 * =]</tt>.
1435
1436 <tag><label id="type-clist">clist</tag>
1437 Clist is similar to a set, except that unlike other sets, it can be
1438 modified. The type is used for community list (a set of pairs) and for
1439 cluster list (a set of quads). There exist no literals of this type.
1440 There are three special operators on clists:
1441
1442 <cf><m/C/.len</cf> returns the length of clist <m/C/.
1443
1444 <cf><m/C/.empty</cf> makes the list <m/C/ empty.
1445
1446 <cf>add(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> adds pair (or quad) <m/P/ to clist <m/C/ and
1447 returns the result. If item <m/P/ is already in clist <m/C/, it does
1448 nothing. <m/P/ may also be a clist, in that case all its members are
1449 added; i.e., it works as clist union.
1450
1451 <cf>delete(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> deletes pair (or quad) <m/P/ from clist
1452 <m/C/ and returns the result. If clist <m/C/ does not contain item
1453 <m/P/, it does nothing. <m/P/ may also be a pair (or quad) set, in that
1454 case the operator deletes all items from clist <m/C/ that are also
1455 members of set <m/P/. Moreover, <m/P/ may also be a clist, which works
1456 analogously; i.e., it works as clist difference.
1457
1458 <cf>filter(<m/C/,<m/P/)</cf> deletes all items from clist <m/C/ that are
1459 not members of pair (or quad) set <m/P/. I.e., <cf/filter/ do the same
1460 as <cf/delete/ with inverted set <m/P/. <m/P/ may also be a clist, which
1461 works analogously; i.e., it works as clist intersection.
1462
1463 Statement <cf><m/C/ = add(<m/C/, <m/P/);</cf> can be shortened to
1464 <cf><m/C/.add(<m/P/);</cf> if <m/C/ is appropriate route attribute (for
1465 example <cf/bgp_community/). Similarly for <cf/delete/ and <cf/filter/.
1466
1467 <tag><label id="type-eclist">eclist</tag>
1468 Eclist is a data type used for BGP extended community lists. Eclists
1469 are very similar to clists, but they are sets of ECs instead of pairs.
1470 The same operations (like <cf/add/, <cf/delete/ or <cf/&tilde;/ and
1471 <cf/!&tilde;/ membership operators) can be used to modify or test
1472 eclists, with ECs instead of pairs as arguments.
1473
1474 <tag><label id="type-lclist">lclist/</tag>
1475 Lclist is a data type used for BGP large community lists. Like eclists,
1476 lclists are very similar to clists, but they are sets of LCs instead of
1477 pairs. The same operations (like <cf/add/, <cf/delete/ or <cf/&tilde;/
1478 and <cf/!&tilde;/ membership operators) can be used to modify or test
1479 lclists, with LCs instead of pairs as arguments.
1480 </descrip>
1481
1482
1483 <sect>Operators
1484 <label id="operators">
1485
1486 <p>The filter language supports common integer operators <cf>(+,-,*,/)</cf>,
1487 parentheses <cf/(a*(b+c))/, comparison <cf/(a=b, a!=b, a&lt;b, a&gt;=b)/.
1488 Logical operations include unary not (<cf/!/), and (<cf/&amp;&amp;/), and or
1489 (<cf/&verbar;&verbar;/). Special operators include (<cf/&tilde;/,
1490 <cf/!&tilde;/) for "is (not) element of a set" operation - it can be used on
1491 element and set of elements of the same type (returning true if element is
1492 contained in the given set), or on two strings (returning true if first string
1493 matches a shell-like pattern stored in second string) or on IP and prefix
1494 (returning true if IP is within the range defined by that prefix), or on prefix
1495 and prefix (returning true if first prefix is more specific than second one) or
1496 on bgppath and bgpmask (returning true if the path matches the mask) or on
1497 number and bgppath (returning true if the number is in the path) or on bgppath
1498 and int (number) set (returning true if any ASN from the path is in the set) or
1499 on pair/quad and clist (returning true if the pair/quad is element of the
1500 clist) or on clist and pair/quad set (returning true if there is an element of
1501 the clist that is also a member of the pair/quad set).
1502
1503 <p>There is one operator related to ROA infrastructure - <cf/roa_check()/. It
1504 examines a ROA table and does <rfc id="6483"> route origin validation for a
1505 given network prefix. The basic usage is <cf>roa_check(<m/table/)</cf>, which
1506 checks current route (which should be from BGP to have AS_PATH argument) in the
1507 specified ROA table and returns ROA_UNKNOWN if there is no relevant ROA,
1508 ROA_VALID if there is a matching ROA, or ROA_INVALID if there are some relevant
1509 ROAs but none of them match. There is also an extended variant
1510 <cf>roa_check(<m/table/, <m/prefix/, <m/asn/)</cf>, which allows to specify a
1511 prefix and an ASN as arguments.
1512
1513
1514 <sect>Control structures
1515 <label id="control-structures">
1516
1517 <p>Filters support two control structures: conditions and case switches.
1518
1519 <p>Syntax of a condition is: <cf>if <M>boolean expression</M> then <m/commandT/;
1520 else <m/commandF/;</cf> and you can use <cf>{ <m/command1/; <m/command2/;
1521 <M>...</M> }</cf> instead of either command. The <cf>else</cf> clause may be
1522 omitted. If the <cf><m>boolean expression</m></cf> is true, <m/commandT/ is
1523 executed, otherwise <m/commandF/ is executed.
1524
1525 <p>The <cf>case</cf> is similar to case from Pascal. Syntax is <cf>case
1526 <m/expr/ { else: | <m/num_or_prefix [ .. num_or_prefix]/: <m/statement/ ; [
1527 ... ] }</cf>. The expression after <cf>case</cf> can be of any type which can be
1528 on the left side of the &tilde; operator and anything that could be a member of
1529 a set is allowed before <cf/:/. Multiple commands are allowed without <cf/{}/
1530 grouping. If <cf><m/expr/</cf> matches one of the <cf/:/ clauses, statements
1531 between it and next <cf/:/ statement are executed. If <cf><m/expr/</cf> matches
1532 neither of the <cf/:/ clauses, the statements after <cf/else:/ are executed.
1533
1534 <p>Here is example that uses <cf/if/ and <cf/case/ structures:
1535
1536 <code>
1537 case arg1 {
1538 2: print "two"; print "I can do more commands without {}";
1539 3 .. 5: print "three to five";
1540 else: print "something else";
1541 }
1542
1543 if 1234 = i then printn "."; else {
1544 print "not 1234";
1545 print "You need {} around multiple commands";
1546 }
1547 </code>
1548
1549
1550 <sect>Route attributes
1551 <label id="route-attributes">
1552
1553 <p>A filter is implicitly passed a route, and it can access its attributes just
1554 like it accesses variables. Attempts to access undefined attribute result in a
1555 runtime error; you can check if an attribute is defined by using the
1556 <cf>defined( <m>attribute</m> )</cf> operator. One notable exception to this
1557 rule are attributes of bgppath and *clist types, where undefined value is
1558 regarded as empty bgppath/*clist for most purposes.
1559
1560 <descrip>
1561 <tag><label id="rta-net"><m/prefix/ net</tag>
1562 The network prefix or anything else the route is talking about. The
1563 primary key of the routing table. Read-only. (See the <ref id="routes"
1564 name="chapter about routes">.)
1565
1566 <tag><label id="rta-scope"><m/enum/ scope</tag>
1567 The scope of the route. Possible values: <cf/SCOPE_HOST/ for routes
1568 local to this host, <cf/SCOPE_LINK/ for those specific for a physical
1569 link, <cf/SCOPE_SITE/ and <cf/SCOPE_ORGANIZATION/ for private routes and
1570 <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/ for globally visible routes. This attribute is not
1571 interpreted by BIRD and can be used to mark routes in filters. The
1572 default value for new routes is <cf/SCOPE_UNIVERSE/.
1573
1574 <tag><label id="rta-preference"><m/int/ preference</tag>
1575 Preference of the route. Valid values are 0-65535. (See the chapter
1576 about routing tables.)
1577
1578 <tag><label id="rta-from"><m/ip/ from</tag>
1579 The router which the route has originated from.
1580
1581 <tag><label id="rta-gw"><m/ip/ gw</tag>
1582 Next hop packets routed using this route should be forwarded to.
1583
1584 <tag><label id="rta-proto"><m/string/ proto</tag>
1585 The name of the protocol which the route has been imported from.
1586 Read-only.
1587
1588 <tag><label id="rta-source"><m/enum/ source</tag>
1589 what protocol has told me about this route. Possible values:
1590 <cf/RTS_DUMMY/, <cf/RTS_STATIC/, <cf/RTS_INHERIT/, <cf/RTS_DEVICE/,
1591 <cf/RTS_STATIC_DEVICE/, <cf/RTS_REDIRECT/, <cf/RTS_RIP/, <cf/RTS_OSPF/,
1592 <cf/RTS_OSPF_IA/, <cf/RTS_OSPF_EXT1/, <cf/RTS_OSPF_EXT2/, <cf/RTS_BGP/,
1593 <cf/RTS_PIPE/, <cf/RTS_BABEL/.
1594
1595 <tag><label id="rta-dest"><m/enum/ dest</tag>
1596 Type of destination the packets should be sent to
1597 (<cf/RTD_ROUTER/ for forwarding to a neighboring router,
1598 <cf/RTD_DEVICE/ for routing to a directly-connected network,
1599 <cf/RTD_MULTIPATH/ for multipath destinations,
1600 <cf/RTD_BLACKHOLE/ for packets to be silently discarded,
1601 <cf/RTD_UNREACHABLE/, <cf/RTD_PROHIBIT/ for packets that should be
1602 returned with ICMP host unreachable / ICMP administratively prohibited
1603 messages). Can be changed, but only to <cf/RTD_BLACKHOLE/,
1604 <cf/RTD_UNREACHABLE/ or <cf/RTD_PROHIBIT/.
1605
1606 <tag><label id="rta-ifname"><m/string/ ifname</tag>
1607 Name of the outgoing interface. Sink routes (like blackhole, unreachable
1608 or prohibit) and multipath routes have no interface associated with
1609 them, so <cf/ifname/ returns an empty string for such routes. Read-only.
1610
1611 <tag><label id="rta-ifindex"><m/int/ ifindex</tag>
1612 Index of the outgoing interface. System wide index of the interface. May
1613 be used for interface matching, however indexes might change on interface
1614 creation/removal. Zero is returned for routes with undefined outgoing
1615 interfaces. Read-only.
1616
1617 <tag><label id="rta-igp-metric"><m/int/ igp_metric</tag>
1618 The optional attribute that can be used to specify a distance to the
1619 network for routes that do not have a native protocol metric attribute
1620 (like <cf/ospf_metric1/ for OSPF routes). It is used mainly by BGP to
1621 compare internal distances to boundary routers (see below). It is also
1622 used when the route is exported to OSPF as a default value for OSPF type
1623 1 metric.
1624 </descrip>
1625
1626 <p>There also exist protocol-specific attributes which are described in the
1627 corresponding protocol sections.
1628
1629
1630 <sect>Other statements
1631 <label id="other-statements">
1632
1633 <p>The following statements are available:
1634
1635 <descrip>
1636 <tag><label id="assignment"><m/variable/ = <m/expr/</tag>
1637 Set variable to a given value.
1638
1639 <tag><label id="filter-accept-reject">accept|reject [ <m/expr/ ]</tag>
1640 Accept or reject the route, possibly printing <cf><m>expr</m></cf>.
1641
1642 <tag><label id="return">return <m/expr/</tag>
1643 Return <cf><m>expr</m></cf> from the current function, the function ends
1644 at this point.
1645
1646 <tag><label id="print">print|printn <m/expr/ [<m/, expr.../]</tag>
1647 Prints given expressions; useful mainly while debugging filters. The
1648 <cf/printn/ variant does not terminate the line.
1649
1650 <tag><label id="quitbird">quitbird</tag>
1651 Terminates BIRD. Useful when debugging the filter interpreter.
1652 </descrip>
1653
1654
1655 <chapt>Protocols
1656 <label id="protocols">
1657
1658 <sect>Babel
1659 <label id="babel">
1660
1661 <sect1>Introduction
1662 <label id="babel-intro">
1663
1664 <p>The Babel protocol
1665 (<rfc id="6126">) is a loop-avoiding distance-vector routing protocol that is
1666 robust and efficient both in ordinary wired networks and in wireless mesh
1667 networks. Babel is conceptually very simple in its operation and "just works"
1668 in its default configuration, though some configuration is possible and in some
1669 cases desirable.
1670
1671 <p>The Babel protocol is dual stack; i.e., it can carry both IPv4 and IPv6
1672 routes over the same IPv6 transport. For sending and receiving Babel packets,
1673 only a link-local IPv6 address is needed.
1674
1675 <p>BIRD implements an extension for IPv6 source-specific routing (SSR or SADR),
1676 but must be configured accordingly to use it. SADR-enabled Babel router can
1677 interoperate with non-SADR Babel router, but the later would ignore routes
1678 with specific (non-zero) source prefix.
1679
1680 <sect1>Configuration
1681 <label id="babel-config">
1682
1683 <p>The Babel protocol support both IPv4 and IPv6 channels; both can be
1684 configured simultaneously. It can also be configured with <ref
1685 id="ip-sadr-routes" name="IPv6 SADR"> channel instead of regular IPv6
1686 channel, in such case SADR support is enabled. Babel supports no global
1687 configuration options apart from those common to all other protocols, but
1688 supports the following per-interface configuration options:
1689
1690 <code>
1691 protocol babel [<name>] {
1692 ipv4 { <channel config> };
1693 ipv6 [sadr] { <channel config> };
1694 interface <interface pattern> {
1695 type <wired|wireless>;
1696 rxcost <number>;
1697 limit <number>;
1698 hello interval <time>;
1699 update interval <time>;
1700 port <number>;
1701 tx class|dscp <number>;
1702 tx priority <number>;
1703 rx buffer <number>;
1704 tx length <number>;
1705 check link <switch>;
1706 next hop ipv4 <address>;
1707 next hop ipv6 <address>;
1708 };
1709 }
1710 </code>
1711
1712 <descrip>
1713 <tag><label id="babel-channel">ipv4 | ipv6 [sadr] <m/channel config/</tag>
1714 The supported channels are IPv4, IPv6, and IPv6 SADR.
1715
1716 <tag><label id="babel-type">type wired|wireless </tag>
1717 This option specifies the interface type: Wired or wireless. On wired
1718 interfaces a neighbor is considered unreachable after a small number of
1719 Hello packets are lost, as described by <cf/limit/ option. On wireless
1720 interfaces the ETX link quality estimation technique is used to compute
1721 the metrics of routes discovered over this interface. This technique will
1722 gradually degrade the metric of routes when packets are lost rather than
1723 the more binary up/down mechanism of wired type links. Default:
1724 <cf/wired/.
1725
1726 <tag><label id="babel-rxcost">rxcost <m/num/</tag>
1727 This option specifies the nominal RX cost of the interface. The effective
1728 neighbor costs for route metrics will be computed from this value with a
1729 mechanism determined by the interface <cf/type/. Note that in contrast to
1730 other routing protocols like RIP or OSPF, the <cf/rxcost/ specifies the
1731 cost of RX instead of TX, so it affects primarily neighbors' route
1732 selection and not local route selection. Default: 96 for wired interfaces,
1733 256 for wireless.
1734
1735 <tag><label id="babel-limit">limit <m/num/</tag>
1736 BIRD keeps track of received Hello messages from each neighbor to
1737 establish neighbor reachability. For wired type interfaces, this option
1738 specifies how many of last 16 hellos have to be correctly received in
1739 order to neighbor is assumed to be up. The option is ignored on wireless
1740 type interfaces, where gradual cost degradation is used instead of sharp
1741 limit. Default: 12.
1742
1743 <tag><label id="babel-hello">hello interval <m/time/ s|ms</tag>
1744 Interval at which periodic Hello messages are sent on this interface,
1745 with time units. Default: 4 seconds.
1746
1747 <tag><label id="babel-update">update interval <m/time/ s|ms</tag>
1748 Interval at which periodic (full) updates are sent, with time
1749 units. Default: 4 times the hello interval.
1750
1751 <tag><label id="babel-port">port <m/number/</tag>
1752 This option selects an UDP port to operate on. The default is to operate
1753 on port 6696 as specified in the Babel RFC.
1754
1755 <tag><label id="babel-tx-class">tx class|dscp|priority <m/number/</tag>
1756 These options specify the ToS/DiffServ/Traffic class/Priority of the
1757 outgoing Babel packets. See <ref id="proto-tx-class" name="tx class"> common
1758 option for detailed description.
1759
1760 <tag><label id="babel-rx-buffer">rx buffer <m/number/</tag>
1761 This option specifies the size of buffers used for packet processing.
1762 The buffer size should be bigger than maximal size of received packets.
1763 The default value is the interface MTU, and the value will be clamped to a
1764 minimum of 512 bytes + IP packet overhead.
1765
1766 <tag><label id="babel-tx-length">tx length <m/number/</tag>
1767 This option specifies the maximum length of generated Babel packets. To
1768 avoid IP fragmentation, it should not exceed the interface MTU value.
1769 The default value is the interface MTU value, and the value will be
1770 clamped to a minimum of 512 bytes + IP packet overhead.
1771
1772 <tag><label id="babel-check-link">check link <m/switch/</tag>
1773 If set, the hardware link state (as reported by OS) is taken into
1774 consideration. When the link disappears (e.g. an ethernet cable is
1775 unplugged), neighbors are immediately considered unreachable and all
1776 routes received from them are withdrawn. It is possible that some
1777 hardware drivers or platforms do not implement this feature. Default:
1778 yes.
1779
1780 <tag><label id="babel-next-hop-ipv4">next hop ipv4 <m/address/</tag>
1781 Set the next hop address advertised for IPv4 routes advertised on this
1782 interface. Default: the preferred IPv4 address of the interface.
1783
1784 <tag><label id="babel-next-hop-ipv6">next hop ipv6 <m/address/</tag>
1785 Set the next hop address advertised for IPv6 routes advertised on this
1786 interface. If not set, the same link-local address that is used as the
1787 source for Babel packets will be used. In normal operation, it should not
1788 be necessary to set this option.
1789 </descrip>
1790
1791 <sect1>Attributes
1792 <label id="babel-attr">
1793
1794 <p>Babel defines just one attribute: the internal babel metric of the route. It
1795 is exposed as the <cf/babel_metric/ attribute and has range from 1 to infinity
1796 (65535).
1797
1798 <sect1>Example
1799 <label id="babel-exam">
1800
1801 <p><code>
1802 protocol babel {
1803 interface "eth*" {
1804 type wired;
1805 };
1806 interface "wlan0", "wlan1" {
1807 type wireless;
1808 hello interval 1;
1809 rxcost 512;
1810 };
1811 interface "tap0";
1812
1813 # This matches the default of babeld: redistribute all addresses
1814 # configured on local interfaces, plus re-distribute all routes received
1815 # from other babel peers.
1816
1817 ipv4 {
1818 export where (source = RTS_DEVICE) || (source = RTS_BABEL);
1819 };
1820 ipv6 {
1821 export where (source = RTS_DEVICE) || (source = RTS_BABEL);
1822 };
1823 }
1824 </code>
1825
1826 <sect1>Known issues
1827 <label id="babel-issues">
1828
1829 <p>When retracting a route, Babel generates an unreachable route for a little
1830 while (according to RFC). The interaction of this behavior with other protocols
1831 is not well tested and strange things may happen.
1832
1833
1834 <sect>BFD
1835 <label id="bfd">
1836
1837 <sect1>Introduction
1838 <label id="bfd-intro">
1839
1840 <p>Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) is not a routing protocol itself, it
1841 is an independent tool providing liveness and failure detection. Routing
1842 protocols like OSPF and BGP use integrated periodic "hello" messages to monitor
1843 liveness of neighbors, but detection times of these mechanisms are high (e.g. 40
1844 seconds by default in OSPF, could be set down to several seconds). BFD offers
1845 universal, fast and low-overhead mechanism for failure detection, which could be
1846 attached to any routing protocol in an advisory role.
