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1 <!doctype linuxdoc system>
3 <!-- $Id$
4 -->
6 <article>
8 <!-- Title information -->
10 <title>Linux Advanced Routing &amp; Traffic Control HOWTO
11 <author>Netherlabs BV (bert hubert &lt;bert.hubert@netherlabs.nl&gt;)&nl;
12 Gregory Maxwell &lt;greg@linuxpower.cx&gt; &nl;
13 Remco van Mook &lt;remco@virtu.nl&gt; &nl;
14 Martijn van Oosterhout &lt;kleptog@cupid.suninternet.com&gt; &nl;
15 Paul B Schroeder &lt;paulsch@us.ibm.com&gt; &nl;
16 Jasper Spaans &lt;jasper@spaans.ds9a.nl&gt; &nl;
17 howto@ds9a.nl
18 <date>v0.9.0 $Date$
19 <abstract>
20 A very hands-on approach to iproute2, traffic shaping and a bit of netfilter
21 </abstract>
23 <!-- Table of contents -->
24 <toc>
26 <!-- Begin the document -->
28 <sect>Dedication
29 <p>
30 This document is dedicated to lots of people, and is my attempt to do
31 something back. To list but a few:
32 <p>
33 <itemize>
34 <item>Rusty Russell
35 <item>Alexey N. Kuznetsov
36 <item>The good folks from Google
37 <item>The staff of Casema Internet
38 </itemize>
40 <sect>Introduction
41 <p>
42 Welcome, gentle reader.
43 <p>
44 This document hopes to enlighten you on how to do more with Linux 2.2/2.4
45 routing. Unbeknownst to most users, you already run tools which allow you to
46 do spectacular things. Commands like 'route' and 'ifconfig' are actually
47 very thin wrappers for the very powerful iproute2 infrastructure
48 <p>
49 I hope that this HOWTO will become as readable as the ones by Rusty Russell
50 of (amongst other things) netfilter fame.
52 You can always reach us by writing to the <url name="HOWTO team"
53 url="mailto:HOWTO@ds9a.nl">. However, please consider posting to the mailing
54 list (see the relevant section) if you have questions which are not directly
55 related to this HOWTO.
57 Before losing your way in this HOWTO, if all you want to do is simple
58 traffic shaping, skip everything and head to the 'Other possibilties'
59 chapter, and read about CBQ.init.
62 <sect1>Disclaimer &amp; License
63 <p>
64 This document is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
65 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
66 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
68 In short, if your STM-64 backbone breaks down and distributes pornography to
69 your most esteemed customers - it's never our fault. Sorry.
71 Copyright (c) 2001 by bert hubert, Gregory Maxwell, Martijn van
72 Oosterhout, Remco can Mook, Paul B. Schroeder and others. This material may
73 be distributed only subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the
74 Open Publication License, v1.0 or later (the latest version is presently
75 available at http://www.opencontent.org/openpub/).
77 Please freely copy and distribute (sell or give away) this document in any
78 format. It's requested that corrections and/or comments be fowarded to the
79 document maintainer.
81 It is also requested that if you publish this HOWTO in hardcopy that you
82 send the authors some samples for 'review purposes' :-)
84 <sect1>Prior knowledge
85 <p>
86 As the title implies, this is the 'Advanced' HOWTO. While by no means rocket
87 science, some prior knowledge is assumed.
89 Here are some other references which might help learn you more:
90 <descrip>
91 <tag><url
92 url="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/networking-concepts-HOWTO/index.html"
93 name="Rusty Russell's networking-concepts-HOWTO"></tag>
94 Very nice introduction, explaining what a network is, and how it is
95 connected to other networks
96 <tag>Linux Networking-HOWTO (Previously the Net-3 HOWTO)</tag>
97 Great stuff, although very verbose. It learns you a lot of stuff that's
98 already configured if you are able to connect to the Internet.
99 Should be located in <file>/usr/doc/HOWTO/NET3-4-HOWTO.txt</file> but can be also be found
100 <url url="http://www.linuxports.com/howto/networking"
101 name="online">
102 </descrip>
104 <sect1>What Linux can do for you
106 A small list of things that are possible:
108 <itemize>
109 <item>Throttle bandwidth for certain computers
110 <item>Throttle bandwidth TO certain computers
111 <item>Help you to fairly share your bandwidth
112 <item>Protect your network from DoS attacks
113 <item>Protect the Internet from your customers
114 <item>Multiplex several servers as one, for load balancing or
115 enhanced availability
116 <item>Restrict access to your computers
117 <item>Limit access of your users to other hosts
118 <item>Do routing based on user id (yes!), MAC address, source IP
119 address, port, type of service, time of day or content
120 </itemize>
122 Currently, not many people are using these advanced features. This is for
123 several reasons. While the provided documentation is verbose, it is not very
124 hands-on. Traffic control is almost undocumented.
125 <sect1>Housekeeping notes
127 There are several things which should be noted about this document. While I
128 wrote most of it, I really don't want it to stay that way. I am a strong
129 believer in Open Source, so I encourage you to send feedback, updates,
130 patches etcetera. Do not hesitate to inform me of typos or plain old errors.
131 If my English sounds somewhat wooden, please realise that I'm not a native
132 speaker. Feel free to send suggestions.
134 If you feel to you are better qualified to maintain a section, or think that
135 you can author and maintain new sections, you are welcome to do so. The SGML
136 of this HOWTO is available via CVS, I very much envision more people
137 working on it.
139 In aid of this, you will find lots of FIXME notices. Patches are always
140 welcome! Wherever you find a FIXME, you should know that you are treading in
141 unknown territory. This is not to say that there are no errors elsewhere,
142 but be extra careful. If you have validated something, please let us know so
143 we can remove the FIXME notice.
145 About this HOWTO, I will take some liberties along the road. For example, I
146 postulate a 10Mbit Internet connection, while I know full well that those
147 are not very common.
148 <sect1>Access, CVS &amp; submitting updates
150 The canonical location for the HOWTO is <url
151 url="http://www.ds9a.nl/lartc" name="here">.
153 We now have anonymous CVS access available to the world at large. This is
154 good in a number of ways. You can easily upgrade to newer versions of this
155 HOWTO and submitting patches is no work at all.
157 Furthermore, it allows the authors to work on the source independently,
158 which is good too.
160 <tscreen><verb>
161 $ export CVSROOT=:pserver:anon@outpost.ds9a.nl:/var/cvsroot
162 $ cvs login
163 CVS password: [enter 'cvs' (without 's)]
164 $ cvs co 2.4routing
165 cvs server: Updating 2.4routing
166 U 2.4routing/2.4routing.sgml
167 </verb></tscreen>
169 If you spot an error, or want to add something, just fix it locally, and run
170 cvs diff -u, and send the result off to us.
172 A Makefile is supplied which should help you create postscript, dvi, pdf,
173 html and plain text. You may need to install sgml-tools, ghostscript and
174 tetex to get all formats.
176 <sect1>Mailing list
178 <label id="MLIST">
179 The authors receive an increasing amount of mail about this HOWTO. Because
180 of the clear interest of the community, it has been decided to start a
181 mailinglist where people can talk to each other about Advanced Routing and
182 Traffic Control. You can subscribe to the list
183 <url url="http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc" name="here">.
185 It should be pointed out that the authors are very hesitant of answering
186 questions not asked on the list. We would like the archive of the list to
187 become some kind of knowledge base. If you have a question, please search
188 the archive, and then post to the mailinglist.
190 <sect1>Layout of this document
192 We will be doing interesting stuff almost immediately, which also means that
193 there will initially be parts that are explained incompletely or are not
194 perfect. Please gloss over these parts and assume that all will become clear.
196 Routing and filtering are two distinct things. Filtering is documented very
197 well by Rusty's HOWTOs, available here:
199 <itemize>
200 <item><url url="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/"
201 name="Rusty's Remarkably Unreliable Guides">
202 </itemize>
204 We will be focusing mostly on what is possible by combining netfilter and
205 iproute2.
206 <sect>Introduction to iproute2
207 <sect1>Why iproute2?
209 Most Linux distributions, and most UNIX's, currently use the
210 venerable 'arp', 'ifconfig' and 'route' commands. While these tools work,
211 they show some unexpected behaviour under Linux 2.2 and up. For example, GRE
212 tunnels are an integral part of routing these days, but require completely
213 different tools.
215 With iproute2, tunnels are an integral part of the tool set.
217 The 2.2 and above Linux kernels include a completely redesigned network
218 subsystem. This new networking code brings Linux performance and a feature
219 set with little competition in the general OS arena. In fact, the new
220 routing, filtering, and classifying code is more featureful than the one
221 provided by many dedicated routers and firewalls and traffic shaping
222 products.
224 As new networking concepts have been invented, people have found ways to
225 plaster them on top of the existing framework in existing OSes. This
226 constant layering of cruft has lead to networking code that is filled with
227 strange behaviour, much like most human languages. In the past, Linux
228 emulated SunOS's handling of many of these things, which was not ideal.
230 This new framework makes it possible to clearly express features
231 previously beyond Linux's reach.
233 <sect1>iproute2 tour
235 Linux has a sophisticated system for bandwidth provisioning called Traffic
236 Control. This system supports various method for classifying, prioritizing,
237 sharing, and limiting both inbound and outbound traffic.
240 We'll start off with a tiny tour of iproute2 possibilities.
241 <sect1>Prerequisites
243 You should make sure that you have the userland tools installed. This
244 package is called 'iproute' on both RedHat and Debian, and may otherwise be
245 found at <tt>ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/iproute2-2.2.4-now-ss??????.tar.gz"</tt>.
247 You can also try <url name="here" url="ftp://ftp.inr.ac.ru/ip-routing/iproute2-current.tar.gz">
248 for the latest version.
250 Some parts of iproute require you to have certain kernel options enabled. It
251 should also be noted that all releases of RedHat up to and including 6.2
252 come without most of the traffic control features in the default kernel.
254 RedHat 7.2 has everything in by default.
256 Also make sure that you have netlink support, should you choose to roll your
257 own kernel. Iproute2 needs it.
259 <sect1>Exploring your current configuration
261 This may come as a surprise, but iproute2 is already configured! The current
262 commands <tt>ifconfig</tt> and <tt>route</tt> are already using the advanced
263 syscalls, but mostly with very default (ie. boring) settings.
265 The <tt>ip</tt> tool is central, and we'll ask it to display our interfaces
266 for us.
267 <sect2><tt>ip</tt> shows us our links
269 <tscreen><verb>
270 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip link list
271 1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP> mtu 3924 qdisc noqueue
272 link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
273 2: dummy: <BROADCAST,NOARP> mtu 1500 qdisc noop
274 link/ether 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
275 3: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,PROMISC,UP> mtu 1400 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 100
276 link/ether 48:54:e8:2a:47:16 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
277 4: eth1: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,PROMISC,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 100
278 link/ether 00:e0:4c:39:24:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
279 3764: ppp0: <POINTOPOINT,MULTICAST,NOARP,UP> mtu 1492 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 10
280 link/ppp
282 </verb></tscreen>
283 <p>Your mileage may vary, but this is what it shows on my NAT router at
284 home. I'll only explain part of the output as not everything is directly
285 relevant.
287 We first see the loopback interface. While your computer may function
288 somewhat without one, I'd advise against it. The MTU size (Maximum Transfer
289 Unit) is 3924 octets, and it is not supposed to queue. Which makes sense
290 because the loopback interface is a figment of your kernel's imagination.
292 I'll skip the dummy interface for now, and it may not be present on your
293 computer. Then there are my two physical network interfaces, one at the side
294 of my cable modem, the other one serves my home ethernet segment.
295 Furthermore, we see a ppp0 interface.
297 Note the absence of IP addresses. iproute disconnects the concept of 'links'
298 and 'IP addresses'. With IP aliasing, the concept of 'the' IP address had
299 become quite irrelevant anyhow.
301 It does show us the MAC addresses though, the hardware identifier of our
302 ethernet interfaces.
303 <sect2><tt>ip</tt> shows us our IP addresses
305 <tscreen><verb>
306 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip address show
307 1: lo: <LOOPBACK,UP> mtu 3924 qdisc noqueue
308 link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
309 inet 127.0.0.1/8 brd 127.255.255.255 scope host lo
310 2: dummy: <BROADCAST,NOARP> mtu 1500 qdisc noop
311 link/ether 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
312 3: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,PROMISC,UP> mtu 1400 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 100
313 link/ether 48:54:e8:2a:47:16 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
314 inet 10.0.0.1/8 brd 10.255.255.255 scope global eth0
315 4: eth1: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,PROMISC,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 100
316 link/ether 00:e0:4c:39:24:78 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
317 3764: ppp0: <POINTOPOINT,MULTICAST,NOARP,UP> mtu 1492 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 10
318 link/ppp
319 inet 212.64.94.251 peer 212.64.94.1/32 scope global ppp0
320 </verb></tscreen>
322 This contains more information. It shows all our addresses, and to which
323 cards they belong. 'inet' stands for Internet (IPv4). There are lots of other
324 address families, but these don't concern us right now.
326 Let's examine eth0 somewhat closer. It says that it is related to the inet
327 address '10.0.0.1/8'. What does this mean? The /8 stands for the number of
328 bits that are in the Network Address. There are 32 bits, so we have 24 bits
329 left that are part of our network. The first 8 bits of 10.0.0.1 correspond
330 to 10.0.0.0, our Network Address, and our netmask is 255.0.0.0.
332 The other bits are connected to this interface, so 10.250.3.13 is directly
333 available on eth0, as is 10.0.0.1 for example.
335 With ppp0, the same concept goes, though the numbers are different. Its
336 address is 212.64.94.251, without a subnet mask. This means that we have a
337 point-to-point connection and that every address, with the exception of
338 212.64.94.251, is remote. There is more information however, it tells us
339 that on the other side of the link there is yet again only one address,
340 212.64.94.1. The /32 tells us that there are no 'network bits'.
342 It is absolutely vital that you grasp these concepts. Refer to the
343 documentation mentioned at the beginning of this HOWTO if you have trouble.
345 You may also note 'qdisc', which stands for Queueing Discipline. This will
346 become vital later on.
348 <sect2><tt>ip</tt> shows us our routes
350 Well, we now know how to find 10.x.y.z addresses, and we are able to reach
351 212.64.94.1. This is not enough however, so we need instructions on how to
352 reach the world. The Internet is available via our ppp connection, and it
353 appears that 212.64.94.1 is willing to spread our packets around the
354 world, and deliver results back to us.
356 <tscreen><verb>
357 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip route show
358 212.64.94.1 dev ppp0 proto kernel scope link src 212.64.94.251
359 10.0.0.0/8 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.1
360 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo scope link
361 default via 212.64.94.1 dev ppp0
362 </verb></tscreen>
364 This is pretty much self explanatory. The first 4 lines of output explicitly
365 state what was already implied by <tt>ip address show</tt>, the last line
366 tells us that the rest of the world can be found via 212.64.94.1, our
367 default gateway. We can see that it is a gateway because of the word
368 via, which tells us that we need to send packets to 212.64.94.1, and that it
369 will take care of things.
371 For reference, this is what the old 'route' utility shows us:
372 <tscreen><verb>
373 [ahu@home ahu]$ route -n
374 Kernel IP routing table
375 Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use
376 Iface
377 212.64.94.1 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 ppp0
378 10.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 eth0
379 127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 lo
380 0.0.0.0 212.64.94.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 ppp0
381 </verb></tscreen>
383 <sect1>ARP
385 ARP is the Address Resolution Protocol as described in
386 <url url="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc826.html" name="RFC 826">.
387 ARP is used by a networked machine to resolve the hardware location/address of
388 another machine on the same
389 local network. Machines on the Internet are generally known by their names
390 which resolve to IP
391 addresses. This is how a machine on the foo.com network is able to communicate
392 with another machine which is on the bar.net network. An IP address, though,
393 cannot tell you the physical location of a machine. This is where ARP comes
394 into the picture.
396 Let's take a very simple example. Suppose I have a network composed of several
397 machines. Two of the machines which are currently on my network are foo
398 with an IP address of 10.0.0.1 and bar with an IP address of 10.0.0.2.
399 Now foo wants to ping bar to see that he is alive, but alas, foo has no idea
400 where bar is. So when foo decides to ping bar he will need to send
401 out an ARP request.
402 This ARP request is akin to foo shouting out on the network "Bar (10.0.0.2)!
403 Where are you?" As a result of this every machine on the network will hear
404 foo shouting, but only bar (10.0.0.2) will respond. Bar will then send an
405 ARP reply directly back to foo which is akin
406 bar saying,
407 "Foo (10.0.0.1) I am here at 00:60:94:E9:08:12." After this simple transaction
408 that's used to locate his friend on the network, foo is able to communicate
409 with bar until he (his arp cache) forgets where bar is (typically after
410 15 minutes on Unix).
412 Now let's see how this works.
413 You can view your machines current arp/neighbor cache/table like so:
414 <tscreen><verb>
415 [root@espa041 /home/src/iputils]# ip neigh show
416 9.3.76.42 dev eth0 lladdr 00:60:08:3f:e9:f9 nud reachable
417 9.3.76.1 dev eth0 lladdr 00:06:29:21:73:c8 nud reachable
418 </verb></tscreen>
420 As you can see my machine espa041 (9.3.76.41) knows where to find espa042
421 (9.3.76.42) and
422 espagate (9.3.76.1). Now let's add another machine to the arp cache.
424 <tscreen><verb>
425 [root@espa041 /home/paulsch/.gnome-desktop]# ping -c 1 espa043
426 PING espa043.austin.ibm.com (9.3.76.43) from 9.3.76.41 : 56(84) bytes of data.
427 64 bytes from 9.3.76.43: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=0.9 ms
429 --- espa043.austin.ibm.com ping statistics ---
430 1 packets transmitted, 1 packets received, 0% packet loss
431 round-trip min/avg/max = 0.9/0.9/0.9 ms
433 [root@espa041 /home/src/iputils]# ip neigh show
434 9.3.76.43 dev eth0 lladdr 00:06:29:21:80:20 nud reachable
435 9.3.76.42 dev eth0 lladdr 00:60:08:3f:e9:f9 nud reachable
436 9.3.76.1 dev eth0 lladdr 00:06:29:21:73:c8 nud reachable
437 </verb></tscreen>
439 As a result of espa041 trying to contact espa043, espa043's hardware
440 address/location has now been added to the arp/neighbor cache.
441 So until the entry for
442 espa043 times out (as a result of no communication between the two) espa041
443 knows where to find espa043 and has no need to send an ARP request.
445 Now let's delete espa043 from our arp cache:
447 <tscreen><verb>
448 [root@espa041 /home/src/iputils]# ip neigh delete 9.3.76.43 dev eth0
449 [root@espa041 /home/src/iputils]# ip neigh show
450 9.3.76.43 dev eth0 nud failed
451 9.3.76.42 dev eth0 lladdr 00:60:08:3f:e9:f9 nud reachable
452 9.3.76.1 dev eth0 lladdr 00:06:29:21:73:c8 nud stale
453 </verb></tscreen>
455 Now espa041 has again forgotten where to find espa043 and will need to send
456 another ARP request the next time he needs to communicate with espa043.
457 You can also see from the above output that espagate (9.3.76.1) has been
458 changed to the "stale" state. This means that the location shown is still
459 valid, but it will have to be confirmed at the first transaction to that
460 machine.
462 <sect>Rules - routing policy database
464 If you have a large router, you may well cater for the needs of different
465 people, who should be served differently. The routing policy database allows
466 you to do this by having multiple sets of routing tables.
468 If you want to use this feature, make sure that your kernel is compiled with
469 the "IP: advanced router" and "IP: policy routing" features.
471 When the kernel needs to make a routing decision, it finds out which table
472 needs to be consulted. By default, there are three tables. The old 'route'
473 tool modifies the main and local tables, as does the ip tool (by default).
475 The default rules:
476 <tscreen><verb>
477 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip rule list
478 0: from all lookup local
479 32766: from all lookup main
480 32767: from all lookup default
481 </verb></tscreen>
483 This lists the priority of all rules. We see that all rules apply to all
484 packets ('from all'). We've seen the 'main' table before, it is output by
485 <tt>ip route ls</tt>, but the 'local' and 'default' table are new.
487 If we want to do fancy things, we generate rules which point to different
488 tables which allow us to override system wide routing rules.
490 For the exact semantics on what the kernel does when there are more matching
491 rules, see Alexey's ip-cref documentation.
493 <sect1>Simple source routing
495 Let's take a real example once again, I have 2 (actually 3, about time I
496 returned them) cable modems, connected to a Linux NAT ('masquerading')
497 router. People living here pay me to use the Internet. Suppose one of my
498 house mates only visits hotmail and wants to pay less. This is fine with me,
499 but you'll end up using the low-end cable modem.
501 The 'fast' cable modem is known as 212.64.94.251 and is a PPP link to
502 212.64.94.1. The 'slow' cable modem is known by various ip addresses,
503 212.64.78.148 in this example and is a link to 195.96.98.253.
505 The local table:
506 <tscreen><verb>
507 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip route list table local
508 broadcast 127.255.255.255 dev lo proto kernel scope link src 127.0.0.1
509 local 10.0.0.1 dev eth0 proto kernel scope host src 10.0.0.1
510 broadcast 10.0.0.0 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.1
511 local 212.64.94.251 dev ppp0 proto kernel scope host src 212.64.94.251
512 broadcast 10.255.255.255 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.1
513 broadcast 127.0.0.0 dev lo proto kernel scope link src 127.0.0.1
514 local 212.64.78.148 dev ppp2 proto kernel scope host src 212.64.78.148
515 local 127.0.0.1 dev lo proto kernel scope host src 127.0.0.1
516 local 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo proto kernel scope host src 127.0.0.1
517 </verb></tscreen>
519 Lots of obvious things, but things that need to be specified somewhere.
520 Well, here they are. The default table is empty.
522 Let's view the 'main' table:
523 <tscreen><verb>
524 [ahu@home ahu]$ ip route list table main
525 195.96.98.253 dev ppp2 proto kernel scope link src 212.64.78.148
526 212.64.94.1 dev ppp0 proto kernel scope link src 212.64.94.251
527 10.0.0.0/8 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.1
528 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo scope link
529 default via 212.64.94.1 dev ppp0
530 </verb></tscreen>
532 We now generate a new rule which we call 'John', for our hypothetical
533 house mate. Although we can work with pure numbers, it's far easier if we add
534 our tables to <file>/etc/iproute2/rt_tables</file>.
536 <tscreen><verb>
537 # echo 200 John >> /etc/iproute2/rt_tables
538 # ip rule add from 10.0.0.10 table John
539 # ip rule ls
540 0: from all lookup local
541 32765: from 10.0.0.10 lookup John
542 32766: from all lookup main
543 32767: from all lookup default
544 </verb></tscreen>
546 Now all that is left is to generate Johns table, and flush the route cache:
547 <tscreen><verb>
548 # ip route add default via 195.96.98.253 dev ppp2 table John
549 # ip route flush cache
550 </verb></tscreen>
552 And we are done. It is left as an exercise for the reader to implement this
553 in ip-up.
554 <sect>GRE and other tunnels
556 There are 3 kinds of tunnels in Linux. There's IP in IP tunneling, GRE tunneling and tunnels that live outside the kernel (like, for example PPTP).
557 <sect1>A few general remarks about tunnels:
559 Tunnels can be used to do some very unusual and very cool stuff. They can
560 also make things go horribly wrong when you don't configure them right.
561 Don't point your default route to a tunnel device unless you know
562 <bf>exactly</bf> what you are doing :-). Furthermore, tunneling increases
563 overhead, because it needs an extra set of IP headers. Typically this is 20
564 bytes per packet, so if the normal packet size (MTU) on a network is 1500
565 bytes, a packet that is sent through a tunnel can only be 1480 bytes big.
566 This is not necessarily a problem, but be sure to read up on IP packet
567 fragmentation/reassembly when you plan to connect large networks with
568 tunnels. Oh, and of course, the fastest way to dig a tunnel is to dig at
569 both sides.
571 <sect1>IP in IP tunneling
573 This kind of tunneling has been available in Linux for a long time. It requires 2 kernel modules,
574 ipip.o and new_tunnel.o.
