Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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to avoid confusing 'v' in GENEVE interface prefix ('gnv')
with a "vXXX" part of a VRRP interface
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Interface will still be visible to the operating system.
(cherry picked from commit a14f93adfa633eabff90524e1f83d56092ec0c3c)
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Improve commend in WWANIf.remove() - remove() was implemented in commit 61e4d75a
("wwan: T3620: place interface in A/D state when removed").
(cherry picked from commit d9a19b77a56031fa3fbfa43a85c8be7ee83ae3d7)
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It seems not all systems have eth0 - get a list of all available Ethernet
interfaces on the system (without VLAN subinterfaces) and then take the
first one.
(cherry picked from commit f19c92f255011149eeb7626a2e158456abe4c9b8)
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We can not pass None as VRF name, this raises an exception.
OSError: [Errno 255] failed to run command: ip link set dev eth2 master None
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Commit 081e23996f (vyos.ifconfig: get_mac_synthetic() must generate a stable
"MAC") calculated a "stable" synthetic MAC address per the interface based on
UUID and the interface name. The problem is that this calculation is too stable
when run on multiple instances of VyOS on different hosts/hypervisors.
Having R1 and R2 setup a connection both via "tun10" interface will become the
same "synthetic" MAC address manifesting in the same link-local IPv6 address.
This e.g. breaks OSPFv3 badly as both neighbors communicate using the same
link-local address.
As workaround one can:
set interfaces tunnel tun1337 address 'fe80::1:1337/64'
set interfaces tunnel tun1337 ipv6 address no-default-link-local
This commit changes the way in how the synthetic MAC address is generated. It's
based on the first 48 bits of a sha256 sum build from a CPU ID retrieved via
DMI, the MAC address of eth0 and the interface name as used before. This should
add enough entropy to get a stable pseudo MAC address.
(cherry picked from commit 8d6861290f39298701b0a89bd358545763cee14b)
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(cherry picked from commit d1c58addd881e06b389799a9c14d8ebf5d03c567)
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Commit dd2eb5e5686655 ("dhcp: T3300: add DHCP default route distance") changed
the logic on how the DHCP process is going to be started. The systemd unit was
always "started" even if it was already running. It should rather be re-started
to track changes in e.g. the DHCP hostname setting.
(cherry picked from commit 8ba8f0e097527e3aaaf8b395bfc07cce47e2c788)
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This is a follow-up commit to 65398e5c8 ("vrrp: keepalived: T616: move
configuration to volatile /run directory") as it makes no sense to store a
static /etc/default/keepalived file marked as "Autogenerated by VyOS" that only
enabled the SNMP option to keepalived.
Better pass the --snmp switch via the systemd override file and drop all other
references/files.
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Move keepalived configuration from /etc/keepalived to /run/keepalived.
(cherry picked from commit b243795eba1b36cadd81c3149e833bdf5c5bea70)
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(cherry picked from commit 3f6ae12908f54222f2f79a87bed51f71e2fbac87)
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Commit b7d30137b1 ("vyos.ifconfig: provide generic get_mac_synthetic() method")
provided a common helper to generate MAC addresses used by EUI64 addresses for
interfaces not having a layer2 interface (WireGuard or ip tunnel).
The problem is that every call to the helper always yielded a new MAC address.
This becomes problematic when IPv6 link-local addresses are generated and
modified on the interface as multiple link-local (fe80::/64) addresses can
easily be added to the interface leaving ... a mess.
This commit changes the way how the "synthetic" MAC is generated, we generate a
UUID which is stable as it is based on the interface name. We take out the last
48 bits of the UUID and form the "MAC" address.
(cherry picked from commit 081e23996feb60ad903caf8b0a4587f5dacc69bf)
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When IPv6 is disbaled on an interface also the sysfs files related to IPv6 for
this interface vanish. We need to check if the file exists before we read it.
(cherry picked from commit 672a70613aa6c987bca417f93b587eddccbfd53a)
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When using VRRP on any given interface and performing an action against that
interface - be it even only changing the alias - will trigger a removal of the
VRRP IP address.