1847
1848 <p>BFD consists of mostly independent BFD sessions. Each session monitors an
1849 unicast bidirectional path between two BFD-enabled routers. This is done by
1850 periodically sending control packets in both directions. BFD does not handle
1851 neighbor discovery, BFD sessions are created on demand by request of other
1852 protocols (like OSPF or BGP), which supply appropriate information like IP
1853 addresses and associated interfaces. When a session changes its state, these
1854 protocols are notified and act accordingly (e.g. break an OSPF adjacency when
1855 the BFD session went down).
1856
1857 <p>BIRD implements basic BFD behavior as defined in <rfc id="5880"> (some
1858 advanced features like the echo mode or authentication are not implemented), IP
1859 transport for BFD as defined in <rfc id="5881"> and <rfc id="5883"> and
1860 interaction with client protocols as defined in <rfc id="5882">.
1861 We currently support at most one protocol instance.
1862
1863 <p>BFD packets are sent with a dynamic source port number. Linux systems use by
1864 default a bit different dynamic port range than the IANA approved one
1865 (49152-65535). If you experience problems with compatibility, please adjust
1866 <cf>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range</cf>
1867
1868 <sect1>Configuration
1869 <label id="bfd-config">
1870
1871 <p>BFD configuration consists mainly of multiple definitions of interfaces.
1872 Most BFD config options are session specific. When a new session is requested
1873 and dynamically created, it is configured from one of these definitions. For
1874 sessions to directly connected neighbors, <cf/interface/ definitions are chosen
1875 based on the interface associated with the session, while <cf/multihop/
1876 definition is used for multihop sessions. If no definition is relevant, the
1877 session is just created with the default configuration. Therefore, an empty BFD
1878 configuration is often sufficient.
1879
1880 <p>Note that to use BFD for other protocols like OSPF or BGP, these protocols
1881 also have to be configured to request BFD sessions, usually by <cf/bfd/ option.
1882
1883 <p>Some of BFD session options require <m/time/ value, which has to be specified
1884 with the appropriate unit: <m/num/ <cf/s/|<cf/ms/|<cf/us/. Although microseconds
1885 are allowed as units, practical minimum values are usually in order of tens of
1886 milliseconds.
1887
1888 <code>
1889 protocol bfd [&lt;name&gt;] {
1890 interface &lt;interface pattern&gt; {
1891 interval &lt;time&gt;;
1892 min rx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1893 min tx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1894 idle tx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1895 multiplier &lt;num&gt;;
1896 passive &lt;switch&gt;;
1897 authentication none;
1898 authentication simple;
1899 authentication [meticulous] keyed md5|sha1;
1900 password "&lt;text&gt;";
1901 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
1902 id &lt;num&gt;;
1903 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
1904 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
1905 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
1906 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
1907 from "&lt;date&gt;";
1908 to "&lt;date&gt;";
1909 };
1910 };
1911 multihop {
1912 interval &lt;time&gt;;
1913 min rx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1914 min tx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1915 idle tx interval &lt;time&gt;;
1916 multiplier &lt;num&gt;;
1917 passive &lt;switch&gt;;
1918 };
1919 neighbor &lt;ip&gt; [dev "&lt;interface&gt;"] [local &lt;ip&gt;] [multihop &lt;switch&gt;];
1920 }
1921 </code>
1922
1923 <descrip>
1924 <tag><label id="bfd-iface">interface <m/pattern/ [, <m/.../] { <m/options/ }</tag>
1925 Interface definitions allow to specify options for sessions associated
1926 with such interfaces and also may contain interface specific options.
1927 See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface"> common option for a detailed
1928 description of interface patterns. Note that contrary to the behavior of
1929 <cf/interface/ definitions of other protocols, BFD protocol would accept
1930 sessions (in default configuration) even on interfaces not covered by
1931 such definitions.
1932
1933 <tag><label id="bfd-multihop">multihop { <m/options/ }</tag>
1934 Multihop definitions allow to specify options for multihop BFD sessions,
1935 in the same manner as <cf/interface/ definitions are used for directly
1936 connected sessions. Currently only one such definition (for all multihop
1937 sessions) could be used.
1938
1939 <tag><label id="bfd-neighbor">neighbor <m/ip/ [dev "<m/interface/"] [local <m/ip/] [multihop <m/switch/]</tag>
1940 BFD sessions are usually created on demand as requested by other
1941 protocols (like OSPF or BGP). This option allows to explicitly add
1942 a BFD session to the specified neighbor regardless of such requests.
1943
1944 The session is identified by the IP address of the neighbor, with
1945 optional specification of used interface and local IP. By default
1946 the neighbor must be directly connected, unless the session is
1947 configured as multihop. Note that local IP must be specified for
1948 multihop sessions.
1949 </descrip>
1950
1951 <p>Session specific options (part of <cf/interface/ and <cf/multihop/ definitions):
1952
1953 <descrip>
1954 <tag><label id="bfd-interval">interval <m/time/</tag>
1955 BFD ensures availability of the forwarding path associated with the
1956 session by periodically sending BFD control packets in both
1957 directions. The rate of such packets is controlled by two options,
1958 <cf/min rx interval/ and <cf/min tx interval/ (see below). This option
1959 is just a shorthand to set both of these options together.
1960
1961 <tag><label id="bfd-min-rx-interval">min rx interval <m/time/</tag>
1962 This option specifies the minimum RX interval, which is announced to the
1963 neighbor and used there to limit the neighbor's rate of generated BFD
1964 control packets. Default: 10 ms.
1965
1966 <tag><label id="bfd-min-tx-interval">min tx interval <m/time/</tag>
1967 This option specifies the desired TX interval, which controls the rate
1968 of generated BFD control packets (together with <cf/min rx interval/
1969 announced by the neighbor). Note that this value is used only if the BFD
1970 session is up, otherwise the value of <cf/idle tx interval/ is used
1971 instead. Default: 100 ms.
1972
1973 <tag><label id="bfd-idle-tx-interval">idle tx interval <m/time/</tag>
1974 In order to limit unnecessary traffic in cases where a neighbor is not
1975 available or not running BFD, the rate of generated BFD control packets
1976 is lower when the BFD session is not up. This option specifies the
1977 desired TX interval in such cases instead of <cf/min tx interval/.
1978 Default: 1 s.
1979
1980 <tag><label id="bfd-multiplier">multiplier <m/num/</tag>
1981 Failure detection time for BFD sessions is based on established rate of
1982 BFD control packets (<cf>min rx/tx interval</cf>) multiplied by this
1983 multiplier, which is essentially (ignoring jitter) a number of missed
1984 packets after which the session is declared down. Note that rates and
1985 multipliers could be different in each direction of a BFD session.
1986 Default: 5.
1987
1988 <tag><label id="bfd-passive">passive <m/switch/</tag>
1989 Generally, both BFD session endpoints try to establish the session by
1990 sending control packets to the other side. This option allows to enable
1991 passive mode, which means that the router does not send BFD packets
1992 until it has received one from the other side. Default: disabled.
1993
1994 <tag>authentication none</tag>
1995 No passwords are sent in BFD packets. This is the default value.
1996
1997 <tag>authentication simple</tag>
1998 Every packet carries 16 bytes of password. Received packets lacking this
1999 password are ignored. This authentication mechanism is very weak.
2000
2001 <tag>authentication [meticulous] keyed md5|sha1</tag>
2002 An authentication code is appended to each packet. The cryptographic
2003 algorithm is keyed MD5 or keyed SHA-1. Note that the algorithm is common
2004 for all keys (on one interface), in contrast to OSPF or RIP, where it
2005 is a per-key option. Passwords (keys) are not sent open via network.
2006
2007 The <cf/meticulous/ variant means that cryptographic sequence numbers
2008 are increased for each sent packet, while in the basic variant they are
2009 increased about once per second. Generally, the <cf/meticulous/ variant
2010 offers better resistance to replay attacks but may require more
2011 computation.
2012
2013 <tag>password "<M>text</M>"</tag>
2014 Specifies a password used for authentication. See <ref id="proto-pass"
2015 name="password"> common option for detailed description. Note that
2016 password option <cf/algorithm/ is not available in BFD protocol. The
2017 algorithm is selected by <cf/authentication/ option for all passwords.
2018
2019 </descrip>
2020
2021 <sect1>Example
2022 <label id="bfd-exam">
2023
2024 <p><code>
2025 protocol bfd {
2026 interface "eth*" {
2027 min rx interval 20 ms;
2028 min tx interval 50 ms;
2029 idle tx interval 300 ms;
2030 };
2031 interface "gre*" {
2032 interval 200 ms;
2033 multiplier 10;
2034 passive;
2035 };
2036 multihop {
2037 interval 200 ms;
2038 multiplier 10;
2039 };
2040
2041 neighbor 192.168.1.10;
2042 neighbor 192.168.2.2 dev "eth2";
2043 neighbor 192.168.10.1 local 192.168.1.1 multihop;
2044 }
2045 </code>
2046
2047
2048 <sect>BGP
2049 <label id="bgp">
2050
2051 <p>The Border Gateway Protocol is the routing protocol used for backbone level
2052 routing in the today's Internet. Contrary to other protocols, its convergence
2053 does not rely on all routers following the same rules for route selection,
2054 making it possible to implement any routing policy at any router in the network,
2055 the only restriction being that if a router advertises a route, it must accept
2056 and forward packets according to it.
2057
2058 <p>BGP works in terms of autonomous systems (often abbreviated as AS). Each AS
2059 is a part of the network with common management and common routing policy. It is
2060 identified by a unique 16-bit number (ASN). Routers within each AS usually
2061 exchange AS-internal routing information with each other using an interior
2062 gateway protocol (IGP, such as OSPF or RIP). Boundary routers at the border of
2063 the AS communicate global (inter-AS) network reachability information with their
2064 neighbors in the neighboring AS'es via exterior BGP (eBGP) and redistribute
2065 received information to other routers in the AS via interior BGP (iBGP).
2066
2067 <p>Each BGP router sends to its neighbors updates of the parts of its routing
2068 table it wishes to export along with complete path information (a list of AS'es
2069 the packet will travel through if it uses the particular route) in order to
2070 avoid routing loops.
2071
2072 <sect1>Supported standards
2073 <label id="bgp-standards">
2074
2075 <p>
2076 <itemize>
2077 <item> <rfc id="4271"> - Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP)
2078 <item> <rfc id="1997"> - BGP Communities Attribute
2079 <item> <rfc id="2385"> - Protection of BGP Sessions via TCP MD5 Signature
2080 <item> <rfc id="2545"> - Use of BGP Multiprotocol Extensions for IPv6
2081 <item> <rfc id="2918"> - Route Refresh Capability
2082 <item> <rfc id="3107"> - Carrying Label Information in BGP
2083 <item> <rfc id="4360"> - BGP Extended Communities Attribute
2084 <item> <rfc id="4364"> - BGP/MPLS IPv4 Virtual Private Networks
2085 <item> <rfc id="4456"> - BGP Route Reflection
2086 <item> <rfc id="4486"> - Subcodes for BGP Cease Notification Message
2087 <item> <rfc id="4659"> - BGP/MPLS IPv6 Virtual Private Networks
2088 <item> <rfc id="4724"> - Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP
2089 <item> <rfc id="4760"> - Multiprotocol extensions for BGP
2090 <item> <rfc id="4798"> - Connecting IPv6 Islands over IPv4 MPLS
2091 <item> <rfc id="5065"> - AS confederations for BGP
2092 <item> <rfc id="5082"> - Generalized TTL Security Mechanism
2093 <item> <rfc id="5492"> - Capabilities Advertisement with BGP
2094 <item> <rfc id="5549"> - Advertising IPv4 NLRI with an IPv6 Next Hop
2095 <item> <rfc id="5575"> - Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules
2096 <item> <rfc id="5668"> - 4-Octet AS Specific BGP Extended Community
2097 <item> <rfc id="6286"> - AS-Wide Unique BGP Identifier
2098 <item> <rfc id="6608"> - Subcodes for BGP Finite State Machine Error
2099 <item> <rfc id="6793"> - BGP Support for 4-Octet AS Numbers
2100 <item> <rfc id="7313"> - Enhanced Route Refresh Capability for BGP
2101 <item> <rfc id="7606"> - Revised Error Handling for BGP UPDATE Messages
2102 <item> <rfc id="7911"> - Advertisement of Multiple Paths in BGP
2103 <item> <rfc id="7947"> - Internet Exchange BGP Route Server
2104 <item> <rfc id="8092"> - BGP Large Communities Attribute
2105 <item> <rfc id="8203"> - BGP Administrative Shutdown Communication
2106 <item> <rfc id="8212"> - Default EBGP Route Propagation Behavior without Policies
2107 </itemize>
2108
2109 <sect1>Route selection rules
2110 <label id="bgp-route-select-rules">
2111
2112 <p>BGP doesn't have any simple metric, so the rules for selection of an optimal
2113 route among multiple BGP routes with the same preference are a bit more complex
2114 and they are implemented according to the following algorithm. It starts the
2115 first rule, if there are more "best" routes, then it uses the second rule to
2116 choose among them and so on.
2117
2118 <itemize>
2119 <item>Prefer route with the highest Local Preference attribute.
2120 <item>Prefer route with the shortest AS path.
2121 <item>Prefer IGP origin over EGP and EGP origin over incomplete.
2122 <item>Prefer the lowest value of the Multiple Exit Discriminator.
2123 <item>Prefer routes received via eBGP over ones received via iBGP.
2124 <item>Prefer routes with lower internal distance to a boundary router.
2125 <item>Prefer the route with the lowest value of router ID of the
2126 advertising router.
2127 </itemize>
2128
2129 <sect1>IGP routing table
2130 <label id="bgp-igp-routing-table">
2131
2132 <p>BGP is mainly concerned with global network reachability and with routes to
2133 other autonomous systems. When such routes are redistributed to routers in the
2134 AS via BGP, they contain IP addresses of a boundary routers (in route attribute
2135 NEXT_HOP). BGP depends on existing IGP routing table with AS-internal routes to
2136 determine immediate next hops for routes and to know their internal distances to
2137 boundary routers for the purpose of BGP route selection. In BIRD, there is
2138 usually one routing table used for both IGP routes and BGP routes.
2139
2140 <sect1>Protocol configuration
2141 <label id="bgp-proto-config">
2142
2143 <p>Each instance of the BGP corresponds to one neighboring router. This allows
2144 to set routing policy and all the other parameters differently for each neighbor
2145 using the following configuration parameters:
2146
2147 <descrip>
2148 <tag><label id="bgp-local">local [<m/ip/] [port <m/number/] [as <m/number/]</tag>
2149 Define which AS we are part of. (Note that contrary to other IP routers,
2150 BIRD is able to act as a router located in multiple AS'es simultaneously,
2151 but in such cases you need to tweak the BGP paths manually in the filters
2152 to get consistent behavior.) Optional <cf/ip/ argument specifies a source
2153 address, equivalent to the <cf/source address/ option (see below).
2154 Optional <cf/port/ argument specifies the local BGP port instead of
2155 standard port 179. The parameter may be used multiple times with
2156 different sub-options (e.g., both <cf/local 10.0.0.1 as 65000;/ and
2157 <cf/local 10.0.0.1; local as 65000;/ are valid). This parameter is
2158 mandatory.
2159
2160 <tag><label id="bgp-neighbor">neighbor [<m/ip/] [port <m/number/] [as <m/number/]</tag>
2161 Define neighboring router this instance will be talking to and what AS
2162 it is located in. In case the neighbor is in the same AS as we are, we
2163 automatically switch to iBGP. Optionally, the remote port may also be
2164 specified. Like <cf/local/ parameter, this parameter may also be used
2165 multiple times with different sub-options. This parameter is mandatory.
2166
2167 <tag><label id="bgp-iface">interface <m/string/</tag>
2168 Define interface we should use for link-local BGP IPv6 sessions.
2169 Interface can also be specified as a part of <cf/neighbor address/
2170 (e.g., <cf/neighbor fe80::1234%eth0 as 65000;/). The option may also be
2171 used for non link-local sessions when it is necessary to explicitly
2172 specify an interface, but only for direct (not multihop) sessions.
2173
2174 <tag><label id="bgp-direct">direct</tag>
2175 Specify that the neighbor is directly connected. The IP address of the
2176 neighbor must be from a directly reachable IP range (i.e. associated
2177 with one of your router's interfaces), otherwise the BGP session
2178 wouldn't start but it would wait for such interface to appear. The
2179 alternative is the <cf/multihop/ option. Default: enabled for eBGP.
2180
2181 <tag><label id="bgp-multihop">multihop [<m/number/]</tag>
2182 Configure multihop BGP session to a neighbor that isn't directly
2183 connected. Accurately, this option should be used if the configured
2184 neighbor IP address does not match with any local network subnets. Such
2185 IP address have to be reachable through system routing table. The
2186 alternative is the <cf/direct/ option. For multihop BGP it is
2187 recommended to explicitly configure the source address to have it
2188 stable. Optional <cf/number/ argument can be used to specify the number
2189 of hops (used for TTL). Note that the number of networks (edges) in a
2190 path is counted; i.e., if two BGP speakers are separated by one router,
2191 the number of hops is 2. Default: enabled for iBGP.
2192
2193 <tag><label id="bgp-source-address">source address <m/ip/</tag>
2194 Define local address we should use for next hop calculation and as a
2195 source address for the BGP session. Default: the address of the local
2196 end of the interface our neighbor is connected to.
2197
2198 <tag><label id="bgp-strict-bind">strict bind <m/switch/</tag>
2199 Specify whether BGP listening socket should be bound to a specific local
2200 address (the same as the <cf/source address/) and associated interface,
2201 or to all addresses. Binding to a specific address could be useful in
2202 cases like running multiple BIRD instances on a machine, each using its
2203 IP address. Note that listening sockets bound to a specific address and
2204 to all addresses collide, therefore either all BGP protocols (of the
2205 same address family and using the same local port) should have set
2206 <cf/strict bind/, or none of them. Default: disabled.
2207
2208 <tag><label id="bgp-check-link">check link <M>switch</M></tag>
2209 BGP could use hardware link state into consideration. If enabled,
2210 BIRD tracks the link state of the associated interface and when link
2211 disappears (e.g. an ethernet cable is unplugged), the BGP session is
2212 immediately shut down. Note that this option cannot be used with
2213 multihop BGP. Default: enabled for direct BGP, disabled otherwise.
2214
2215 <tag><label id="bgp-bfd">bfd <M>switch</M></tag>
2216 BGP could use BFD protocol as an advisory mechanism for neighbor
2217 liveness and failure detection. If enabled, BIRD setups a BFD session
2218 for the BGP neighbor and tracks its liveness by it. This has an
2219 advantage of an order of magnitude lower detection times in case of
2220 failure. Note that BFD protocol also has to be configured, see
2221 <ref id="bfd" name="BFD"> section for details. Default: disabled.
2222
2223 <tag><label id="bgp-ttl-security">ttl security <m/switch/</tag>
2224 Use GTSM (<rfc id="5082"> - the generalized TTL security mechanism). GTSM
2225 protects against spoofed packets by ignoring received packets with a
2226 smaller than expected TTL. To work properly, GTSM have to be enabled on
2227 both sides of a BGP session. If both <cf/ttl security/ and
2228 <cf/multihop/ options are enabled, <cf/multihop/ option should specify
2229 proper hop value to compute expected TTL. Kernel support required:
2230 Linux: 2.6.34+ (IPv4), 2.6.35+ (IPv6), BSD: since long ago, IPv4 only.
2231 Note that full (ICMP protection, for example) <rfc id="5082"> support is
2232 provided by Linux only. Default: disabled.
2233
2234 <tag><label id="bgp-password">password <m/string/</tag>
2235 Use this password for MD5 authentication of BGP sessions (<rfc id="2385">). When
2236 used on BSD systems, see also <cf/setkey/ option below. Default: no
2237 authentication.