576 Let's say you have 3 networks: Internal networks A and B, and intermediate network C (or let's say, Internet).
577 So we have network A:
579 <tscreen><verb>
580 network 10.0.1.0
581 netmask 255.255.255.0
582 router 10.0.1.1
583 </verb></tscreen>
584 The router has address 172.16.17.18 on network C.
586 and network B:
587 <tscreen><verb>
588 network 10.0.2.0
589 netmask 255.255.255.0
590 router 10.0.2.1
591 </verb></tscreen>
592 The router has address 172.19.20.21 on network C.
594 As far as network C is concerned, we assume that it will pass any packet sent
595 from A to B and vice versa. You might even use the Internet for this.
597 Here's what you do:
599 First, make sure the modules are installed:
601 <tscreen><verb>
602 insmod ipip.o
603 insmod new_tunnel.o
604 </verb></tscreen>
605 Then, on the router of network A, you do the following:
606 <tscreen><verb>
607 ifconfig tunl0 10.0.1.1 pointopoint 172.19.20.21
608 route add -net 10.0.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 dev tunl0
609 </verb></tscreen>
610 And on the router of network B:
611 <tscreen><verb>
612 ifconfig tunl0 10.0.2.1 pointopoint 172.16.17.18
613 route add -net 10.0.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 dev tunl0
614 </verb></tscreen>
615 And if you're finished with your tunnel:
616 <tscreen><verb>
617 ifconfig tunl0 down
618 </verb></tscreen>
619 Presto, you're done. You can't forward broadcast or IPv6 traffic through
620 an IP-in-IP tunnel, though. You just connect 2 IPv4 networks that normally wouldn't be able to talk to each other, that's all. As far as compatibility goes, this code has been around a long time, so it's compatible all the way back to 1.3 kernels. Linux IP-in-IP tunneling doesn't work with other Operating Systems or routers, as far as I know. It's simple, it works. Use it if you have to, otherwise use GRE.
622 <sect1>GRE tunneling
624 GRE is a tunneling protocol that was originally developed by Cisco, and it
625 can do a few more things than IP-in-IP tunneling. For example, you can also
626 transport multicast traffic and IPv6 through a GRE tunnel.
628 In Linux, you'll need the ip_gre.o module.
630 <sect2>IPv4 Tunneling
632 Let's do IPv4 tunneling first:
634 Let's say you have 3 networks: Internal networks A and B, and intermediate network C (or let's say, Internet).
636 So we have network A:
637 <tscreen><verb>
638 network 10.0.1.0
639 netmask 255.255.255.0
640 router 10.0.1.1
641 </verb></tscreen>
642 The router has address 172.16.17.18 on network C.
643 Let's call this network neta (ok, hardly original)
645 and network B:
646 <tscreen><verb>
647 network 10.0.2.0
648 netmask 255.255.255.0
649 router 10.0.2.1
650 </verb></tscreen>
651 The router has address 172.19.20.21 on network C.
652 Let's call this network netb (still not original)
654 As far as network C is concerned, we assume that it will pass any packet sent
655 from A to B and vice versa. How and why, we do not care.
657 On the router of network A, you do the following:
658 <tscreen><verb>
659 ip tunnel add netb mode gre remote 172.19.20.21 local 172.16.17.18 ttl 255
660 ip link set netb up
661 ip addr add 10.0.1.1 dev netb
662 ip route add 10.0.2.0/24 dev netb
663 </verb></tscreen>
665 Let's discuss this for a bit. In line 1, we added a tunnel device, and
666 called it netb (which is kind of obvious because that's where we want it to
667 go). Furthermore we told it to use the GRE protocol (mode gre), that the
668 remote address is 172.19.20.21 (the router at the other end), that our
669 tunneling packets should originate from 172.16.17.18 (which allows your
670 router to have several IP addresses on network C and let you decide which
671 one to use for tunneling) and that the TTL field of the packet should be set
672 to 255 (ttl 255).
674 The second line enables the device.
676 In the third line we gave the newly born interface netb the address
677 10.0.1.1. This is OK for smaller networks, but when you're starting up a
678 mining expedition (LOTS of tunnels), you might want to consider using
679 another IP range for tunneling interfaces (in this example, you could use
680 10.0.3.0).
682 <p>In the fourth line we set the route for network B. Note the different notation for the netmask. If you're not familiar with this notation, here's how it works: you write out the netmask in binary form, and you count all the ones. If you don't know how to do that, just remember that 255.0.0.0 is /8, 255.255.0.0 is /16 and 255.255.255.0 is /24. Oh, and 255.255.254.0 is /23, in case you were wondering.
684 But enough about this, let's go on with the router of network B.
685 <tscreen><verb>
686 ip tunnel add neta mode gre remote 172.16.17.18 local 172.19.20.21 ttl 255
687 ip link set neta up
688 ip addr add 10.0.2.1 dev neta
689 ip route add 10.0.1.0/24 dev neta
690 </verb></tscreen>
691 And when you want to remove the tunnel on router A:
692 <tscreen><verb>
693 ip link set netb down
694 ip tunnel del netb
695 </verb></tscreen>
696 Of course, you can replace netb with neta for router B.
698 <sect2>IPv6 Tunneling
700 See Section 6 for a short bit about IPv6 Addresses.
702 On with the tunnels.
704 Let's assume that you have the following IPv6 network, and you want to connect it to 6bone, or a friend.
706 <tscreen><verb>
707 Network 3ffe:406:5:1:5:a:2:1/96
708 </verb></tscreen>
709 Your IPv4 address is 172.16.17.18, and the 6bone router has IPv4 address 172.22.23.24.
711 <tscreen><verb>
712 ip tunnel add sixbone mode sit remote 172.22.23.24 local 172.16.17.18 ttl 255
713 ip link set sixbone up
714 ip addr add 3ffe:406:5:1:5:a:2:1/96 dev sixbone
715 ip route add 3ffe::/15 dev sixbone
716 </verb></tscreen>
718 Let's discuss this. In the first line, we created a tunnel device called sixbone. We gave it mode sit (which is IPv6 in IPv4 tunneling) and told it where to go to (remote) and where to come from (local). TTL is set to maximum, 255. Next, we made the device active (up). After that, we added our own network address, and set a route for 3ffe::/15 (which is currently all of 6bone) through the tunnel.
720 GRE tunnels are currently the preferred type of tunneling. It's a standard that's also widely adopted outside the Linux community and therefore a Good Thing.
722 <sect1>Userland tunnels
724 There are literally dozens of implementations of tunneling outside the kernel. Best known are of course PPP and PPTP, but there are lots more (some proprietary, some secure, some that don't even use IP) and that is really beyond the scope of this HOWTO.
726 <sect>IPv6 tunneling with Cisco and/or 6bone
728 By Marco Davids &lt;marco@sara.nl&gt;
730 NOTE to maintainer:
732 As far as I am concerned, this IPv6-IPv4 tunneling is not per definition
733 GRE tunneling. You could tunnel IPv6 over IPv4 by means of GRE tunnel devices
734 (GRE tunnels ANY to IPv4), but the device used here ("sit") only tunnels
735 IPv6 over IPv4 and is therefore something different.
737 <sect1>IPv6 Tunneling
739 This is another application of the tunneling capabilities of Linux. It is
740 popular among the IPv6 early adopters, or pioneers if you like.
741 The 'hands-on' example described below is certainly not the only way
742 to do IPv6 tunneling. However, it is the method that is often used to tunnel
743 between Linux and a Cisco IPv6 capable router and experience learned that
744 this is just the thing many people are after. Ten to one this applies to
745 you too ;-)
747 A short bit about IPv6 addresses:
749 IPv6 addresses are, compared to IPv4 addresses, really big: 128 bits
750 against 32 bits. And this provides us just with the thing we need: many, many
751 IP-addresses: 340,282,266,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,465 to be
752 precise. Apart from this, IPv6 (or IPng, for IP Next Generation) is supposed
753 to provide for smaller routing tables on the Internet's backbone routers,
754 simpler configuration of equipment, better security at the IP level and
755 better support for QoS.
757 An example: 2002:836b:9820:0000:0000:0000:836b:9886
759 Writing down IPv6 addresses can be quite a burden. Therefore, to make
760 life easier there are some rules:
762 <itemize>
763 <item>
764 Don't use leading zeroes. Same as in IPv4.
766 <item>Use colons to separate every 16 bits or two bytes.
768 <item>When you have lots of consecutive zeroes,
769 you can write this down as ::. You can only do this once in an
770 address and only for quantities of 16 bits, though.
771 </itemize>
773 The address 2002:836b:9820:0000:0000:0000:836b:9886 can be written down
774 as 2002:836b:9820::836b:9886, which is somewhat friendlier.
776 Another example, the address 3ffe:0000:0000:0000:0000:0020:34A1:F32C can be
777 written down as 3ffe::20:34A1:F32C, which is a lot shorter.
779 IPv6 is intended to be the successor of the current IPv4. Because it
780 is relatively new technology, there is no worldwide native IPv6 network
781 yet. To be able to move forward swiftly, the 6bone was introduced.
783 Native IPv6 networks are connected to each other by encapsulating the IPv6
784 protocol in IPv4 packets and sending them over the existing IPv4 infrastructure
785 from one IPv6 site to another.
787 That is precisely where the tunnel steps in.
789 To be able to use IPv6, we should have a kernel that supports it. There
790 are many good documents on how to achieve this. But it all comes down to
791 a few steps:
792 <itemize>
793 <item>Get yourself a recent Linux distribution, with suitable glibc.
794 <item>Then get yourself an up-to-date kernel source.
795 </itemize>
796 If you are all set, then you can go ahead and compile an IPv6 capable
797 kernel:
798 <itemize>
799 <item>Go to /usr/src/linux and type:
800 <item>make menuconfig
801 <item>Choose "Networking Options"
802 <item>Select "The IPv6 protocol", "IPv6: enable EUI-64 token format", "IPv6:
803 disable provider based addresses"
804 </itemize>
805 HINT: Don't go for the 'module' option. Often this won't work well.
807 In other words, compile IPv6 as 'built-in' in your kernel.
808 You can then save your config like usual and go ahead with compiling
809 the kernel.
811 HINT: Before doing so, consider editing the Makefile:
812 EXTRAVERSION = -x ; --> ; EXTRAVERSION = -x-IPv6
814 There is a lot of good documentation about compiling and installing
815 a kernel, however this document is about something else. If you run into
816 problems at this stage, go and look for documentation about compiling a
817 Linux kernel according to your own specifications.
819 The file /usr/src/linux/README might be a good start.
820 After you acomplished all this, and rebooted with your brand new kernel,
821 you might want to issue an '/sbin/ifconfig -a' and notice the brand
822 new 'sit0-device'. SIT stands for Simple Internet Transition. You may give
823 yourself a compliment; you are now one major step closer to IP, the Next
824 Generation ;-)
826 Now on to the next step. You want to connect your host, or maybe even
827 your entire LAN to another IPv6 capable network. This might be the "6bone"
828 that is setup especially for this particular purpose.
830 Let's assume that you have the following IPv6 network: 3ffe:604:6:8::/64 and
831 you want to connect it to 6bone, or a friend. Please note that the /64
832 subnet notation works just like with regular IP adresses.
834 Your IPv4 address is 145.100.24.181 and the 6bone router has IPv4 address
835 145.100.1.5
836 <tscreen><verb>
837 # ip tunnel add sixbone mode sit remote 145.100.1.5 [local 145.100.24.181 ttl 225]
838 # ip link set sixbone up
839 # ip addr add 3FFE:604:6:7::2/126 dev sixbone
840 # ip route add 3ffe::0/16 dev sixbone
841 </verb></tscreen>
843 Let's discuss this. In the first line, we created a tunnel device called
844 sixbone. We gave it mode sit (which is IPv6 in IPv4 tunneling) and told it
845 where to go to (remote) and where to come from (local). TTL is set to
846 maximum, 255.
848 Next, we made the device active (up). After that, we added our own network
849 address, and set a route for 3ffe::/15 (which is currently all of 6bone)
850 through the tunnel. If the particular machine you run this on is your IPv6
851 gateway, then consider adding the following lines:
853 <tscreen><verb>
854 # echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/all/forwarding
855 # /usr/local/sbin/radvd
856 </verb></tscreen>
857 The latter, radvd is -like zebra- a router advertisement daemon, to
858 support IPv6's autoconfiguration features. Search for it with your favourite
859 search-engine if you like.
860 You can check things like this:
862 <tscreen><verb>
863 # /sbin/ip -f inet6 addr
864 </verb></tscreen>
866 If you happen to have radvd running on your IPv6 gateway and boot your
867 IPv6 capable Linux on a machine on your local LAN, you would be able to
868 enjoy the benefits of IPv6 autoconfiguration:
869 <tscreen><verb>
870 # /sbin/ip -f inet6 addr
871 1: lo: &lt;LOOPBACK,UP&gt; mtu 3924 qdisc noqueue inet6 ::1/128 scope host
873 3: eth0: &lt;BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP&gt; mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast qlen 100
874 inet6 3ffe:604:6:8:5054:4cff:fe01:e3d6/64 scope global dynamic
875 valid_lft forever preferred_lft 604646sec inet6 fe80::5054:4cff:fe01:e3d6/10
876 scope link
877 </verb></tscreen>
879 You could go ahead and configure your bind for IPv6 addresses. The A
880 type has an equivalent for IPv6: AAAA. The in-addr.arpa's equivalent is:
881 ip6.int. There's a lot of information available on this topic.
883 There is an increasing number of IPv6-aware applications available,
884 including secure shell, telnet, inetd, Mozilla the browser, Apache the
885 websever and a lot of others. But this is all outside the scope of this
886 Routing document ;-)
888 On the Cisco side the configuration would be something like this:
889 <tscreen><verb>
891 interface Tunnel1
892 description IPv6 tunnel
893 no ip address
894 no ip directed-broadcast
895 ipv6 enable
896 ipv6 address 3FFE:604:6:7::1/126
897 tunnel source Serial0
898 tunnel destination 145.100.24.181
899 tunnel mode ipv6ip
901 ipv6 route 3FFE:604:6:8::/64 Tunnel1
902 </verb></tscreen>
903 But if you don't have a Cisco at your disposal, try one of the many
904 IPv6 tunnel brokers available on the Internet. They are willing to configure
905 their Cisco with an extra tunnel for you. Mostly by means of a friendly
906 web interface. Search for "ipv6 tunnel broker" on your favourite search engine.
908 <sect>IPsec: secure IP over the Internet
910 FIXME: editor vacancy.
911 In the meantime, see: <url url="http://www.freeswan.org/" name="The
912 FreeS/WAN project">. Another IPSec implementation for Linux is Cerberus,
913 by NIST. However, their web pages have not been updated in over a year,
914 and their version tended to trail well behind the current Linux kernel.
915 USAGI, an alternative IPv6 implementation for Linux, also includes an
916 IPSec implementation, but that might only be for IPv6.
918 <sect>Multicast routing
920 FIXME: Editor Vacancy!
922 The Multicast-HOWTO is ancient (relatively-speaking) and may be inaccurate
923 or misleading in places, for that reason.
925 Before you can do any multicast routing, you need to configure the Linux
926 kernel to support the type of multicast routing you want to do. This, in
927 turn, requires you to decide what type of multicast routing you expect to
928 be using. There are essentially four "common" types - DVMRP (the Multicast
929 version of the RIP unicast protocol), MOSPF (the same, but for OSPF), PIM-SM
930 ("Protocol Independent Multicasting - Sparse Mode", which assumes that users
931 of any multicast group are spread out, rather than clumped) and PIM-DM (the
932 same, but "Dense Mode", which assumes that there will be significant clumps
933 of users of the same multicast group).
935 In the Linux kernel, you will notice that these options don't appear. This is
936 because the protocol itself is handled by a routing application, such as
937 Zebra, mrouted, or pimd. However, you still have to have a good idea of which
938 you're going to use, to select the right options in the kernel.
940 For all multicast routing, you will definitely need to enable "multicasting"
941 and "multicast routing". For DVMRP and MOSPF, this is sufficient. If you are
942 going to use PIM, you must also enable PIMv1 or PIMv2, depending on whether
943 the network you are connecting to uses version 1 or 2 of the PIM protocol.
945 Once you have all that sorted out, and your new Linux kernel compiled, you
946 will see that the IP protocols listed, at boot time, now include IGMP. This
947 is a protocol for managing multicast groups. At the time of writing, Linux
948 supports IGMP versions 1 and 2 only, although version 3 does exist and has
949 been documented. This doesn't really affect us that much, as IGMPv3 is still
950 new enough that the extra capabilities of IGMPv3 aren't going to be that
951 much use. Because IGMP deals with groups, only the features present in the
952 simplest version of IGMP over the entire group are going to be used. For the
953 most part, that will be IGMPv2, although IGMPv1 is sill going to be
954 encountered.
956 So far, so good. We've enabled multicasting. Now, we have to tell the Linux
957 kernel to actually do something with it, so we can start routing. This means
958 adding the Multicast virtual network to the router table:
960 ip route add 224.0.0.0/4 dev eth0
962 (Assuming, of course, that you're multicasting over eth0! Substitute the
963 device of your choice, for this.)
965 Now, tell Linux to forward packets...
967 echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
969 At this point, you may be wondering if this is ever going to do anything. So,
970 to test our connection, we ping the default group, 224.0.0.1, to see if anyone
971 is alive. All machines on your LAN with multicasting enabled <em>should</em>
972 respond, but nothing else. You'll notice that none of the machines that
973 respond have an IP address of 224.0.0.1. What a surprise! :) This is a group
974 address (a "broadcast" to subscribers), and all members of the group will
975 respond with their own address, not the group address.
977 ping -c 2 224.0.0.1
979 At this point, you're ready to do actual multicast routing. Well, assuming
980 that you have two networks to route between.
982 (To Be Continued!)
984 <sect>Queueing Disciplines for Bandwidth Management
986 Now, when I discovered this, it <em>really</em> blew me away. Linux 2.2/2.4
987 comes with everything to manage bandwidth in ways comparable to high-end
988 dedicated bandwidth management systems.
990 Linux even goes far beyond what Frame and ATM provide.
992 <sect1>Queues and Queueing Disciplines explained
994 With queueing we determine the way in which data is <em>sent</em>. It is
995 important to realise that we can only shape data that we transmit.
997 With the way the Internet works, we have no direct control of what people
998 send us. It's a bit like your (physical!) mailbox at home. There is no way
999 you can influence the world to modify the amount of mail they send you,
1000 short of contacting everybody.
1002 However, the Internet is mostly based on TCP/IP which has a few features
1003 that help us. TCP/IP has no way of knowing the capacity of the network
1004 between two hosts, so it just starts sending data faster and faster ('slow
1005 start') and when packets start getting lost, because there is no room to
1006 send them, it will slow down. In fact it is a bit smarter than this, but
1007 more about that later.
1009 This is the equivalent of not reading half of your mail, and hoping that
1010 people will stop sending it to you. With the difference that it works for
1011 the Internet :-)
1013 If you have a router and wish to prevent certain hosts of networks from
1014 downloading too fast, you need to do your shaping on the *inner* interface
1015 of your router, the one that sends data to your own computers.
1017 <sect1>Simple, classless Queueing Disciplines
1019 As said, with queueing disciplines, we change the way data is sent.
1020 Classless queueing disciplines are those that, by and large accept data and
1021 only reorder, delay or drop it.
1023 These can be used to shape traffic for an entire interface, without any
1024 subdivisions. It is vital that you understand this part of queueing before
1025 we go on the the classful qdisc-containing-qdiscs!
1027 By far the most widely used discipline is the pfifo_fast queue - this is the
1028 default. This also explains why these advanced features are so robust. They
1029 are nothing more than 'just another queue'.
1031 Each of these queues has specific strengths and weaknesses. Not all of them
1032 may be as well tested.
1034 <sect2>pfifo_fast
1036 This queue is, as the name says, First In, First Out, which means that no
1037 packet receives special treatment. At least, not quite. This queue has 3 so
1038 called 'bands'. Within each band, FIFO rules apply. However, as long as
1039 there are packets waiting in band 0, band 1 won't be processed. Same goes
1040 for band 1 and band 2.
1042 The kernel honors the so called Type of Service flag of packets, and takes
1043 care to insert 'minimum delay' packets in band 0.
1045 Do not confuse this classless simple qdisc with the classful PRIO one!
1046 <sect3>Parameters &amp; usage
1048 <descrip>
1049 <tag>bands</tag>
1050 Number of bands. Defaults to three. If you change this, also change:
1051 <tag>priomap</tag>
1052 Determines how packet priorities, as assigned by the kernel, map to bands.
1053 Mapping occurs according to the following table, which identical to the one
1054 used by the PRIO qdisc:
1055 <verb>
1056 TC_PRIO.. Num TOS Band
1057 -------------------------------------------------------
1058 BESTEFFORT 0 Maximize Reliablity 1
1059 FILLER 1 Minimize Cost 2
1060 BULK 2 Maximize Throughput (0x8) 2
1061 INTERACTIVE_BULK 4 2
1062 INTERACTIVE 6 Minimize Delay (0x10) 1
1063 CONTROL 7 2
1066 10 1
1067 11 1
1068 12 1
1069 13 1
1070 14 1
1071 15 1
1072 </verb>
1073 FIXME: It is not known what the higher priorities correspond to.
1075 SSH sets TOS to 'Minimize Delay', unless it is doing scp, in which case it
1076 sets 'Maximize Throughput'. The numbers in parentheses denote the TOS value
1077 as reported by tcpdump and the kernel. If you divide this by two, you get
1078 the values mentioned by RFC1349.
1080 The default priomap is reasonable, you probably do not need to change
1081 it.
1082 <tag>txqueuelen</tag>
1083 The length of this queue is gleaned from the interface configuration, which
1084 you can see and set with ifconfig and ip. To set the queue length to 10,
1085 execute: ifconfig eth0 txqueuelen 10
1087 You can't set this parameter with tc!
1088 </descrip>
1089 <sect2>Token Bucket Filter
1091 The Token Bucket Filter (TBF) is a simple queue that only passes packets
1092 arriving at a rate which is not exceeding some administratively set rate,
1093 with the possibility to allow short bursts in excess of this rate.
1095 TBF is very precise, network- and processor friendly. It should be your
1096 first choice if you simple want to slow an interface down!
1098 The TBF implementation consists of a buffer (bucket), constantly filled by
1099 some virtual pieces of information called tokens, at a specific rate (token
1100 rate). The most important parameter of the bucket is its size, that is the
1101 number of tokens it can store.
1103 Each arriving token collects one incoming data packet from the data queue
1104 and is then deleted from the bucket. Associating this algorithm
1105 with the two flows -- token and data, gives us three possible scenarios:
1107 <itemize>
1108 <item> The data arrives in TBF at a rate that's <em>equal</em> to the rate
1109 of incoming tokens. In this case each incoming packet has its matching token
1110 and passes the queue without delay.
1112 <item> The data arrives in TBF at a rate that's <em>smaller</em> than the
1113 token rate. Only a part of the tokens are deleted at output of each data packet
1114 that's sent out the queue, so the tokens accumulate, up to the bucket size.
1115 The unused tokens can then be used to send data a a speed that's exceeding the
1116 standard token rate, in case short data bursts occur.
1118 <item> The data arrives in TBF at a rate <em>bigger</em> than the token rate.
1119 This means that the bucket will soon be devoid of tokens, which causes the
1120 TBF to throttle itself for a while. This is called an 'overlimit situation'.
1121 If packets keep coming in, packets will start to get dropped.
1122 </itemize>
1124 The last scenario is very important, because it allows to
1125 administratively shape the bandwidth available to data that's passing
1126 the filter.
1128 The accumulation of tokens allows a short burst of overlimit data to be
1129 still passed without loss, but any lasting overload will cause packets to be
1130 constantly delayed, and then dropped.
1132 Please note that in the actual implementation, tokens correspond to bytes,
1133 not packets.
1134 <sect3>Parameters &amp; usage
1136 Even though you will probably not need to change them, tbf has some knobs
1137 available. First the parameters that are always available:
1138 <descrip>
1139 <tag>limit or latency</tag>
1140 Limit is the number of bytes that can be queued waiting for tokens to become
1141 available. You can also specify this the other way around by setting the
1142 latency parameter, which specifies the maximum amount of time a packet can
1143 sit in the TBF. The latter calculation takes into account the size of the
1144 bucket, the rate and possibly the peakrate (if set).
1146 <tag>burst/buffer/maxburst</tag>
1147 Size of the bucket, in bytes. This is the maximum amount of bytes that
1148 tokens can be available for instantaneously. In general, larger shaping
1149 rates require a larger buffer. For 10mbit/s on Intel, you need at least
1150 10kbyte buffer if you want to reach your configured rate!