2238
2239 <tag><label id="bgp-setkey">setkey <m/switch/</tag>
2240 On BSD systems, keys for TCP MD5 authentication are stored in the global
2241 SA/SP database, which can be accessed by external utilities (e.g.
2242 setkey(8)). BIRD configures security associations in the SA/SP database
2243 automatically based on <cf/password/ options (see above), this option
2244 allows to disable automatic updates by BIRD when manual configuration by
2245 external utilities is preferred. Note that automatic SA/SP database
2246 updates are currently implemented only for FreeBSD. Passwords have to be
2247 set manually by an external utility on NetBSD and OpenBSD. Default:
2248 enabled (ignored on non-FreeBSD).
2249
2250 <tag><label id="bgp-passive">passive <m/switch/</tag>
2251 Standard BGP behavior is both initiating outgoing connections and
2252 accepting incoming connections. In passive mode, outgoing connections
2253 are not initiated. Default: off.
2254
2255 <tag><label id="bgp-confederation">confederation <m/number/</tag>
2256 BGP confederations (<rfc id="5065">) are collections of autonomous
2257 systems that act as one entity to external systems, represented by one
2258 confederation identifier (instead of AS numbers). This option allows to
2259 enable BGP confederation behavior and to specify the local confederation
2260 identifier. When BGP confederations are used, all BGP speakers that are
2261 members of the BGP confederation should have the same confederation
2262 identifier configured. Default: 0 (no confederation).
2263
2264 <tag><label id="bgp-confederation-member">confederation member <m/switch/</tag>
2265 When BGP confederations are used, this option allows to specify whether
2266 the BGP neighbor is a member of the same confederation as the local BGP
2267 speaker. The option is unnecessary (and ignored) for IBGP sessions, as
2268 the same AS number implies the same confederation. Default: no.
2269
2270 <tag><label id="bgp-rr-client">rr client</tag>
2271 Be a route reflector and treat the neighbor as a route reflection
2272 client. Default: disabled.
2273
2274 <tag><label id="bgp-rr-cluster-id">rr cluster id <m/IPv4 address/</tag>
2275 Route reflectors use cluster id to avoid route reflection loops. When
2276 there is one route reflector in a cluster it usually uses its router id
2277 as a cluster id, but when there are more route reflectors in a cluster,
2278 these need to be configured (using this option) to use a common cluster
2279 id. Clients in a cluster need not know their cluster id and this option
2280 is not allowed for them. Default: the same as router id.
2281
2282 <tag><label id="bgp-rs-client">rs client</tag>
2283 Be a route server and treat the neighbor as a route server client.
2284 A route server is used as a replacement for full mesh EBGP routing in
2285 Internet exchange points in a similar way to route reflectors used in
2286 IBGP routing. BIRD does not implement obsoleted <rfc id="1863">, but
2287 uses ad-hoc implementation, which behaves like plain EBGP but reduces
2288 modifications to advertised route attributes to be transparent (for
2289 example does not prepend its AS number to AS PATH attribute and
2290 keeps MED attribute). Default: disabled.
2291
2292 <tag><label id="bgp-allow-local-pref">allow bgp_local_pref <m/switch/</tag>
2293 A standard BGP implementation do not send the Local Preference attribute
2294 to eBGP neighbors and ignore this attribute if received from eBGP
2295 neighbors, as per <rfc id="4271">. When this option is enabled on an
2296 eBGP session, this attribute will be sent to and accepted from the peer,
2297 which is useful for example if you have a setup like in <rfc id="7938">.
2298 The option does not affect iBGP sessions. Default: off.
2299
2300 <tag><label id="bgp-allow-local-as">allow local as [<m/number/]</tag>
2301 BGP prevents routing loops by rejecting received routes with the local
2302 AS number in the AS path. This option allows to loose or disable the
2303 check. Optional <cf/number/ argument can be used to specify the maximum
2304 number of local ASNs in the AS path that is allowed for received
2305 routes. When the option is used without the argument, the check is
2306 completely disabled and you should ensure loop-free behavior by some
2307 other means. Default: 0 (no local AS number allowed).
2308
2309 <tag><label id="bgp-enable-route-refresh">enable route refresh <m/switch/</tag>
2310 After the initial route exchange, BGP protocol uses incremental updates
2311 to keep BGP speakers synchronized. Sometimes (e.g., if BGP speaker
2312 changes its import filter, or if there is suspicion of inconsistency) it
2313 is necessary to do a new complete route exchange. BGP protocol extension
2314 Route Refresh (<rfc id="2918">) allows BGP speaker to request
2315 re-advertisement of all routes from its neighbor. BGP protocol
2316 extension Enhanced Route Refresh (<rfc id="7313">) specifies explicit
2317 begin and end for such exchanges, therefore the receiver can remove
2318 stale routes that were not advertised during the exchange. This option
2319 specifies whether BIRD advertises these capabilities and supports
2320 related procedures. Note that even when disabled, BIRD can send route
2321 refresh requests. Default: on.
2322
2323 <tag><label id="bgp-graceful-restart">graceful restart <m/switch/|aware</tag>
2324 When a BGP speaker restarts or crashes, neighbors will discard all
2325 received paths from the speaker, which disrupts packet forwarding even
2326 when the forwarding plane of the speaker remains intact. <rfc id="4724">
2327 specifies an optional graceful restart mechanism to alleviate this
2328 issue. This option controls the mechanism. It has three states:
2329 Disabled, when no support is provided. Aware, when the graceful restart
2330 support is announced and the support for restarting neighbors is
2331 provided, but no local graceful restart is allowed (i.e. receiving-only
2332 role). Enabled, when the full graceful restart support is provided
2333 (i.e. both restarting and receiving role). Restarting role could be also
2334 configured per-channel. Note that proper support for local graceful
2335 restart requires also configuration of other protocols. Default: aware.
2336
2337 <tag><label id="bgp-graceful-restart-time">graceful restart time <m/number/</tag>
2338 The restart time is announced in the BGP graceful restart capability
2339 and specifies how long the neighbor would wait for the BGP session to
2340 re-establish after a restart before deleting stale routes. Default:
2341 120 seconds.
2342
2343 <tag><label id="bgp-interpret-communities">interpret communities <m/switch/</tag>
2344 <rfc id="1997"> demands that BGP speaker should process well-known
2345 communities like no-export (65535, 65281) or no-advertise (65535,
2346 65282). For example, received route carrying a no-adverise community
2347 should not be advertised to any of its neighbors. If this option is
2348 enabled (which is by default), BIRD has such behavior automatically (it
2349 is evaluated when a route is exported to the BGP protocol just before
2350 the export filter). Otherwise, this integrated processing of
2351 well-known communities is disabled. In that case, similar behavior can
2352 be implemented in the export filter. Default: on.
2353
2354 <tag><label id="bgp-enable-as4">enable as4 <m/switch/</tag>
2355 BGP protocol was designed to use 2B AS numbers and was extended later to
2356 allow 4B AS number. BIRD supports 4B AS extension, but by disabling this
2357 option it can be persuaded not to advertise it and to maintain old-style
2358 sessions with its neighbors. This might be useful for circumventing bugs
2359 in neighbor's implementation of 4B AS extension. Even when disabled
2360 (off), BIRD behaves internally as AS4-aware BGP router. Default: on.
2361
2362 <tag><label id="bgp-enable-extended-messages">enable extended messages <m/switch/</tag>
2363 The BGP protocol uses maximum message length of 4096 bytes. This option
2364 provides an extension to allow extended messages with length up
2365 to 65535 bytes. Default: off.
2366
2367 <tag><label id="bgp-capabilities">capabilities <m/switch/</tag>
2368 Use capability advertisement to advertise optional capabilities. This is
2369 standard behavior for newer BGP implementations, but there might be some
2370 older BGP implementations that reject such connection attempts. When
2371 disabled (off), features that request it (4B AS support) are also
2372 disabled. Default: on, with automatic fallback to off when received
2373 capability-related error.
2374
2375 <tag><label id="bgp-advertise-ipv4">advertise ipv4 <m/switch/</tag>
2376 Advertise IPv4 multiprotocol capability. This is not a correct behavior
2377 according to the strict interpretation of <rfc id="4760">, but it is
2378 widespread and required by some BGP implementations (Cisco and Quagga).
2379 This option is relevant to IPv4 mode with enabled capability
2380 advertisement only. Default: on.
2381
2382 <tag><label id="bgp-disable-after-error">disable after error <m/switch/</tag>
2383 When an error is encountered (either locally or by the other side),
2384 disable the instance automatically and wait for an administrator to fix
2385 the problem manually. Default: off.
2386
2387 <tag><label id="bgp-hold-time">hold time <m/number/</tag>
2388 Time in seconds to wait for a Keepalive message from the other side
2389 before considering the connection stale. Default: depends on agreement
2390 with the neighboring router, we prefer 240 seconds if the other side is
2391 willing to accept it.
2392
2393 <tag><label id="bgp-startup-hold-time">startup hold time <m/number/</tag>
2394 Value of the hold timer used before the routers have a chance to exchange
2395 open messages and agree on the real value. Default: 240 seconds.
2396
2397 <tag><label id="bgp-keepalive-time">keepalive time <m/number/</tag>
2398 Delay in seconds between sending of two consecutive Keepalive messages.
2399 Default: One third of the hold time.
2400
2401 <tag><label id="bgp-connect-delay-time">connect delay time <m/number/</tag>
2402 Delay in seconds between protocol startup and the first attempt to
2403 connect. Default: 5 seconds.
2404
2405 <tag><label id="bgp-connect-retry-time">connect retry time <m/number/</tag>
2406 Time in seconds to wait before retrying a failed attempt to connect.
2407 Default: 120 seconds.
2408
2409 <tag><label id="bgp-error-wait-time">error wait time <m/number/,<m/number/</tag>
2410 Minimum and maximum delay in seconds between a protocol failure (either
2411 local or reported by the peer) and automatic restart. Doesn't apply
2412 when <cf/disable after error/ is configured. If consecutive errors
2413 happen, the delay is increased exponentially until it reaches the
2414 maximum. Default: 60, 300.
2415
2416 <tag><label id="bgp-error-forget-time">error forget time <m/number/</tag>
2417 Maximum time in seconds between two protocol failures to treat them as a
2418 error sequence which makes <cf/error wait time/ increase exponentially.
2419 Default: 300 seconds.
2420
2421 <tag><label id="bgp-path-metric">path metric <m/switch/</tag>
2422 Enable comparison of path lengths when deciding which BGP route is the
2423 best one. Default: on.
2424
2425 <tag><label id="bgp-med-metric">med metric <m/switch/</tag>
2426 Enable comparison of MED attributes (during best route selection) even
2427 between routes received from different ASes. This may be useful if all
2428 MED attributes contain some consistent metric, perhaps enforced in
2429 import filters of AS boundary routers. If this option is disabled, MED
2430 attributes are compared only if routes are received from the same AS
2431 (which is the standard behavior). Default: off.
2432
2433 <tag><label id="bgp-deterministic-med">deterministic med <m/switch/</tag>
2434 BGP route selection algorithm is often viewed as a comparison between
2435 individual routes (e.g. if a new route appears and is better than the
2436 current best one, it is chosen as the new best one). But the proper
2437 route selection, as specified by <rfc id="4271">, cannot be fully
2438 implemented in that way. The problem is mainly in handling the MED
2439 attribute. BIRD, by default, uses an simplification based on individual
2440 route comparison, which in some cases may lead to temporally dependent
2441 behavior (i.e. the selection is dependent on the order in which routes
2442 appeared). This option enables a different (and slower) algorithm
2443 implementing proper <rfc id="4271"> route selection, which is
2444 deterministic. Alternative way how to get deterministic behavior is to
2445 use <cf/med metric/ option. This option is incompatible with <ref
2446 id="dsc-table-sorted" name="sorted tables">. Default: off.
2447
2448 <tag><label id="bgp-igp-metric">igp metric <m/switch/</tag>
2449 Enable comparison of internal distances to boundary routers during best
2450 route selection. Default: on.
2451
2452 <tag><label id="bgp-prefer-older">prefer older <m/switch/</tag>
2453 Standard route selection algorithm breaks ties by comparing router IDs.
2454 This changes the behavior to prefer older routes (when both are external
2455 and from different peer). For details, see <rfc id="5004">. Default: off.
2456
2457 <tag><label id="bgp-default-med">default bgp_med <m/number/</tag>
2458 Value of the Multiple Exit Discriminator to be used during route
2459 selection when the MED attribute is missing. Default: 0.
2460
2461 <tag><label id="bgp-default-local-pref">default bgp_local_pref <m/number/</tag>
2462 A default value for the Local Preference attribute. It is used when
2463 a new Local Preference attribute is attached to a route by the BGP
2464 protocol itself (for example, if a route is received through eBGP and
2465 therefore does not have such attribute). Default: 100 (0 in pre-1.2.0
2466 versions of BIRD).
2467 </descrip>
2468
2469 <sect1>Channel configuration
2470 <label id="bgp-channel-config">
2471
2472 <p>BGP supports several AFIs and SAFIs over one connection. Every AFI/SAFI
2473 announced to the peer corresponds to one channel. The table of supported AFI/SAFIs
2474 together with their appropriate channels follows.
2475
2476 <table loc="h">
2477 <tabular ca="l|l|l|r|r">
2478 <bf/Channel name/ | <bf/Table nettype/ | <bf/IGP table allowed/ | <bf/AFI/ | <bf/SAFI/
2479 @<hline>
2480 <cf/ipv4/ | <cf/ipv4/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 1 | 1
2481 @ <cf/ipv6/ | <cf/ipv6/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 2 | 1
2482 @ <cf/ipv4 multicast/ | <cf/ipv4/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 1 | 2
2483 @ <cf/ipv6 multicast/ | <cf/ipv6/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 2 | 2
2484 @ <cf/ipv4 mpls/ | <cf/ipv4/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 1 | 4
2485 @ <cf/ipv6 mpls/ | <cf/ipv6/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 2 | 4
2486 @ <cf/vpn4 mpls/ | <cf/vpn4/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 1 | 128
2487 @ <cf/vpn6 mpls/ | <cf/vpn6/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 2 | 128
2488 @ <cf/vpn4 multicast/ | <cf/vpn4/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 1 | 129
2489 @ <cf/vpn6 multicast/ | <cf/vpn6/ | <cf/ipv4/ and <cf/ipv6/ | 2 | 129
2490 @ <cf/flow4/ | <cf/flow4/ | --- | 1 | 133
2491 @ <cf/flow6/ | <cf/flow6/ | --- | 2 | 133
2492 </tabular>
2493 </table>
2494
2495 <p>Due to <rfc id="8212">, external BGP protocol requires explicit configuration
2496 of import and export policies (in contrast to other protocols, where default
2497 policies of <cf/import all/ and <cf/export none/ are used in absence of explicit
2498 configuration). Note that blanket policies like <cf/all/ or <cf/none/ can still
2499 be used in explicit configuration.
2500
2501 <p>BGP channels have additional config options (together with the common ones):
2502
2503 <descrip>
2504 <tag><label id="bgp-next-hop-keep">next hop keep</tag>
2505 Forward the received Next Hop attribute even in situations where the
2506 local address should be used instead, like when the route is sent to an
2507 interface with a different subnet. Default: disabled.
2508
2509 <tag><label id="bgp-next-hop-self">next hop self</tag>
2510 Avoid calculation of the Next Hop attribute and always advertise our own
2511 source address as a next hop. This needs to be used only occasionally to
2512 circumvent misconfigurations of other routers. Default: disabled.
2513
2514 <tag><label id="bgp-next-hop-address">next hop address <m/ip/</tag>
2515 Avoid calculation of the Next Hop attribute and always advertise this address
2516 as a next hop.
2517
2518 <tag><label id="bgp-missing-lladdr">missing lladdr self|drop|ignore</tag>
2519 Next Hop attribute in BGP-IPv6 sometimes contains just the global IPv6
2520 address, but sometimes it has to contain both global and link-local IPv6
2521 addresses. This option specifies what to do if BIRD have to send both
2522 addresses but does not know link-local address. This situation might
2523 happen when routes from other protocols are exported to BGP, or when
2524 improper updates are received from BGP peers. <cf/self/ means that BIRD
2525 advertises its own local address instead. <cf/drop/ means that BIRD
2526 skips that prefixes and logs error. <cf/ignore/ means that BIRD ignores
2527 the problem and sends just the global address (and therefore forms
2528 improper BGP update). Default: <cf/self/, unless BIRD is configured as a
2529 route server (option <cf/rs client/), in that case default is <cf/ignore/,
2530 because route servers usually do not forward packets themselves.
2531
2532 <tag><label id="bgp-gateway">gateway direct|recursive</tag>
2533 For received routes, their <cf/gw/ (immediate next hop) attribute is
2534 computed from received <cf/bgp_next_hop/ attribute. This option
2535 specifies how it is computed. Direct mode means that the IP address from
2536 <cf/bgp_next_hop/ is used if it is directly reachable, otherwise the
2537 neighbor IP address is used. Recursive mode means that the gateway is
2538 computed by an IGP routing table lookup for the IP address from
2539 <cf/bgp_next_hop/. Note that there is just one level of indirection in
2540 recursive mode - the route obtained by the lookup must not be recursive
2541 itself, to prevent mutually recursive routes.
2542
2543 Recursive mode is the behavior specified by the BGP
2544 standard. Direct mode is simpler, does not require any routes in a
2545 routing table, and was used in older versions of BIRD, but does not
2546 handle well nontrivial iBGP setups and multihop. Recursive mode is
2547 incompatible with <ref id="dsc-table-sorted" name="sorted tables">. Default:
2548 <cf/direct/ for direct sessions, <cf/recursive/ for multihop sessions.
2549
2550 <tag><label id="bgp-igp-table">igp table <m/name/</tag>
2551 Specifies a table that is used as an IGP routing table. The type of this
2552 table must be as allowed in the table above. This option is allowed once
2553 for every allowed table type. Default: the same as the main table
2554 the channel is connected to (if eligible).
2555
2556 <tag><label id="bgp-secondary">secondary <m/switch/</tag>
2557 Usually, if an export filter rejects a selected route, no other route is
2558 propagated for that network. This option allows to try the next route in
2559 order until one that is accepted is found or all routes for that network
2560 are rejected. This can be used for route servers that need to propagate
2561 different tables to each client but do not want to have these tables
2562 explicitly (to conserve memory). This option requires that the connected
2563 routing table is <ref id="dsc-table-sorted" name="sorted">. Default: off.
2564
2565 <tag><label id="bgp-add-paths">add paths <m/switch/|rx|tx</tag>
2566 Standard BGP can propagate only one path (route) per destination network
2567 (usually the selected one). This option controls the add-path protocol
2568 extension, which allows to advertise any number of paths to a
2569 destination. Note that to be active, add-path has to be enabled on both
2570 sides of the BGP session, but it could be enabled separately for RX and
2571 TX direction. When active, all available routes accepted by the export
2572 filter are advertised to the neighbor. Default: off.
2573
2574 <tag><label id="bgp-graceful-restart-c">graceful restart <m/switch/</tag>
2575 Although BGP graceful restart is configured mainly by protocol-wide
2576 <ref id="bgp-graceful-restart" name="options">, it is possible to
2577 configure restarting role per AFI/SAFI pair by this channel option.
2578 The option is ignored if graceful restart is disabled by protocol-wide
2579 option. Default: off in aware mode, on in full mode.
2580 </descrip>
2581
2582 <sect1>Attributes
2583 <label id="bgp-attr">
2584
2585 <p>BGP defines several route attributes. Some of them (those marked with
2586 `<tt/I/' in the table below) are available on internal BGP connections only,
2587 some of them (marked with `<tt/O/') are optional.
2588
2589 <descrip>
2590 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-path">bgppath bgp_path/</tag>
2591 Sequence of AS numbers describing the AS path the packet will travel
2592 through when forwarded according to the particular route. In case of
2593 internal BGP it doesn't contain the number of the local AS.
2594
2595 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-local-pref">int bgp_local_pref/ [I]</tag>
2596 Local preference value used for selection among multiple BGP routes (see
2597 the selection rules above). It's used as an additional metric which is
2598 propagated through the whole local AS.
2599
2600 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-med">int bgp_med/ [O]</tag>
2601 The Multiple Exit Discriminator of the route is an optional attribute
2602 which is used on external (inter-AS) links to convey to an adjacent AS
2603 the optimal entry point into the local AS. The received attribute is
2604 also propagated over internal BGP links. The attribute value is zeroed
2605 when a route is exported to an external BGP instance to ensure that the
2606 attribute received from a neighboring AS is not propagated to other
2607 neighboring ASes. A new value might be set in the export filter of an
2608 external BGP instance. See <rfc id="4451"> for further discussion of
2609 BGP MED attribute.
2610
2611 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-origin">enum bgp_origin/</tag>
2612 Origin of the route: either <cf/ORIGIN_IGP/ if the route has originated
2613 in an interior routing protocol or <cf/ORIGIN_EGP/ if it's been imported
2614 from the <tt>EGP</tt> protocol (nowadays it seems to be obsolete) or
2615 <cf/ORIGIN_INCOMPLETE/ if the origin is unknown.
2616
2617 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-next-hop">ip bgp_next_hop/</tag>
2618 Next hop to be used for forwarding of packets to this destination. On
2619 internal BGP connections, it's an address of the originating router if
2620 it's inside the local AS or a boundary router the packet will leave the
2621 AS through if it's an exterior route, so each BGP speaker within the AS
2622 has a chance to use the shortest interior path possible to this point.
2623
2624 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-atomic-aggr">void bgp_atomic_aggr/ [O]</tag>
2625 This is an optional attribute which carries no value, but the sole
2626 presence of which indicates that the route has been aggregated from
2627 multiple routes by some router on the path from the originator.
2628
2629 <!-- we don't handle aggregators right since they are of a very obscure type
2630 <tag>bgp_aggregator</tag>
2631 -->
2632 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-community">clist bgp_community/ [O]</tag>
2633 List of community values associated with the route. Each such value is a
2634 pair (represented as a <cf/pair/ data type inside the filters) of 16-bit
2635 integers, the first of them containing the number of the AS which
2636 defines the community and the second one being a per-AS identifier.
2637 There are lots of uses of the community mechanism, but generally they
2638 are used to carry policy information like "don't export to USA peers".
2639 As each AS can define its own routing policy, it also has a complete
2640 freedom about which community attributes it defines and what will their
2641 semantics be.
2642
2643 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-ext-community">eclist bgp_ext_community/ [O]</tag>
2644 List of extended community values associated with the route. Extended
2645 communities have similar usage as plain communities, but they have an
2646 extended range (to allow 4B ASNs) and a nontrivial structure with a type
2647 field. Individual community values are represented using an <cf/ec/ data
2648 type inside the filters.
2649
2650 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-large-community">lclist <cf/bgp_large_community/ [O]</tag>
2651 List of large community values associated with the route. Large BGP
2652 communities is another variant of communities, but contrary to extended
2653 communities they behave very much the same way as regular communities,
2654 just larger -- they are uniform untyped triplets of 32bit numbers.
2655 Individual community values are represented using an <cf/lc/ data type
2656 inside the filters.
2657
2658 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-originator-id">quad bgp_originator_id/ [I, O]</tag>
2659 This attribute is created by the route reflector when reflecting the
2660 route and contains the router ID of the originator of the route in the
2661 local AS.
2662
2663 <tag><label id="rta-bgp-cluster-list">clist bgp_cluster_list/ [I, O]</tag>
2664 This attribute contains a list of cluster IDs of route reflectors. Each
2665 route reflector prepends its cluster ID when reflecting the route.
2666 </descrip>
2667
2668 <sect1>Example
2669 <label id="bgp-exam">
2670
2671 <p><code>
2672 protocol bgp {
2673 local 198.51.100.14 as 65000; # Use a private AS number
2674 neighbor 198.51.100.130 as 64496; # Our neighbor ...
2675 multihop; # ... which is connected indirectly
2676 ipv4 {
2677 export filter { # We use non-trivial export rules
2678 if source = RTS_STATIC then { # Export only static routes
2679 # Assign our community
2680 bgp_community.add((65000,64501));
2681 # Artificially increase path length
2682 # by advertising local AS number twice
2683 if bgp_path ~ [= 65000 =] then
2684 bgp_path.prepend(65000);
2685 accept;
2686 }
2687 reject;
2688 };
2689 import all;
2690 next hop self; # advertise this router as next hop
2691 igp table myigptable4; # IGP table for routes with IPv4 nexthops
2692 igp table myigptable6; # IGP table for routes with IPv6 nexthops
2693 };
2694 ipv6 {
2695 export filter mylargefilter; # We use a named filter
2696 import all;
2697 missing lladdr self;
2698 igp table myigptable4; # IGP table for routes with IPv4 nexthops
2699 igp table myigptable6; # IGP table for routes with IPv6 nexthops
2700 };
2701 ipv4 multicast {
2702 import all;
2703 export filter someotherfilter;
2704 table mymulticasttable4; # Another IPv4 table, dedicated for multicast
2705 igp table myigptable4;
2706 };
2707 }
2708 </code>
2709
2710
2711 <sect>Device
2712 <label id="device">
2713
2714 <p>The Device protocol is not a real routing protocol. It doesn't generate any
2715 routes and it only serves as a module for getting information about network
2716 interfaces from the kernel. This protocol supports no channel.
2717
2718 <p>Except for very unusual circumstances, you probably should include this
2719 protocol in the configuration since almost all other protocols require network
2720 interfaces to be defined for them to work with.
2721
2722 <sect1>Configuration
2723 <label id="device-config">
2724
2725 <p><descrip>
2726 <tag><label id="device-scan-time">scan time <m/number/</tag>
2727 Time in seconds between two scans of the network interface list. On
2728 systems where we are notified about interface status changes
2729 asynchronously (such as newer versions of Linux), we need to scan the
2730 list only in order to avoid confusion by lost notification messages,
2731 so the default time is set to a large value.
2732
2733 <tag><label id="device-iface">interface <m/pattern/ [, <m/.../]</tag>
2734
2735 By default, the Device protocol handles all interfaces without any
2736 configuration. Interface definitions allow to specify optional
2737 parameters for specific interfaces. See <ref id="proto-iface"
2738 name="interface"> common option for detailed description. Currently only
2739 one interface option is available:
2740
2741 <tag><label id="device-preferred">preferred <m/ip/</tag>
2742 If a network interface has more than one IP address, BIRD chooses one of
2743 them as a preferred one. Preferred IP address is used as source address
2744 for packets or announced next hop by routing protocols. Precisely, BIRD
2745 chooses one preferred IPv4 address, one preferred IPv6 address and one
2746 preferred link-local IPv6 address. By default, BIRD chooses the first
2747 found IP address as the preferred one.
2748
2749 This option allows to specify which IP address should be preferred. May
2750 be used multiple times for different address classes (IPv4, IPv6, IPv6
2751 link-local). In all cases, an address marked by operating system as
2752 secondary cannot be chosen as the primary one.
2753 </descrip>
2754
2755 <p>As the Device protocol doesn't generate any routes, it cannot have
2756 any attributes. Example configuration looks like this:
2757
2758 <p><code>
2759 protocol device {
2760 scan time 10; # Scan the interfaces often
2761 interface "eth0" {
2762 preferred 192.168.1.1;
2763 preferred 2001:db8:1:10::1;
2764 };
2765 }
2766 </code>
2767
2768
2769 <sect>Direct
2770 <label id="direct">
2771
2772 <p>The Direct protocol is a simple generator of device routes for all the
2773 directly connected networks according to the list of interfaces provided by the
2774 kernel via the Device protocol. The Direct protocol supports both IPv4 and IPv6
2775 channels; both can be configured simultaneously. It can also be configured with
2776 <ref id="ip-sadr-routes" name="IPv6 SADR"> channel instead of regular IPv6
2777 channel in order to be used together with SADR-enabled Babel protocol.
2778
2779 <p>The question is whether it is a good idea to have such device routes in BIRD
2780 routing table. OS kernel usually handles device routes for directly connected
2781 networks by itself so we don't need (and don't want) to export these routes to
2782 the kernel protocol. OSPF protocol creates device routes for its interfaces
2783 itself and BGP protocol is usually used for exporting aggregate routes. But the
2784 Direct protocol is necessary for distance-vector protocols like RIP or Babel to
2785 announce local networks.
2786
2787 <p>There is one notable case when you definitely want to use the direct protocol
2788 -- running BIRD on BSD systems. Having high priority device routes for directly
2789 connected networks from the direct protocol protects kernel device routes from
2790 being overwritten or removed by IGP routes during some transient network
2791 conditions, because a lower priority IGP route for the same network is not
2792 exported to the kernel routing table. This is an issue on BSD systems only, as
2793 on Linux systems BIRD cannot change non-BIRD route in the kernel routing table.
2794
2795 <p>There are just few configuration options for the Direct protocol:
2796
2797 <p><descrip>
2798 <tag><label id="direct-iface">interface <m/pattern/ [, <m/.../]</tag>
2799 By default, the Direct protocol will generate device routes for all the
2800 interfaces available. If you want to restrict it to some subset of
2801 interfaces or addresses (e.g. if you're using multiple routing tables
2802 for policy routing and some of the policy domains don't contain all
2803 interfaces), just use this clause. See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface">
2804 common option for detailed description. The Direct protocol uses
2805 extended interface clauses.
2806
2807 <tag><label id="direct-check-link">check link <m/switch/</tag>
2808 If enabled, a hardware link state (reported by OS) is taken into
2809 consideration. Routes for directly connected networks are generated only
2810 if link up is reported and they are withdrawn when link disappears
2811 (e.g., an ethernet cable is unplugged). Default value is no.
2812 </descrip>
2813
2814 <p>Direct device routes don't contain any specific attributes.
2815
2816 <p>Example config might look like this:
2817
2818 <p><code>
2819 protocol direct {
2820 ipv4;
2821 ipv6;
2822 interface "-arc*", "*"; # Exclude the ARCnets
2823 }
2824 </code>
2825
2826
2827 <sect>Kernel
2828 <label id="krt">
2829
2830 <p>The Kernel protocol is not a real routing protocol. Instead of communicating
2831 with other routers in the network, it performs synchronization of BIRD's routing
2832 tables with the OS kernel. Basically, it sends all routing table updates to the
2833 kernel and from time to time it scans the kernel tables to see whether some
2834 routes have disappeared (for example due to unnoticed up/down transition of an
2835 interface) or whether an `alien' route has been added by someone else (depending
2836 on the <cf/learn/ switch, such routes are either ignored or accepted to our
2837 table).
2838
2839 <p>Unfortunately, there is one thing that makes the routing table synchronization
2840 a bit more complicated. In the kernel routing table there are also device routes
2841 for directly connected networks. These routes are usually managed by OS itself
2842 (as a part of IP address configuration) and we don't want to touch that. They
2843 are completely ignored during the scan of the kernel tables and also the export
2844 of device routes from BIRD tables to kernel routing tables is restricted to
2845 prevent accidental interference. This restriction can be disabled using
2846 <cf/device routes/ switch.
2847
2848 <p>If your OS supports only a single routing table, you can configure only one
2849 instance of the Kernel protocol. If it supports multiple tables (in order to
2850 allow policy routing; such an OS is for example Linux), you can run as many
2851 instances as you want, but each of them must be connected to a different BIRD
2852 routing table and to a different kernel table.
2853
2854 <p>Because the kernel protocol is partially integrated with the connected
2855 routing table, there are two limitations - it is not possible to connect more
2856 kernel protocols to the same routing table and changing route destination
2857 (gateway) in an export filter of a kernel protocol does not work. Both
2858 limitations can be overcome using another routing table and the pipe protocol.
2859
2860 <p>The Kernel protocol supports both IPv4 and IPv6 channels; only one channel
2861 can be configured in each protocol instance. On Linux, it also supports <ref
2862 id="ip-sadr-routes" name="IPv6 SADR"> and <ref id="mpls-routes" name="MPLS">
2863 channels.
2864
2865 <sect1>Configuration
2866 <label id="krt-config">
2867
2868 <p><descrip>
2869 <tag><label id="krt-persist">persist <m/switch/</tag>
2870 Tell BIRD to leave all its routes in the routing tables when it exits
2871 (instead of cleaning them up).
2872
2873 <tag><label id="krt-scan-time">scan time <m/number/</tag>
2874 Time in seconds between two consecutive scans of the kernel routing
2875 table.
2876
2877 <tag><label id="krt-learn">learn <m/switch/</tag>
2878 Enable learning of routes added to the kernel routing tables by other
2879 routing daemons or by the system administrator. This is possible only on
2880 systems which support identification of route authorship.
2881
2882 <tag><label id="krt-kernel-table">kernel table <m/number/</tag>
2883 Select which kernel table should this particular instance of the Kernel
2884 protocol work with. Available only on systems supporting multiple
2885 routing tables.
2886
2887 <tag><label id="krt-metric">metric <m/number/</tag> (Linux)
2888 Use specified value as a kernel metric (priority) for all routes sent to
2889 the kernel. When multiple routes for the same network are in the kernel
2890 routing table, the Linux kernel chooses one with lower metric. Also,
2891 routes with different metrics do not clash with each other, therefore
2892 using dedicated metric value is a reliable way to avoid overwriting
2893 routes from other sources (e.g. kernel device routes). Metric 0 has a
2894 special meaning of undefined metric, in which either OS default is used,
2895 or per-route metric can be set using <cf/krt_metric/ attribute. Default:
2896 32.
2897
2898 <tag><label id="krt-graceful-restart">graceful restart <m/switch/</tag>
2899 Participate in graceful restart recovery. If this option is enabled and
2900 a graceful restart recovery is active, the Kernel protocol will defer
2901 synchronization of routing tables until the end of the recovery. Note
2902 that import of kernel routes to BIRD is not affected.
2903
2904 <tag><label id="krt-merge-paths">merge paths <M>switch</M> [limit <M>number</M>]</tag>
2905 Usually, only best routes are exported to the kernel protocol. With path
2906 merging enabled, both best routes and equivalent non-best routes are
2907 merged during export to generate one ECMP (equal-cost multipath) route
2908 for each network. This is useful e.g. for BGP multipath. Note that best
2909 routes are still pivotal for route export (responsible for most
2910 properties of resulting ECMP routes), while exported non-best routes are
2911 responsible just for additional multipath next hops. This option also
2912 allows to specify a limit on maximal number of nexthops in one route. By
2913 default, multipath merging is disabled. If enabled, default value of the
2914 limit is 16.
2915 </descrip>
2916
2917 <sect1>Attributes
2918 <label id="krt-attr">
2919
2920 <p>The Kernel protocol defines several attributes. These attributes are
2921 translated to appropriate system (and OS-specific) route attributes. We support
2922 these attributes:
2923
2924 <descrip>
2925 <tag><label id="rta-krt-source">int krt_source/</tag>
2926 The original source of the imported kernel route. The value is
2927 system-dependent. On Linux, it is a value of the protocol field of the
2928 route. See /etc/iproute2/rt_protos for common values. On BSD, it is
2929 based on STATIC and PROTOx flags. The attribute is read-only.
2930
2931 <tag><label id="rta-krt-metric">int krt_metric/</tag> (Linux)
2932 The kernel metric of the route. When multiple same routes are in a
2933 kernel routing table, the Linux kernel chooses one with lower metric.
2934 Note that preferred way to set kernel metric is to use protocol option
2935 <cf/metric/, unless per-route metric values are needed.
2936
2937 <tag><label id="rta-krt-prefsrc">ip krt_prefsrc/</tag> (Linux)
2938 The preferred source address. Used in source address selection for
2939 outgoing packets. Has to be one of the IP addresses of the router.
2940
2941 <tag><label id="rta-krt-realm">int krt_realm/</tag> (Linux)
2942 The realm of the route. Can be used for traffic classification.
2943
2944 <tag><label id="rta-krt-scope">int krt_scope/</tag> (Linux IPv4)
2945 The scope of the route. Valid values are 0-254, although Linux kernel
2946 may reject some values depending on route type and nexthop. It is
2947 supposed to represent `indirectness' of the route, where nexthops of
2948 routes are resolved through routes with a higher scope, but in current
2949 kernels anything below <it/link/ (253) is treated as <it/global/ (0).
2950 When not present, global scope is implied for all routes except device
2951 routes, where link scope is used by default.
2952 </descrip>
2953
2954 <p>In Linux, there is also a plenty of obscure route attributes mostly focused
2955 on tuning TCP performance of local connections. BIRD supports most of these
2956 attributes, see Linux or iproute2 documentation for their meaning. Attributes
2957 <cf/krt_lock_*/ and <cf/krt_feature_*/ have type bool, others have type int.
2958 Supported attributes are:
2959
2960 <cf/krt_mtu/, <cf/krt_lock_mtu/, <cf/krt_window/, <cf/krt_lock_window/,
2961 <cf/krt_rtt/, <cf/krt_lock_rtt/, <cf/krt_rttvar/, <cf/krt_lock_rttvar/,
2962 <cf/krt_sstresh/, <cf/krt_lock_sstresh/, <cf/krt_cwnd/, <cf/krt_lock_cwnd/,
2963 <cf/krt_advmss/, <cf/krt_lock_advmss/, <cf/krt_reordering/, <cf/krt_lock_reordering/,
2964 <cf/krt_hoplimit/, <cf/krt_lock_hoplimit/, <cf/krt_rto_min/, <cf/krt_lock_rto_min/,
2965 <cf/krt_initcwnd/, <cf/krt_initrwnd/, <cf/krt_quickack/,
2966 <cf/krt_feature_ecn/, <cf/krt_feature_allfrag/
2967
2968 <sect1>Example
2969 <label id="krt-exam">
2970
2971 <p>A simple configuration can look this way:
2972
2973 <p><code>
2974 protocol kernel {
2975 export all;
2976 }
2977 </code>
2978
2979 <p>Or for a system with two routing tables:
2980
2981 <p><code>
2982 protocol kernel { # Primary routing table
2983 learn; # Learn alien routes from the kernel
2984 persist; # Don't remove routes on bird shutdown
2985 scan time 10; # Scan kernel routing table every 10 seconds
2986 ipv4 {
2987 import all;
2988 export all;
2989 };
2990 }
2991
2992 protocol kernel { # Secondary routing table
2993 kernel table 100;
2994 ipv4 {
2995 table auxtable;
2996 export all;
2997 };
2998 }
2999 </code>
3000
3001
3002 <sect>OSPF
3003 <label id="ospf">
3004
3005 <sect1>Introduction
3006 <label id="ospf-intro">
3007
3008 <p>Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a quite complex interior gateway
3009 protocol. The current IPv4 version (OSPFv2) is defined in <rfc id="2328"> and
3010 the current IPv6 version (OSPFv3) is defined in <rfc id="5340"> It's a link
3011 state (a.k.a. shortest path first) protocol -- each router maintains a database
3012 describing the autonomous system's topology. Each participating router has an
3013 identical copy of the database and all routers run the same algorithm
3014 calculating a shortest path tree with themselves as a root. OSPF chooses the
3015 least cost path as the best path.
3016
3017 <p>In OSPF, the autonomous system can be split to several areas in order to
3018 reduce the amount of resources consumed for exchanging the routing information
3019 and to protect the other areas from incorrect routing data. Topology of the area
3020 is hidden to the rest of the autonomous system.
3021
3022 <p>Another very important feature of OSPF is that it can keep routing information
3023 from other protocols (like Static or BGP) in its link state database as external
3024 routes. Each external route can be tagged by the advertising router, making it
3025 possible to pass additional information between routers on the boundary of the
3026 autonomous system.
3027
3028 <p>OSPF quickly detects topological changes in the autonomous system (such as
3029 router interface failures) and calculates new loop-free routes after a short
3030 period of convergence. Only a minimal amount of routing traffic is involved.
3031
3032 <p>Each router participating in OSPF routing periodically sends Hello messages
3033 to all its interfaces. This allows neighbors to be discovered dynamically. Then
3034 the neighbors exchange theirs parts of the link state database and keep it
3035 identical by flooding updates. The flooding process is reliable and ensures that
3036 each router detects all changes.