1152 If your buffer is too small, packets may be dropped because more tokens
1153 arrive per timer tick than fit in your bucket.
1154 <tag>mpu</tag>
1155 A zero-sized packet does not use zero bandwidth. For ethernet, no packet
1156 uses less than 64 bytes. The Minimum Packet Unit determines the minimal
1157 token usage for a packet.
1158 <tag>rate</tag>
1159 The speedknob. See remarks above about limits!
1160 </descrip>
1162 If the bucket contains tokens and is allowed to empty, by default it does so
1163 at infinite speed. If this is unacceptable, use the following parameters:
1165 <descrip>
1166 <tag>peakrate</tag>
1167 If tokens are available, and packets arrive, they are sent out immediately
1168 by default, at 'lightspeed' so to speak. That may not be what you want,
1169 especially if you have a large bucket.
1171 The peakrate can be used to specify how quickly the bucket is allowed to be
1172 depleted. If doing everything by the book, this is achieved by releasing a
1173 packet, and then wait just long enough, and release the next. We calculated
1174 our waits so we send just at peakrate.
1176 However, due to de default 10ms timer resolution of Unix, with 10.000 bits
1177 average packets, we are limited to 1mbit/s of peakrate!
1179 <tag>mtu/minburst</tag>
1180 The 1mbit/s peakrate is not very useful if your regular rate is more than
1181 that. A higher peakrate is possible by sending out more packets per
1182 timertick, which effectively means that we create a second bucket!
1184 This second bucket defaults to a single packet, which is not a bucket at
1185 all.
1187 To calculate the maximum possible peakrate, multiply the configured mtu by
1188 100 (or more correctly, HZ, which is 100 on intel, 1024 on Alpha).
1190 </descrip>
1191 <sect3>Sample configuration
1193 A simple but *very* useful configuration is this:
1194 <verb>
1195 # tc qdisc add dev ppp0 root tbf rate 220kbit latency 50ms burst 1540
1196 </verb>
1198 Ok, why is this useful? If you have a networking device with a large queue,
1199 like a DSL modem or a cablemodem, and you talk to it over a fast device,
1200 like over an ethernet interface, you will find that uploading absolutely
1201 destroys interactivity.
1203 This is because uploading will fill the queue in the modem, which is
1204 probably *huge* because this helps actually achieving good data throughput
1205 uploading. But this is not what you want, you want to have the queue not too
1206 big so interactivity remains and you can stil do other stuff while sending
1207 data.
1209 The line above slows down sending to a rate that does not lead to a queue in
1210 the modem - the queue will be in Linux, where we can control it to a limited
1211 size.
1213 Change 220kbit to your uplinks *actual* speed, minus a few percent. If you
1214 have a really fast modem, raise 'burst' a bit.
1215 <sect2>Stochastic Fairness Queueing
1217 Stochastic Fairness Queueing (SFQ) is a simple implementation of the fair
1218 queueing algorithms family. It's less accurate than others, but it also
1219 requires less calculations while being almost perfectly fair.
1221 The key word in SFQ is conversation (or flow), which mostly corresponds to a
1222 TCP session or a UDP stream. Traffic is divided into a pretty large number
1223 of FIFO queues, one for each conversation. Traffic is then sent in a round
1224 robin fashion, giving each session the chance to send data in turn.
1226 This leads to very fair behaviour and disallows any single conversation from
1227 drowning out the rest. SFQ is called 'Stochastic' because it doesn't really
1228 allocate a queue for each session, it has an algorithm which divides traffic
1229 over a limited number of queues using a hashing algorithm.
1231 Because of the hash, multiple sessions might end up in the same bucket, which
1232 would halve each session's chance of sending a packet, thus halving the
1233 effective speed available. To prevent this situation from becoming
1234 noticeable, SFQ changes its hashing algorithm quite often so that any two
1235 colliding sessions will only do so for a small number of seconds.
1237 It is important to note that SFQ is only useful in case your actual outgoing
1238 interface is really full! If it isn't then there will be no queue on your
1239 linux machine and hence no effect. Later on we will describe how to combine
1240 SFQ with other qdiscs to get a best-of-both worlds situation.
1242 Specifically, setting SFQ on the ethernet interface heading to your
1243 cablemodem or DSL router is pointless without further shaping!
1244 <sect3>Parameters &amp; usage
1246 The SFQ is pretty much selftuning:
1247 <descrip>
1248 <tag>perturb</tag>
1249 Reconfigure hashing once this many seconds. If unset, hash will never be
1250 reconfigured. Not recommended. 10 seconds is probably a good value.
1251 <tag>quantum</tag>
1252 Amount of bytes a stream is allowed to dequeue before the next queue gets a
1253 turn. Defaults to 1 maximum sized packet (MTU-sized). Do not set below the
1254 MTU!
1255 </descrip>
1256 <sect3>Sample configuration
1258 If you have a device which has identical link speed as actual available
1259 rate, like a phone modem, this configuration will help promote fairness:
1260 <verb>
1261 # tc qdisc add dev ppp0 root sfq perturb 10
1262 # tc -s -d qdisc ls
1263 qdisc sfq 800c: dev eth0 quantum 1514b limit 128p flows 128/1024 perturb 10sec
1264 Sent 4812 bytes 62 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1265 </verb>
1267 The number 800c: is the automatically assigned handle number, limit means
1268 that 128 packets can wait in this queue. There are 1024 hashbuckets
1269 available for accounting, of which 128 can be active at a time (no more
1270 packets fit in the queue!) Once every 10 seconds, the hashes are
1271 reconfigured.
1273 <sect1>Advice for when to use which queue
1275 Summarizing, these are the simple queues that actually manage traffic by
1276 reordering, slowing or dropping packets.
1278 The following tips may help in chosing which queue to use. It mentions some
1279 qdiscs described in the 'Advanced &amp; less common queueing disciplines'.
1281 <itemize>
1282 <item>
1283 To purely slow down outgoing traffic, use the Token Bucket Filter. Works up
1284 to huge bandwidths, if you scale the bucket.
1285 <item>
1286 If your link is truly full and you want to make sure that no single session
1287 can dominate your outgoing bandwidth, use Stochastical Fairness Queueing.
1288 <item>
1289 If you have a big backbone and know what you are doing, consider Random
1290 Early Drop (see Advanced chapter).
1291 <item>
1292 To 'shape' incoming traffic which you are not forwarding, use the Ingress
1293 Policer.
1294 <item>
1295 If you *are* forwarding it, use a TBF on the interface you are forwarding
1296 the data to.
1297 <item>
1298 If you don't want to shape, but only want to see if your interface is so
1299 loaded that it has to queue, use the pfifo queue (not pfifo_fast). It lacks
1300 internal bands but does account the size of its backlog.
1301 </itemize>
1302 <sect1>Classful Queueing Disciplines
1304 Some queueing disciplines can contain other queueing disciplines, which are
1305 then suddenly called 'classes'. A class is nothing short of a qdisc, except
1306 that it lives within another qdisc. We use the terms 'inner qdisc'
1307 , 'sub-qdisc' and 'class' interchangeably.
1309 Classful qdiscs are very useful if you have different kinds of traffic which
1310 should have differing treatment. One of the classful qdiscs is called 'CBQ'
1311 , 'Class Based Queueing' - it is so widely mentioned that people identify
1312 queueing with classes solely with CBQ, but this is not the case.
1314 CBQ is merely the oldest kid on the block - yet it is by far the least
1315 useful qdisc and also the most complex one. I advise *against* using it.
1316 This may come as something of a shock to many who fell for the 'sendmail
1317 effect', which learns us that any complex technology which doesn't come with
1318 documentation must be the best available.
1320 More about CBQ and it's alternatives shortly.
1321 <sect2>Flow within classful qdiscs &amp; classes
1323 When traffic enters a classful qdisc, it needs to be sent to any of the
1324 qdiscs within - the classes. To determine what to do with a packet, the so
1325 called 'filters' are consulted. It is important to know that the filters are
1326 called from within a qdisc, and not the other way around!
1328 The filters attached to that qdisc then return with a decision, and the
1329 qdisc uses this to enqueue the packet into one of the classes. These classes
1330 don't know that they are part of an outer-qdisc, they act as they normally
1331 do: accepting packets on one end and outputting them again when asked.
1333 Besides containing other qdiscs, most classful qdiscs also perform shaping.
1334 This is useful to perform both packet reordering (with SFQ, for example) and
1335 rate control. You need this in cases where you have a high speed
1336 interface (for example, ethernet) to a slower device (a cable modem).
1338 If you were only to run SFQ, nothing would happen, as packets enter &amp;
1339 leave your router without delay: the output interface is far faster than
1340 your actual link speed. There is no queue to process then.
1342 <sect2>The qdisc family: roots, handles, siblings and parents
1344 Each interface has a 'root qdisc', by default the earlier mentioned
1345 classless pfifo_fast queueing discipline. Each qdisc can be assigned a
1346 handle, which can be used by later configuration statements to refer to that
1347 qdisc.
1349 These handles consist of two parts, a major number and a minor number. It is
1350 habitual to name the root qdisc '1:', which is equal to '1:0'.
1352 CBQ leaf nodes need to have the same major number as their parent.
1353 <sect3>How filters are used to classify traffic
1355 Recapping, a typical hierarchy might look like this:
1356 <verb>
1357 root 1:
1359 _1:1_
1360 / | \
1361 / | \
1362 / | \
1363 10: 11: 12:
1364 / \ / \
1365 10:1 10:2 12:1 12:2
1366 </verb>
1368 But don't let this tree fool you! You should *not* imagine the kernel to be
1369 at the apex of the tree and the network below, that is just not the case.
1370 Packets get enqueued and dequeued at the root qdisc, which is the only thing
1371 the kernel talks to.
1373 A packet might get enqueued in a chain like this:
1375 1: -> 1:1 -> 12: -> 12:2
1377 The packet now resides in a queue in qdisc 12:2. In this example, a filter
1378 was attached to each 'node' in the tree, each chosing a branch to take next.
1379 This can make sense. However, tnis is also possible:
1381 1: -> 12:2
1383 In this case, a filter attached to the root decided to send the packet
1384 directly to 12:2.
1386 <sect3>How packets are dequeued to the hardware
1388 When the kernel decides that it needs to extract packets to send to the
1389 interface, the root qdisc 1: gets a dequeue request, which is passed to
1390 1:1, which is in turn passed to 10:, 11: and 12:, which each query their
1391 siblings, and try to dequeue() from them. In this case, the kernel needs to
1392 walk the entire tree, because only 12:2 contains a packet.
1394 In short, nested qdiscs ONLY talk to their parent qdiscs, never to an
1395 interface. Only the root qdisc gets dequeued by the kernel!
1397 The upshot of this is that sub-qdiscs never get dequeued faster than their
1398 parents allow. And this is exactly what we want: this way we can have SFQ as
1399 an inner class, which doesn't do any shaping, only reordering, and have a
1400 shaping outer class, which does the shaping.
1401 <sect2>The PRIO qdisc
1403 The PRIO qdisc doesn't actually shape, it only subdivides traffic based on
1404 how you configured your filters. You can consider the PRIO qdisc a kind
1405 of pfifo_fast on stereoids, whereby each band is a separate qdisc instead of
1406 a simple FIFO.
1408 When a packet is enqueued to the PRIO qdisc, a sub-qdisc is chosen based on
1409 the filter commands you gave. By default, three pfifo sub-qdiscs are
1410 created. These sub-qdiscs are by default pure FIFO queues with no internal
1411 structure, but you can replace them by any qdisc you have available.
1413 Whenever a packet needs to be dequeued, class :1 is tried first. Higher
1414 classes are only used of lower bands all did not give up a packet.
1416 This queue is very useful in case you want to prioritize certain kinds of
1417 traffic without using TOS-flags but using all the power of the tc filters.
1418 Because it doesn't actually shape, the same warning as for SFQ holds: either
1419 use it only if your physical link is really full or wrap it inside a
1420 classful qdisc that does shape.
1422 The last holds for almost all cablemodems and DSL devices.
1423 <sect3>PRIO parameters &amp; usage
1425 The following parameters are recognized by tc:
1426 <descrip>
1427 <tag>bands</tag>
1428 Number of bands to create. Each band is in fact a class. If you change this
1429 number, you should probably also change the priomap.
1430 <tag>priomap</tag>
1431 If you do not provide tc filters to classify traffic, the PRIO qdisc looks
1432 at the TC_PRIO priority to decide how to enqueue traffic. The kernel assigns
1433 each packet a TC_PRIO priority, based on TOS flags or socket options passed
1434 by the application.
1436 The TC_PRIO is decided based on the TOS, and mapped as follows:
1438 <verb>
1439 TC_PRIO.. Num TOS Band
1440 -------------------------------------------------------
1441 BESTEFFORT 0 Maximize Reliablity 1
1442 FILLER 1 Minimize Cost 2
1443 BULK 2 Maximize Throughput (0x8) 2
1444 INTERACTIVE_BULK 4 2
1445 INTERACTIVE 6 Minimize Delay (0x10) 1
1446 CONTROL 7 2
1449 10 1
1450 11 1
1451 12 1
1452 13 1
1453 14 1
1454 15 1
1455 </verb>
1456 FIXME: It is not known what the higher priorities confirm to.
1458 SSH sets TOS to 'Minimize Delay', unless it is doing scp, in which case it
1459 sets 'Maximize Throughput'. The numbers in parentheses denote the TOS value
1460 as reported by tcpdump and the kernel. If you divide this by two, you get
1461 the values mentioned by RFC1349.
1463 The default values are reasonable, you probably do not need to change
1464 them.
1465 </descrip>
1466 The bands are classes, and are called major:1 to major:3 by default, so if
1467 your PRIO qdisc is called 12:, tc filter traffic to 12:1 to grant it more
1468 priority.
1470 Reiterating, band 0 goes to minor number 1! Band 1 to minor number 2, etc.
1471 <sect3>Sample configuration
1473 We will create this tree:
1474 <verb>
1475 root 1: prio
1476 / | \
1477 1:1 1:2 1:3
1478 | | |
1479 10: 20: 30:
1480 sfq tbf sfq
1481 band 0 1 2
1482 </verb>
1484 Bulk traffic will go to 30:, interactive traffic to 20: or 10:.
1486 Commandlines:
1487 <verb>
1488 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 1: prio
1489 ## This *instantly* creates 1:1, 1:2, 1:3
1491 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:1 handle 10: sfq
1492 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:2 handle 20: tbf rate 20kbit buffer 1600 limit 3000
1493 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:3 handle 30: sfq
1494 </verb>
1496 Now lets's see what we created:
1497 <verb>
1498 # tc -s qdisc ls dev eth0
1499 qdisc sfq 30: quantum 1514b
1500 Sent 0 bytes 0 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1502 qdisc tbf 20: rate 20Kbit burst 1599b lat 667.6ms
1503 Sent 0 bytes 0 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1505 qdisc sfq 10: quantum 1514b
1506 Sent 132 bytes 2 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1508 qdisc prio 1: bands 3 priomap 1 2 2 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1509 Sent 174 bytes 3 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1510 </verb>
1511 As you can see, band 0 has already had some traffic, and one packet was sent
1512 while running this command!
1514 We now do some bulk data transfer with a tool that properly sets TOS flags,
1515 and take another look:
1516 <verb>
1517 # scp tc ahu@10.0.0.11:./
1518 ahu@10.0.0.11's password:
1519 tc 100% |*****************************| 353 KB 00:00
1520 # tc -s qdisc ls dev eth0
1521 qdisc sfq 30: quantum 1514b
1522 Sent 384228 bytes 274 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1524 qdisc tbf 20: rate 20Kbit burst 1599b lat 667.6ms
1525 Sent 2640 bytes 20 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1527 qdisc sfq 10: quantum 1514b
1528 Sent 2230 bytes 31 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1530 qdisc prio 1: bands 3 priomap 1 2 2 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1531 Sent 389140 bytes 326 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1532 </verb>
1533 As you can see, all traffic went to handle 30:, which is the lowest priority
1534 band, just as intended. Now to verify that interactive traffic goes to
1535 higher bands, we create some interactive traffic:
1537 <verb>
1538 # tc -s qdisc ls dev eth0
1539 qdisc sfq 30: quantum 1514b
1540 Sent 384228 bytes 274 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1542 qdisc tbf 20: rate 20Kbit burst 1599b lat 667.6ms
1543 Sent 2640 bytes 20 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1545 qdisc sfq 10: quantum 1514b
1546 Sent 14926 bytes 193 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1548 qdisc prio 1: bands 3 priomap 1 2 2 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1549 Sent 401836 bytes 488 pkts (dropped 0, overlimits 0)
1550 </verb>
1552 It worked - all additional traffic has gone to 10:, which is our highest
1553 priority qdisc. No traffic was sent to the lowest priority, which previously
1554 received our entire scp.
1556 <sect2>The famous CBQ qdisc
1558 As said before, CBQ is the most complex qdisc available, the most hyped, the
1559 least understood and possibly the worst queueing discipline for you in the
1560 entire Linux kernel. This is not because the authors are evil or
1561 incompetent, far from it, it's just that the CBQ algorithm isn't all that
1562 precise and doesn't really match the way Linux works.
1564 Besides being classful, CBQ is also a shaper and it is in that aspect that
1565 it really doesn't work very well. It should work like this. If you try to
1566 shape a 10mbit/s connection to 1mbit/s, the link should be idle 90% of the
1567 time. If it isn't, we need to throttle so that it IS idle 90% of the time.
1569 This is pretty hard to measure, so CBQ also needs to know how big an average
1570 packet is going to be, and instead derives the idle time from the number of
1571 microseconds that elapse between requests from the hardware layer for more
1572 data. Combined, this can be used to approximate how full or empty the link
1575 This is rather circumspect and doesn't always arrive at proper results. For
1576 example, what is the actual link speed of an interface that is not really
1577 able to transmit the full 100mbit/s of data, perhaps because of a badly
1578 implemented driver? A PCMCIA network card will also never achieve 100mbit/s
1579 because of the way the bus is designed - again, how do we calculate the idle
1580 time?
1582 It gets even worse if we consider not-quite-real network devices like PPP
1583 over Ethernet or PPTP over TCP/IP. The effective bandwidth in that case is
1584 probably determined by the efficiency of pipes to userspace - which is huge.
1586 People who have done measurements discover that CBQ is not very accurate and
1587 sometimes completely misses the mark.
1589 Besides not being all that good, it also comes with little or no
1590 documentation AND with about 20 knobs to tune. In fact, CBQ is so hard to
1591 configure that people use scripts to generate the needed commands.
1593 In short - I would advise AGAINST using CBQ if you want to have accurate
1594 results and want to understand what you are doing.
1595 <sect3>CBQ shaping in detail
1597 Because lots of people are using CBQ anyhow, possibly because they don't
1598 have anything else available, we will describe it here.
1600 As said before, CBQ works by making sure that the link is idle just long
1601 enough to bring down the real bandwidth to the configured rate. To do so, it
1602 calculates the time that should pass between average packets.
1604 During operations, the effective idletime is measured using an exponential
1605 weighted moving average (EWMA), which considers recent packets to be
1606 exponentially more important than past ones. The unix loadaverage is
1607 calculated in the same way.
1609 The calculated idle time is substracted from the EWMA measured one, the
1610 resulting number is called 'avgidle'. A perfectly loaded link has an avgidle
1611 of zero: packets arrive exactly once every calculated interval.
1613 An overloaded link has a negative avgidle and if it gets too negative, CBQ
1614 shuts down for a while and is then 'overlimit'.
1616 Conversely, an idle link might amass a huge avgidle, which would then allow
1617 infinite bandwidths after a few hours of silence. To prevent this, avgidle is
1618 capped at maxidle.
1620 If overlimit, in theory, the CBQ could throttle itself for exactly the
1621 amount of time that was calculated to pass between packets, and then pass
1622 one packet, and throttle again. But see the 'minburst' parameter below.
1624 These are parameters you can specify in order to configure shaping:
1626 <descrip>
1627 <tag>avpkt</tag>
1628 Average size of a packet, measured in bytes. Needed for idle time
1629 approximation.
1630 <tag>bandwidth</tag>
1631 The physical bandwidth of your device, also needed for idle time
1632 calculations.
1633 <tag>cell</tag>
1634 The time a packet takes to be transmitted over an ethernet device grows in
1635 steps, based on the packet size. An 800 and a 806 size packet may take just
1636 as long to send, for example - this sets the granularity. Most often set
1637 to '8'. Must be an integral power of two.
1638 <tag>maxburst</tag>
1639 This number of packets is used to calculate maxidle so that when avgidle is
1640 at maxidle, this number of average packets can be burst before avgidle drops
1641 to 0. Set it higher to be more tolerant of bursts. You can't set maxidle
1642 directly, only via this parameter.
1643 <tag>minburst</tag>
1644 As mentioned before, CBQ needs to throttle in case of overlimit. The ideal
1645 solution is to do so for exactly the calculated idle time, and pass 1
1646 packet. However, Unix kernels generally have a hard time scheduling events
1647 shorter than 10ms, so it is better to throttle for a longer period, and then
1648 pass minburst packets in one go, and then sleep minburst times longer.
1650 The time to wait is called the offtime. Higher values of minburst lead to
1651 more accurate shaping in the long term, but to bigger bursts at millisecond
1652 timescales.
1653 <tag>minidle</tag>
1654 If avgidle is below 0, we are overlimits and need to wait until avgidle will
1655 be big enough to send one packet. To prevent a sudden burst from shutting
1656 down the link for a prolonged period of time, avgidle is reset to minidle if
1657 it gets too low.
1659 Minidle is specified in negative microseconds, so 10 means that avgidle is
1660 capped at -10us.
1661 <tag>mpu</tag>
1662 Mininum packet size - needed because even a zero size packet is padded
1663 to 64 bytes on ethernet, and so takes a certain time to transmit. CBQ needs
1664 to know this to accurately measure the idle time.
1665 <tag>rate</tag>
1666 Desired rate of traffic leaving this qdisc - this is the 'speed knob'!
1667 </descrip>
1669 Internally, CBQ has a lot of finetuning. For example, classes which are
1670 known not to have data enqueued to them aren't queried. Overlimit classes
1671 are penalized by lowering their effective priority. All very smart &amp;
1672 complicated.
1674 <sect3>CBQ classful behaviour
1676 Besides shaping, using the aforementioned idletime approximations, CBQ also
1677 acts like the PRIO queue in the sense that classes can have differing
1678 priorities and that lower priority numbers will be polled before the higher
1679 priority ones.
1681 Each time a packet is requested by the hardware layer to be sent out to the
1682 network, a weighted round robin process starts, beginning with the lower
1683 priority classes.
1685 These are then grouped and queried if they have data available. If so, it is
1686 returned. After a class has been allowed to dequeue a number of bytes, the
1687 next class within that priority is tried.
1689 The following parameters control the WRR process:
1690 <descrip>
1691 <tag>allot</tag>
1692 When the outer cbq is asked for a packet to send out on the interface, it
1693 will try all inner qdiscs (classes) in turn, in order of the 'priority'
1694 parameter. Each time a class gets its turn, it can only send out a limited
1695 amount of data. 'Allot' is the base unit of this amount. See the 'weight'
1696 parameter for more information.
1699 <tag>prio</tag>
1700 The CBQ can also act like the PRIO device. Inner classes with lower priority
1701 are tried first and as long as they have traffic, other classes are not
1702 polled for traffic.
1704 <tag>weight</tag>
1705 Weight helps in the Weighted Round Robin process. Each class gets a chance
1706 to send in turn. If you have classes with significantly more bandwidth than
1707 other classes, it makes sense to allow them to send more data in one round
1708 than the others.
1710 A CBQ adds up all weights within a class, and normalizes them, so you can
1711 use arbitrary numbers: only the ratios are important. People have been
1712 using 'rate/10' as a rule of thumb and it appears to work well. The
1713 renormalized weight is multiplied by the 'allot' parameter to determine how
1714 much data can be sent in one round.
1715 </descrip>
1717 Please note that all nodes within an CBQ hierarchy need to share the same
1718 major number!
1719 <sect3>CBQ parameters that determine link sharing &amp; borrowing
1721 Besides purely limiting certain kinds of traffic, it is also possible to
1722 specify which classes can borrow capacity from other classes or, conversely,
1723 lend out bandwidth.
1725 <descrip>
1726 <tag>Isolated/sharing</tag>
1727 A class that is configured with 'isolated' will not lend out bandwidth to
1728 sibling classes. Use this if you have competing or mutually-unfriendly
1729 agencies on your link who do want to give eachother freebies.
1731 The control program tc also knows about 'sharing', which is the reverse
1732 of 'isolated'.
1733 <tag>bounded/borrow</tag>
1734 A class can also be 'bounded', which means that it will not try to borrow
1735 bandwidth from sibling classes. tc also knows about 'borrow', which is the
1736 reverse of 'bounded'.
1737 </descrip>
1738 A typical situation might be where you have two agencies on your link which
1739 are both 'isolated' and 'bounded', which means that they are really limited
1740 to their assigened rate, and also won't allow each other to borrow.
1742 Within such an agency class, there might be other classes which are allowed
1743 to swap bandwidth.
1744 <sect3>Sample configuration
1746 This configuration limits webserver traffic to 5mbit and smtp traffic to 3
1747 mbit, and limits the sum to 5mbit:
1748 <verb>
1749 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 1:0 cbq bandwidth 100Mbit \
1750 avpkt 1000 cell 8
1751 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:0 classid 1:1 cbq bandwidth 100Mbit \
1752 rate 5Mbit weight 0.5Mbit prio 8 allot 1514 cell 8 maxburst 20 \
1753 avpkt 1000
1754 </verb>
1755 This part installs the root and the customary 1:0 sub-root. While it is
1756 possible to remove the first line, and attach the second line directly to
1757 the root, there are some subtleties involved which are avoided if adding
1758 this extra layer.
1760 As said before, CBQ requires a *lot* of knobs. All parameters are explained
1761 above, however. The corresponding HTB configuration is lots simpler.
1763 <verb>
1764 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:1 classid 1:3 cbq bandwidth 100Mbit \
1765 rate 5Mbit weight 0.5Mbit prio 5 allot 1514 cell 8 maxburst 20 \
1766 avpkt 1000 bounded
1767 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:1 classid 1:4 cbq bandwidth 100Mbit \
1768 rate 3Mbit weight 0.3Mbit prio 5 allot 1514 cell 8 maxburst 20 \
1769 avpkt 1000 bounded
1770 </verb>
1772 These are our two classes. Note how we scale the weight with the configured
1773 rate. Also note that both classes are bounded and won't therefore try to
1774 borrow traffic. The classid's need to be within the same major number as the
1775 parent CBQ, by the way!
1777 <verb>
1778 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:3 tbf rate 5Mbit buffer 10Kb/8 limit \
1779 15Kb mtu 1540
1780 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:4 tbf rate 3Mbit buffer 10Kb/8 limit \
1781 15Kb mtu 1540
1782 </verb>
1784 Here we install token bucket filters in the two configured subclasses. The
1785 /8 corresponds to the cell size we mentioned earlier for CBQ. We create a
1786 bucket of 10kbytes of tokens, a maximum 'pre-bucket' backlog of 15kbyte.
1788 <verb>
1789 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 match ip \
1790 sport 80 0xffff flowid 1:3
1791 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 match ip \
1792 sport 25 0xffff flowid 1:4
1793 </verb>
1795 These commands, attached directly to the root, send traffic to the right
1796 qdiscs.
1798 Note that we use 'tc class add' to CREATE classes within a qdisc, but that
1799 we use 'tc qdisc add' to actually configure these classes.
1801 You may wonder what happens to traffic that is not classified by any of the
1802 two rules. It appears that in this case, data will then be processed within
1803 1:0, and be unlimited. The unfiltered behaviour can be configured in a
1804 variety of ways, which have not yet been documented adequately. HTB is
1805 clearer in this respect, so you may prefer it.
1807 If smtp+web together try to exceed the set limit of 5mbit/s, bandwidth will
1808 be divided according to the weight parameter, giving 5/8 of traffic to the
1809 webserver and 3/8 to the mailserver.
1811 <sect3>Other CBQ parameters: split &amp; defmap
1813 As said before, a classful qdisc needs to call filters to determine
1814 which class a packet will be enqueued to.
1816 Besides calling the filter, CBQ offers other options, defmap &amp; split.
1817 This is pretty complicated to understand, and it is not vital. But as this
1818 is the only known place where defmap &amp; split are properly explained, I'm
1819 doing my best.
1821 As you will often want to filter on the Type of Service field only, a special
1822 syntax is provided. Whenever the CBQ needs to figure out where a packet
1823 needs to be enqueued, it checks if this node is a 'split node'. If so, one
1824 of the sub-qdiscs has indicated that it wishes to receive all packets with
1825 a certain configured priority, as might be derived from the TOS field, or
1826 socket options set by applications.
1828 The packets' priority bits are or-ed with the defmap field to see if a match
1829 exists. In other words, this is a short-hand way of creating a very fast
1830 filter, which only matches certain priorities. A defmap of ff (hex) will
1831 match everything, a map of 0 nothing. A sample configuration may help make
1832 things clearer:
1834 <verb>
1835 # tc qdisc add dev eth1 root handle 1: cbq bandwidth 10Mbit allot 1514 \
1836 cell 8 avpkt 1000 mpu 64
1838 # tc class add dev eth1 parent 1:0 classid 1:1 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit \
1839 rate 10Mbit allot 1514 cell 8 weight 1Mbit prio 8 maxburst 20 \
1840 avpkt 1000
1841 </verb>
1842 Standard CBQ preamble. I never get used to the sheer amount of numbers
1843 required!
1845 Defmap refers to TC_PRIO bits, which are defined as follows:
1847 <verb>
1848 TC_PRIO.. Num Corresponds to TOS
1849 -------------------------------------------------
1850 BESTEFFORT 0 Maximuze Reliablity
1851 FILLER 1 Minimize Cost
1852 BULK 2 Maximize Throughput (0x8)
1853 INTERACTIVE_BULK 4
1854 INTERACTIVE 6 Minimize Delay (0x10)
1855 CONTROL 7
1856 </verb>
1858 This corresponds to bits, counted from the right. Now the interactive, and
1859 the bulk classes:
1861 <verb>
1862 # tc class add dev eth1 parent 1:1 classid 1:2 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit \
1863 rate 1Mbit allot 1514 cell 8 weight 100Kbit prio 3 maxburst 20 \
1864 avpkt 1000 split 1:0 defmap c0
1866 # tc class add dev eth1 parent 1:1 classid 1:3 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit \
1867 rate 8Mbit allot 1514 cell 8 weight 800Kbit prio 7 maxburst 20 \
1868 avpkt 1000 split 1:0 defmap 3f
1869 </verb>
1871 The 'split qdisc' is 1:0, which is where the choice will be made. C0 is
1872 binary for 11000000, 3F for 00111111, so these two together will match
1873 everything. The first class matches bits 7 & 6, and thus corresponds
1874 to 'interactive' and 'control' traffic. The second class matches the rest.
1876 Node 1:0 now has a table like this:
1877 <verb>
1878 priority send to
1879 0 1:3
1880 1 1:3
1881 2 1:3
1882 3 1:3
1883 4 1:3
1884 5 1:3
1885 6 1:2
1886 7 1:2
1887 </verb>
1890 For additional fun, you can also pass a 'change mask', which indicates
1891 exactly which priorities you wish to change. You only need to use this if you
1892 are running 'tc class change'. For example, to add best effort traffic to
1893 1:2, we could run this:
1895 <verb>
1896 # tc class change dev eth1 classid 1:2 cbq defmap 01/01
1897 </verb>
1899 The priority map over at 1:0 now looks like this:
1901 <verb>
1902 priority send to
1903 0 1:2
1904 1 1:3
1905 2 1:3
1906 3 1:3
1907 4 1:3
1908 5 1:3
1909 6 1:2
1910 7 1:2
1911 </verb>
1913 FIXME: did not test this, only looked at the source.
1914 <sect2>Hierarchical Token Bucket
1916 Martin Devera (&lt;devik&gt;) rightly realised that CBQ is complex and does
1917 not seem optimized for many typical situations. His Hierarchial approach is
1918 well suited for setups where you have a fixed amount of bandwidth which you
1919 want to divide for different purposes, giving each purpose a guaranteed
1920 bandwidth, with the possibility of specifying how much bandwidth can be
1921 borrowed.
1923 HTB works just like CBQ but does not resort to idle time calculations to
1924 shape. Instead, it is a classful Token Bucket Filter - hence the name. It
1925 has only a few parameters, which are well documented on his
1926 <url url="http://luxik.cdi.cz/~devik/qos/htb/"
1927 name="site">.
1929 As your HTB configuration gets more complex, your configuration scales
1930 well. With CBQ it is already complex even in simple cases! HTB is not yet a
1931 part of the standard kernel, but it should soon be!
1933 If you are in a position to patch your kernel, by all means use HTB instead
1934 of CBQ.
1935 <sect3>Sample configuration
1937 Functionally almost identical to the CBQ sample configuration above:
1939 <tscreen><verb>
1940 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 1: htb default 30
1942 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1: classid 1:1 htb rate 5mbit burst 15k
1944 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:1 classid 1:10 htb rate 5mbit burst 15k
1945 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:1 classid 1:20 htb rate 3mbit ceil 5mbit burst 15k
1946 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:1 classid 1:30 htb rate 1kbit ceil 5mbit burst 15k
1947 </verb></tscreen>
1949 The author then recommends SFQ for beneath these classes:
1950 <tscreen><verb>
1951 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:10 handle 10: sfq perturb 10
1952 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:20 handle 20: sfq perturb 10
1953 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:30 handle 30: sfq perturb 10
1954 </verb></tscreen>
1956 Add the filters which direct traffic to the right classes:
1957 <tscreen><verb>
1958 # U32="tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 u32"
1959 # $U32 match ip dport 80 0xffff flowid 1:10
1960 # $U32 match ip sport 25 0xffff flowid 1:20
1961 </verb></tscreen>
1962 And that's it - no unsightly unexplained numbers, no undocumented
1963 parameters.
1965 HTB certainly looks wonderful - if 10: and 20: both have their guaranteed
1966 bandwidth, and more is left to divide, they borrow in a 5:3 ratio, just as
1967 you would expect.
1969 Unclassified traffic gets routed to 30:, which has little bandwidth of its
1970 own but can borrow everything that is left over. Because we chose SFQ
1971 internally, we get fairness thrown in for free!
1973 <sect1>Classifying packets with filters
1975 To determine which class shall process a packet, the so-called 'classifier
1976 chain' is called each time a choice needs to be made. This chain consists of
1977 all filters attached to the classful qdisc that needs to decide.
1979 To reiterate the tree, which is not a tree:
1980 <verb>
1981 root 1:
1983 _1:1_
1984 / | \
1985 / | \
1986 / | \
1987 10: 11: 12:
1988 / \ / \
1989 10:1 10:2 12:1 12:2
1990 </verb>
1992 When enqueueing a packet, at each branch the filter chain is consulted for a
1993 relevant instruction. A typical setup might be to have a filter in 1:1 that
1994 directs a packet to 12: and a filter on 12: that sends the packet to 12:2.
1996 You might also attach this latter rule to 1:1, but you can make efficiency
1997 gains by having more specific tests lower in the chain.
1999 You can't filter a packet 'upwards', by the way. Also, with HTB, you should
2000 attach all filters to the root!
2002 And again - packets are only enqueued downwards! When they are dequeued,
2003 they go up again, where the interface lives. They do NOT fall off the end of
2004 the tree to the network adaptor!
2006 <sect2>Some simple filtering examples
2008 As explained in the Classifier chapter, you can match on literally anything,
2009 using a very complicated syntax. To start, we will show how to do the
2010 obvious things, which luckily are quite easy.
2012 Let's say we have a PRIO qdisc called '10:' which contains three classes, and
2013 we want to assign all traffic from and to port 22 to the highest priority
2014 band, the filters would be:
2016 <tscreen><verb>
2017 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 10: prio 1 u32 match \
2018 ip dport 22 0xffff flowid 10:1
2019 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 10: prio 1 u32 match \
2020 ip sport 80 0xffff flowid 10:1
2021 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 10: prio 2 flowid 10:2
2022 </verb></tscreen>
2024 What does this say? It says: attach to eth0, node 10: a priority 1 u32
2025 filter that matches on IP destination port 22 *exactly* and send it to band
2026 10:1. And it then repeats the same for source port 80. The last command says
2027 that anything unmatched so far should go to band 10:2, the next-highest
2028 priority.
2030 You need to add 'eth0', or whatever your interface is called, because each
2031 interface has a unique namespace of handles.
2033 To select on an IP address, use this:
2034 <tscreen><verb>
2035 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 10:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 \
2036 match ip dst 4.3.2.1/32 flowid 10:1
2037 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 10:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 \
2038 match ip src 1.2.3.4/32 flowid 10:1
2039 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 10: prio 2 \
2040 flowid 10:2
2041 </verb></tscreen>
2043 This assigns traffic to 4.3.2.1 and traffic from 1.2.3.4 to the highest
2044 priority queue, and the rest to the next-highest one.
2046 You can concatenate matches, to match on traffic from 1.2.3.4 and from port
2047 80, do this:
2048 <tscreen><verb>
2049 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 10:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 match ip src 4.3.2.1/32
2050 match ip sport 80 0xffff flowid 10:1
2051 </verb></tscreen>
2053 <sect2>All the filtering commands you will normally need
2055 Most shaping commands presented here start with this preamble:
2056 <verb>
2057 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 1 u32 ..
2058 </verb>
2059 These are the so called 'u32' matches, which can match on ANY part of a
2060 packet.
2061 <descrip>
2062 <tag>On source/destination address</tag>
2063 Source mask 'match ip src 1.2.3.0/24', destination mask 'match ip dst
2064 4.3.2.0/24'. To match a single host, use /32, or omit the mask.
2065 <tag>On source/destination port, all IP protocols</tag>
2066 Source: 'match ip sport 80 0xffff', 'match ip dport 0xffff'
2067 <tag>On ip protocol (tcp, udp, icmp, gre, ipsec)</tag>
2068 Use the numbers from /etc/protocols, for example, icmp is 1: 'match ip
2069 protocol 1 0xff'.
2070 <tag>On fwmark</tag>
2071 You can mark packets with either ipchains and have that mark survive routing
2072 across interfaces. This is really useful to for example only shape traffic on
2073 eth1 that came in on eth0. Syntax:
2074 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 1 handle 6 fw classid 1:1
2075 Note that this is not a u32 match!
2077 You can place a mark like this:
2078 <verb>
2079 # iptables -A FORWARD -t mangle -i eth0 -j MARK --set-mark 6
2080 </verb>
2081 The number 6 is arbitrary.
2083 If you don't want to understand the full tc filter syntax, just use
2084 iptables, and only learn to select on fwmark.
2085 <tag>On the TOS field</tag>
2086 To select interactive, minimum delay traffic:
2087 <verb>
2088 # tc filter add dev ppp0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 10 u32 \
2089 match ip tos 0x10 0xff \
2090 flowid 1:4
2091 </verb>
2092 Use 0x08 0xff for bulk traffic.
2093 </descrip>
2095 For more filtering commands, see the Advanced Filters chapter.
2096 <sect>Loadsharing over multiple interfaces
2098 There are several ways of doing this. One of the easiest and straightforward
2099 ways is 'TEQL' - "True" (or "trivial") link equalizer. Like most things
2100 having to do with queueing, loadsharing goes both ways. Both ends of a link
2101 may need to participate for full effect.
2103 Imagine this situation:
2105 <tscreen><verb>
2106 +-------+ eth1 +-------+
2107 | |==========| |
2108 'network 1' ----| A | | B |---- 'network 2'
2109 | |==========| |
2110 +-------+ eth2 +-------+
2111 </verb></tscreen>
2113 A and B are routers, and for the moment we'll assume both run Linux. If
2114 traffic is going from network 1 to network 2, router A needs to distribute
2115 the packets over both links to B. Router B needs to be configured to accept
2116 this. Same goes the other way around, when packets go from network 2 to
2117 network 1, router B needs to send the packets over both eth1 and eth2.
2119 The distributing part is done by a 'TEQL' device, like this (it couldn't be
2120 easier):
2122 <tscreen><verb>
2123 # tc qdisc add dev eth1 root teql0
2124 # tc qdisc add dev eth2 root teql0
2125 </verb></tscreen>
2127 This needs to be done on both hosts. The device teql0 is basically a
2128 roundrobbin distributor over eth1 and eth2, for sending packets. No data
2129 ever comes in over an teql device, that just appears on the 'raw' eth1 and
2130 eth2.
2132 But now we just have devices, we also need proper routing. One way to do
2133 this is to assign a /31 network to both links, and a /31 to the teql0 device
2134 as well:
2136 FIXME: does this need something like 'nobroadcast'? A /31 is too small to
2137 house a network address and a broadcast address - if this doesn't work as
2138 planned, try a /30, and adjust the ip adresses accordingly. You might even
2139 try to make eth1 and eth2 do without an IP address!
2141 On router A:
2142 <tscreen><verb>
2143 # ip addr add dev eth1 10.0.0.0/31
2144 # ip addr add dev eth2 10.0.0.2/31
2145 # ip addr add dev teql0 10.0.0.4/31
2146 </verb></tscreen>
2148 On router B:
2149 <tscreen><verb>
2150 # ip addr add dev eth1 10.0.0.1/31
2151 # ip addr add dev eth2 10.0.0.3/31
2152 # ip addr add dev teql0 10.0.0.5/31
2153 </verb></tscreen>
2155 Router A should now be able to ping 10.0.0.1, 10.0.0.3 and 10.0.0.5 over the
2156 2 real links and the 1 equalized device. Router B should be able to ping
2157 10.0.0.0, 10.0.0.2 and 10.0.0.4 over the links.
2159 If this works, Router A should make 10.0.0.5 its route for reaching network
2160 2, and Router B should make 10.0.0.4 its route for reaching network 1. For
2161 the special case where network 1 is your network at home, and network 2 is
2162 the Internet, Router A should make 10.0.0.5 its default gateway.
2164 <sect1>Caveats
2166 Nothing is as easy as it seems. eth1 and eth2 on both router A and B need to
2167 have return path filtering turned off, because they will otherwise drop
2168 packets destined for ip addresses other than their own:
2170 <tscreen><verb>
2171 # echo 0 > /proc/net/ipv4/conf/eth1/rp_filter
2172 # echo 0 > /proc/net/ipv4/conf/eth2/rp_filter
2173 </verb></tscreen>
2175 Then there is the nasty problem of packet reordering. Let's say 6 packets
2176 need to be sent from A to B - eth1 might get 1, 3 and 5. eth2 would then do
2177 2, 4 and 6. In an ideal world, router B would receive this in order, 1, 2,
2178 3, 4, 5, 6. But the possibility is very real that the kernel gets it like
2179 this: 2, 1, 4, 3, 6, 5. The problem is that this confuses TCP/IP. While not
2180 a problem for links carrying many different TCP/IP sessions, you won't be
2181 able to to a bundle multiple links and get to ftp a single file lots faster,
2182 except when your receiving or sending OS is Linux, which is not easily
2183 shaken by some simple reordering.
2185 However, for lots of applications, link loadbalancing is a great idea.
2188 <sect>Netfilter &amp; iproute - marking packets
2190 So far we've seen how iproute works, and netfilter was mentioned a few
2191 times. This would be a good time to browse through <url name="Rusty's Remarkably
2192 Unreliable Guides"
2193 url="http://netfilter.samba.org/unreliable-guides/">. Netfilter itself
2194 can be found <url name="here"
2195 url="http://netfilter.filewatcher.org/">.
2197 Netfilter allows us to filter packets, or mangle their headers. One special
2198 feature is that we can mark a packet with a number. This is done with the
2199 --set-mark facility.
2201 As an example, this command marks all packets destined for port 25, outgoing
2202 mail:
2204 <tscreen><verb>
2205 # iptables -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -t mangle -p tcp --dport 25 \
2206 -j MARK --set-mark 1
2207 </verb></tscreen>
2209 Let's say that we have multiple connections, one that is fast (and
2210 expensive, per megabyte) and one that is slower, but flat fee. We would most
2211 certainly like outgoing mail to go via the cheap route.
2213 We've already marked the packets with a '1', we now instruct the routing
2214 policy database to act on this:
2216 <tscreen><verb>
2217 # echo 201 mail.out >> /etc/iproute2/rt_tables
2218 # ip rule add fwmark 1 table mail.out
2219 # ip rule ls
2220 0: from all lookup local
2221 32764: from all fwmark 1 lookup mail.out
2222 32766: from all lookup main
2223 32767: from all lookup default
2224 </verb></tscreen>
2226 Now we generate the mail.out table with a route to the slow but cheap link:
2227 <tscreen><verb>
2228 # /sbin/ip route add default via 195.96.98.253 dev ppp0 table mail.out
2229 </verb></tscreen>
2231 And we are done. Should we want to make exceptions, there are lots of ways
2232 to achieve this. We can modify the netfilter statement to exclude certain
2233 hosts, or we can insert a rule with a lower priority that points to the main
2234 table for our excepted hosts.
2236 We can also use this feature to honour TOS bits by marking packets with a
2237 different type of service with different numbers, and creating rules to act
2238 on that. This way you can even dedicate, say, an ISDN line to interactive
2239 sessions.
2241 Needless to say, this also works fine on a host that's doing NAT
2242 ('masquerading').
2244 IMPORTANT: We received a report that MASQ and SNAT at least collide
2245 with marking packets. Rusty Russell explains it in
2246 <url
2247 url="http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/netfilter/2000-November/006089.html"
2248 name="this posting">. Turn off the reverse path filter to make it work
2249 properly.
2251 Note: to mark packets, you need to have some options enabled in your
2252 kernel:
2254 <tscreen><verb>
2255 IP: advanced router (CONFIG_IP_ADVANCED_ROUTER) [Y/n/?]
2256 IP: policy routing (CONFIG_IP_MULTIPLE_TABLES) [Y/n/?]
2257 IP: use netfilter MARK value as routing key (CONFIG_IP_ROUTE_FWMARK) [Y/n/?]
2258 </verb></tscreen>
2260 See also <ref id="SQUID" name="Transparent web-caching using netfilter, iproute2, ipchains and squid">
2261 in the Cookbook.
2262 <sect>Advanced filters for (re-)classifying packets
2264 As explained in the section on classful queueing disciplines, filters are
2265 needed to classify packets into any of the sub-queues. These filters are
2266 called from within the classful qdisc.
2268 Here is an incomplete list of classifiers available:
2269 <descrip>
2270 <tag>fw</tag>
2271 Bases the decision on how the firewall has marked the packet. This can be
2272 the easy way out if you don't want to learn tc filter syntax. See the
2273 Queueing chapter for details.
2275 <tag>u32</tag>
2276 Bases the decision on fields within the packet (i.e. source IP address, etc)
2278 <tag>route</tag>
2279 Bases the decision on which route the packet will be routed by
2281 <tag>rsvp, rsvp6</tag>
2282 Routes packets based on <url
2283 url="http://www.isi.edu/div7/rsvp/overview.html" name="RSVP ">. Only useful
2284 on networks you control - the Ifnternet does not respect RSVP.
2286 <tag>tcindex</tag>
2287 Used in the DSMARK qdisc, see the relevant section.
2288 </descrip>
2290 Note that in general there are many ways in which you can classify packet
2291 and that it generally comes down to preference as to which system you wish
2292 to use.
2294 Classifiers in general accept a few arguments in common. They are listed
2295 here for convenience:
2297 <descrip>
2298 <tag>protocol</tag>
2299 The protocol this classifier will accept. Generally you will only be
2300 accepting only IP traffic. Required.
2302 <tag>parent</tag>
2303 The handle this classifier is to be attached to. This handle must be
2304 an already existing class. Required.
2306 <tag>prio</tag>
2307 The priority of this classifier. Lower numbers get tested first.
2309 <tag>handle</tag>
2310 This handle means different things to different filters.
2312 </descrip>
2314 All the following sections will assume you are trying to shape the traffic
2315 going to <tt>HostA</tt>. They will assume that the root class has been
2316 configured on 1: and that the class you want to send the selected traffic to
2317 is 1:1.
2320 <sect1>The "u32" classifier
2322 The U32 filter is the most advanced filter available in the current
2323 implementation. It entirely based on hashing tables, which make it
2324 robust when there are many filter rules.
2326 In its simplest form the U32 filter is a list of records, each
2327 consisting of two fields: a selector and an action. The selectors,
2328 described below, are compared with the currently processed IP packet
2329 until the first match occurs, and then the associated action is performed.