3037
3038 <sect1>Configuration
3039 <label id="ospf-config">
3040
3041 <p>First, the desired OSPF version can be specified by using <cf/ospf v2/ or
3042 <cf/ospf v3/ as a protocol type. By default, OSPFv2 is used. In the main part of
3043 configuration, there can be multiple definitions of OSPF areas, each with a
3044 different id. These definitions includes many other switches and multiple
3045 definitions of interfaces. Definition of interface may contain many switches and
3046 constant definitions and list of neighbors on nonbroadcast networks.
3047
3048 <p>OSPFv2 needs one IPv4 channel. OSPFv3 needs either one IPv6 channel, or one
3049 IPv4 channel (<rfc id="5838">). Therefore, it is possible to use OSPFv3 for both
3050 IPv4 and Pv6 routing, but it is necessary to have two protocol instances anyway.
3051 If no channel is configured, appropriate channel is defined with default
3052 parameters.
3053
3054 <code>
3055 protocol ospf [v2|v3] &lt;name&gt; {
3056 rfc1583compat &lt;switch&gt;;
3057 rfc5838 &lt;switch&gt;;
3058 instance id &lt;num&gt;;
3059 stub router &lt;switch&gt;;
3060 tick &lt;num&gt;;
3061 ecmp &lt;switch&gt; [limit &lt;num&gt;];
3062 merge external &lt;switch&gt;;
3063 area &lt;id&gt; {
3064 stub;
3065 nssa;
3066 summary &lt;switch&gt;;
3067 default nssa &lt;switch&gt;;
3068 default cost &lt;num&gt;;
3069 default cost2 &lt;num&gt;;
3070 translator &lt;switch&gt;;
3071 translator stability &lt;num&gt;;
3072
3073 networks {
3074 &lt;prefix&gt;;
3075 &lt;prefix&gt; hidden;
3076 }
3077 external {
3078 &lt;prefix&gt;;
3079 &lt;prefix&gt; hidden;
3080 &lt;prefix&gt; tag &lt;num&gt;;
3081 }
3082 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt;;
3083 stubnet &lt;prefix&gt; {
3084 hidden &lt;switch&gt;;
3085 summary &lt;switch&gt;;
3086 cost &lt;num&gt;;
3087 }
3088 interface &lt;interface pattern&gt; [instance &lt;num&gt;] {
3089 cost &lt;num&gt;;
3090 stub &lt;switch&gt;;
3091 hello &lt;num&gt;;
3092 poll &lt;num&gt;;
3093 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
3094 priority &lt;num&gt;;
3095 wait &lt;num&gt;;
3096 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
3097 dead &lt;num&gt;;
3098 secondary &lt;switch&gt;;
3099 rx buffer [normal|large|&lt;num&gt;];
3100 tx length &lt;num&gt;;
3101 type [broadcast|bcast|pointopoint|ptp|
3102 nonbroadcast|nbma|pointomultipoint|ptmp];
3103 link lsa suppression &lt;switch&gt;;
3104 strict nonbroadcast &lt;switch&gt;;
3105 real broadcast &lt;switch&gt;;
3106 ptp netmask &lt;switch&gt;;
3107 check link &lt;switch&gt;;
3108 bfd &lt;switch&gt;;
3109 ecmp weight &lt;num&gt;;
3110 ttl security [&lt;switch&gt;; | tx only]
3111 tx class|dscp &lt;num&gt;;
3112 tx priority &lt;num&gt;;
3113 authentication none|simple|cryptographic;
3114 password "&lt;text&gt;";
3115 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
3116 id &lt;num&gt;;
3117 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
3118 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
3119 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
3120 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
3121 from "&lt;date&gt;";
3122 to "&lt;date&gt;";
3123 algorithm ( keyed md5 | keyed sha1 | hmac sha1 | hmac sha256 | hmac sha384 | hmac sha512 );
3124 };
3125 neighbors {
3126 &lt;ip&gt;;
3127 &lt;ip&gt; eligible;
3128 };
3129 };
3130 virtual link &lt;id&gt; [instance &lt;num&gt;] {
3131 hello &lt;num&gt;;
3132 retransmit &lt;num&gt;;
3133 wait &lt;num&gt;;
3134 dead count &lt;num&gt;;
3135 dead &lt;num&gt;;
3136 authentication none|simple|cryptographic;
3137 password "&lt;text&gt;";
3138 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
3139 id &lt;num&gt;;
3140 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
3141 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
3142 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
3143 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
3144 from "&lt;date&gt;";
3145 to "&lt;date&gt;";
3146 algorithm ( keyed md5 | keyed sha1 | hmac sha1 | hmac sha256 | hmac sha384 | hmac sha512 );
3147 };
3148 };
3149 };
3150 }
3151 </code>
3152
3153 <descrip>
3154 <tag><label id="ospf-rfc1583compat">rfc1583compat <M>switch</M></tag>
3155 This option controls compatibility of routing table calculation with
3156 <rfc id="1583">. Default value is no.
3157
3158 <tag><label id="ospf-rfc5838">rfc5838 <m/switch/</tag>
3159 Basic OSPFv3 is limited to IPv6 unicast routing. The <rfc id="5838">
3160 extension defines support for more address families (IPv4, IPv6, both
3161 unicast and multicast). The extension is enabled by default, but can be
3162 disabled if necessary, as it restricts the range of available instance
3163 IDs. Default value is yes.
3164
3165 <tag><label id="ospf-instance-id">instance id <m/num/</tag>
3166 When multiple OSPF protocol instances are active on the same links, they
3167 should use different instance IDs to distinguish their packets. Although
3168 it could be done on per-interface basis, it is often preferred to set
3169 one instance ID to whole OSPF domain/topology (e.g., when multiple
3170 instances are used to represent separate logical topologies on the same
3171 physical network). This option specifies the instance ID for all
3172 interfaces of the OSPF instance, but can be overridden by
3173 <cf/interface/ option. Default value is 0 unless OSPFv3-AF extended
3174 address families are used, see <rfc id="5838"> for that case.
3175
3176 <tag><label id="ospf-stub-router">stub router <M>switch</M></tag>
3177 This option configures the router to be a stub router, i.e., a router
3178 that participates in the OSPF topology but does not allow transit
3179 traffic. In OSPFv2, this is implemented by advertising maximum metric
3180 for outgoing links. In OSPFv3, the stub router behavior is announced by
3181 clearing the R-bit in the router LSA. See <rfc id="6987"> for details.
3182 Default value is no.
3183
3184 <tag><label id="ospf-tick">tick <M>num</M></tag>
3185 The routing table calculation and clean-up of areas' databases is not
3186 performed when a single link state change arrives. To lower the CPU
3187 utilization, it's processed later at periodical intervals of <m/num/
3188 seconds. The default value is 1.
3189
3190 <tag><label id="ospf-ecmp">ecmp <M>switch</M> [limit <M>number</M>]</tag>
3191 This option specifies whether OSPF is allowed to generate ECMP
3192 (equal-cost multipath) routes. Such routes are used when there are
3193 several directions to the destination, each with the same (computed)
3194 cost. This option also allows to specify a limit on maximum number of
3195 nexthops in one route. By default, ECMP is enabled if supported by
3196 Kernel. Default value of the limit is 16.
3197
3198 <tag><label id="ospf-merge-external">merge external <M>switch</M></tag>
3199 This option specifies whether OSPF should merge external routes from
3200 different routers/LSAs for the same destination. When enabled together
3201 with <cf/ecmp/, equal-cost external routes will be combined to multipath
3202 routes in the same way as regular routes. When disabled, external routes
3203 from different LSAs are treated as separate even if they represents the
3204 same destination. Default value is no.
3205
3206 <tag><label id="ospf-area">area <M>id</M></tag>
3207 This defines an OSPF area with given area ID (an integer or an IPv4
3208 address, similarly to a router ID). The most important area is the
3209 backbone (ID 0) to which every other area must be connected.
3210
3211 <tag><label id="ospf-stub">stub</tag>
3212 This option configures the area to be a stub area. External routes are
3213 not flooded into stub areas. Also summary LSAs can be limited in stub
3214 areas (see option <cf/summary/). By default, the area is not a stub
3215 area.
3216
3217 <tag><label id="ospf-nssa">nssa</tag>
3218 This option configures the area to be a NSSA (Not-So-Stubby Area). NSSA
3219 is a variant of a stub area which allows a limited way of external route
3220 propagation. Global external routes are not propagated into a NSSA, but
3221 an external route can be imported into NSSA as a (area-wide) NSSA-LSA
3222 (and possibly translated and/or aggregated on area boundary). By
3223 default, the area is not NSSA.
3224
3225 <tag><label id="ospf-summary">summary <M>switch</M></tag>
3226 This option controls propagation of summary LSAs into stub or NSSA
3227 areas. If enabled, summary LSAs are propagated as usual, otherwise just
3228 the default summary route (0.0.0.0/0) is propagated (this is sometimes
3229 called totally stubby area). If a stub area has more area boundary
3230 routers, propagating summary LSAs could lead to more efficient routing
3231 at the cost of larger link state database. Default value is no.
3232
3233 <tag><label id="ospf-default-nssa">default nssa <M>switch</M></tag>
3234 When <cf/summary/ option is enabled, default summary route is no longer
3235 propagated to the NSSA. In that case, this option allows to originate
3236 default route as NSSA-LSA to the NSSA. Default value is no.
3237
3238 <tag><label id="ospf-default-cost">default cost <M>num</M></tag>
3239 This option controls the cost of a default route propagated to stub and
3240 NSSA areas. Default value is 1000.
3241
3242 <tag><label id="ospf-default-cost2">default cost2 <M>num</M></tag>
3243 When a default route is originated as NSSA-LSA, its cost can use either
3244 type 1 or type 2 metric. This option allows to specify the cost of a
3245 default route in type 2 metric. By default, type 1 metric (option
3246 <cf/default cost/) is used.
3247
3248 <tag><label id="ospf-translator">translator <M>switch</M></tag>
3249 This option controls translation of NSSA-LSAs into external LSAs. By
3250 default, one translator per NSSA is automatically elected from area
3251 boundary routers. If enabled, this area boundary router would
3252 unconditionally translate all NSSA-LSAs regardless of translator
3253 election. Default value is no.
3254
3255 <tag><label id="ospf-translator-stability">translator stability <M>num</M></tag>
3256 This option controls the translator stability interval (in seconds).
3257 When the new translator is elected, the old one keeps translating until
3258 the interval is over. Default value is 40.
3259
3260 <tag><label id="ospf-networks">networks { <m/set/ }</tag>
3261 Definition of area IP ranges. This is used in summary LSA origination.
3262 Hidden networks are not propagated into other areas.
3263
3264 <tag><label id="ospf-external">external { <m/set/ }</tag>
3265 Definition of external area IP ranges for NSSAs. This is used for
3266 NSSA-LSA translation. Hidden networks are not translated into external
3267 LSAs. Networks can have configured route tag.
3268
3269 <tag><label id="ospf-stubnet">stubnet <m/prefix/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
3270 Stub networks are networks that are not transit networks between OSPF
3271 routers. They are also propagated through an OSPF area as a part of a
3272 link state database. By default, BIRD generates a stub network record
3273 for each primary network address on each OSPF interface that does not
3274 have any OSPF neighbors, and also for each non-primary network address
3275 on each OSPF interface. This option allows to alter a set of stub
3276 networks propagated by this router.
3277
3278 Each instance of this option adds a stub network with given network
3279 prefix to the set of propagated stub network, unless option <cf/hidden/
3280 is used. It also suppresses default stub networks for given network
3281 prefix. When option <cf/summary/ is used, also default stub networks
3282 that are subnetworks of given stub network are suppressed. This might be
3283 used, for example, to aggregate generated stub networks.
3284
3285 <tag><label id="ospf-iface">interface <M>pattern</M> [instance <m/num/]</tag>
3286 Defines that the specified interfaces belong to the area being defined.
3287 See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface"> common option for detailed
3288 description. In OSPFv2, extended interface clauses are used, because
3289 each network prefix is handled as a separate virtual interface.
3290
3291 You can specify alternative instance ID for the interface definition,
3292 therefore it is possible to have several instances of that interface
3293 with different options or even in different areas. For OSPFv2, instance
3294 ID support is an extension (<rfc id="6549">) and is supposed to be set
3295 per-protocol. For OSPFv3, it is an integral feature.
3296
3297 <tag><label id="ospf-virtual-link">virtual link <M>id</M> [instance <m/num/]</tag>
3298 Virtual link to router with the router id. Virtual link acts as a
3299 point-to-point interface belonging to backbone. The actual area is used
3300 as a transport area. This item cannot be in the backbone. Like with
3301 <cf/interface/ option, you could also use several virtual links to one
3302 destination with different instance IDs.
3303
3304 <tag><label id="ospf-cost">cost <M>num</M></tag>
3305 Specifies output cost (metric) of an interface. Default value is 10.
3306
3307 <tag><label id="ospf-stub-iface">stub <M>switch</M></tag>
3308 If set to interface it does not listen to any packet and does not send
3309 any hello. Default value is no.
3310
3311 <tag><label id="ospf-hello">hello <M>num</M></tag>
3312 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages. Beware,
3313 all routers on the same network need to have the same hello interval.
3314 Default value is 10.
3315
3316 <tag><label id="ospf-poll">poll <M>num</M></tag>
3317 Specifies interval in seconds between sending of Hello messages for some
3318 neighbors on NBMA network. Default value is 20.
3319
3320 <tag><label id="ospf-retransmit">retransmit <M>num</M></tag>
3321 Specifies interval in seconds between retransmissions of unacknowledged
3322 updates. Default value is 5.
3323
3324 <tag><label id="ospf-priority">priority <M>num</M></tag>
3325 On every multiple access network (e.g., the Ethernet) Designated Router
3326 and Backup Designated router are elected. These routers have some special
3327 functions in the flooding process. Higher priority increases preferences
3328 in this election. Routers with priority 0 are not eligible. Default
3329 value is 1.
3330
3331 <tag><label id="ospf-wait">wait <M>num</M></tag>
3332 After start, router waits for the specified number of seconds between
3333 starting election and building adjacency. Default value is 4*<m/hello/.
3334
3335 <tag><label id="ospf-dead-count">dead count <M>num</M></tag>
3336 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
3337 <m/dead count/*<m/hello/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down.
3338
3339 <tag><label id="ospf-dead">dead <M>num</M></tag>
3340 When the router does not receive any messages from a neighbor in
3341 <m/dead/ seconds, it will consider the neighbor down. If both directives
3342 <cf/dead count/ and <cf/dead/ are used, <cf/dead/ has precedence.
3343
3344 <tag><label id="ospf-secondary">secondary <M>switch</M></tag>
3345 On BSD systems, older versions of BIRD supported OSPFv2 only for the
3346 primary IP address of an interface, other IP ranges on the interface
3347 were handled as stub networks. Since v1.4.1, regular operation on
3348 secondary IP addresses is supported, but disabled by default for
3349 compatibility. This option allows to enable it. The option is a
3350 transitional measure, will be removed in the next major release as the
3351 behavior will be changed. On Linux systems, the option is irrelevant, as
3352 operation on non-primary addresses is already the regular behavior.
3353
3354 <tag><label id="ospf-rx-buffer">rx buffer <M>num</M></tag>
3355 This option allows to specify the size of buffers used for packet
3356 processing. The buffer size should be bigger than maximal size of any
3357 packets. By default, buffers are dynamically resized as needed, but a
3358 fixed value could be specified. Value <cf/large/ means maximal allowed
3359 packet size - 65535.
3360
3361 <tag><label id="ospf-tx-length">tx length <M>num</M></tag>
3362 Transmitted OSPF messages that contain large amount of information are
3363 segmented to separate OSPF packets to avoid IP fragmentation. This
3364 option specifies the soft ceiling for the length of generated OSPF
3365 packets. Default value is the MTU of the network interface. Note that
3366 larger OSPF packets may still be generated if underlying OSPF messages
3367 cannot be splitted (e.g. when one large LSA is propagated).
3368
3369 <tag><label id="ospf-type-bcast">type broadcast|bcast</tag>
3370 BIRD detects a type of a connected network automatically, but sometimes
3371 it's convenient to force use of a different type manually. On broadcast
3372 networks (like ethernet), flooding and Hello messages are sent using
3373 multicasts (a single packet for all the neighbors). A designated router
3374 is elected and it is responsible for synchronizing the link-state
3375 databases and originating network LSAs. This network type cannot be used
3376 on physically NBMA networks and on unnumbered networks (networks without
3377 proper IP prefix).
3378
3379 <tag><label id="ospf-type-ptp">type pointopoint|ptp</tag>
3380 Point-to-point networks connect just 2 routers together. No election is
3381 performed and no network LSA is originated, which makes it simpler and
3382 faster to establish. This network type is useful not only for physically
3383 PtP ifaces (like PPP or tunnels), but also for broadcast networks used
3384 as PtP links. This network type cannot be used on physically NBMA
3385 networks.
3386
3387 <tag><label id="ospf-type-nbma">type nonbroadcast|nbma</tag>
3388 On NBMA networks, the packets are sent to each neighbor separately
3389 because of lack of multicast capabilities. Like on broadcast networks,
3390 a designated router is elected, which plays a central role in propagation
3391 of LSAs. This network type cannot be used on unnumbered networks.
3392
3393 <tag><label id="ospf-type-ptmp">type pointomultipoint|ptmp</tag>
3394 This is another network type designed to handle NBMA networks. In this
3395 case the NBMA network is treated as a collection of PtP links. This is
3396 useful if not every pair of routers on the NBMA network has direct
3397 communication, or if the NBMA network is used as an (possibly
3398 unnumbered) PtP link.
3399
3400 <tag><label id="ospf-link-lsa-suppression">link lsa suppression <m/switch/</tag>
3401 In OSPFv3, link LSAs are generated for each link, announcing link-local
3402 IPv6 address of the router to its local neighbors. These are useless on
3403 PtP or PtMP networks and this option allows to suppress the link LSA
3404 origination for such interfaces. The option is ignored on other than PtP
3405 or PtMP interfaces. Default value is no.
3406
3407 <tag><label id="ospf-strict-nonbroadcast">strict nonbroadcast <m/switch/</tag>
3408 If set, don't send hello to any undefined neighbor. This switch is
3409 ignored on other than NBMA or PtMP interfaces. Default value is no.
3410
3411 <tag><label id="ospf-real-broadcast">real broadcast <m/switch/</tag>
3412 In <cf/type broadcast/ or <cf/type ptp/ network configuration, OSPF
3413 packets are sent as IP multicast packets. This option changes the
3414 behavior to using old-fashioned IP broadcast packets. This may be useful
3415 as a workaround if IP multicast for some reason does not work or does
3416 not work reliably. This is a non-standard option and probably is not
3417 interoperable with other OSPF implementations. Default value is no.
3418
3419 <tag><label id="ospf-ptp-netmask">ptp netmask <m/switch/</tag>
3420 In <cf/type ptp/ network configurations, OSPFv2 implementations should
3421 ignore received netmask field in hello packets and should send hello
3422 packets with zero netmask field on unnumbered PtP links. But some OSPFv2
3423 implementations perform netmask checking even for PtP links. This option
3424 specifies whether real netmask will be used in hello packets on <cf/type
3425 ptp/ interfaces. You should ignore this option unless you meet some
3426 compatibility problems related to this issue. Default value is no for
3427 unnumbered PtP links, yes otherwise.
3428
3429 <tag><label id="ospf-check-link">check link <M>switch</M></tag>
3430 If set, a hardware link state (reported by OS) is taken into consideration.
3431 When a link disappears (e.g. an ethernet cable is unplugged), neighbors
3432 are immediately considered unreachable and only the address of the iface
3433 (instead of whole network prefix) is propagated. It is possible that
3434 some hardware drivers or platforms do not implement this feature.