2330 The simplest type of action would be directing the packet into defined
2331 CBQ class.
2333 The commandline of <tt>tc filter</tt> program, used to configure the filter,
2334 consists of three parts: filter specification, a selector and an action.
2335 The filter specification can be defined as:
2337 <tscreen><verb>
2338 tc filter add dev IF [ protocol PROTO ]
2339 [ (preference|priority) PRIO ]
2340 [ parent CBQ ]
2341 </verb></tscreen>
2343 The <tt>protocol</tt> field describes protocol that the filter will be
2344 applied to. We will only discuss case of <tt>ip</tt> protocol. The
2345 <tt>preference</tt> field (<tt>priority</tt> can be used alternatively)
2346 sets the priority of currently defined filter. This is important, since
2347 you can have several filters (lists of rules) with different priorities.
2348 Each list will be passed in the order the rules were added, then list with
2349 lower priority (higher preference number) will be processed. The <tt>parent</tt>
2350 field defines the CBQ tree top (e.g. 1:0), the filter should be attached
2353 The options decribed above apply to all filters, not only U32.
2355 <sect2>U32 selector
2357 The U32 selector contains definition of the pattern, that will be matched
2358 to the currently processed packet. Precisely, it defines which bits are
2359 to be matched in the packet header and nothing more, but this simple
2360 method is very powerful. Let's take a look at the following examples,
2361 taken directly from a pretty complex, real-world filter:
2363 <tscreen><verb>
2364 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 1:0 pref 10 u32 \
2365 match u32 00100000 00ff0000 at 0 flowid 1:10
2366 </verb></tscreen>
2369 For now, leave the first line alone - all these parameters describe
2370 the filter's hash tables. Focus on the selector line, containing
2371 <tt>match</tt> keyword. This selector will match to IP headers, whose
2372 second byte will be 0x10 (0010). As you can guess, the 00ff number is
2373 the match mask, telling the filter exactly which bits to match. Here
2374 it's 0xff, so the byte will match if it's exactly 0x10. The <tt>at</tt>
2375 keyword means that the match is to be started at specified offset (in
2376 bytes) -- in this case it's beginning of the packet. Translating all
2377 that to human language, the packet will match if its Type of Service
2378 field will have `low delay' bits set. Let's analyze another rule:
2380 <tscreen><verb>
2381 # tc filter add dev eth0 protocol ip parent 1:0 pref 10 u32 \
2382 match u32 00000016 0000ffff at nexthdr+0 flowid 1:10
2383 </verb></tscreen>
2386 The <tt>nexthdr</tt> option means next header encapsulated in the IP packet,
2387 i.e. header of upper-layer protocol. The match will also start here
2388 at the beginning of the next header. The match should occur in the
2389 second, 32-bit word of the header. In TCP and UDP protocols this field
2390 contains packet's destination port. The number is given in big-endian
2391 format, i.e. older bits first, so we simply read 0x0016 as 22 decimal,
2392 which stands for SSH service if this was TCP. As you guess, this match
2393 is ambigous without a context, and we will discuss this later.
2396 Having understood all the above, we will find the following selector
2397 quite easy to read: <tt>match c0a80100 ffffff00 at 16</tt>. What we
2398 got here is a three byte match at 17-th byte, counting from the IP
2399 header start. This will match for packets with destination address
2400 anywhere in 192.168.1/24 network. After analyzing the examples, we
2401 can summarize what we have learnt.
2403 <sect2>General selectors
2406 General selectors define the pattern, mask and offset the pattern
2407 will be matched to the packet contents. Using the general selectors
2408 you can match virtually any single bit in the IP (or upper layer)
2409 header. They are more difficult to write and read, though, than
2410 specific selectors that described below. The general selector syntax
2413 <tscreen><verb>
2414 match [ u32 | u16 | u8 ] PATTERN MASK [ at OFFSET | nexthdr+OFFSET]
2415 </verb></tscreen>
2418 One of the keywords <tt>u32</tt>, <tt>u16</tt> or <tt>u8</tt> specifies
2419 length of the pattern in bits. PATTERN and MASK should follow, of length
2420 defined by the previous keyword. The OFFSET parameter is the offset,
2421 in bytes, to start matching. If <tt>nexthdr+</tt> keyword is given,
2422 the offset is relative to start of the upper layer header.
2425 Some examples:
2427 <tscreen><verb>
2428 # tc filter add dev ppp14 parent 1:0 prio 10 u32 \
2429 match u8 64 0xff at 8 \
2430 flowid 1:4
2431 </verb></tscreen>
2434 Packet will match to this rule, if its time to live (TTL) is 64.
2435 TTL is the field starting just after 8-th byte of the IP header.
2437 <tscreen><verb>
2438 # tc filter add dev ppp14 parent 1:0 prio 10 u32 \
2439 match u8 0x10 0xff at nexthdr+13 \
2440 protocol tcp \
2441 flowid 1:3
2442 </verb></tscreen>
2444 FIXME: it has been pointed out that this syntax does not work currently.
2446 Stuart DJ Lynne uses this to match ACKs:
2448 <tscreen><verb>
2449 ## match acks the hard way,
2450 ## IP protocol 6,
2451 ## IP header length 0x5(32 bit words),
2452 ## IP Total length 0x34
2453 ## TCP ack set (bit 5, offset 33)
2454 # tc filter add dev ppp14 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 10 u32 \
2455 match ip protocol 6 0xff \
2456 match u8 0x05 0x0f at 0 \
2457 match u8 0x34 0xff at 3 \
2458 match u8 0x10 0xff at 33 \
2459 flowid 1:3
2460 </verb></tscreen>
2463 This rule will only match TCP packets with ACK bit set. Here we can see
2464 an example of using two selectors, the final result will be logical AND
2465 of their results. If we take a look at TCP header diagram, we can see
2466 that the ACK bit is second older bit (0x10) in the 14-th byte of the TCP
2467 header (<tt>at nexthdr+13</tt>). As for the second selector, if we'd like
2468 to make our life harder, we could write <tt>match u8 0x06 0xff at 9</tt>
2469 instead of using the specific selector <tt>protocol tcp</tt>, because
2470 6 is the number of TCP protocol, present in 10-th byte of the IP header.
2471 On the other hand, in this example we couldn't use any specific selector
2472 for the first match - simply because there's no specific selector to match
2473 TCP ACK bits.
2475 <sect2>Specific selectors
2477 The following table contains a list of all specific selectors
2478 the author of this section has found in the <tt>tc</tt> program
2479 source code. They simply make your life easier and increase readability
2480 of your filter's configuration.
2482 FIXME: table placeholder - the table is in separate file ,,selector.html''
2484 FIXME: it's also still in Polish :-(
2486 FIXME: must be sgml'ized
2488 Some examples:
2491 <tscreen><verb>
2492 # tc filter add dev ppp0 parent 1:0 prio 10 u32 \
2493 match ip tos 0x10 0xff \
2494 flowid 1:4
2495 </verb></tscreen>
2497 The above rule will match packets which have the TOS field set to 0x10.
2498 The TOS field starts at second byte of the packet and is one byte big,
2499 so we could write an equivalent general selector: <tt>match u8 0x10 0xff
2500 at 1</tt>. This gives us hint to the internals of U32 filter -- the
2501 specific rules are always translated to general ones, and in this
2502 form they are stored in the kernel memory. This leads to another conclusion
2503 -- the <tt>tcp</tt> and <tt>udp</tt> selectors are exactly the same
2504 and this is why you can't use single <tt>match tcp dst 53 0xffff</tt>
2505 selector to match TCP packets sent to given port -- they will also
2506 match UDP packets sent to this port. You must remember to also specify
2507 the protocol and end up with the following rule:
2509 <tscreen><verb>
2510 # tc filter add dev ppp0 parent 1:0 prio 10 u32 \
2511 match tcp dst 53 0xffff \
2512 match ip protocol 0x6 0xff \
2513 flowid 1:2
2514 </verb></tscreen>
2516 <!--
2517 TODO:
2519 describe more options
2521 match
2522 offset
2523 hashkey
2524 classid | flowid
2525 divisor
2526 order
2527 link
2529 sample
2530 police
2534 <sect1>The "route" classifier
2537 This classifier filters based on the results of the routing tables. When a
2538 packet that is traversing through the classes reaches one that is marked
2539 with the "route" filter, it splits the packets up based on information in
2540 the routing table.
2542 <tscreen><verb>
2543 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 route
2544 </verb></tscreen>
2546 Here we add a route classifier onto the parent node 1:0 with priority 100.
2547 When a packet reaches this node (which, since it is the root, will happen
2548 immediately) it will consult the routing table and if one matches will
2549 send it to the given class and give it a priority of 100. Then, to finally
2550 kick it into action, you add the appropriate routing entry:
2552 The trick here is to define 'realm' based on either destination or source.
2553 The way to do it is like this:
2555 <tscreen><verb>
2556 # ip route add Host/Network via Gateway dev Device realm RealmNumber
2557 </verb></tscreen>
2559 For instance, we can define our destination network 192.168.10.0 with a realm
2560 number 10:
2562 <tscreen><verb>
2563 # ip route add 192.168.10.0/24 via 192.168.10.1 dev eth1 realm 10
2564 </verb></tscreen>
2566 When adding route filters, we can use realm numbers to represent the
2567 networks or hosts and specify how the routes match the filters.
2569 <tscreen><verb>
2570 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 \
2571 route to 10 classid 1:10
2572 </verb></tscreen>
2574 The above rule says packets going to the network 192.168.10.0 match class id
2575 1:10.
2577 Route filter can also be used to match source routes. For example, there is
2578 a subnetwork attached to the Linux router on eth2.
2580 <tscreen><verb>
2581 # ip route add 192.168.2.0/24 dev eth2 realm 2
2582 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 \
2583 route from 2 classid 1:2
2584 </verb></tscreen>
2586 Here the filter specifies that packets from the subnetwork 192.168.2.0
2587 (realm 2) will match class id 1:2.
2589 <sect1>Policing filters
2591 To make even more complicated setups possible, you can have filters that
2592 only match up to a certain bandwidth. You can declare a filter to entirely
2593 cease matching above a certain rate, or only to not match only the bandwidth
2594 exceeding a certain rate.
2596 So if you decided to police at 4mbit/s, but 5mbit/s of traffic is present,
2597 you can stop matching either the entire 5mbit/s, or only not match 1mbit/s,
2598 and do send 4mbit/s to the configured class.
2600 If bandwidth exceeds the configured rate, you can drop a packet, reclassify
2601 it, or see if another filter will match it.
2603 <sect2>Ways to police
2605 There are basically two ways to police. If you compiled the kernel
2606 with 'Estimators', the kernel can measure for each filter how much traffic
2607 it is passing, more or less. These estimators are very easy on the CPU, as
2608 they simply count 25 times per second how many data has been passed, and
2609 calculate the bitrate from that.
2611 The other way works again via a Token Bucket Filter, this time living within
2612 your filter. The TBF only matches traffic UP TO your configured bandwidth,
2613 if more is offered, only the excess is subject to the configured overlimit
2614 action.
2616 <sect3>With the kernel estimator
2618 This is very simple and has only one parameter: avrate. Either the flow
2619 remains below avrate, and the filter classifies the traffic to the classid
2620 configured, or your rate exceeds it in which case the specified action is
2621 taken, which is 'reclassify' by default.
2623 The kernel uses an Exponential Weighted Moving Average for your bandwidth
2624 which makes it less sensitive to short bursts.
2626 <sect3>With Token Bucket Filter
2628 Uses the following parameters:
2629 <itemize>
2630 <item>buffer/maxburst
2631 <item>mtu/minburst
2632 <item>mpu
2633 <item>rate
2634 </itemize>
2636 Which behave identical to those described in the Token Bucket Filter
2637 section.
2639 <sect2>Overlimit actions
2641 If your filter decides that it is overlimit, it can take 'actions'.
2642 Currently, three actions are available:
2643 <descrip>
2644 <tag>continue</tag>
2645 Causes this filter not to match, but perhaps other filters will.
2646 <tag>drop</tag>
2647 This is a very fierce option which simply discards traffic exceeding a
2648 certain rate. It is often used in the ingress policer and has limited uses.
2649 For example, you may have a nameserver that falls over if offered more than
2650 5mbit/s of packets, in which case an ingress filter could be used to make
2651 sure no more is ever offered.
2652 <tag>Pass/OK</tag>
2653 Pass on traffic ok. Might be used to disable a complicated filter, but leave
2654 it in place.
2655 <tag>reclassify</tag>
2656 Most often comes down to reclassification to Best Effort. This is the
2657 default action.
2658 </descrip>
2660 <sect2>Examples
2662 The only real example known is mentioned in the 'Protecting your host
2663 from SYN floods' section.
2665 FIXME: if you have used this, please share your experience with us
2667 <sect1>Hashing filters for very fast massive filtering
2669 If you have a need for thousands of rules, for example if you have a lot of
2670 clients or computers, all with different QoS specifications, you may find
2671 that the kernel spends a lot of time matching all those rules.
2673 By default, all filters reside in one big chain which is matched in
2674 descending order of priority. If you have 1000 rules, 1000 checks may be
2675 needed to determine what to do with a packet.
2677 Matching would go much quicker if you would have 256 chains with each four
2678 rules - if you could divide packets over those 256 chains, so that the right
2679 rule will be there.
2681 Hashing makes this possible. Let's say you have 1024 cablemodem customers in
2682 your network, with IP addresses ranging from 1.2.0.0 to 1.2.3.255, and each
2683 has to go in another bin, for example 'lite', 'regular' and 'premium'. You
2684 would then have 1024 rules like this:
2686 <verb>
2687 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2688 1.2.0.0 classid 1:1
2689 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2690 1.2.0.1 classid 1:1
2692 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2693 1.2.3.254 classid 1:3
2694 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2695 1.2.3.255 classid 1:2
2696 </verb>
2698 To speed this up, we can use the last part of the IP address as a 'hash
2699 key'. We then get 256 tables, the first of which looks like this:
2700 <verb>
2701 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2702 1.2.0.0 classid 1:1
2703 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2704 1.2.1.0 classid 1:1
2705 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2706 1.2.2.0 classid 1:3
2707 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2708 1.2.3.0 classid 1:2
2709 </verb>
2711 The next one starts like this:
2712 <verb>
2713 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 100 match ip src \
2714 1.2.0.1 classid 1:1
2716 </verb>
2718 This way, only four checks are needed at most, two on average.
2720 Configuration is pretty complicated, but very worth it by the time you have
2721 this many rules. First we make a filter root, then we create a table with
2722 256 entries:
2723 <verb>
2724 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 prio 5 protocol ip u32
2725 # tc filter add dev eth1 parent 1:0 prio 5 handle 2: u32 divisor 256
2726 </verb>
2728 Now we add some rules to entries in the created table:
2730 <verb>
2731 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 ht 2:7b: \
2732 match ip src 1.2.0.123 flowid 1:1
2733 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 ht 2:7b: \
2734 match ip src 1.2.1.123 flowid 1:2
2735 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 ht 2:7b: \
2736 match ip src 1.2.3.123 flowid 1:3
2737 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 ht 2:7b: \
2738 match ip src 1.2.4.123 flowid 1:2
2739 </verb>
2740 This is entry 123, which contains matches for 1.2.0.123, 1.2.1.123,
2741 1.2.2.123, 1.2.3.123, and sends them to 1:1, 1:2, 1:3 and 1:2 respectively.
2742 Note that we need to specify our hash bucket in hex, 0x7b is 123.
2744 Next create a 'hashing filter' that directs traffic to the right entry in
2745 the hashing table:
2746 <verb>
2747 # tc filter add dev eth1 protocol ip parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 ht 800:: \
2748 match ip src 1.2.0.0/16 \
2749 hashkey mask 0x000000ff at 12 \
2750 link 2:
2751 </verb>
2752 Ok, some numbers need explaining. The default hash table is called 800:: and
2753 all filtering starts there. Then we select the source address, which lives
2754 as position 12, 13, 14 and 15 in the IP header, and indicate that we are
2755 only interested in the last part. This we send to hash table 1:, which we
2756 created earlier.
2758 It is quite complicated, but it does work in practice and performance will
2759 be staggering. Note that this example could be improved to the ideal case
2760 where each chain contains 1 filter!
2761 <sect>Kernel network parameters
2762 <p>
2763 The kernel has lots of parameters which
2764 can be tuned for different circumstances. While, as usual, the default
2765 parameters serve 99% of installations very well, we don't call this the
2766 Advanced HOWTO for the fun of it!
2768 The interesting bits are in /proc/sys/net, take a look there. Not everything
2769 will be documented here initially, but we're working on it.
2771 (FIXME)
2773 <sect1>Reverse Path Filtering
2775 By default, routers route everything, even packets which 'obviously' don't
2776 belong on your network. A common example is private IP space escaping onto
2777 the Internet. If you have an interface with a route of 195.96.96.0/24 to it,
2778 you do not expect packets from 212.64.94.1 to arrive there.
2780 Lots of people will want to turn this feature off, so the kernel hackers
2781 have made it easy. There are files in <file>/proc</file> where you can tell
2782 the kernel to do this for you. The method is called "Reverse Path
2783 Filtering". Basically, if the reply to this packet wouldn't go out the
2784 interface this packet came in, then this is a bogus packet and should be
2785 ignored.
2787 The following fragment will turn this on for all current and future
2788 interfaces.
2790 <tscreen><verb>
2791 # for i in /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/*/rp_filter ; do
2792 &gt; echo 2 > $i
2793 &gt; done
2794 </verb></tscreen>
2796 Going by the example above, if a packet arrived on the Linux router on eth1
2797 claiming to come from the Office+ISP subnet, it would be dropped. Similarly,
2798 if a packet came from the Office subnet, claiming to be from somewhere
2799 outside your firewall, it would be dropped also.
2801 The above is full reverse path filtering. The default is to only filter
2802 based on IPs that are on directly connected networks. This is because the
2803 full filtering breaks in the case of asymmetric routing (where packets come
2804 in one way and go out another, like satellite traffic, or if you have
2805 dynamic (bgp, ospf, rip) routes in your network. The data comes down
2806 through the satellite dish and replies go back through normal land-lines).
2808 If this exception applies to you (and you'll probably know if it does) you
2809 can simply turn off the <file>rp_filter</file> on the interface where the
2810 satellite data comes in. If you want to see if any packets are being
2811 dropped, the <file>log_martians</file> file in the same directory will tell
2812 the kernel to log them to your syslog.
2814 <tscreen><verb>
2815 # echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/<interfacename>/log_martians
2816 </verb></tscreen>
2818 FIXME: is setting the conf/{default,all}/* files enough? - martijn
2820 <sect1>Obscure settings
2822 Ok, there are a lot of parameters which can be modified. We try to list them
2823 all. Also documented (partly) in <file>Documentation/ip-sysctl.txt</file>.
2825 Some of these settings have different defaults based on whether you
2826 answered 'Yes' to 'Configure as router and not host' while compiling your
2827 kernel.
2829 <sect2>Generic ipv4
2831 As a generic note, most rate limiting features don't work on loopback, so
2832 don't test them locally. The limits are supplied in 'jiffies', and are
2833 enforced using the earlier mentioned token bucket filter.
2835 The kernel has an internal clock which runs at 'HZ' ticks (or 'jiffies') per
2836 second. On intel, 'HZ' is mostly 100. So setting a *_rate file to, say 50,
2837 would allow for 2 packets per second. The token bucket filter is also
2838 configured to allow for a burst of at most 6 packets, if enough tokens have
2839 been earned.
2841 Several entries in the following list have been copied from
2842 /usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt, written by Alexey
2843 Kuznetsov &lt;kuznet@ms2.inr.ac.ru&gt; and Andi Kleen &lt;ak@muc.de&gt;
2844 <descrip>
2845 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_destunreach_rate</tag>
2846 If the kernel decides that it can't deliver a packet, it will drop it, and
2847 send the source of the packet an ICMP notice to this effect.
2848 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echo_ignore_all</tag>
2849 Don't act on echo packets at all. Please don't set this by default, but if
2850 you are used as a relay in a DoS attack, it may be useful.
2851 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echo_ignore_broadcasts [Useful]</tag>
2852 If you ping the broadcast address of a network, all hosts are supposed to
2853 respond. This makes for a dandy denial-of-service tool. Set this to 1 to
2854 ignore these broadcast messages.
2855 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_echoreply_rate</tag>
2856 The rate at which echo replies are sent to any one destination.
2857 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_ignore_bogus_error_responses</tag>
2858 Set this to ignore ICMP errors caused by hosts in the network reacting badly
2859 to frames sent to what they perceive to be the broadcast address.
2860 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_paramprob_rate</tag>
2861 A relatively unknown ICMP message, which is sent in response to incorrect
2862 packets with broken IP or TCP headers. With this file you can control the
2863 rate at which it is sent.
2864 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/icmp_timeexceed_rate</tag>
2865 This the famous cause of the 'Solaris middle star' in traceroutes. Limits
2866 number of ICMP Time Exceeded messages sent.
2867 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/igmp_max_memberships</tag>
2868 Maximum number of listening igmp (multicast) sockets on the host.
2869 FIXME: Is this true?
2870 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/inet_peer_gc_maxtime</tag>
2871 FIXME: Add a little explanation about the inet peer storage?&nl;
2872 Minimum interval between garbage collection passes. This interval is in
2873 effect under low (or absent) memory pressure on the pool. Measured in
2874 jiffies.
2875 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/inet_peer_gc_mintime</tag>
2876 Minimum interval between garbage collection passes. This interval is in
2877 effect under high memory pressure on the pool. Measured in jiffies.
2878 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/inet_peer_maxttl</tag>
2879 Maximum time-to-live of entries. Unused entries will expire after this
2880 period of time if there is no memory pressure on the pool (i.e. when the
2881 number of entries in the pool is very small). Measured in jiffies.
2882 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/inet_peer_minttl</tag>
2883 Minimum time-to-live of entries. Should be enough to cover fragment
2884 time-to-live on the reassembling side. This minimum time-to-live
2885 is guaranteed if the pool size is less than inet_peer_threshold.
2886 Measured in jiffies.
2887 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/inet_peer_threshold</tag>
2888 The approximate size of the INET peer storage. Starting from this threshold
2889 entries will be thrown aggressively. This threshold also determines
2890 entries' time-to-live and time intervals between garbage collection passes.
2891 More entries, less time-to-live, less GC interval.
2892 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_autoconfig</tag>
2893 This file contains the number one if the host received its IP configuration by
2894 RARP, BOOTP, DHCP or a similar mechanism. Otherwise it is zero.
2895 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_default_ttl</tag>
2896 Time To Live of packets. Set to a safe 64. Raise it if you have a huge
2897 network. Don't do so for fun - routing loops cause much more damage that
2898 way. You might even consider lowering it in some circumstances.
2899 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_dynaddr</tag>
2900 You need to set this if you use dial-on-demand with a dynamic interface
2901 address. Once your demand interface comes up, any local TCP sockets which haven't seen replies will be rebound to have the right address. This solves the problem that the
2902 connection that brings up your interface itself does not work, but the
2903 second try does.
2904 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward</tag>
2905 If the kernel should attempt to forward packets. Off by default.
2906 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range</tag>
2907 Range of local ports for outgoing connections. Actually quite small by
2908 default, 1024 to 4999.
2909 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_no_pmtu_disc</tag>
2910 Set this if you want to disable Path MTU discovery - a technique to
2911 determine the largest Maximum Transfer Unit possible on your path. See also
2912 the section on Path MTU discovery in the cookbook chapter.
2913 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ipfrag_high_thresh</tag>
2914 Maximum memory used to reassemble IP fragments. When
2915 ipfrag_high_thresh bytes of memory is allocated for this purpose,
2916 the fragment handler will toss packets until ipfrag_low_thresh
2917 is reached.
2918 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_nonlocal_bind</tag>
2919 Set this if you want your applications to be able to bind to an address
2920 which doesn't belong to a device on your system. This can be useful when
2921 your machine is on a non-permanent (or even dynamic) link, so your services
2922 are able to start up and bind to a specific address when your link is down.
2923 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ipfrag_low_thresh</tag>
2924 Minimum memory used to reassemble IP fragments.
2925 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ipfrag_time</tag>
2926 Time in seconds to keep an IP fragment in memory.
2927 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_abort_on_overflow</tag>
2928 A boolean flag controlling the behaviour under lots of incoming connections.
2929 When enabled, this causes the kernel to actively send RST packets when a
2930 service is overloaded.
2931 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout</tag>
2932 Time to hold socket in state FIN-WAIT-2, if it was closed by our side. Peer
2933 can be broken and never close its side, or even died unexpectedly. Default
2934 value is 60sec. Usual value used in 2.2 was 180 seconds, you may restore it,
2935 but remember that if your machine is even underloaded WEB server, you risk
2936 to overflow memory with kilotons of dead sockets, FIN-WAIT-2 sockets are
2937 less dangerous than FIN-WAIT-1, because they eat maximum 1.5K of memory, but
2938 they tend to live longer. Cf. tcp_max_orphans.
2939 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_time</tag>
2940 How often TCP sends out keepalive messages when keepalive is enabled. &nl;
2941 Default: 2hours.
2942 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_intvl</tag>
2943 How frequent probes are retransmitted, when a probe isn't acknowledged. &nl;
2944 Default: 75 seconds.
2945 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_probes</tag>
2946 How many keepalive probes TCP will send, until it decides that the
2947 connection is broken. &nl;
2948 Default value: 9. &nl;
2949 Multiplied with tcp_keepalive_intvl, this gives the time a link can be
2950 nonresponsive after a keepalive has been sent.
2951 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_orphans</tag>
2952 Maximal number of TCP sockets not attached to any user file handle, held by
2953 system. If this number is exceeded orphaned connections are reset
2954 immediately and warning is printed. This limit exists only to prevent simple
2955 DoS attacks, you _must_ not rely on this or lower the limit artificially,
2956 but rather increase it (probably, after increasing installed memory), if
2957 network conditions require more than default value, and tune network
2958 services to linger and kill such states more aggressively. Let me remind you
2959 again: each orphan eats up to ~64K of unswappable memory.
2960 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_orphan_retries</tag>
2961 How may times to retry before killing TCP connection, closed by our side.
2962 Default value 7 corresponds to ~50sec-16min depending on RTO. If your machine
2963 is a loaded WEB server, you should think about lowering this value, such
2964 sockets may consume significant resources. Cf. tcp_max_orphans.
2965 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog</tag>
2966 Maximal number of remembered connection requests, which still did not
2967 receive an acknowledgement from connecting client. Default value is 1024 for
2968 systems with more than 128Mb of memory, and 128 for low memory machines. If
2969 server suffers of overload, try to increase this number. Warning! If you
2970 make it greater than 1024, it would be better to change TCP_SYNQ_HSIZE in
2971 include/net/tcp.h to keep TCP_SYNQ_HSIZE*16<=tcp_max_syn_backlog and to
2972 recompile kernel.
2973 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_tw_buckets</tag>
2974 Maximal number of timewait sockets held by system simultaneously. If this
2975 number is exceeded time-wait socket is immediately destroyed and warning is
2976 printed. This limit exists only to prevent simple DoS attacks, you _must_
2977 not lower the limit artificially, but rather increase it (probably, after
2978 increasing installed memory), if network conditions require more than
2979 default value.
2980 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_retrans_collapse</tag>
2981 Bug-to-bug compatibility with some broken printers.
2982 On retransmit try to send bigger packets to work around bugs in
2983 certain TCP stacks.
2984 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_retries1</tag>
2985 How many times to retry before deciding that something is wrong
2986 and it is necessary to report this suspection to network layer.
2987 Minimal RFC value is 3, it is default, which corresponds
2988 to ~3sec-8min depending on RTO.
2989 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_retries2</tag>
2990 How may times to retry before killing alive TCP connection.
2991 RFC1122 says that the limit should be longer than 100 sec.
2992 It is too small number. Default value 15 corresponds to ~13-30min
2993 depending on RTO.
2994 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_rfc1337</tag>
2995 This boolean enables a fix for 'time-wait assassination hazards in tcp', described
2996 in RFC 1337. If enabled, this causes the kernel to drop RST packets for
2997 sockets in the time-wait state.&nl;
2998 Default: 0
2999 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_sack</tag>
3000 Use Selective ACK which can be used to signify that specific packets are
3001 missing - therefore helping fast recovery.
3002 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_stdurg</tag>
3003 Use the Host requirements interpretation of the TCP urg pointer
3004 field. &nl;
3005 Most hosts use the older BSD interpretation, so if you turn this on
3006 Linux might not communicate correctly with them. &nl;
3007 Default: FALSE
3008 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syn_retries</tag>
3009 Number of SYN packets the kernel will send before giving up on the new
3010 connection.
3011 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_synack_retries</tag>
3012 To open the other side of the connection, the kernel sends a SYN with a
3013 piggybacked ACK on it, to acknowledge the earlier received SYN. This is part
3014 2 of the threeway handshake. This setting determines the number of SYN+ACK
3015 packets sent before the kernel gives up on the connection.
3016 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_timestamps</tag>
3017 Timestamps are used, amongst other things, to protect against wrapping
3018 sequence numbers. A 1 gigabit link might conceivably re-encounter a previous
3019 sequence number with an out-of-line value, because it was of a previous
3020 generation. The timestamp will let it recognise this 'ancient packet'.
3021 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_recycle</tag>
3022 Enable fast recycling TIME-WAIT sockets. Default value is 1.
3023 It should not be changed without advice/request of technical experts.
3025 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_window_scaling</tag>
3026 TCP/IP normally allows windows up to 65535 bytes big. For really fast
3027 networks, this may not be enough. The window scaling options allows for
3028 almost gigabyte windows, which is good for high bandwidth*delay products.
3030 </descrip>
3031 <sect2>Per device settings
3033 DEV can either stand for a real interface, or for 'all' or 'default'.
3034 Default also changes settings for interfaces yet to be created.
3035 <descrip>
3036 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/accept_redirects</tag>
3037 If a router decides that you are using it for a wrong purpose (ie, it needs
3038 to resend your packet on the same interface), it will send us a ICMP
3039 Redirect. This is a slight security risk however, so you may want to turn it
3040 off, or use secure redirects.
3041 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/accept_source_route</tag>
3042 Not used very much anymore. You used to be able to give a packet a list of
3043 IP addresses it should visit on its way. Linux can be made to honor this IP
3044 option.
3045 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/bootp_relay</tag>
3046 FIXME: fill this in
3047 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/forwarding</tag>
3048 FIXME:
3049 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/log_martians</tag>
3050 See the section on reverse path filters.
3051 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/mc_forwarding</tag>
3052 If we do multicast forwarding on this interface
3053 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/proxy_arp</tag>
3054 If you set this to 1, all other interfaces will respond to arp queries
3055 destined for addresses on this interface. Can be very useful when building 'ip
3056 pseudo bridges'. Do take care that your netmasks are very correct before
3057 enabling this!
3058 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/rp_filter</tag>
3059 See the section on reverse path filters.
3060 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/secure_redirects</tag>
3061 FIXME: fill this in
3062 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/send_redirects</tag>
3063 If we send the above mentioned redirects.
3064 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/shared_media</tag>
3065 FIXME: fill this in
3066 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/DEV/tag</tag>
3067 FIXME: fill this in
3069 </descrip>
3071 <sect2> Neighbor policy
3073 Dev can either stand for a real interface, or for 'all' or 'default'.
3074 Default also changes settings for interfaces yet to be created.
3075 <descrip>
3076 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/anycast_delay</tag>
3077 FIXME: fill this in
3078 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/app_solicit</tag>
3079 FIXME: fill this in
3080 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/base_reachable_time</tag>
3081 FIXME: fill this in
3082 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/delay_first_probe_time</tag>
3083 FIXME: fill this in
3084 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/gc_stale_time</tag>
3085 FIXME: fill this in
3086 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/locktime</tag>
3087 FIXME: fill this in
3088 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/mcast_solicit</tag>
3089 FIXME: fill this in
3090 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/proxy_delay</tag>
3091 FIXME: fill this in
3092 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/proxy_qlen</tag>
3093 FIXME: fill this in
3094 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/retrans_time</tag>
3095 FIXME: fill this in
3096 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/ucast_solicit</tag>
3097 FIXME: fill this in
3098 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/neigh/DEV/unres_qlen</tag>
3099 FIXME: fill this in
3101 </descrip>
3103 <sect2>Routing settings
3105 <descrip>
3106 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/error_burst</tag>
3107 FIXME: fill this in
3108 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/error_cost</tag>
3109 FIXME: fill this in
3110 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/flush</tag>
3111 FIXME: fill this in
3112 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/gc_elasticity</tag>
3113 FIXME: fill this in
3114 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/gc_interval</tag>
3115 FIXME: fill this in
3116 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/gc_min_interval</tag>
3117 FIXME: fill this in
3118 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/gc_thresh</tag>
3119 FIXME: fill this in
3120 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/gc_timeout</tag>
3121 FIXME: fill this in
3122 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/max_delay</tag>
3123 FIXME: fill this in
3124 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/max_size</tag>
3125 FIXME: fill this in
3126 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/min_adv_mss</tag>
3127 FIXME: fill this in
3128 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/min_delay</tag>
3129 FIXME: fill this in
3130 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/min_pmtu</tag>
3131 FIXME: fill this in
3132 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/mtu_expires</tag>
3133 FIXME: fill this in
3134 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/redirect_load</tag>
3135 FIXME: fill this in
3136 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/redirect_number</tag>
3137 FIXME: fill this in
3138 <tag>/proc/sys/net/ipv4/route/redirect_silence</tag>
3139 FIXME: fill this in
3140 </descrip>
3143 <sect>Advanced &amp; less common queueing disciplines
3145 Besides the queues mentioned earlier, the kernel contains some other more
3146 specialized queues which are mentioned here, should you find that you have
3147 needs not addressed by the other queues.
3148 <sect1>bfifo/pfifo
3150 These classless queues are even simpler than pfifo_fast in that they lack
3151 the internal bands - all traffic is really equal. They have one important
3152 benefit though, they have some statistics. So even if you don't need shaping
3153 or prioritizing, you can use this qdisc to determine the backlog on your
3154 interface.
3156 pfifo has a length measured in packets, bfifo in bytes.
3157 <sect2>Parameters &amp; usage
3159 <descrip>
3160 <tag>limit</tag>
3161 Specifies the length of the queue. Measured in bytes for bfifo, in packets
3162 for pfifo. Defaults to the interface txqueuelen (see pfifo_fast chapter)
3163 packets long or txqueuelen*mtu bytes for bfifo.
3164 </descrip>
3165 <sect1> Clark-Shenker-Zhang algorithm (CSZ)
3167 This is so theoretical that not even Alexey (the main CBQ author) claims to
3168 understand it. From his source:
3170 "David D. Clark, Scott Shenker and Lixia Zhang
3171 Supporting Real-Time Applications in an Integrated Services Packet
3172 Network: Architecture and Mechanism.
3174 As I understand it, the main idea is to create WFQ flows for each guaranteed
3175 service and to allocate the rest of bandwith to dummy flow-0. Flow-0
3176 comprises the predictive services and the best effort traffic; it is handled
3177 by a priority scheduler with the highest priority band allocated for
3178 predictive services, and the rest --- to the best effort packets.
3180 Note that in CSZ flows are NOT limited to their bandwidth. It is supposed
3181 that the flow passed admission control at the edge of the QoS network and it
3182 doesn't need further shaping. Any attempt to improve the flow or to shape it
3183 to a token bucket at intermediate hops will introduce undesired delays and
3184 raise jitter.
3186 At the moment CSZ is the only scheduler that provides true guaranteed
3187 service. Another schemes (including CBQ) do not provide guaranteed delay and
3188 randomize jitter."
3190 Does not currently seem like a good canidate to use, unless you've read and
3191 understand the article mentioned.
3192 <sect1>DSMARK
3194 Esteve Camps Chust &lt;marvin@grn.es&gt;&nl;
3195 This text is an extract from my thesis on "QoS Support in Linux", September 2000.&nl;
3197 Source documents:&nl;
3198 <itemize>
3199 <item><url url="http://ica1www.epfl.ch/~almesber" name="Draft-almesberger-wajhak-diffserv-linux-01.txt">.
3200 <item>Examples in iproute2 distribution.
3201 <item><url url="http://www.qosforum.com/white-papers/qosprot_v3.pdf" name="White Paper-QoS protocols and architectures"> and
3202 <url url="http://www.qosforum.com/docs/faq" name="IP QoS Frequently Asked Questions"> both by <em>Quality of Service Forum</em>.
3203 </itemize>
3205 This chapter was written by Esteve Camps &lt;esteve@hades.udg.es&gt;.
3206 <sect2>Introduction
3209 First of all, first of all, it would be a great idea for you to read RFCs
3210 written about this (RFC2474, RFC2475, RFC2597 and RFC2598) at <url
3211 url="http://www.ietf.org/html.charters/diffserv-charter.html" name="IETF
3212 DiffServ working Group web site"> and <url
3213 url="http://ica1www.epfl.ch/~almesber" name="Werner Almesberger web site">
3214 (he wrote the code to support Differentiated Services on Linux).
3216 <sect2>What is Dsmark related to?
3218 Dsmark is a queueing discipline that offers the capabilities needed in
3219 Differentiated Services (also called DiffServ or, simply, DS). DiffServ is
3220 one of two actual QoS architectures (the other one is called Integrated
3221 Services) that is based on a value carried by packets in the DS field of the
3222 IP header.
3225 One of the first solutions in IP designed to offer some QoS level was
3226 the Type of Service field (TOS byte) in IP header. By changing that value,
3227 we could choose a high/low level of throughput, delay or reliability.
3228 But this didn't provide sufficient flexibility to the needs of new
3229 services (such as real-time applications, interactive applications and
3230 others). After this, new architectures appeared. One of these was DiffServ
3231 which kept TOS bits and renamed DS field.
3232 <sect2>Differentiated Services guidelines
3234 Differentiated Services is group-oriented. I mean, we don't know nothing
3235 about flows (this will be the Integrated Services purpose); we know about
3236 flow aggregations and we will apply different behaviours depending on which
3237 aggregation a packet belongs to.
3240 When a packet arrives to an edge node (entry node to a DiffServ domain)
3241 entering to a DiffServ Domain we'll have to policy, shape and/or mark those
3242 packets (marking refers to assigning a value to the DS field. It's just like the
3243 cows :-) ). This will be the mark/value that the internal/core nodes on our
3244 DiffServ Domain will look at to determine which behaviour or QoS level
3245 apply.
3248 As you can deduce, Differentiated Services involves a domain on which
3249 all DS rules will have to be applied. In fact you can think &dquot;I
3250 will classify all the packets entering my domain. Once they enter my
3251 domain they will be subjected to the rules that my classification dictates
3252 and every traversed node will apply that QoS level&dquot;.
3254 In fact, you can apply your own policies into your local domains, but some
3255 <em>Service Level Agreements</em> should be considered when connecting to
3256 other DS domains.
3259 At this point, you maybe have a lot of questions. DiffServ is more than I've
3260 explained. In fact, you can understand that I can not resume more than 3
3261 RFC's in just 50 lines :-).
3263 <sect2>Working with Dsmark
3266 As the DiffServ bibliography specifies, we differentiate boundary nodes and
3267 interior nodes. These are two important points in the traffic path. Both
3268 types perform a classification when the packets arrive. Its result may be
3269 used in different places along the DS process before the packet is released
3270 to the network. It's just because of this that the diffserv code supplies an
3271 structure called sk_buff, including a new field called skb-&gt;tc_index
3272 where we'll store the result of initial classification that may be used in
3273 several points in DS treatment.
3276 The skb-&gt;tc_index value will be initially set by the DSMARK qdisc,
3277 retrieving it from the DS field in IP header of every received packet.
3278 Besides, cls_tcindex classifier will read all or part of skb-&gt;tcindex
3279 value and use it to select classes.
3282 But, first of all, take a look at DSMARK qdisc command and its parameters:
3283 <tscreen><verb>
3284 ... dsmark indices INDICES [ default_index DEFAULT_INDEX ] [ set_tc_index ]
3285 </verb></tscreen>
3286 What do these parameters mean?
3287 <itemize>
3288 <item><bf>indices</bf>: size of table of (mask,value) pairs. Maximum value is 2^n, where n&gt=0.
3289 <item><bf>Default_index</bf>: the default table entry index if classifier finds no match.
3290 <item><bf>Set_tc_index</bf>: instructs dsmark discipline to retrieve the DS field and store it onto skb-&gt;tc_index.
3291 </itemize>
3292 Let's see the DSMARK process.
3294 <sect2>How SCH_DSMARK works.
3296 This qdisc will apply the next steps:
3297 <itemize>
3298 <item>If we have declared set_tc_index option in qdisc command, DS field is retrieved and stored onto
3299 skb-&gt;tc_index variable.
3300 <item>Classifier is invoked. The classifier will be executed and it will return a class ID that will be stored in
3301 skb-&gt;tc_index variable.If no filter matches are found, we consider the default_index option to be the
3302 classId to store. If neither set_tc_index nor default_index has been declared results may be
3303 impredictibles.
3304 <item>After been sent to internal qdisc's where you can reuse the result of the filter, the classid returned by
3305 the internal qdisc is stored into skb-&gt;tc_index. We will use this value in the future to index a mask-
3306 value table. The final result to assign to the packet will be that resulting from next operation:
3307 <tscreen><verb>
3308 New_Ds_field = ( Old_DS_field & mask ) | value
3309 </verb></tscreen>
3311 <item>Thus, new value will result from "anding" ds_field and mask values and next, this result "ORed" with
3312 value parameter. See next diagram to understand all this process:
3313 </itemize>
3314 <tscreen>
3315 <verb>
3316 skb-&gt;ihp-&gt;tos
3317 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - &gt;
3318 | | ^
3319 | -- If you declare set_tc_index, we set DS | | &lt;-----May change
3320 | value into skb-&gt;tc_index variable | |O DS field
3321 | A| |R
3322 +-|-+ +------+ +---+-+ Internal +-+ +---N|-----|----+
3323 | | | | tc |---&gt;| | |--&gt; . . . --&gt;| | | D| | |
3324 | | |-----&gt;|index |---&gt;| | | Qdisc | |----&gt;| v | |
3325 | | | |filter|---&gt;| | | +---------------+ | ----&gt;(mask,value) |
3326 --&gt;| O | +------+ +-|-+--------------^----+ / | (. , .) |
3327 | | | ^ | | | | (. , .) |
3328 | | +----------|---------|----------------|-------|--+ (. , .) |
3329 | | sch_dsmark | | | | |
3330 +-|------------|---------|----------------|-------|------------------+
3331 | | | &lt;- tc_index -&gt; | |
3332 | |(read) | may change | | &lt;--------------Index to the
3333 | | | | | (mask,value)
3334 v | v v | pairs table
3335 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -&gt;
3336 skb-&gt;tc_index
3337 </verb>
3338 </tscreen>
3340 How to do marking? Just change the mask and value of the class you want to remark. See next line of code:
3341 <tscreen>
3342 tc class change dev eth0 classid 1:1 dsmark mask 0x3 value 0xb8
3343 </tscreen>
3344 This changes the (mask,value) pair in hash table, to remark packets belonging to class 1:1.You have to "change" this values
3345 because of default values that (mask,value) gets initially (see table below).
3347 Now, we'll explain how TC_INDEX filter works and how fits into this. Besides, TCINDEX filter can be
3348 used in other configurations rather than those including DS services.
3351 <sect2>TC_INDEX Filter
3353 This is the basic command to declare a TC_INDEX filter:
3354 <tscreen>
3355 <verb>
3356 ... tcindex [ hash SIZE ] [ mask MASK ] [ shift SHIFT ]
3357 [ pass_on | fall_through ]
3358 [ classid CLASSID ] [ police POLICE_SPEC ]
3359 </verb>
3360 </tscreen>
3361 Next, we show the example used to explain TC_INDEX operation mode. Pay attention to bolded words:
3362 &nl;&nl;
3363 tc qdisc add dev eth0 handle 1:0 root dsmark indices 64 <bf>set_tc_index</bf>&nl;
3364 tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 1 tcindex <bf>mask 0xfc shift 2</bf>&nl;
3365 tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 1:0 handle 2:0 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit cell 8 avpkt 1000 mpu 64&nl;
3366 # EF traffic class&nl;
3367 tc class add dev eth0 parent 2:0 classid 2:1 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit rate 1500Kbit avpkt 1000 prio 1 bounded isolated allot 1514 weight 1 maxburst 10&nl;
3368 # Packet fifo qdisc for EF traffic&nl;
3369 tc qdisc add dev eth0 parent 2:1 pfifo limit 5&nl;
3370 tc filter add dev eth0 parent 2:0 protocol ip prio 1 <bf>handle 0x2e</bf> tcindex <bf>classid 2:1 pass_on</bf>&nl;
3371 &nl;&nl;
3372 (This code is not complete. It's just an extract from EFCBQ example included in iproute2 distribution).
3374 First of all, suppose we receive a packet marked as EF . If you read RFC2598, you'll see that DSCP
3375 recommended value for EF traffic is 101110. This means that DS field will be 10111000 (remember that
3376 less signifiant bits in TOS byte are not used in DS) or 0xb8 in hexadecimal codification.
3378 <tscreen>
3379 <verb>
3380 TC INDEX
3381 FILTER
3382 +---+ +-------+ +---+-+ +------+ +-+ +-------+
3383 | | | | | | | |FILTER| +-+ +-+ | | | |
3384 | |-----&gt;| MASK | -&gt; | | | -&gt; |HANDLE|-&gt;| | | | -&gt; | | -&gt; | |
3385 | | . | =0xfc | | | | |0x2E | | +----+ | | | | |
3386 | | . | | | | | +------+ +--------+ | | | |
3387 | | . | | | | | | | | |
3388 --&gt;| | . | SHIFT | | | | | | | |--&gt;
3389 | | . | =2 | | | +----------------------------+ | | |
3390 | | | | | | CBQ 2:0 | | |
3391 | | +-------+ +---+--------------------------------+ | |
3392 | | | |
3393 | +-------------------------------------------------------------+ |
3394 | DSMARK 1:0 |
3395 +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
3397 </verb>
3398 </tscreen>
3400 The packet arrives, then, set with 0xb8 value at DS field. As we explained before, dsmark qdisc identified
3401 by 1:0 id in the example, retrieves DS field and store it in skb-&gt;tc_index variable.
3402 Next step in the example will correspond to the filter associated to this qdisc (second line in the example).
3403 This will perform next operations:
3404 <tscreen>
3405 <verb>
3406 Value1 = skb->tc_index & MASK
3407 Key = Value1 >> SHIFT
3408 </verb>
3409 </tscreen>
3412 In the example, MASK=0xFC i SHIFT=2.
3413 <tscreen>
3414 <verb>
3415 Value1 = 10111000 & 11111100 = 10111000
3416 Key = 10111000 >> 2 = 00101110 -> 0x2E in hexadecimal
3417 </verb>
3418 </tscreen>
3421 The returned value will correspond to a qdisc interal filter handle (in the example, identifier 2:0). If a
3422 filter with this id exists, policing and metering conditions will be verified (in case that filter includes this)
3423 and the classid will be returned (in our example, classid 2:1) and stored in skb-&gt;tc_index variable.
3426 But if any filter with that identifier is found, the result will depend on fall_through flag declaration. If so,
3427 value key is returned as classid. If not, an error is returned and process continues with the rest filters. Be
3428 careful if you use fall_through flag; this can be done if a simple relation exists between values
3429 &nl;of skb-&gt;tc_index variable and class id's.
3432 The latest parameters to comment on are hash and pass_on. The first one
3433 relates to hash table size. Pass_on will be used to indicate that if no classid
3434 equal to the result of this filter is found, try next filter.
3435 The default action is fall_through (look at next table).
3438 Finally, let's see which possible values can be set to all this TCINDEX parameters:
3439 <tscreen>
3440 <verb>
3441 TC Name Value Default
3442 -----------------------------------------------------------------
3443 Hash 1...0x10000 Implementation dependent
3444 Mask 0...0xffff 0xffff
3445 Shift 0...15 0
3446 Fall through / Pass_on Flag Fall_through
3447 Classid Major:minor None
3448 Police ..... None
3449 </verb>
3450 </tscreen>
3452 This kind of filter is very powerful. It's necessary to explore all possibilities. Besides, this filter is not only used in DiffServ configurations.
3453 You can use it as any other kind of filter.
3455 I recommend you to look at all DiffServ examples included in iproute2 distribution. I promise I will try to
3456 complement this text as soon as I can. Besides, all I have explained is the result of a lot of tests.