3435 Default value is yes.
3436
3437 <tag><label id="ospf-bfd">bfd <M>switch</M></tag>
3438 OSPF could use BFD protocol as an advisory mechanism for neighbor
3439 liveness and failure detection. If enabled, BIRD setups a BFD session
3440 for each OSPF neighbor and tracks its liveness by it. This has an
3441 advantage of an order of magnitude lower detection times in case of
3442 failure. Note that BFD protocol also has to be configured, see
3443 <ref id="bfd" name="BFD"> section for details. Default value is no.
3444
3445 <tag><label id="ospf-ttl-security">ttl security [<m/switch/ | tx only]</tag>
3446 TTL security is a feature that protects routing protocols from remote
3447 spoofed packets by using TTL 255 instead of TTL 1 for protocol packets
3448 destined to neighbors. Because TTL is decremented when packets are
3449 forwarded, it is non-trivial to spoof packets with TTL 255 from remote
3450 locations. Note that this option would interfere with OSPF virtual
3451 links.
3452
3453 If this option is enabled, the router will send OSPF packets with TTL
3454 255 and drop received packets with TTL less than 255. If this option si
3455 set to <cf/tx only/, TTL 255 is used for sent packets, but is not
3456 checked for received packets. Default value is no.
3457
3458 <tag><label id="ospf-tx-class">tx class|dscp|priority <m/num/</tag>
3459 These options specify the ToS/DiffServ/Traffic class/Priority of the
3460 outgoing OSPF packets. See <ref id="proto-tx-class" name="tx class"> common
3461 option for detailed description.
3462
3463 <tag><label id="ospf-ecmp-weight">ecmp weight <M>num</M></tag>
3464 When ECMP (multipath) routes are allowed, this value specifies a
3465 relative weight used for nexthops going through the iface. Allowed
3466 values are 1-256. Default value is 1.
3467
3468 <tag><label id="ospf-auth-none">authentication none</tag>
3469 No passwords are sent in OSPF packets. This is the default value.
3470
3471 <tag><label id="ospf-auth-simple">authentication simple</tag>
3472 Every packet carries 8 bytes of password. Received packets lacking this
3473 password are ignored. This authentication mechanism is very weak.
3474 This option is not available in OSPFv3.
3475
3476 <tag><label id="ospf-auth-cryptographic">authentication cryptographic</tag>
3477 An authentication code is appended to every packet. The specific
3478 cryptographic algorithm is selected by option <cf/algorithm/ for each
3479 key. The default cryptographic algorithm for OSPFv2 keys is Keyed-MD5
3480 and for OSPFv3 keys is HMAC-SHA-256. Passwords are not sent open via
3481 network, so this mechanism is quite secure. Packets can still be read by
3482 an attacker.
3483
3484 <tag><label id="ospf-pass">password "<M>text</M>"</tag>
3485 Specifies a password used for authentication. See
3486 <ref id="proto-pass" name="password"> common option for detailed
3487 description.
3488
3489 <tag><label id="ospf-neighbors">neighbors { <m/set/ } </tag>
3490 A set of neighbors to which Hello messages on NBMA or PtMP networks are
3491 to be sent. For NBMA networks, some of them could be marked as eligible.
3492 In OSPFv3, link-local addresses should be used, using global ones is
3493 possible, but it is nonstandard and might be problematic. And definitely,
3494 link-local and global addresses should not be mixed.
3495 </descrip>
3496
3497 <sect1>Attributes
3498 <label id="ospf-attr">
3499
3500 <p>OSPF defines four route attributes. Each internal route has a <cf/metric/.
3501
3502 <p>Metric is ranging from 1 to infinity (65535). External routes use
3503 <cf/metric type 1/ or <cf/metric type 2/. A <cf/metric of type 1/ is comparable
3504 with internal <cf/metric/, a <cf/metric of type 2/ is always longer than any
3505 <cf/metric of type 1/ or any <cf/internal metric/. <cf/Internal metric/ or
3506 <cf/metric of type 1/ is stored in attribute <cf/ospf_metric1/, <cf/metric type
3507 2/ is stored in attribute <cf/ospf_metric2/. If you specify both metrics only
3508 metric1 is used.
3509
3510 <p>Each external route can also carry attribute <cf/ospf_tag/ which is a 32-bit
3511 integer which is used when exporting routes to other protocols; otherwise, it
3512 doesn't affect routing inside the OSPF domain at all. The fourth attribute
3513 <cf/ospf_router_id/ is a router ID of the router advertising that route /
3514 network. This attribute is read-only. Default is <cf/ospf_metric2 = 10000/ and
3515 <cf/ospf_tag = 0/.
3516
3517 <sect1>Example
3518 <label id="ospf-exam">
3519
3520 <p><code>
3521 protocol ospf MyOSPF {
3522 ipv4 {
3523 export filter {
3524 if source = RTS_BGP then {
3525 ospf_metric1 = 100;
3526 accept;
3527 }
3528 reject;
3529 };
3530 };
3531 area 0.0.0.0 {
3532 interface "eth*" {
3533 cost 11;
3534 hello 15;
3535 priority 100;
3536 retransmit 7;
3537 authentication simple;
3538 password "aaa";
3539 };
3540 interface "ppp*" {
3541 cost 100;
3542 authentication cryptographic;
3543 password "abc" {
3544 id 1;
3545 generate to "22-04-2003 11:00:06";
3546 accept from "17-01-2001 12:01:05";
3547 algorithm hmac sha384;
3548 };
3549 password "def" {
3550 id 2;
3551 generate to "22-07-2005 17:03:21";
3552 accept from "22-02-2001 11:34:06";
3553 algorithm hmac sha512;
3554 };
3555 };
3556 interface "arc0" {
3557 cost 10;
3558 stub yes;
3559 };
3560 interface "arc1";
3561 };
3562 area 120 {
3563 stub yes;
3564 networks {
3565 172.16.1.0/24;
3566 172.16.2.0/24 hidden;
3567 }
3568 interface "-arc0" , "arc*" {
3569 type nonbroadcast;
3570 authentication none;
3571 strict nonbroadcast yes;
3572 wait 120;
3573 poll 40;
3574 dead count 8;
3575 neighbors {
3576 192.168.120.1 eligible;
3577 192.168.120.2;
3578 192.168.120.10;
3579 };
3580 };
3581 };
3582 }
3583 </code>
3584
3585
3586 <sect>Pipe
3587 <label id="pipe">
3588
3589 <sect1>Introduction
3590 <label id="pipe-intro">
3591
3592 <p>The Pipe protocol serves as a link between two routing tables, allowing
3593 routes to be passed from a table declared as primary (i.e., the one the pipe is
3594 connected to using the <cf/table/ configuration keyword) to the secondary one
3595 (declared using <cf/peer table/) and vice versa, depending on what's allowed by
3596 the filters. Export filters control export of routes from the primary table to
3597 the secondary one, import filters control the opposite direction. Both tables
3598 must be of the same nettype.
3599
3600 <p>The Pipe protocol may work in the transparent mode mode or in the opaque
3601 mode. In the transparent mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits all routes from
3602 one table to the other table, retaining their original source and attributes.
3603 If import and export filters are set to accept, then both tables would have
3604 the same content. The transparent mode is the default mode.
3605
3606 <p>In the opaque mode, the Pipe protocol retransmits optimal route from one
3607 table to the other table in a similar way like other protocols send and receive
3608 routes. Retransmitted route will have the source set to the Pipe protocol, which
3609 may limit access to protocol specific route attributes. This mode is mainly for
3610 compatibility, it is not suggested for new configs. The mode can be changed by
3611 <tt/mode/ option.
3612
3613 <p>The primary use of multiple routing tables and the Pipe protocol is for
3614 policy routing, where handling of a single packet doesn't depend only on its
3615 destination address, but also on its source address, source interface, protocol
3616 type and other similar parameters. In many systems (Linux being a good example),
3617 the kernel allows to enforce routing policies by defining routing rules which
3618 choose one of several routing tables to be used for a packet according to its
3619 parameters. Setting of these rules is outside the scope of BIRD's work (on
3620 Linux, you can use the <tt/ip/ command), but you can create several routing
3621 tables in BIRD, connect them to the kernel ones, use filters to control which
3622 routes appear in which tables and also you can employ the Pipe protocol for
3623 exporting a selected subset of one table to another one.
3624
3625 <sect1>Configuration
3626 <label id="pipe-config">
3627
3628 <p>Essentially, the Pipe protocol is just a channel connected to a table on both
3629 sides. Therefore, the configuration block for <cf/protocol pipe/ shall directly
3630 include standard channel config options; see the example below.
3631
3632 <p><descrip>
3633 <tag><label id="pipe-peer-table">peer table <m/table/</tag>
3634 Defines secondary routing table to connect to. The primary one is
3635 selected by the <cf/table/ keyword.
3636 </descrip>
3637
3638 <sect1>Attributes
3639 <label id="pipe-attr">
3640
3641 <p>The Pipe protocol doesn't define any route attributes.
3642
3643 <sect1>Example
3644 <label id="pipe-exam">
3645
3646 <p>Let's consider a router which serves as a boundary router of two different
3647 autonomous systems, each of them connected to a subset of interfaces of the
3648 router, having its own exterior connectivity and wishing to use the other AS as
3649 a backup connectivity in case of outage of its own exterior line.
3650
3651 <p>Probably the simplest solution to this situation is to use two routing tables
3652 (we'll call them <cf/as1/ and <cf/as2/) and set up kernel routing rules, so that
3653 packets having arrived from interfaces belonging to the first AS will be routed
3654 according to <cf/as1/ and similarly for the second AS. Thus we have split our
3655 router to two logical routers, each one acting on its own routing table, having
3656 its own routing protocols on its own interfaces. In order to use the other AS's
3657 routes for backup purposes, we can pass the routes between the tables through a
3658 Pipe protocol while decreasing their preferences and correcting their BGP paths
3659 to reflect the AS boundary crossing.
3660
3661 <code>
3662 ipv4 table as1; # Define the tables
3663 ipv4 table as2;
3664
3665 protocol kernel kern1 { # Synchronize them with the kernel
3666 ipv4 { table as1; export all; };
3667 kernel table 1;
3668 }
3669
3670 protocol kernel kern2 {
3671 ipv4 { table as2; export all; };
3672 kernel table 2;
3673 }
3674
3675 protocol bgp bgp1 { # The outside connections
3676 ipv4 { table as1; import all; export all; };
3677 local as 1;
3678 neighbor 192.168.0.1 as 1001;
3679 }
3680
3681 protocol bgp bgp2 {
3682 ipv4 { table as2; import all; export all; };
3683 local as 2;
3684 neighbor 10.0.0.1 as 1002;
3685 }
3686
3687 protocol pipe { # The Pipe
3688 table as1;
3689 peer table as2;
3690 export filter {
3691 if net ~ [ 1.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS1 networks
3692 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
3693 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(1);
3694 accept;
3695 }
3696 reject;
3697 };
3698 import filter {
3699 if net ~ [ 2.0.0.0/8+] then { # Only AS2 networks
3700 if preference>10 then preference = preference-10;
3701 if source=RTS_BGP then bgp_path.prepend(2);
3702 accept;
3703 }
3704 reject;
3705 };
3706 }
3707 </code>
3708
3709
3710 <sect>RAdv
3711 <label id="radv">
3712
3713 <sect1>Introduction
3714 <label id="radv-intro">
3715
3716 <p>The RAdv protocol is an implementation of Router Advertisements, which are
3717 used in the IPv6 stateless autoconfiguration. IPv6 routers send (in irregular
3718 time intervals or as an answer to a request) advertisement packets to connected
3719 networks. These packets contain basic information about a local network (e.g. a
3720 list of network prefixes), which allows network hosts to autoconfigure network
3721 addresses and choose a default route. BIRD implements router behavior as defined
3722 in <rfc id="4861">, router preferences and specific routes (<rfc id="4191">),
3723 and DNS extensions (<rfc id="6106">).
3724
3725 <p>The RAdv protocols supports just IPv6 channel.
3726
3727 <sect1>Configuration
3728 <label id="radv-config">
3729
3730 <p>There are several classes of definitions in RAdv configuration -- interface
3731 definitions, prefix definitions and DNS definitions:
3732
3733 <descrip>
3734 <tag><label id="radv-iface">interface <m/pattern/ [, <m/.../] { <m/options/ }</tag>
3735 Interface definitions specify a set of interfaces on which the
3736 protocol is activated and contain interface specific options.
3737 See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface"> common options for
3738 detailed description.
3739
3740 <tag><label id="radv-prefix">prefix <m/prefix/ { <m/options/ }</tag>
3741 Prefix definitions allow to modify a list of advertised prefixes. By
3742 default, the advertised prefixes are the same as the network prefixes
3743 assigned to the interface. For each network prefix, the matching prefix
3744 definition is found and its options are used. If no matching prefix
3745 definition is found, the prefix is used with default options.
3746
3747 Prefix definitions can be either global or interface-specific. The
3748 second ones are part of interface options. The prefix definition
3749 matching is done in the first-match style, when interface-specific
3750 definitions are processed before global definitions. As expected, the
3751 prefix definition is matching if the network prefix is a subnet of the
3752 prefix in prefix definition.
3753
3754 <tag><label id="radv-rdnss">rdnss { <m/options/ }</tag>
3755 RDNSS definitions allow to specify a list of advertised recursive DNS
3756 servers together with their options. As options are seldom necessary,
3757 there is also a short variant <cf>rdnss <m/address/</cf> that just
3758 specifies one DNS server. Multiple definitions are cumulative. RDNSS
3759 definitions may also be interface-specific when used inside interface
3760 options. By default, interface uses both global and interface-specific
3761 options, but that can be changed by <cf/rdnss local/ option.
3762
3763 <tag><label id="radv-dnssl">dnssl { <m/options/ }</tag>
3764 DNSSL definitions allow to specify a list of advertised DNS search
3765 domains together with their options. Like <cf/rdnss/ above, multiple
3766 definitions are cumulative, they can be used also as interface-specific
3767 options and there is a short variant <cf>dnssl <m/domain/</cf> that just
3768 specifies one DNS search domain.
3769
3770 <tag><label id="radv-trigger">trigger <m/prefix/</tag>
3771 RAdv protocol could be configured to change its behavior based on
3772 availability of routes. When this option is used, the protocol waits in
3773 suppressed state until a <it/trigger route/ (for the specified network)
3774 is exported to the protocol, the protocol also returnsd to suppressed
3775 state if the <it/trigger route/ disappears. Note that route export
3776 depends on specified export filter, as usual. This option could be used,
3777 e.g., for handling failover in multihoming scenarios.
3778
3779 During suppressed state, router advertisements are generated, but with
3780 some fields zeroed. Exact behavior depends on which fields are zeroed,
3781 this can be configured by <cf/sensitive/ option for appropriate
3782 fields. By default, just <cf/default lifetime/ (also called <cf/router
3783 lifetime/) is zeroed, which means hosts cannot use the router as a
3784 default router. <cf/preferred lifetime/ and <cf/valid lifetime/ could
3785 also be configured as <cf/sensitive/ for a prefix, which would cause
3786 autoconfigured IPs to be deprecated or even removed.
3787
3788 <tag><label id="radv-propagate-routes">propagate routes <m/switch/</tag>
3789 This option controls propagation of more specific routes, as defined in
3790 <rfc id="4191">. If enabled, all routes exported to the RAdv protocol,
3791 with the exception of the trigger prefix, are added to advertisments as
3792 additional options. The lifetime and preference of advertised routes can
3793 be set individually by <cf/ra_lifetime/ and <cf/ra_preference/ route
3794 attributes, or per interface by <cf/route lifetime/ and
3795 <cf/route preference/ options. Default: disabled.
3796
3797 Note that the RFC discourages from sending more than 17 routes and
3798 recommends the routes to be configured manually.
3799 </descrip>
3800
3801 <p>Interface specific options:
3802
3803 <descrip>
3804 <tag><label id="radv-iface-max-ra-interval">max ra interval <m/expr/</tag>
3805 Unsolicited router advertisements are sent in irregular time intervals.
3806 This option specifies the maximum length of these intervals, in seconds.
3807 Valid values are 4-1800. Default: 600
3808
3809 <tag><label id="radv-iface-min-ra-interval">min ra interval <m/expr/</tag>
3810 This option specifies the minimum length of that intervals, in seconds.
3811 Must be at least 3 and at most 3/4 * <cf/max ra interval/. Default:
3812 about 1/3 * <cf/max ra interval/.
3813
3814 <tag><label id="radv-iface-min-delay">min delay <m/expr/</tag>
3815 The minimum delay between two consecutive router advertisements, in
3816 seconds. Default: 3
3817
3818 <tag><label id="radv-iface-managed">managed <m/switch/</tag>
3819 This option specifies whether hosts should use DHCPv6 for IP address
3820 configuration. Default: no
3821
3822 <tag><label id="radv-iface-other-config">other config <m/switch/</tag>
3823 This option specifies whether hosts should use DHCPv6 to receive other
3824 configuration information. Default: no
3825
3826 <tag><label id="radv-iface-link-mtu">link mtu <m/expr/</tag>
3827 This option specifies which value of MTU should be used by hosts. 0
3828 means unspecified. Default: 0
3829
3830 <tag><label id="radv-iface-reachable-time">reachable time <m/expr/</tag>
3831 This option specifies the time (in milliseconds) how long hosts should
3832 assume a neighbor is reachable (from the last confirmation). Maximum is
3833 3600000, 0 means unspecified. Default 0.
3834
3835 <tag><label id="radv-iface-retrans-timer">retrans timer <m/expr/</tag>
3836 This option specifies the time (in milliseconds) how long hosts should
3837 wait before retransmitting Neighbor Solicitation messages. 0 means
3838 unspecified. Default 0.
3839
3840 <tag><label id="radv-iface-current-hop-limit">current hop limit <m/expr/</tag>
3841 This option specifies which value of Hop Limit should be used by
3842 hosts. Valid values are 0-255, 0 means unspecified. Default: 64
3843
3844 <tag><label id="radv-iface-default-lifetime">default lifetime <m/expr/ [sensitive <m/switch/]</tag>
3845 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (since the receipt
3846 of RA) hosts may use the router as a default router. 0 means do not use
3847 as a default router. For <cf/sensitive/ option, see <ref id="radv-trigger" name="trigger">.
3848 Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/, <cf/sensitive/ yes.
3849
3850 <tag><label id="radv-iface-default-preference">default preference low|medium|high</tag>
3851 This option specifies the Default Router Preference value to advertise
3852 to hosts. Default: medium.
3853
3854 <tag><label id="radv-iface-route-lifetime">route lifetime <m/expr/ [sensitive <m/switch/]</tag>
3855 This option specifies the default value of advertised lifetime for
3856 specific routes; i.e., the time (in seconds) for how long (since the
3857 receipt of RA) hosts should consider these routes valid. A special value
3858 0xffffffff represents infinity. The lifetime can be overriden on a per
3859 route basis by the <ref id="rta-ra-lifetime" name="ra_lifetime"> route
3860 attribute. Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/, <cf/sensitive/ no.
3861
3862 For the <cf/sensitive/ option, see <ref id="radv-trigger" name="trigger">.
3863 If <cf/sensitive/ is enabled, even the routes with the <cf/ra_lifetime/
3864 attribute become sensitive to the trigger.
3865
3866 <tag><label id="radv-iface-route-preference">route preference low|medium|high</tag>
3867 This option specifies the default value of advertised route preference
3868 for specific routes. The value can be overriden on a per route basis by
3869 the <ref id="rta-ra-preference" name="ra_preference"> route attribute.
3870 Default: medium.
3871
3872 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-linger-time">prefix linger time <m/expr/</tag>
3873 When a prefix or a route disappears, it is advertised for some time with
3874 zero lifetime, to inform clients it is no longer valid. This option
3875 specifies the time (in seconds) for how long prefixes are advertised
3876 that way. Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/.
3877
3878 <tag><label id="radv-route-linger-time">route linger time <m/expr/</tag>
3879 When a prefix or a route disappears, it is advertised for some time with
3880 zero lifetime, to inform clients it is no longer valid. This option
3881 specifies the time (in seconds) for how long routes are advertised
3882 that way. Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/.