3457 I would thank you tell me if I'm wrong in any point.
3458 <sect1>Ingress policer qdisc
3459 <p>
3460 The Ingress qdisc comes in handy if you need to ratelimit a host without
3461 help from routers or other Linux boxes. You can police incoming bandwidth
3462 and drop packets when this bandwidth exceeds your desired rate. This can
3463 save your host from a SYN flood, for example, and also works to slow down
3464 TCP/IP, which responds to dropped packets by reducing speed.
3466 FIXME: shaping by dropping packets seems less desirable than using, for
3467 example, a token bucket filter. Not sure though, Cisco CAR works this
3468 way, and people appear to be happy with it.
3470 See the reference to <ref id="CAR" name="IOS Committed Access Rate"> at the
3471 end of this document.
3473 In short: you can use this to limit how fast your computer downloads files,
3474 thus leaving more of the available bandwidth for others.
3476 The ingress policer is not a regular qdisc, although it looks like one. It
3477 is in fact hooked to the interface via the Netfilter infrastructure.
3478 Configuration is achieved using 'tc filter police' commands.
3480 See the section on 'Protecting your host from SYN floods' for an example on
3481 how this works.
3484 <sect1>Random Early Detection (RED)
3486 This section is meant as an introduction to backbone routing, which often
3487 involves &lt;100 megabit bandwidths, which requires a different approach than
3488 your ADSL modem at home.
3490 The normal behaviour of router queues on the Internet is called tail-drop.
3491 Tail-drop works by queueing up to a certain amount, then dropping all traffic
3492 that 'spills over'. This is very unfair, and also leads to retransmit
3493 synchronisation. When retransmit synchronisation occurs, the sudden burst
3494 of drops from a router that has reached its fill will cause a delayed burst
3495 of retransmits, which will over fill the congested router again.
3497 In order to cope with transient congestion on links, backbone routers will
3498 often implement large queues. Unfortunately, while these queues are good for
3499 throughput, they can substantially increase latency and cause TCP
3500 connections to behave very bursty during congestion.
3502 These issues with tail-drop are becoming increasingly troublesome on the
3503 Internet because the use of network unfriendly applications is increasing.
3504 The Linux kernel offers us RED, short for Random Early Detect, also called
3505 Random Early Drop, as that is how it works.
3507 RED isn't a cure-all for this, applications which inappropriately fail to
3508 implement exponential backoff still get an unfair share of the bandwidth,
3509 however, with RED they do not cause as much harm to the throughput and
3510 latency of other connections.
3512 RED statistically drops packets from flows before it reaches its hard
3513 limit. This causes a congested backbone link to slow more gracefully, and
3514 prevents retransmit synchronisation. This also helps TCP find its 'fair'
3515 speed faster by allowing some packets to get dropped sooner keeping queue
3516 sizes low and latency under control. The probability of a packet being
3517 dropped from a particular connection is proportional to its bandwidth usage
3518 rather than the number of packets it transmits.
3520 RED is a good queue for backbones, where you can't afford the
3521 complexity of per-session state tracking needed by fairness queueing.
3523 In order to use RED, you must decide on three parameters: Min, Max, and
3524 burst. Min sets the minimum queue size in bytes before dropping will begin,
3525 Max is a soft maximum that the algorithm will attempt to stay under, and
3526 burst sets the maximum number of packets that can 'burst through'.
3528 You should set the min by calculating that highest acceptable base queueing
3529 latency you wish, and multiply it by your bandwidth. For instance, on my
3530 64kbit/s ISDN link, I might want a base queueing latency of 200ms so I set
3531 min to 1600 bytes. Setting min too small will degrade throughput and too
3532 large will degrade latency. Setting a small min is not a replacement for
3533 reducing the MTU on a slow link to improve interactive response.
3535 You should make max at least twice min to prevent synchronisation. On slow
3536 links with small min's it might be wise to make max perhaps four or
3537 more times large then min.
3539 Burst controls how the RED algorithm responds to bursts. Burst must be set
3540 larger then min/avpkt. Experimentally, I've found (min+min+max)/(3*avpkt) to
3541 work okay.
3543 Additionally, you need to set limit and avpkt. Limit is a safety value, after
3544 there are limit bytes in the queue, RED 'turns into' tail-drop. I typical set
3545 limit to eight times max. Avpkt should be your average packet size. 1000
3546 works okay on high speed Internet links with a 1500byte MTU.
3548 Read <url url="http://www.aciri.org/floyd/papers/red/red.html"
3549 name="the paper on RED queueing"> by Sally Floyd and Van Jacobson for technical
3550 information.
3551 <sect1>Generic Random Early Detection
3553 Not a lot is known about GRED. It looks like GRED with several internal
3554 queues, whereby the internal queue is chosen based on the Diffserv tcindex
3555 field. According to a slide found <url
3556 url="http://www.davin.ottawa.on.ca/ols/img22.htm" name="here">, it contains
3557 the capabilities of Cisco's 'Distributed Weighted RED', as well as Dave
3558 Clark's RIO.
3560 Each virtual queue can have its own Drop Parameters specified.
3562 FIXME: get Jamal or Werner to tell us more
3564 <sect1>VC/ATM emulation
3566 This is quite a major effort by Werner Almesberger to allow you to build
3567 Virtual Circuits over TCP/IP sockets. A Virtual Circuit is a concept from
3568 ATM network theory.
3570 For more information, see the <url url="http://linux-atm.sourceforge.net/"
3571 name="ATM on Linux homepage">.
3573 <sect1>Weighted Round Robin (WRR)
3575 This qdisc is not included in the standard kernels but can be downloaded from
3576 <url url="http://wipl-wrr.dkik.dk/wrr/">.
3577 Currently the qdisc is only tested with Linux 2.2 kernels but it will
3578 probably work with 2.4/2.5 kernels too.
3580 The WRR qdisc distributes bandwidth between its classes using the weighted
3581 round robin scheme. That is, like the CBQ qdisc it contains classes
3582 into which arbitrary qdiscs can be plugged. All classes which have sufficient
3583 demand will get bandwidth proportional to the weights associated with the classes.
3584 The weights can be set manually using the <tt>tc</tt> program. But they
3585 can also be made automatically decreasing for classes transferring much data.
3587 The qdisc has a built-in classifier which assigns packets coming from or
3588 sent to different machines to different classes. Either the MAC or IP and
3589 either source or destination addresses can be used. The MAC address can only
3590 be used when the Linux box is acting as an ethernet bridge, however. The
3591 classes are automatically assigned to machines based on the packets seen.
3593 The qdisc can be very useful at sites such as dorms where a lot of unrelated
3594 individuals share an Internet connection. A set of scripts setting up a
3595 relevant behavior for such a site is a central part of the WRR distribution.
3597 <sect>Cookbook
3599 This section contains 'cookbook' entries which may help you solve problems.
3600 A cookbook is no replacement for understanding however, so try and comprehend
3601 what is going on.
3602 <!--
3603 <sect1>Reserving bandwidth for your IRC server
3605 Recently the IRC networks have been plagued by distributed denial of service
3606 attacks. The aim of some of these attacks is to disrupt communication
3607 between servers which split the network. You then join the splitted part
3608 of the network. Because nobody else is there, the server assigns you
3609 operator status. You then stop the disruption, the network rejoins and
3610 voila, you can take over the channel.
3612 This silly behaviour is seriously damaging IRC, and luckily, Linux is there
3613 to protect it :-)
3615 We need to be smarter than your average scriptkid, so we'll use some
3616 advanced netfilter features to help us.
3619 <sect1>Running multiple sites with different SLAs
3621 You can do this in several ways. Apache has some support for this with a
3622 module, but we'll show how Linux can do this for you, and do so for other
3623 services as well. These commands are stolen from a presentation by Jamal
3624 Hadi that's referenced below.
3626 Let's say we have two customers, with http, ftp and streaming audio, and we
3627 want to sell them a limited amount of bandwidth. We do so on the server itself.
3629 Customer A should have at most 2 megabits, customer B has paid for 5
3630 megabits. We separate our customers by creating virtual IP addresses on our
3631 server.
3633 <tscreen><verb>
3634 # ip address add 188.177.166.1 dev eth0
3635 # ip address add 188.177.166.2 dev eth0
3636 </verb></tscreen>
3638 It is up to you to attach the different servers to the right IP address. All
3639 popular daemons have support for this.
3641 We first attach a CBQ qdisc to eth0:
3642 <tscreen><verb>
3643 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 1: cbq bandwidth 10Mbit cell 8 avpkt 1000 \
3644 mpu 64
3645 </verb></tscreen>
3647 We then create classes for our customers:
3649 <tscreen><verb>
3650 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:0 classid 1:1 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit rate \
3651 2MBit avpkt 1000 prio 5 bounded isolated allot 1514 weight 1 maxburst 21
3652 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 1:0 classid 1:2 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit rate \
3653 5Mbit avpkt 1000 prio 5 bounded isolated allot 1514 weight 1 maxburst 21
3654 </verb></tscreen>
3656 Then we add filters for our two classes:
3657 <tscreen><verb>
3658 ##FIXME: Why this line, what does it do?, what is a divisor?:
3659 ##FIXME: A divisor has something to do with a hash table, and the number of
3660 ## buckets - ahu
3661 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 5 handle 1: u32 divisor 1
3662 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 match ip src 188.177.166.1
3663 flowid 1:1
3664 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 prio 5 u32 match ip src 188.177.166.2
3665 flowid 1:2
3666 </verb></tscreen>
3668 And we're done.
3670 FIXME: why no token bucket filter? is there a default pfifo_fast fallback
3671 somewhere?
3673 <sect1>Protecting your host from SYN floods
3674 <p>From Alexey's iproute documentation, adapted to netfilter and with more
3675 plausible paths. If you use this, take care to adjust the numbers to
3676 reasonable values for your system.
3678 If you want to protect an entire network, skip this script, which is best
3679 suited for a single host.
3681 It appears that you need the very latest version of the iproute2 tools to
3682 get this to work with 2.4.0.
3684 <tscreen><verb>
3685 #! /bin/sh -x
3687 # sample script on using the ingress capabilities
3688 # this script shows how one can rate limit incoming SYNs
3689 # Useful for TCP-SYN attack protection. You can use
3690 # IPchains to have more powerful additions to the SYN (eg
3691 # in addition the subnet)
3693 #path to various utilities;
3694 #change to reflect yours.
3696 TC=/sbin/tc
3697 IP=/sbin/ip
3698 IPTABLES=/sbin/iptables
3699 INDEV=eth2
3701 # tag all incoming SYN packets through $INDEV as mark value 1
3702 ############################################################
3703 $iptables -A PREROUTING -i $INDEV -t mangle -p tcp --syn \
3704 -j MARK --set-mark 1
3705 ############################################################
3707 # install the ingress qdisc on the ingress interface
3708 ############################################################
3709 $TC qdisc add dev $INDEV handle ffff: ingress
3710 ############################################################
3714 # SYN packets are 40 bytes (320 bits) so three SYNs equals
3715 # 960 bits (approximately 1kbit); so we rate limit below
3716 # the incoming SYNs to 3/sec (not very useful really; but
3717 #serves to show the point - JHS
3718 ############################################################
3719 $TC filter add dev $INDEV parent ffff: protocol ip prio 50 handle 1 fw \
3720 police rate 1kbit burst 40 mtu 9k drop flowid :1
3721 ############################################################
3725 echo "---- qdisc parameters Ingress ----------"
3726 $TC qdisc ls dev $INDEV
3727 echo "---- Class parameters Ingress ----------"
3728 $TC class ls dev $INDEV
3729 echo "---- filter parameters Ingress ----------"
3730 $TC filter ls dev $INDEV parent ffff:
3732 #deleting the ingress qdisc
3733 #$TC qdisc del $INDEV ingress
3734 </verb></tscreen>
3735 <sect1>Ratelimit ICMP to prevent dDoS
3737 Recently, distributed denial of service attacks have become a major nuisance
3738 on the Internet. By properly filtering and ratelimiting your network, you can
3739 both prevent becoming a casualty or the cause of these attacks.
3741 You should filter your networks so that you do not allow non-local IP source
3742 addressed packets to leave your network. This stops people from anonymously
3743 sending junk to the Internet.
3745 <!-- FIXME: netfilter one liner. Is there a netfilter one-liner? Martijn -->
3748 Rate limiting goes much as shown earlier. To refresh your memory, our
3749 ASCIIgram again:
3751 <tscreen><verb>
3752 [The Internet] ---<E3, T3, whatever>--- [Linux router] --- [Office+ISP]
3753 eth1 eth0
3754 </verb></tscreen>
3756 We first set up the prerequisite parts:
3758 <tscreen><verb>
3759 # tc qdisc add dev eth0 root handle 10: cbq bandwidth 10Mbit avpkt 1000
3760 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 10:0 classid 10:1 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit rate \
3761 10Mbit allot 1514 prio 5 maxburst 20 avpkt 1000
3762 </verb></tscreen>
3764 If you have 100Mbit, or more, interfaces, adjust these numbers. Now you need
3765 to determine how much ICMP traffic you want to allow. You can perform
3766 measurements with tcpdump, by having it write to a file for a while, and
3767 seeing how much ICMP passes your network. Do not forget to raise the
3768 snapshot length!
3770 If measurement is impractical, you might want to choose 5% of your available
3771 bandwidth. Let's set up our class:
3772 <tscreen><verb>
3773 # tc class add dev eth0 parent 10:1 classid 10:100 cbq bandwidth 10Mbit rate \
3774 100Kbit allot 1514 weight 800Kbit prio 5 maxburst 20 avpkt 250 \
3775 bounded
3776 </verb></tscreen>
3778 This limits at 100Kbit. Now we need a filter to assign ICMP traffic to this
3779 class:
3780 <tscreen><verb>
3781 # tc filter add dev eth0 parent 10:0 protocol ip prio 100 u32 match ip
3782 protocol 1 0xFF flowid 10:100
3784 </verb></tscreen>
3786 <sect1>Prioritizing interactive traffic
3788 If lots of data is coming down your link, or going up for that matter, and
3789 you are trying to do some maintenance via telnet or ssh, this may not go too
3790 well. Other packets are blocking your keystrokes. Wouldn't it be great if
3791 there were a way for your interactive packets to sneak past the bulk
3792 traffic? Linux can do this for you!
3794 As before, we need to handle traffic going both ways. Evidently, this works
3795 best if there are Linux boxes on both ends of your link, although other
3796 UNIX's are able to do this. Consult your local Solaris/BSD guru for this.
3798 The standard pfifo_fast scheduler has 3 different 'bands'. Traffic in band 0
3799 is transmitted first, after which traffic in band 1 and 2 gets considered.
3800 It is vital that our interactive traffic be in band 0!
3802 We blatantly adapt from the (soon to be obsolete) ipchains HOWTO:
3804 There are four seldom-used bits in the IP header, called the Type of Service
3805 (TOS) bits. They effect the way packets are treated; the four bits are
3806 "Minimum Delay", "Maximum Throughput", "Maximum Reliability" and "Minimum
3807 Cost". Only one of these bits is allowed to be set. Rob van Nieuwkerk, the
3808 author of the ipchains TOS-mangling code, puts it as follows:
3810 <tscreen>
3811 Especially the "Minimum Delay" is important for me. I switch it on for
3812 "interactive" packets in my upstream (Linux) router. I'm
3813 behind a 33k6 modem link. Linux prioritizes packets in 3 queues. This
3814 way I get acceptable interactive performance while doing bulk
3815 downloads at the same time.
3816 </tscreen>
3818 The most common use is to set telnet & ftp control connections to "Minimum
3819 Delay" and FTP data to "Maximum Throughput". This would be
3820 done as follows, on your upstream router:
3822 <tscreen><verb>
3823 # iptables -A PREROUTING -t mangle -p tcp --sport telnet \
3824 -j TOS --set-tos Minimize-Delay
3825 # iptables -A PREROUTING -t mangle -p tcp --sport ftp \
3826 -j TOS --set-tos Minimize-Delay
3827 # iptables -A PREROUTING -t mangle -p tcp --sport ftp-data \
3828 -j TOS --set-tos Maximize-Throughput
3829 </verb></tscreen>
3831 Now, this only works for data going from your telnet foreign host to your
3832 local computer. The other way around appears to be done for you, ie, telnet,
3833 ssh & friends all set the TOS field on outgoing packets automatically.
3835 Should you have an application that does not do this, you can always do it
3836 with netfilter. On your local box:
3838 <tscreen><verb>
3839 # iptables -A OUTPUT -t mangle -p tcp --dport telnet \
3840 -j TOS --set-tos Minimize-Delay
3841 # iptables -A OUTPUT -t mangle -p tcp --dport ftp \
3842 -j TOS --set-tos Minimize-Delay
3843 # iptables -A OUTPUT -t mangle -p tcp --dport ftp-data \
3844 -j TOS --set-tos Maximize-Throughput
3845 </verb></tscreen>
3847 <sect1>Transparent web-caching using netfilter, iproute2, ipchains and squid
3849 <label id="SQUID">
3850 This section was sent in by reader Ram Narula from Internet for Education
3851 (Thailand).
3853 The regular technique in accomplishing this in Linux
3854 is probably with use of ipchains AFTER making sure
3855 that the "outgoing" port 80(web) traffic gets routed through
3856 the server running squid.
3858 There are 3 common methods to make sure "outgoing"
3859 port 80 traffic gets routed to the server running squid
3860 and 4th one is being introduced here.
3862 <descrip>
3863 <tag>Making the gateway router do it.</tag>
3864 If you can tell your gateway router to
3865 match packets that has outgoing destination port
3866 of 80 to be sent to the IP address of squid server.
3870 This would put additional load on the router and
3871 some commercial routers might not even support this.
3872 <tag>Using a Layer 4 switch.</tag>
3873 Layer 4 switches can handle this without any problem.
3877 The cost for this equipment is usually very high. Typical
3878 layer 4 switch would normally cost more than
3879 a typical router+good linux server.
3880 <tag>Using cache server as network's gateway.</tag>
3881 You can force ALL traffic through cache server.
3885 This is quite risky because Squid does
3886 utilize lots of cpu power which might
3887 result in slower over-all network performance
3888 or the server itself might crash and no one on the
3889 network will be able to access the Internet if
3890 that occurs.
3893 <tag>Linux+NetFilter router.</tag>
3894 By using NetFilter another technique can be implemented
3895 which is using NetFilter for "mark"ing the packets
3896 with destination port 80 and using iproute2 to
3897 route the "mark"ed packets to the Squid server.
3898 </descrip>
3899 <tscreen><verb>
3900 |----------------|
3901 | Implementation |
3902 |----------------|
3904 Addresses used
3905 10.0.0.1 naret (NetFilter server)
3906 10.0.0.2 silom (Squid server)
3907 10.0.0.3 donmuang (Router connected to the Internet)
3908 10.0.0.4 kaosarn (other server on network)
3909 10.0.0.5 RAS
3910 10.0.0.0/24 main network
3911 10.0.0.0/19 total network
3913 |---------------|
3914 |Network diagram|
3915 |---------------|
3917 Internet
3919 donmuang
3921 ------------hub/switch----------
3922 | | | |
3923 naret silom kaosarn RAS etc.
3924 </verb></tscreen>
3925 First, make all traffic pass through naret by making
3926 sure it is the default gateway except for silom.
3927 Silom's default gateway has to be donmuang (10.0.0.3) or
3928 this would create web traffic loop.
3932 (all servers on my network had 10.0.0.1 as the default gateway
3933 which was the former IP address of donmuang router so what I did
3934 was changed the IP address of donmuang to 10.0.0.3 and gave
3935 naret ip address of 10.0.0.1)
3937 <tscreen><verb>
3938 Silom
3939 -----
3940 -setup squid and ipchains
3941 </verb></tscreen>
3944 Setup Squid server on silom, make sure it does support
3945 transparent caching/proxying, the default port is usually
3946 3128, so all traffic for port 80 has to be redirected to port
3947 3128 locally. This can be done by using ipchains with the following:
3949 <tscreen><verb>
3950 silom# ipchains -N allow1
3951 silom# ipchains -A allow1 -p TCP -s 10.0.0.0/19 -d 0/0 80 -j REDIRECT 3128
3952 silom# ipchains -I input -j allow1
3953 </verb></tscreen>
3955 <p>
3957 Or, in netfilter lingo:
3958 <tscreen><verb>
3959 silom# iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 3128
3960 </verb></tscreen>
3962 (note: you might have other entries as well)
3965 For more information on setting Squid server please refer
3966 to Squid faq page on <url
3967 url="http://squid.nlanr.net" name="http://squid.nlanr.net">).
3971 Make sure ip forwarding is enabled on this server and the default
3972 gateway for this server is donmuang router (NOT naret).
3976 <tscreen><verb>
3977 Naret
3978 -----
3979 -setup iptables and iproute2
3980 -disable icmp REDIRECT messages (if needed)
3981 </verb></tscreen>
3983 <enum>
3984 <item>"Mark" packets of destination port 80 with value 2
3985 <tscreen><verb>
3986 naret# iptables -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -t mangle -p tcp --dport 80 \
3987 -j MARK --set-mark 2
3988 </verb></tscreen>
3989 </item>
3990 <item>Setup iproute2 so it will route packets with "mark" 2 to silom
3991 <tscreen><verb>
3992 naret# echo 202 www.out >> /etc/iproute2/rt_tables
3993 naret# ip rule add fwmark 2 table www.out
3994 naret# ip route add default via 10.0.0.2 dev eth0 table www.out
3995 naret# ip route flush cache
3997 </verb></tscreen>
3999 If donmuang and naret is on the same subnet then
4000 naret should not send out icmp REDIRECT messages.
4001 In this case it is, so icmp REDIRECTs has to be
4002 disabled by:
4003 <tscreen><verb>
4004 naret# echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/send_redirects
4005 naret# echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/default/send_redirects
4006 naret# echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth0/send_redirects
4008 </verb></tscreen>
4009 </item>
4010 </enum>
4012 The setup is complete, check the configuration
4014 <tscreen><verb>
4015 On naret:
4017 naret# iptables -t mangle -L
4018 Chain PREROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
4019 target prot opt source destination
4020 MARK tcp -- anywhere anywhere tcp dpt:www MARK set 0x2
4022 Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT)
4023 target prot opt source destination
4025 naret# ip rule ls
4026 0: from all lookup local
4027 32765: from all fwmark 2 lookup www.out
4028 32766: from all lookup main
4029 32767: from all lookup default
4031 naret# ip route list table www.out
4032 default via 203.114.224.8 dev eth0
4034 naret# ip route
4035 10.0.0.1 dev eth0 scope link
4036 10.0.0.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 10.0.0.1
4037 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo scope link
4038 default via 10.0.0.3 dev eth0
4040 (make sure silom belongs to one of the above lines, in this case
4041 it's the line with 10.0.0.0/24)
4043 |------|
4044 |-DONE-|
4045 |------|
4048 </verb></tscreen>
4049 <sect2>Traffic flow diagram after implementation
4051 <tscreen><verb>
4053 |-----------------------------------------|
4054 |Traffic flow diagram after implementation|
4055 |-----------------------------------------|
4057 INTERNET
4061 -----------------donmuang router---------------------
4062 /\ /\ ||
4063 || || ||
4064 || \/ ||
4065 naret silom ||
4066 *destination port 80 traffic=========>(cache) ||
4067 /\ || ||
4068 || \/ \/
4069 \\===================================kaosarn, RAS, etc.
4071 </verb></tscreen>
4073 Note that the network is asymmetric as there is one extra hop on
4074 general outgoing path.
4076 <tscreen><verb>
4077 Here is run down for packet traversing the network from kaosarn
4078 to and from the Internet.
4080 For web/http traffic:
4081 kaosarn http request->naret->silom->donmuang->internet
4082 http replies from Internet->donmuang->silom->kaosarn
4084 For non-web/http requests(eg. telnet):
4085 kaosarn outgoing data->naret->donmuang->internet
4086 incoming data from Internet->donmuang->kaosarn
4087 </verb></tscreen>
4089 <sect1>Circumventing Path MTU Discovery issues with per route MTU settings
4091 For sending bulk data, the Internet generally works better when using larger
4092 packets. Each packet implies a routing decision, when sending a 1 megabyte
4093 file, this can either mean around 700 packets when using packets that are as
4094 large as possible, or 4000 if using the smallest default.
4096 However, not all parts of the Internet support full 1460 bytes of payload
4097 per packet. It is therefore necessary to try and find the largest packet
4098 that will 'fit', in order to optimize a connection.
4100 This process is called 'Path MTU Discovery', where MTU stands for 'Maximum
4101 Transfer Unit.'
4103 When a router encounters a packet that's too big too send in one piece, AND
4104 it has been flagged with the "Don't Fragment" bit, it returns an ICMP
4105 message stating that it was forced to drop a packet because of this. The
4106 sending host acts on this hint by sending smaller packets, and by iterating
4107 it can find the optimum packet size for a connection over a certain path.
4109 This used to work well until the Internet was discovered by hooligans who do
4110 their best to disrupt communications. This in turn lead administrators to
4111 either block or shape ICMP traffic in a misguided attempt to improve
4112 security or robustness of their Internet service.
4114 What has happened now is that Path MTU Discovery is working less and less
4115 well and fails for certain routes, which leads to strange TCP/IP sessions
4116 which die after a while.
4118 Although I have no proof for this, two sites who I used to have this problem
4119 with both run Alteon Acedirectors before the affected systems - perhaps
4120 somebody more knowledgeable can provide clues as to why this happens.
4122 <sect2>Solution
4124 When you encounter sites that suffer from this problem, you can disable Path
4125 MTU discovery by setting it manually. Koos van den Hout, slightly edited,
4126 writes:
4128 <tscreen>
4130 The following problem: I set the mtu/mru of my leased line running ppp to
4131 296 because it's only 33k6 and I cannot influence the queueing on the
4132 other side. At 296, the response to a keypress is within a reasonable
4133 timeframe.
4135 And, on my side I have a masqrouter running (of course) Linux.
4137 Recently I split 'server' and 'router' so most applications are run on a
4138 different machine than the routing happens on.
4140 I then had trouble logging into irc. Big panic! Some digging did find
4141 out that I got connected to irc, even showed up as 'connected' on irc
4142 but I did not receive the motd from irc. I checked what could be wrong
4143 and noted that I already had some previous trouble reaching certain
4144 websites related to the MTU, since I had no trouble reaching them when
4145 the MTU was 1500, the problem just showed when the MTU was set to 296.
4146 Since irc servers block about every kind of traffic not needed for their
4147 immediate operation, they also block icmp.
4149 I managed to convince the operators of a webserver that this was the cause
4150 of a problem, but the irc server operators were not going to fix this.
4152 So, I had to make sure outgoing masqueraded traffic started with the lower
4153 mtu of the outside link. But I want local ethernet traffic to have the
4154 normal mtu (for things like nfs traffic).
4156 Solution:
4157 <tscreen><verb>
4158 ip route add default via 10.0.0.1 mtu 296
4159 </verb></tscreen>
4161 (10.0.0.1 being the default gateway, the inside address of the
4162 masquerading router)
4163 </tscreen>
4165 In general, it is possible to override PMTU Discovery by setting specific
4166 routes. For example, if only a certain subnet is giving problems, this
4167 should help:
4169 <tscreen><verb>
4170 ip route add 195.96.96.0/24 via 10.0.0.1 mtu 1000
4171 </verb></tscreen>
4172 <sect1>Circumventing Path MTU Discovery issues with MSS Clamping (for ADSL,
4173 cable, PPPoE &amp; PPtP users)
4175 As explained above, Path MTU Discovery doesn't work as well as it should
4176 anymore. If you know for a fact that a hop somewhere in your network has a
4177 limited (&lt;1500) MTU, you cannot rely on PMTU Discovery finding this out.
4179 Besides MTU, there is yet another way to set the maximum packet size, the so
4180 called Maximum Segment Size. This is a field in the TCP Options part of a
4181 SYN packet.
4183 Recent Linux kernels, and a few pppoe drivers (notably, the excellent
4184 Roaring Penguin one), feature the possibility to 'clamp the MSS'.
4186 The good thing about this is that by setting the MSS value, you are telling
4187 the remote side unequivocally 'do not ever try to send me packets bigger
4188 than this value'. No ICMP traffic is needed to get this to work.
4190 The bad thing is that it's an obvious hack - it breaks 'end to end' by
4191 modifying packets. Having said that, we use this trick in many places and it
4192 works like a charm.
4194 In order for this to work you need at least iptables-1.2.1a and Linux 2.4.3
4195 or higher. The basic commandline is:
4196 <tscreen><verb>
4197 # iptables -A FORWARD -p tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN -j TCPMSS --clamp-mss-to-pmtu
4198 </verb></tscreen>
4200 This calculates the proper MSS for your link. If you are feeling brave, or
4201 think that you know best, you can also do something like this:
4203 <tscreen><verb>
4204 # iptables -A FORWARD -p tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN -j TCPMSS --set-mss 128
4205 </verb></tscreen>
4207 This sets the MSS of passing SYN packets to 128. Use this if you have VoIP
4208 with tiny packets, and huge http packets which are causing chopping in your
4209 voice calls.
4210 <sect>Building bridges, and pseudo-bridges with Proxy ARP
4212 Bridges are devices which can be installed in a network without any
4213 reconfiguration. A network switch is basically a many-port bridge. A bridge
4214 is often a 2-port switch. Linux does however support multiple interfaces in
4215 a bridge, making it a true switch.
4217 Bridges are often deployed when confronted with a broken network that needs
4218 to be fixed without any alterations. Because the bridge is a layer-2 device,
4219 one layer below IP, routers and servers are not aware of its existence.
4220 This means that you can transparently block or modify certain packets, or do
4221 shaping.
4223 Another good thing is that a bridge can often be replaced by a cross cable
4224 or a hub, should it break down.
4226 The bad news is that a bridge can cause great confusion unless it is very
4227 well documented. It does not appear in traceroutes, but somehow packets
4228 disappear or get changed from point A to point B. You should also wonder if
4229 an organization that 'does not want to change anything' is doing the right
4230 thing.
4232 The Linux 2.4/2.5 bridge is documented on
4234 <url url=" http://bridge.sourceforge.net/" name="this page">.
4236 <sect1>State of bridging and iptables
4238 As of Linux 2.4.14, bridging and iptables do not 'see' each other without
4239 help. If you bridge packets from eth0 to eth1, they do not 'pass' by
4240 iptables. This means that you cannot do filtering, or NAT or mangling or
4241 whatever.
4243 There are several projects going on to fix this, the truly right one is by
4244 the author of the Linux 2.4 bridging code, Lennert Buytenhek. He recently
4245 informed us that as of bridge-nf 0.0.2 (see the url above), the code is
4246 stable and usable in production environments. He is now asking the kernel
4247 people if and how the patch can be merged, stay tuned!
4249 <sect1>Bridging and shaping
4251 This does work as advertised. Be sure to figure out which side each
4252 interface is on, otherwise you might be shaping outbound traffic in your
4253 internal interface, which won't work. Use tcpdump if needed.
4255 <sect1>Pseudo-bridges with Proxy-ARP
4257 If you just want to implement a Pseudo-bridge, skip down a few sections
4258 to 'Implementing it', but it is wise to read a bit about how it works in
4259 practice.
4261 A Pseudo-bridge works a bit differently. By default, a bridge passes packets
4262 unaltered from one interface to the other. It only looks at the hardware
4263 address of packets to determine what goes where. This in turn means that you
4264 can bridge traffic that Linux does not understand, as long as it has an
4265 hardware address it does.
4267 A 'Pseudo-bridge' works differently and looks more like a hidden router than
4268 a bridge, but like a bridge, it has little impact on network design.
4270 An advantage of the fact that it is not a brige lies in the fact that
4271 packets really pass through the kernel, and can be filtered, changed,
4272 redirected or rerouted.
4274 A real bridge can also be made to perform these feats, but it needs special
4275 code, like the Ethernet Frame Diverter, or the above mentioned patch.
4277 Another advantage of a pseudo-bridge is that it does not pass packets it
4278 does not understand - thus cleaning your network of a lot of cruft. In cases
4279 where you need this cruft (like SAP packets, or Netbeui), use a real bridge.
4280 <sect2>ARP &amp; Proxy-ARP
4282 When a host wants to talk to another host on the same physical network
4283 segment, it sends out an Address Resolution Protocol packet, which, somewhat
4284 simplified, reads like this 'who has 10.0.0.1, tell 10.0.0.7'. In response
4285 to this, 10.0.0.1 replies with a short 'here' packet.
4287 10.0.0.7 then sends packets to the hardware address mentioned in the 'here'
4288 packet. It caches this hardware address for a relatively long time, and
4289 after the cache expires, it reasks the question.
4291 When building a Pseudo-bridge, we instruct the bridge to reply to these ARP
4292 packets, which causes the hosts in the network to send its packets to the
4293 bridge. The brige then processes these packets, and sends them to the
4294 relevant interface.
4296 So, in short, whenever a host on one side of the bridge asks for the
4297 hardware address of a host on the other, the bridge replies with a packet
4298 that says 'hand it to me'.
4300 This way, all data traffic gets transmitted to the right place, and always
4301 passes through the bridge.
4302 <sect2>Implementing it
4304 In the bad old days, it used to be possible to instruct the Linux Kernel to
4305 perform 'proxy-ARP' for just any subnet. So, to configure a pseudo-bridge,
4306 you would have to specify both the proper routes to both sides of the bridge
4307 AND create matching proxy-ARP rules. This is bad in that it requires a lot
4308 of typing, but also because it easily allows you to make mistakes which make
4309 your bridge respond to ARP queries for networks it does not know how to
4310 route.
4312 With Linux 2.4/2.5 (and possibly 2.2), this possibility has been withdrawn and
4313 has been replaced by a flag in the /proc directory, called 'proxy_arp'. The
4314 procedure for building a pseudo-bridge is then:
4316 <enum>
4317 <item>Assign an IP address to both interfaces, the 'left' and the 'right'
4319 <item>Create routes so your machine knows which hosts reside on the left,
4320 and which on the right
4321 <item>Turn on proxy-ARP on both interfaces, echo 1 >
4322 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/ethL/proxy_arp, echo 1 >
4323 /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/ethR/proxy_arp, where L and R stand for the numbers
4324 of your interfaces on the left and on the right side
4325 </enum>
4327 Also, do not forget to turn on the ip_forwarding flag! When converting from
4328 a true bridge, you may find that this flag was turned off as it is not
4329 needed when bridging.
4331 Another thing you might note when converting is that you need to clear the
4332 arp cache of computers in the network - the arp cache might contain old
4333 pre-bridge hardware addresses which are no longer correct.
4335 On a Cisco, this is done using the command 'clear arp-cache', under
4336 Linux, use 'arp -d ip.address'. You can also wait for the cache to expire
4337 manually, which can take rather long.
4339 <sect>Dynamic routing - OSPF and BGP
4341 Once your network starts to get really big, or you start to consider 'the
4342 internet' as your network, you need tools which dynamically route your data.
4343 Sites are often connected to each other with multiple links, and more are
4344 popping up all the time.
4346 The Internet has mostly standardised on OSPF and BGP4 (rfc1771). Linux
4347 supports both, by way of <tt>gated</tt> and <tt>zebra</tt>
4349 While currently not within the scope of this document, we would like to
4350 point you to the definitive works:
4352 Overview:
4354 Cisco Systems
4355 <url
4356 url="http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/cisintwk/idg4/nd2003.htm"
4357 name="Designing large-scale IP Internetworks">
4361 For OSPF:
4363 Moy, John T.
4364 "OSPF. The anatomy of an Internet routing protocol"
4365 Addison Wesley. Reading, MA. 1998.
4367 Halabi has also written a good guide to OSPF routing design, but this
4368 appears to have been dropped from the Cisco web site.
4371 For BGP:
4373 Halabi, Bassam
4374 "Internet routing architectures"
4375 Cisco Press (New Riders Publishing). Indianapolis, IN. 1997.
4377 also
4379 Cisco Systems
4381 <url
4382 url="http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/cisintwk/ics/icsbgp4.htm"
4383 name="Using the Border Gateway Protocol for interdomain routing">
4386 Although the examples are Cisco-specific, they are remarkably similar
4387 to the configuration language in Zebra :-)
4388 <sect>Other possibilities
4390 This chapter is a list of projects having to do with advanced Linux routing
4391 &amp; traffic shaping. Some of these links may deserve chapters of their
4392 own, some are documented very well of themselves, and don't need more HOWTO.
4394 <descrip>
4395 <tag>802.1Q VLAN Implementation for Linux <url url="http://scry.wanfear.com/~greear/vlan.html"
4396 name="(site)"></tag>
4398 VLANs are a very cool way to segregate your
4399 networks in a more virtual than physical way. Good information on VLANs can
4400 be found <url
4401 url="ftp://ftp.netlab.ohio-state.edu/pub/jain/courses/cis788-97/virtual_lans/index.htm"
4402 name="here">. With this implementation, you can have your Linux box talk
4403 VLANs with machines like Cisco Catalyst, 3Com: {Corebuilder, Netbuilder II,
4404 SuperStack II switch 630}, Extreme Ntwks Summit 48, Foundry: {ServerIronXL,
4405 FastIron}.
4407 Update: has been included in the kernel as of 2.4.14 (perhaps 13).
4408 <tag>Alternate 802.1Q VLAN Implementation for Linux <url
4409 url="http://vlan.sourceforge.net "
4410 name="(site)"></tag>
4411 Alternative VLAN implementation for linux. This project was started out of
4412 disagreement with the 'established' VLAN project's architecture and coding
4413 style, resulting in a cleaner overall design.
4415 <tag>Linux Virtual Server <url url="http://www.LinuxVirtualServer.org/"
4416 name="(site)"></tag>
4418 These people are brilliant. The Linux Virtual Server is a highly scalable and
4419 highly available server built on a cluster of real servers, with the load
4420 balancer running on the Linux operating system. The architecture of the
4421 cluster is transparent to end users. End users only see a single virtual
4422 server.
4424 In short whatever you need to loadbalance, at whatever level of traffic, LVS
4425 will have a way of doing it. Some of their techniques are positively evil!
4426 For example, they let several machines have the same IP address on a
4427 segment, but turn off ARP on them. Only the LVS machine does ARP - it then
4428 decides which of the backend hosts should handle an incoming packet, and
4429 sends it directly to the right MAC address of the backend server. Outgoing
4430 traffic will flow directly to the router, and not via the LVS machine, which
4431 does therefor not need to see your 5Gbit/s of content flowing to the world,
4432 and cannot be a bottleneck.
4434 The LVS is implemented as a kernel patch in Linux 2.0 and 2.2, but as a
4435 Netfilter module in 2.4/2.5, so it does not need kernel patches! Their 2.4
4436 support is still in early development, so beat on it and give feedback or
4437 send patches.
4439 <tag>CBQ.init <url url="ftp://ftp.equinox.gu.net/pub/linux/cbq/"
4440 name="(site)"></tag>
4441 Configuring CBQ can be a bit daunting, especially if all you want to do is
4442 shape some computers behind a router. CBQ.init can help you configure Linux
4443 with a simplified syntax.
4445 For example, if you want all computers in your 192.168.1.0/24 subnet
4446 (on 10mbit eth1) to be limited to 28kbit/s download speed, put
4447 this in the CBQ.init configuration file:
4449 <tscreen><verb>
4450 DEVICE=eth1,10Mbit,1Mbit
4451 RATE=28Kbit
4452 WEIGHT=2Kbit
4453 PRIO=5
4454 RULE=192.168.1.0/24
4455 </verb></tscreen>
4457 By all means use this program if the 'how and why' don't interest you.
4458 We're using CBQ.init in production and it works very well. It can even do
4459 some more advanced things, like time dependent shaping. The documentation is
4460 embedded in the script, which explains why you can't find a README.
4462 <tag>Chronox easy shaping scripts <url url="http://www.chronox.de"
4463 name="(site)"></tag>
4465 Stephan Mueller (smueller@chronox.de) wrote two useful scripts, 'limit.conn'
4466 and 'shaper'. The first one allows you to easily throttle a single download
4467 session, like this:
4469 <tscreen><verb>
4470 # limit.conn -s SERVERIP -p SERVERPORT -l LIMIT
4471 </verb></tscreen>
4473 It works on Linux 2.2 and 2.4/2.5.
4475 The second script is more complicated, and can be used to make lots of
4476 different queues based on iptables rules, which are used to mark packets
4477 which are then shaped.
4479 <tag>Virtual Router
4480 Redundancy Protocol implementation <url url="http://w3.arobas.net/~jetienne/vrrpd/index.html"
4481 name="(site)"></tag>
4483 This is purely for redundancy. Two machines with their own IP address and
4484 MAC Address together create a third IP Address and MAC Address, which is
4485 virtual. Originally intended purely for routers, which need constant MAC
4486 addresses, it also works for other servers.
4488 The beauty of this approach is the incredibly easy configuration. No kernel
4489 compiling or patching required, all userspace.
4491 Just run this on all machines participating in a service:
4492 <tscreen><verb>
4493 # vrrpd -i eth0 -v 50 10.0.0.22
4494 </verb></tscreen>
4496 And you are in business! 10.0.0.22 is now carried by one of your servers,
4497 probably the first one to run the vrrp daemon. Now disconnect that computer
4498 from the network and very rapidly one of the other computers will assume the
4499 10.0.0.22 address, as well as the MAC address.
4501 I tried this over here and had it up and running in 1 minute. For some
4502 strange reason it decided to drop my default gateway, but the -n flag
4503 prevented that.
4505 This is a 'live' failover:
4507 <tscreen><verb>
4508 64 bytes from 10.0.0.22: icmp_seq=3 ttl=255 time=0.2 ms
4509 64 bytes from 10.0.0.22: icmp_seq=4 ttl=255 time=0.2 ms
4510 64 bytes from 10.0.0.22: icmp_seq=5 ttl=255 time=16.8 ms
4511 64 bytes from 10.0.0.22: icmp_seq=6 ttl=255 time=1.8 ms
4512 64 bytes from 10.0.0.22: icmp_seq=7 ttl=255 time=1.7 ms
4513 </verb></tscreen>
4515 Not *one* ping packet was lost! Just after packet 4, I disconnected my P200
4516 from the network, and my 486 took over, which you can see from the higher
4517 latency.
4518 </descrip>
4519 <sect>Further reading
4521 <descrip>
4522 <tag><url url="http://snafu.freedom.org/linux2.2/iproute-notes.html"
4523 name="http://snafu.freedom.org/linux2.2/iproute-notes.html"></tag>
4524 Contains lots of technical information, comments from the kernel
4525 <tag><url url="http://www.davin.ottawa.on.ca/ols/"
4526 name="http://www.davin.ottawa.on.ca/ols/"></tag>
4527 Slides by Jamal Hadi Salim, one of the authors of Linux traffic control
4528 <tag><url url="http://defiant.coinet.com/iproute2/ip-cref/"
4529 name="http://defiant.coinet.com/iproute2/ip-cref/"></tag>
4530 HTML version of Alexeys LaTeX documentation - explains part of iproute2 in
4531 great detail
4532 <tag><url url="http://www.aciri.org/floyd/cbq.html"
4533 name="http://www.aciri.org/floyd/cbq.html"></tag>
4534 Sally Floyd has a good page on CBQ, including her original papers. None of
4535 it is Linux specific, but it does a fair job discussing the theory and uses
4536 of CBQ.
4537 Very technical stuff, but good reading for those so inclined.
4539 <tag><url url="http://ceti.pl/~kravietz/cbq/NET4_tc.html"
4540 name="http://ceti.pl/~kravietz/cbq/NET4_tc.html"></tag>
4541 Yet another HOWTO, this time in Polish! You can copy/paste command lines
4542 however, they work just the same in every language. The author is
4543 cooperating with us and may soon author sections of this HOWTO.
4545 <tag><url
4546 url="http://snafu.freedom.org/linux2.2/docs/draft-almesberger-wajhak-diffserv-linux-00.txt"
4547 name="Differentiated Services on Linux"></tag>
4548 Discussion on how to use Linux in a diffserv compliant environment. Pretty
4549 far removed from your everyday routing needs, but very interesting none the
4550 less. We may include a section on this at a later date.
4552 <tag><url
4553 url="http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios111/cc111/car.htm"
4554 name="IOS Committed Access Rate"></tag>
4555 <label id="CAR">
4556 From the helpful folks of Cisco who have the laudable habit of putting
4557 their documentation online. Cisco syntax is different but the concepts are
4558 the same, except that we can do more and do it without routers the price of
4559 cars :-)
4561 <tag>Docum experimental site<url url="http://www.docum.org"
4562 name="(site)"></tag>
4563 Stef Coene is busy convincing his boss to sell Linux support, and so he is
4564 experimenting a lot, especially with managing bandwidth. His site has a lot
4565 of practical information, examples, tests and also points out some CBQ/tc bugs.
4567 <tag>TCP/IP Illustrated, volume 1, W. Richard Stevens, ISBN 0-201-63346-9</tag>
4568 Required reading if you truly want to understand TCP/IP. Entertaining as
4569 well.
4571 </descrip>
4572 <sect>Acknowledgements
4573 <p>
4574 It is our goal to list everybody who has contributed to this HOWTO, or
4575 helped us demystify how things work. While there are currently no plans
4576 for a Netfilter type scoreboard, we do like to recognise the people who are
4577 helping.
4579 <itemize>
4580 <item>Ron Brinker &lt;service%emcis.com&gt;
4581 <item>Lennert Buytenhek &lt;buytenh@gnu.org&gt;
4582 <item>Esteve Camps &lt;esteve@hades.udg.es&gt;
4583 <item>Stef Coene &lt;stef.coene@docum.org&gt;
4584 <item>Gerry Creager N5JXS &lt;gerry%cs.tamu.edu&gt;
4585 <item>Marco Davids &lt;marco@sara.nl&gt;
4586 <item>Jonathan Day &lt;jd9812@my-deja.com&gt;
4587 <item>Martin Devera aka devik &lt;devik@cdi.cz&gt;
4588 <item>Stephan "Kobold" Gehring &lt;Stephan.Gehring@bechtle.de&gt;
4589 <item>Jacek Glinkowski &lt;jglinkow%hns.com&gt;
4590 <item>Nadeem Hasan &lt;nhasan@usa.net&gt;
4591 <item>Vik Heyndrickx &lt;vik.heyndrickx@edchq.com&gt;
4592 <item>Koos van den Hout &lt;koos@kzdoos.xs4all.nl&gt;
4593 <item>Martin Josefsson &lt;gandalf%wlug.westbo.se&gt;
4594 <item>Pawel Krawczyk &lt;kravietz%alfa.ceti.pl&gt;
4595 <item>Edmund Lau &lt;edlau%ucf.ics.uci.edu&gt;
4596 <item>Philippe Latu &lt;philippe.latu%linux-france.org&gt;
4597 <item>Arthur van Leeuwen &lt;arthurvl%sci.kun.nl&gt;
4598 <item>Jason Lunz &lt;j@cc.gatech.edu&gt;
4599 <item>Stuart Lynne &lt;sl@fireplug.net&gt;
4600 <item>Alexey Mahotkin &lt;alexm@formulabez.ru&gt;
4601 <item>Andreas Mohr &lt;andi%lisas.de&gt;
4602 <item>Wim van der Most
4603 <item>Stephan Mueller &lt;smueller@chronox.de&gt;
4604 <item>Patrick Nagelschmidt &lt;dto%gmx.net&gt;
4605 <item>Ram Narula &lt;ram@princess1.net&gt;
4606 <item>Jorge Novo &lt;jnovo@educanet.net&gt;
4607 <item>Patrik &lt;ph@kurd.nu&gt;
4608 <item>Jason Pyeron &lt;jason%pyeron.com&gt;
4609 <item>Rusty Russell &lt;rusty%rustcorp.com.au&gt;
4610 <item>Jamal Hadi Salim &lt;hadi%cyberus.ca&gt;
4611 <item>David Sauer &lt;davids%penguin.cz&gt;
4612 <item>Sheharyar Suleman Shaikh &lt;sss23@drexel.edu&gt;
4613 <item>Stewart Shields &lt;MourningBlade%bigfoot.com&gt;
4614 <item>Nick Silberstein &lt;nhsilber%yahoo.com&gt;
4615 <item>Konrads Smelkov &lt;konrads@interbaltika.com&gt;
4616 <item>Andreas Steinmetz &lt;ast%domdv.de&gt;
4617 <item>Jason Tackaberry &lt;tack@linux.com&gt;
4618 <item>Charles Tassell &lt;ctassell%isn.net&gt;
4619 <item>Glen Turner &lt;glen.turner%aarnet.edu.au&gt;
4620 <item>Song Wang &lt;wsong@ece.uci.edu&gt;
4622 </itemize>
4624 </article>