3883
3884 <tag><label id="radv-iface-rdnss-local">rdnss local <m/switch/</tag>
3885 Use only local (interface-specific) RDNSS definitions for this
3886 interface. Otherwise, both global and local definitions are used. Could
3887 also be used to disable RDNSS for given interface if no local definitons
3888 are specified. Default: no.
3889
3890 <tag><label id="radv-iface-dnssl-local">dnssl local <m/switch/</tag>
3891 Use only local DNSSL definitions for this interface. See <cf/rdnss local/
3892 option above. Default: no.
3893 </descrip>
3894
3895 <p>Prefix specific options
3896
3897 <descrip>
3898 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-skip">skip <m/switch/</tag>
3899 This option allows to specify that given prefix should not be
3900 advertised. This is useful for making exceptions from a default policy
3901 of advertising all prefixes. Note that for withdrawing an already
3902 advertised prefix it is more useful to advertise it with zero valid
3903 lifetime. Default: no
3904
3905 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-onlink">onlink <m/switch/</tag>
3906 This option specifies whether hosts may use the advertised prefix for
3907 onlink determination. Default: yes
3908
3909 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-autonomous">autonomous <m/switch/</tag>
3910 This option specifies whether hosts may use the advertised prefix for
3911 stateless autoconfiguration. Default: yes
3912
3913 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-valid-lifetime">valid lifetime <m/expr/ [sensitive <m/switch/]</tag>
3914 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (after the
3915 receipt of RA) the prefix information is valid, i.e., autoconfigured
3916 IP addresses can be assigned and hosts with that IP addresses are
3917 considered directly reachable. 0 means the prefix is no longer
3918 valid. For <cf/sensitive/ option, see <ref id="radv-trigger" name="trigger">.
3919 Default: 86400 (1 day), <cf/sensitive/ no.
3920
3921 <tag><label id="radv-prefix-preferred-lifetime">preferred lifetime <m/expr/ [sensitive <m/switch/]</tag>
3922 This option specifies the time (in seconds) how long (after the
3923 receipt of RA) IP addresses generated from the prefix using stateless
3924 autoconfiguration remain preferred. For <cf/sensitive/ option,
3925 see <ref id="radv-trigger" name="trigger">. Default: 14400 (4 hours),
3926 <cf/sensitive/ no.
3927 </descrip>
3928
3929 <p>RDNSS specific options:
3930
3931 <descrip>
3932 <tag><label id="radv-rdnss-ns">ns <m/address/</tag>
3933 This option specifies one recursive DNS server. Can be used multiple
3934 times for multiple servers. It is mandatory to have at least one
3935 <cf/ns/ option in <cf/rdnss/ definition.
3936
3937 <tag><label id="radv-rdnss-lifetime">lifetime [mult] <m/expr/</tag>
3938 This option specifies the time how long the RDNSS information may be
3939 used by clients after the receipt of RA. It is expressed either in
3940 seconds or (when <cf/mult/ is used) in multiples of <cf/max ra
3941 interval/. Note that RDNSS information is also invalidated when
3942 <cf/default lifetime/ expires. 0 means these addresses are no longer
3943 valid DNS servers. Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/.
3944 </descrip>
3945
3946 <p>DNSSL specific options:
3947
3948 <descrip>
3949 <tag><label id="radv-dnssl-domain">domain <m/address/</tag>
3950 This option specifies one DNS search domain. Can be used multiple times
3951 for multiple domains. It is mandatory to have at least one <cf/domain/
3952 option in <cf/dnssl/ definition.
3953
3954 <tag><label id="radv-dnssl-lifetime">lifetime [mult] <m/expr/</tag>
3955 This option specifies the time how long the DNSSL information may be
3956 used by clients after the receipt of RA. Details are the same as for
3957 RDNSS <cf/lifetime/ option above. Default: 3 * <cf/max ra interval/.
3958 </descrip>
3959
3960 <sect1>Attributes
3961 <label id="radv-attr">
3962
3963 <p>RAdv defines two route attributes:
3964
3965 <descrip>
3966 <tag><label id="rta-ra-preference">enum ra_preference/</tag>
3967 The preference of the route. The value can be <it/RA_PREF_LOW/,
3968 <it/RA_PREF_MEDIUM/ or <it/RA_PREF_HIGH/. If the attribute is not set,
3969 the <ref id="radv-iface-route-preference" name="route preference">
3970 option is used.
3971
3972 <tag><label id="rta-ra-lifetime">int ra_lifetime/</tag>
3973 The advertised lifetime of the route, in seconds. The special value of
3974 0xffffffff represents infinity. If the attribute is not set, the
3975 <ref id="radv-iface-route-lifetime" name="route lifetime">
3976 option is used.
3977 </descrip>
3978
3979 <sect1>Example
3980 <label id="radv-exam">
3981
3982 <p><code>
3983 ipv6 table radv_routes; # Manually configured routes go here
3984
3985 protocol static {
3986 ipv6 { table radv_routes; };
3987
3988 route 2001:0DB8:4000::/48 unreachable;
3989 route 2001:0DB8:4010::/48 unreachable;
3990
3991 route 2001:0DB8:4020::/48 unreachable {
3992 ra_preference = RA_PREF_HIGH;
3993 ra_lifetime = 3600;
3994 };
3995 }
3996
3997 protocol radv {
3998 propagate routes yes; # Propagate the routes from the radv_routes table
3999 ipv6 { table radv_routes; export all; };
4000
4001 interface "eth2" {
4002 max ra interval 5; # Fast failover with more routers
4003 managed yes; # Using DHCPv6 on eth2
4004 prefix ::/0 {
4005 autonomous off; # So do not autoconfigure any IP
4006 };
4007 };
4008
4009 interface "eth*"; # No need for any other options
4010
4011 prefix 2001:0DB8:1234::/48 {
4012 preferred lifetime 0; # Deprecated address range
4013 };
4014
4015 prefix 2001:0DB8:2000::/48 {
4016 autonomous off; # Do not autoconfigure
4017 };
4018
4019 rdnss 2001:0DB8:1234::10; # Short form of RDNSS
4020
4021 rdnss {
4022 lifetime mult 10;
4023 ns 2001:0DB8:1234::11;
4024 ns 2001:0DB8:1234::12;
4025 };
4026
4027 dnssl {
4028 lifetime 3600;
4029 domain "abc.com";
4030 domain "xyz.com";
4031 };
4032 }
4033 </code>
4034
4035
4036 <sect>RIP
4037 <label id="rip">
4038
4039 <sect1>Introduction
4040 <label id="rip-intro">
4041
4042 <p>The RIP protocol (also sometimes called Rest In Pieces) is a simple protocol,
4043 where each router broadcasts (to all its neighbors) distances to all networks it
4044 can reach. When a router hears distance to another network, it increments it and
4045 broadcasts it back. Broadcasts are done in regular intervals. Therefore, if some
4046 network goes unreachable, routers keep telling each other that its distance is
4047 the original distance plus 1 (actually, plus interface metric, which is usually
4048 one). After some time, the distance reaches infinity (that's 15 in RIP) and all
4049 routers know that network is unreachable. RIP tries to minimize situations where
4050 counting to infinity is necessary, because it is slow. Due to infinity being 16,
4051 you can't use RIP on networks where maximal distance is higher than 15
4052 hosts.
4053
4054 <p>BIRD supports RIPv1 (<rfc id="1058">), RIPv2 (<rfc id="2453">), RIPng (<rfc
4055 id="2080">), and RIP cryptographic authentication (<rfc id="4822">).
4056
4057 <p>RIP is a very simple protocol, and it has a lot of shortcomings. Slow
4058 convergence, big network load and inability to handle larger networks makes it
4059 pretty much obsolete. It is still usable on very small networks.
4060
4061 <sect1>Configuration
4062 <label id="rip-config">
4063
4064 <p>RIP configuration consists mainly of common protocol options and interface
4065 definitions, most RIP options are interface specific. RIPng (RIP for IPv6)
4066 protocol instance can be configured by using <cf/rip ng/ instead of just
4067 <cf/rip/ as a protocol type.
4068
4069 <p>RIP needs one IPv4 channel. RIPng needs one IPv6 channel. If no channel is
4070 configured, appropriate channel is defined with default parameters.
4071
4072 <code>
4073 protocol rip [ng] [&lt;name&gt;] {
4074 infinity &lt;number&gt;;
4075 ecmp &lt;switch&gt; [limit &lt;number&gt;];
4076 interface &lt;interface pattern&gt; {
4077 metric &lt;number&gt;;
4078 mode multicast|broadcast;
4079 passive &lt;switch&gt;;
4080 address &lt;ip&gt;;
4081 port &lt;number&gt;;
4082 version 1|2;
4083 split horizon &lt;switch&gt;;
4084 poison reverse &lt;switch&gt;;
4085 check zero &lt;switch&gt;;
4086 update time &lt;number&gt;;
4087 timeout time &lt;number&gt;;
4088 garbage time &lt;number&gt;;
4089 ecmp weight &lt;number&gt;;
4090 ttl security &lt;switch&gt;; | tx only;
4091 tx class|dscp &lt;number&gt;;
4092 tx priority &lt;number&gt;;
4093 rx buffer &lt;number&gt;;
4094 tx length &lt;number&gt;;
4095 check link &lt;switch&gt;;
4096 authentication none|plaintext|cryptographic;
4097 password "&lt;text&gt;";
4098 password "&lt;text&gt;" {
4099 id &lt;num&gt;;
4100 generate from "&lt;date&gt;";
4101 generate to "&lt;date&gt;";
4102 accept from "&lt;date&gt;";
4103 accept to "&lt;date&gt;";
4104 from "&lt;date&gt;";
4105 to "&lt;date&gt;";
4106 algorithm ( keyed md5 | keyed sha1 | hmac sha1 | hmac sha256 | hmac sha384 | hmac sha512 );
4107 };
4108 };
4109 }
4110 </code>
4111
4112 <descrip>
4113 <tag><label id="rip-infinity">infinity <M>number</M></tag>
4114 Selects the distance of infinity. Bigger values will make
4115 protocol convergence even slower. The default value is 16.
4116
4117 <tag><label id="rip-ecmp">ecmp <M>switch</M> [limit <M>number</M>]</tag>
4118 This option specifies whether RIP is allowed to generate ECMP
4119 (equal-cost multipath) routes. Such routes are used when there are
4120 several directions to the destination, each with the same (computed)
4121 cost. This option also allows to specify a limit on maximum number of
4122 nexthops in one route. By default, ECMP is enabled if supported by
4123 Kernel. Default value of the limit is 16.
4124
4125 <tag><label id="rip-iface">interface <m/pattern/ [, <m/.../] { <m/options/ }</tag>
4126 Interface definitions specify a set of interfaces on which the
4127 protocol is activated and contain interface specific options.
4128 See <ref id="proto-iface" name="interface"> common options for
4129 detailed description.
4130 </descrip>
4131
4132 <p>Interface specific options:
4133
4134 <descrip>
4135 <tag><label id="rip-iface-metric">metric <m/num/</tag>
4136 This option specifies the metric of the interface. When a route is
4137 received from the interface, its metric is increased by this value
4138 before further processing. Valid values are 1-255, but values higher
4139 than infinity has no further meaning. Default: 1.
4140
4141 <tag><label id="rip-iface-mode">mode multicast|broadcast</tag>
4142 This option selects the mode for RIP to use on the interface. The
4143 default is multicast mode for RIPv2 and broadcast mode for RIPv1.
4144 RIPng always uses the multicast mode.
4145
4146 <tag><label id="rip-iface-passive">passive <m/switch/</tag>
4147 Passive interfaces receive routing updates but do not transmit any
4148 messages. Default: no.
4149
4150 <tag><label id="rip-iface-address">address <m/ip/</tag>
4151 This option specifies a destination address used for multicast or
4152 broadcast messages, the default is the official RIP (224.0.0.9) or RIPng
4153 (ff02::9) multicast address, or an appropriate broadcast address in the
4154 broadcast mode.
4155
4156 <tag><label id="rip-iface-port">port <m/number/</tag>
4157 This option selects an UDP port to operate on, the default is the
4158 official RIP (520) or RIPng (521) port.
4159
4160 <tag><label id="rip-iface-version">version 1|2</tag>
4161 This option selects the version of RIP used on the interface. For RIPv1,
4162 automatic subnet aggregation is not implemented, only classful network
4163 routes and host routes are propagated. Note that BIRD allows RIPv1 to be
4164 configured with features that are defined for RIPv2 only, like
4165 authentication or using multicast sockets. The default is RIPv2 for IPv4
4166 RIP, the option is not supported for RIPng, as no further versions are
4167 defined.
4168
4169 <tag><label id="rip-iface-version-only">version only <m/switch/</tag>
4170 Regardless of RIP version configured for the interface, BIRD accepts
4171 incoming packets of any RIP version. This option restrict accepted
4172 packets to the configured version. Default: no.
4173
4174 <tag><label id="rip-iface-split-horizon">split horizon <m/switch/</tag>
4175 Split horizon is a scheme for preventing routing loops. When split
4176 horizon is active, routes are not regularly propagated back to the
4177 interface from which they were received. They are either not propagated
4178 back at all (plain split horizon) or propagated back with an infinity
4179 metric (split horizon with poisoned reverse). Therefore, other routers
4180 on the interface will not consider the router as a part of an
4181 independent path to the destination of the route. Default: yes.
4182
4183 <tag><label id="rip-iface-poison-reverse">poison reverse <m/switch/</tag>
4184 When split horizon is active, this option specifies whether the poisoned
4185 reverse variant (propagating routes back with an infinity metric) is
4186 used. The poisoned reverse has some advantages in faster convergence,
4187 but uses more network traffic. Default: yes.
4188
4189 <tag><label id="rip-iface-check-zero">check zero <m/switch/</tag>
4190 Received RIPv1 packets with non-zero values in reserved fields should
4191 be discarded. This option specifies whether the check is performed or
4192 such packets are just processed as usual. Default: yes.
4193
4194 <tag><label id="rip-iface-update-time">update time <m/number/</tag>
4195 Specifies the number of seconds between periodic updates. A lower number
4196 will mean faster convergence but bigger network load. Default: 30.
4197
4198 <tag><label id="rip-iface-timeout-time">timeout time <m/number/</tag>
4199 Specifies the time interval (in seconds) between the last received route
4200 announcement and the route expiration. After that, the network is
4201 considered unreachable, but still is propagated with infinity distance.
4202 Default: 180.
4203
4204 <tag><label id="rip-iface-garbage-time">garbage time <m/number/</tag>
4205 Specifies the time interval (in seconds) between the route expiration
4206 and the removal of the unreachable network entry. The garbage interval,
4207 when a route with infinity metric is propagated, is used for both
4208 internal (after expiration) and external (after withdrawal) routes.
4209 Default: 120.
4210
4211 <tag><label id="rip-iface-ecmp-weight">ecmp weight <m/number/</tag>
4212 When ECMP (multipath) routes are allowed, this value specifies a
4213 relative weight used for nexthops going through the iface. Valid
4214 values are 1-256. Default value is 1.
4215
4216 <tag><label id="rip-iface-auth">authentication none|plaintext|cryptographic</tag>
4217 Selects authentication method to be used. <cf/none/ means that packets
4218 are not authenticated at all, <cf/plaintext/ means that a plaintext
4219 password is embedded into each packet, and <cf/cryptographic/ means that
4220 packets are authenticated using some cryptographic hash function
4221 selected by option <cf/algorithm/ for each key. The default
4222 cryptographic algorithm for RIP keys is Keyed-MD5. If you set
4223 authentication to not-none, it is a good idea to add <cf>password</cf>
4224 section. Default: none.
4225
4226 <tag><label id="rip-iface-pass">password "<m/text/"</tag>
4227 Specifies a password used for authentication. See <ref id="proto-pass"
4228 name="password"> common option for detailed description.
4229
4230 <tag><label id="rip-iface-ttl-security">ttl security [<m/switch/ | tx only]</tag>
4231 TTL security is a feature that protects routing protocols from remote
4232 spoofed packets by using TTL 255 instead of TTL 1 for protocol packets
4233 destined to neighbors. Because TTL is decremented when packets are
4234 forwarded, it is non-trivial to spoof packets with TTL 255 from remote
4235 locations.
4236
4237 If this option is enabled, the router will send RIP packets with TTL 255
4238 and drop received packets with TTL less than 255. If this option si set
4239 to <cf/tx only/, TTL 255 is used for sent packets, but is not checked
4240 for received packets. Such setting does not offer protection, but offers
4241 compatibility with neighbors regardless of whether they use ttl
4242 security.
4243
4244 For RIPng, TTL security is a standard behavior (required by <rfc
4245 id="2080">) and therefore default value is yes. For IPv4 RIP, default
4246 value is no.
4247
4248 <tag><label id="rip-iface-tx-class">tx class|dscp|priority <m/number/</tag>
4249 These options specify the ToS/DiffServ/Traffic class/Priority of the
4250 outgoing RIP packets. See <ref id="proto-tx-class" name="tx class"> common
4251 option for detailed description.
4252
4253 <tag><label id="rip-iface-rx-buffer">rx buffer <m/number/</tag>
4254 This option specifies the size of buffers used for packet processing.
4255 The buffer size should be bigger than maximal size of received packets.
4256 The default value is 532 for IPv4 RIP and interface MTU value for RIPng.
4257
4258 <tag><label id="rip-iface-tx-length">tx length <m/number/</tag>
4259 This option specifies the maximum length of generated RIP packets. To
4260 avoid IP fragmentation, it should not exceed the interface MTU value.
4261 The default value is 532 for IPv4 RIP and interface MTU value for RIPng.
4262
4263 <tag><label id="rip-iface-check-link">check link <m/switch/</tag>
4264 If set, the hardware link state (as reported by OS) is taken into
4265 consideration. When the link disappears (e.g. an ethernet cable is
4266 unplugged), neighbors are immediately considered unreachable and all
4267 routes received from them are withdrawn. It is possible that some
4268 hardware drivers or platforms do not implement this feature.
4269 Default: yes.
4270 </descrip>
4271
4272 <sect1>Attributes
4273 <label id="rip-attr">
4274
4275 <p>RIP defines two route attributes:
4276
4277 <descrip>
4278 <tag>int <cf/rip_metric/</tag>
4279 RIP metric of the route (ranging from 0 to <cf/infinity/). When routes
4280 from different RIP instances are available and all of them have the same
4281 preference, BIRD prefers the route with lowest <cf/rip_metric/. When a
4282 non-RIP route is exported to RIP, the default metric is 1.
4283
4284 <tag><label id="rta-rip-tag">int rip_tag/</tag>
4285 RIP route tag: a 16-bit number which can be used to carry additional
4286 information with the route (for example, an originating AS number in
4287 case of external routes). When a non-RIP route is exported to RIP, the
4288 default tag is 0.
4289 </descrip>
4290
4291 <sect1>Example
4292 <label id="rip-exam">
4293
4294 <p><code>
4295 protocol rip {
4296 ipv4 {
4297 import all;
4298 export all;
4299 };
4300 interface "eth*" {
4301 metric 2;
4302 port 1520;
4303 mode multicast;
4304 update time 12;
4305 timeout time 60;
4306 authentication cryptographic;
4307 password "secret" { algorithm hmac sha256; };
4308 };
4309 }
4310 </code>
4311
4312
4313 <sect>RPKI
4314 <label id="rpki">
4315
4316 <sect1>Introduction
4317
4318 <p>The Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) is mechanism for origin
4319 validation of BGP routes (RFC 6480). BIRD supports only so-called RPKI-based
4320 origin validation. There is implemented RPKI to Router (RPKI-RTR) protocol (RFC
4321 6810). It uses some of the RPKI data to allow a router to verify that the
4322 autonomous system announcing an IP address prefix is in fact authorized to do
4323 so. This is not crypto checked so can be violated. But it should prevent the
4324 vast majority of accidental hijackings on the Internet today, e.g. the famous
4325 Pakastani accidental announcement of YouTube's address space.
4326
4327 <p>The RPKI-RTR protocol receives and maintains a set of ROAs from a cache
4328 server (also called validator). You can validate routes (RFC 6483) using
4329 function <cf/roa_check()/ in filter and set it as import filter at the BGP
4330 protocol. BIRD should re-validate all of affected routes after RPKI update by
4331 RFC 6811, but we don't support it yet! You can use a BIRD's client command
4332 <cf>reload in <m/bgp_protocol_name/</cf> for manual call of revalidation of all
4333 routes.
4334
4335 <sect1>Supported transports
4336 <p>
4337 <itemize>
4338 <item>Unprotected transport over TCP uses a port 323. The cache server
4339 and BIRD router should be on the same trusted and controlled network
4340 for security reasons.
4341 <item>SSHv2 encrypted transport connection uses the normal SSH port
4342 22.
4343 </itemize>
4344
4345 <sect1>Configuration
4346
4347 <p>We currently support just one cache server per protocol. However you can
4348 define more RPKI protocols generally.
4349
4350 <code>
4351 protocol rpki [&lt;name&gt;] {
4352 roa4 { table &lt;tab&gt;; };
4353 roa6 { table &lt;tab&gt;; };
4354 remote &lt;ip&gt; | "&lt;domain&gt;" [port &lt;num&gt;];
4355 port &lt;num&gt;;
4356 refresh [keep] &lt;num&gt;;
4357 retry [keep] &lt;num&gt;;
4358 expire [keep] &lt;num&gt;;
4359 transport tcp;
4360 transport ssh {
4361 bird private key "&lt;/path/to/id_rsa&gt;";
4362 remote public key "&lt;/path/to/known_host&gt;";
4363 user "&lt;name&gt;";
4364 };
4365 }
4366 </code>
4367
4368 <p>Alse note that you have to specify the ROA channel. If you want to import
4369 only IPv4 prefixes you have to specify only roa4 channel. Similarly with IPv6
4370 prefixes only. If you want to fetch both IPv4 and even IPv6 ROAs you have to
4371 specify both channels.
4372
4373 <sect2>RPKI protocol options
4374 <p>
4375 <descrip>
4376 <tag>remote <m/ip/ | "<m/hostname/" [port <m/num/]</tag> Specifies
4377 a destination address of the cache server. Can be specified by an IP
4378 address or by full domain name string. Only one cache can be specified
4379 per protocol. This option is required.
4380
4381 <tag>port <m/num/</tag> Specifies the port number. The default port
4382 number is 323 for transport without any encryption and 22 for transport
4383 with SSH encryption.
4384
4385 <tag>refresh [keep] <m/num/</tag> Time period in seconds. Tells how
4386 long to wait before next attempting to poll the cache using a Serial
4387 Query or a Reset Query packet. Must be lower than 86400 seconds (one
4388 day). Too low value can caused a false positive detection of
4389 network connection problems. A keyword <cf/keep/ suppresses updating
4390 this value by a cache server.
4391 Default: 3600 seconds
4392
4393 <tag>retry [keep] <m/num/</tag> Time period in seconds between a failed
4394 Serial/Reset Query and a next attempt. Maximum allowed value is 7200
4395 seconds (two hours). Too low value can caused a false positive
4396 detection of network connection problems. A keyword <cf/keep/
4397 suppresses updating this value by a cache server.
4398 Default: 600 seconds
4399
4400 <tag>expire [keep] <m/num/</tag> Time period in seconds. Received
4401 records are deleted if the client was unable to successfully refresh
4402 data for this time period. Must be in range from 600 seconds (ten
4403 minutes) to 172800 seconds (two days). A keyword <cf/keep/
4404 suppresses updating this value by a cache server.
4405 Default: 7200 seconds
4406
4407 <tag>transport tcp</tag> Unprotected transport over TCP. It's a default
4408 transport. Should be used only on secure private networks.
4409 Default: tcp
4410
4411 <tag>transport ssh { <m/SSH transport options.../ }</tag> It enables a
4412 SSHv2 transport encryption. Cannot be combined with a TCP transport.
4413 Default: off
4414 </descrip>
4415
4416 <sect3>SSH transport options
4417 <p>
4418 <descrip>
4419 <tag>bird private key "<m>/path/to/id_rsa</m>"</tag>
4420 A path to the BIRD's private SSH key for authentication.
4421 It can be a <cf><m>id_rsa</m></cf> file.
4422
4423 <tag>remote public key "<m>/path/to/known_host</m>"</tag>
4424 A path to the cache's public SSH key for verification identity
4425 of the cache server. It could be a path to <cf><m>known_host</m></cf> file.
4426
4427 <tag>user "<m/name/"</tag>
4428 A SSH user name for authentication. This option is a required.
4429 </descrip>
4430
4431 <sect1>Examples
4432 <sect2>BGP origin validation
4433 <p>Policy: Don't import <cf/ROA_INVALID/ routes.
4434 <code>
4435 roa4 table r4;
4436 roa6 table r6;
4437
4438 protocol rpki {
4439 debug all;
4440
4441 roa4 { table r4; };
4442 roa6 { table r6; };
4443
4444 # Please, do not use rpki-validator.realmv6.org in production
4445 remote "rpki-validator.realmv6.org" port 8282;
4446
4447 retry keep 5;
4448 refresh keep 30;
4449 expire 600;
4450 }
4451
4452 filter peer_in_v4 {
4453 if (roa_check(r4, net, bgp_path.last) = ROA_INVALID) then
4454 {
4455 print "Ignore invalid ROA ", net, " for ASN ", bgp_path.last;
4456 reject;
4457 }
4458 accept;
4459 }
4460
4461 protocol bgp {
4462 debug all;
4463 local as 65000;
4464 neighbor 192.168.2.1 as 65001;
4465 ipv4 {
4466 import filter peer_in_v4;
4467 export none;
4468 };
4469 }
4470 </code>
4471
4472 <sect2>SSHv2 transport encryption
4473 <p>
4474 <code>
4475 roa4 table r4;
4476 roa6 table r6;
4477
4478 protocol rpki {
4479 debug all;
4480
4481 roa4 { table r4; };
4482 roa6 { table r6; };
4483
4484 remote 127.0.0.1 port 2345;
4485 transport ssh {
4486 bird private key "/home/birdgeek/.ssh/id_rsa";
4487 remote public key "/home/birdgeek/.ssh/known_hosts";
4488 user "birdgeek";
4489 };
4490
4491 # Default interval values
4492 }
4493 </code>
4494
4495
4496 <sect>Static
4497 <label id="static">
4498
4499 <p>The Static protocol doesn't communicate with other routers in the network,
4500 but instead it allows you to define routes manually. This is often used for
4501 specifying how to forward packets to parts of the network which don't use
4502 dynamic routing at all and also for defining sink routes (i.e., those telling to
4503 return packets as undeliverable if they are in your IP block, you don't have any
4504 specific destination for them and you don't want to send them out through the
4505 default route to prevent routing loops).
4506
4507 <p>There are three classes of definitions in Static protocol configuration --
4508 global options, static route definitions, and per-route options. Usually, the
4509 definition of the protocol contains mainly a list of static routes.
4510 Static routes have no specific attributes.
4511
4512 <p>Global options:
4513
4514 <descrip>
4515 <tag><label id="static-check-link">check link <m/switch/</tag>
4516 If set, hardware link states of network interfaces are taken into
4517 consideration. When link disappears (e.g. ethernet cable is unplugged),
4518 static routes directing to that interface are removed. It is possible
4519 that some hardware drivers or platforms do not implement this feature.
4520 Default: off.
4521
4522 <tag><label id="static-igp-table">igp table <m/name/</tag>
4523 Specifies a table that is used for route table lookups of recursive
4524 routes. Default: the same table as the protocol is connected to.
4525 </descrip>
4526
4527 <p>Route definitions (each may also contain a block of per-route options):
4528
4529 <sect1>Regular routes; MPLS switching rules
4530
4531 <p>There exist several types of routes; keep in mind that <m/prefix/ syntax is
4532 <ref id="type-prefix" name="dependent on network type">.
4533
4534 <descrip>
4535 <tag>route <m/prefix/ via <m/ip/|<m/"interface"/ [mpls <m/num/[/<m/num/[/<m/num/[...]]]]</tag>
4536 Next hop routes may bear one or more <ref id="route-next-hop" name="next hops">.
4537 Every next hop is preceded by <cf/via/ and configured as shown.
4538
4539 <tag>route <m/prefix/ recursive <m/ip/ [mpls <m/num/[/<m/num/[/<m/num/[...]]]]</tag>
4540 Recursive nexthop resolves the given IP in the configured IGP table and
4541 uses that route's next hop. The MPLS stacks are concatenated; on top is
4542 the IGP's nexthop stack and on bottom is this route's stack.
4543
4544 <tag>route <m/prefix/ blackhole|unreachable|prohibit</tag>
4545 Special routes specifying to silently drop the packet, return it as
4546 unreachable or return it as administratively prohibited. First two
4547 targets are also known as <cf/drop/ and <cf/reject/.
4548 </descrip>
4549
4550 <p>When the particular destination is not available (the interface is down or
4551 the next hop of the route is not a neighbor at the moment), Static just
4552 uninstalls the route from the table it is connected to and adds it again as soon
4553 as the destination becomes adjacent again.
4554
4555 <sect1>Route Origin Authorization
4556
4557 <p>The ROA config is just <cf>route <m/prefix/ max <m/int/ as <m/int/</cf> with no nexthop.
4558
4559 <sect1>Flowspec
4560 <label id="flowspec-network-type">
4561
4562 <p>The flow specification are rules for routers and firewalls for filtering
4563 purpose. It is described by <rfc id="5575">. There are 3 types of arguments:
4564 <m/inet4/ or <m/inet6/ prefixes, bitmasks matching expressions and numbers
4565 matching expressions.
4566
4567 Bitmasks matching is written using <m/value/<cf>/</cf><m/mask/ or
4568 <cf/!/<m/value/<cf>/</cf><m/mask/ pairs. It means that <cf/(/<m/data/ <cf/&/
4569 <m/mask/<cf/)/ is or is not equal to <m/value/.
4570
4571 Numbers matching is a matching sequence of numbers and ranges separeted by a
4572 commas (<cf/,/) (e.g. <cf/10,20,30/). Ranges can be written using double dots
4573 <cf/../ notation (e.g. <cf/80..90,120..124/). An alternative notation are
4574 sequence of one or more pairs of relational operators and values separated by
4575 logical operators <cf/&&/ or <cf/||/. Allowed relational operators are <cf/=/,
4576 <cf/!=/, <cf/</, <cf/<=/, <cf/>/, <cf/>=/, <cf/true/ and <cf/false/.
4577
4578 <sect2>IPv4 Flowspec
4579
4580 <p><descrip>
4581 <tag><label id="flow-dst">dst <m/inet4/</tag>
4582 Set a matching destination prefix (e.g. <cf>dst 192.168.0.0/16</cf>).
4583 Only this option is mandatory in IPv4 Flowspec.
4584
4585 <tag><label id="flow-src">src <m/inet4/</tag>
4586 Set a matching source prefix (e.g. <cf>src 10.0.0.0/8</cf>).
4587
4588 <tag><label id="flow-proto">proto <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4589 Set a matching IP protocol numbers (e.g. <cf/proto 6/).
4590
4591 <tag><label id="flow-port">port <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4592 Set a matching source or destination TCP/UDP port numbers (e.g.
4593 <cf>port 1..1023,1194,3306</cf>).
4594
4595 <tag><label id="flow-dport">dport <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4596 Set a mating destination port numbers (e.g. <cf>dport 49151</cf>).
4597
4598 <tag><label id="flow-sport">sport <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4599 Set a matching source port numbers (e.g. <cf>sport = 0</cf>).
4600
4601 <tag><label id="flow-icmp-type">icmp type <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4602 Set a matching type field number of an ICMP packet (e.g. <cf>icmp type
4603 3</cf>)
4604
4605 <tag><label id="flow-icmp-code">icmp code <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4606 Set a matching code field number of an ICMP packet (e.g. <cf>icmp code
4607 1</cf>)
4608
4609 <tag><label id="flow-tcp-flags">tcp flags <m/bitmask-match/</tag>
4610 Set a matching bitmask for TCP header flags (aka control bits) (e.g.
4611 <cf>tcp flags 0x03/0x0f;</cf>). The maximum length of mask is 12 bits
4612 (0xfff).
4613
4614 <tag><label id="flow-length">length <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4615 Set a matching packet length (e.g. <cf>length > 1500;</cf>)
4616
4617 <tag><label id="flow-dscp">dscp <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4618 Set a matching DiffServ Code Point number (e.g. <cf>length > 1500;</cf>).
4619
4620 <tag><label id="flow-fragment">fragment <m/fragmentation-type/</tag>
4621 Set a matching type of packet fragmentation. Allowed fragmentation
4622 types are <cf/dont_fragment/, <cf/is_fragment/, <cf/first_fragment/,
4623 <cf/last_fragment/ (e.g. <cf>fragment is_fragment &&
4624 !dont_fragment</cf>).
4625 </descrip>
4626
4627 <p><code>
4628 protocol static {
4629 flow4;
4630
4631 route flow4 {
4632 dst 10.0.0.0/8;
4633 port > 24 && < 30 || 40..50,60..70,80 && >= 90;
4634 tcp flags 0x03/0x0f;
4635 length > 1024;
4636 dscp = 63;
4637 fragment dont_fragment, is_fragment || !first_fragment;
4638 };
4639 }
4640 </code>
4641
4642 <sect2>Differences for IPv6 Flowspec
4643
4644 <p>Flowspec IPv6 are same as Flowspec IPv4 with a few exceptions.
4645 <itemize>
4646 <item>Prefixes <m/inet6/ can be specified not only with prefix length,
4647 but with prefix <cf/offset/ <m/num/ too (e.g.
4648 <cf>::1234:5678:9800:0000/101 offset 64</cf>). Offset means to don't
4649 care of <m/num/ first bits.
4650 <item>IPv6 Flowspec hasn't mandatory any flowspec component.
4651 <item>In IPv6 packets, there is a matching the last next header value
4652 for a matching IP protocol number (e.g. <cf>next header 6</cf>).
4653 <item>It is not possible to set <cf>dont_fragment</cf> as a type of
4654 packet fragmentation.
4655 </itemize>
4656
4657 <p><descrip>
4658 <tag><label id="flow6-dst">dst <m/inet6/ [offset <m/num/]</tag>
4659 Set a matching destination IPv6 prefix (e.g. <cf>dst
4660 ::1c77:3769:27ad:a11a/128 offset 64</cf>).
4661
4662 <tag><label id="flow6-src">src <m/inet6/ [offset <m/num/]</tag>
4663 Set a matching source IPv6 prefix (e.g. <cf>src fe80::/64</cf>).
4664
4665 <tag><label id="flow6-next-header">next header <m/numbers-match/</tag>
4666 Set a matching IP protocol numbers (e.g. <cf>next header != 6</cf>).
4667
4668 <tag><label id="flow6-label">label <m/bitmask-match/</tag>
4669 Set a 20-bit bitmask for matching Flow Label field in IPv6 packets
4670 (e.g. <cf>label 0x8e5/0x8e5</cf>).
4671 </descrip>
4672
4673 <p><code>
4674 protocol static {
4675 flow6 { table myflow6; };
4676
4677 route flow6 {
4678 dst fec0:1122:3344:5566:7788:99aa:bbcc:ddee/128;
4679 src 0000:0000:0000:0001:1234:5678:9800:0000/101 offset 63;
4680 next header = 23;
4681 sport > 24 && < 30 || = 40 || 50,60,70..80;
4682 dport = 50;
4683 tcp flags 0x03/0x0f, !0/0xff || 0x33/0x33;
4684 fragment !is_fragment || !first_fragment;
4685 label 0xaaaa/0xaaaa && 0x33/0x33;
4686 };
4687 }
4688 </code>
4689
4690 <sect1>Per-route options
4691 <p>
4692 <descrip>
4693 <tag><label id="static-route-bfd">bfd <m/switch/</tag>
4694 The Static protocol could use BFD protocol for next hop liveness
4695 detection. If enabled, a BFD session to the route next hop is created
4696 and the static route is BFD-controlled -- the static route is announced
4697 only if the next hop liveness is confirmed by BFD. If the BFD session
4698 fails, the static route is removed. Note that this is a bit different
4699 compared to other protocols, which may use BFD as an advisory mechanism
4700 for fast failure detection but ignores it if a BFD session is not even
4701 established.
4702
4703 This option can be used for static routes with a direct next hop, or
4704 also for for individual next hops in a static multipath route (see
4705 above). Note that BFD protocol also has to be configured, see
4706 <ref id="bfd" name="BFD"> section for details. Default value is no.
4707
4708 <tag><label id="static-route-filter"><m/filter expression/</tag>
4709 This is a special option that allows filter expressions to be configured
4710 on per-route basis. Can be used multiple times. These expressions are
4711 evaluated when the route is originated, similarly to the import filter
4712 of the static protocol. This is especially useful for configuring route
4713 attributes, e.g., <cf/ospf_metric1 = 100;/ for a route that will be
4714 exported to the OSPF protocol.
4715 </descrip>
4716
4717 <sect1>Example static config
4718
4719 <p><code>
4720 protocol static {
4721 ipv4 { table testable; }; # Connect to a non-default routing table
4722 check link; # Advertise routes only if link is up
4723 route 0.0.0.0/0 via 198.51.100.130; # Default route
4724 route 10.0.0.0/8 # Multipath route
4725 via 198.51.100.10 weight 2
4726 via 198.51.100.20 bfd # BFD-controlled next hop
4727 via 192.0.2.1;
4728 route 203.0.113.0/24 unreachable; # Sink route
4729 route 10.2.0.0/24 via "arc0"; # Secondary network
4730 route 192.168.10.0/24 via 198.51.100.100 {
4731 ospf_metric1 = 20; # Set extended attribute
4732 }
4733 route 192.168.10.0/24 via 198.51.100.100 {
4734 ospf_metric2 = 100; # Set extended attribute
4735 ospf_tag = 2; # Set extended attribute
4736 bfd; # BFD-controlled route
4737 }
4738 }
4739 </code>
4740
4741
4742 <chapt>Conclusions
4743 <label id="conclusion">
4744
4745 <sect>Future work
4746 <label id="future-work">
4747
4748 <p>Although BIRD supports all the commonly used routing protocols, there are
4749 still some features which would surely deserve to be implemented in future
4750 versions of BIRD:
4751
4752 <itemize>
4753 <item>Opaque LSA's
4754 <item>Route aggregation and flap dampening
4755 <item>Multicast routing protocols
4756 <item>Ports to other systems
4757 </itemize>
4758
4759
4760 <sect>Getting more help
4761 <label id="help">
4762
4763 <p>If you use BIRD, you're welcome to join the bird-users mailing list
4764 (<HTMLURL URL="mailto:bird-users@network.cz" name="bird-users@network.cz">)
4765 where you can share your experiences with the other users and consult
4766 your problems with the authors. To subscribe to the list, visit
4767 <HTMLURL URL="http://bird.network.cz/?m_list" name="http://bird.network.cz/?m_list">.
4768 The home page of BIRD can be found at <HTMLURL URL="http://bird.network.cz/" name="http://bird.network.cz/">.
4769
4770 <p>BIRD is a relatively young system and it probably contains some bugs. You can
4771 report any problems to the bird-users list and the authors will be glad to solve
4772 them, but before you do so, please make sure you have read the available
4773 documentation and that you are running the latest version (available at
4774 <HTMLURL URL="ftp://bird.network.cz/pub/bird" name="bird.network.cz:/pub/bird">).
4775 (Of course, a patch which fixes the bug is always welcome as an attachment.)
4776
4777 <p>If you want to understand what is going inside, Internet standards are a good
4778 and interesting reading. You can get them from
4779 <HTMLURL URL="ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/" name="ftp.rfc-editor.org"> (or a
4780 nicely sorted version from <HTMLURL URL="ftp://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/pub/rfc"
4781 name="atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz:/pub/rfc">).
4782
4783 <p><it/Good luck!/
4784
4785 </book>
4786
4787 <!--
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