The issue is caused by:
# determine IP addresses which are assigned to the interface and build a
# list of addresses which are no longer in the dict so they can be removed
cur_addr = self.get_addr()
for addr in list_diff(cur_addr, new_addr):
When the script calls into the library - we will drop all IP addresses set on
the adapter but not available in the config dict.
We should only remove the IP addresses marked by the CLI to be deleted!
(cherry picked from commit e80d0aebd691f1a707ab534b4d1340fa0b793e01)
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There is no need to alter interface parameters if they have not changed at all.
(cherry picked from commit b4c58c5aefaca4fce817b58327b9c7c3e8145d6d)
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states
Turns out an AX88179 USB 3.0 NIC does not support reading back the speed and
duplex settings in every operating state. While the NIC is beeing
initialized, reading the speed setting will return:
$ cat /sys/class/net/eth6/speed
cat: /sys/class/net/eth6/speed: Invalid argument
Thus if this happens, we simply tell the system that the current NIC speed
matches the requested speed and nothing is changed at this point in time.
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Move the two implementations to get the driver name of a NIC from ethernet.py
and ethtool.py to only ethtool.py.
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It makes no sense to have a parser for the ethtool values in ethtool.py
and ethernet.py - one instance ios more then enough!
(cherry picked from commit 0229645c8248decb5664056df8aa5cd5dff41802)
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Only update the RX/TX ring-buffer settings if they are different from the ones
currently programmed to the hardware. There is no need to write the same value
to the hardware again - this could cause traffic disruption on some NICs.
(cherry picked from commit 29082959e0efc02462fba8560d6726096e8743e9)
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It makes no sense to have a parser for the ethtool value sin ethtool.py
and ethernet.py - one instance ios more then enough!
(cherry picked from commit 6f5fb5c503b5df96d0686002355da3633b1fc597)
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This makes understanding the code easier what is "really" called without
opening the man page.
(cherry picked from commit a086dc2c429aea9614ac7a9c735c6475c2d6da59)
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Some tc qdisc rules are generated by old perl code
It prevent to unexpected override this code by python.
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Deprecated in the Linux Kernel by commit 08a00fea6de277df12ccfadc21 ("net:
Remove references to NETIF_F_UFO from ethtool.").
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option
Commit 31169fa8 ("vyos.ifconfig: T3619: only set offloading options if
supported by NIC") added a warning for the user if an offload option was about
to change that was not possible at all (harware limit).
Unfortunately the warning was even displayed if nothing was done at all. This
got corrected.
(cherry picked from commit ce784a9fcb7199f87949f17777b7b736227c85b3)
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Check eui64_old value before deleting
It can be empty or not ipv6 address.
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In the past we always told ethtool to change the offloading settings, even if
this was not supported by the underlaying driver.
This commit will only change the offloading options if they differ from the
current state of the NIC and only if it's supported by the NIC. If the NIC does
not support setting the offloading options, a message will be displayed
for the user:
vyos@vyos# set interfaces ethernet eth2 offload gro
vyos@vyos# commit
[ interfaces ethernet eth2 ]
Adapter does not support changing large-receive-offload settings!
(cherry picked from commit 31169fa8a763e36f6276632139da46b1aca3a7af)
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When the interface name was stripped down from "eth0.201" to "eth" to determine
the appropriate interface section, VRRP interfaces got left out on the call
to rstrip().
VRRP interfaces now show up in "show interfaces" as they did in VyOS 1.2.
vyos@vyos:~$ show interfaces
Codes: S - State, L - Link, u - Up, D - Down, A - Admin Down
Interface IP Address S/L Description
--------- ---------- --- -----------
dum0 172.18.254.201/32 u/u
eth0 - u/u
eth0.10 172.16.33.8/24 u/u
eth0.201 172.18.201.10/24 u/u
eth1 10.1.1.2/24 u/u
eth1v10 10.1.1.1/24 u/u
eth2 - u/u
lo 127.0.0.1/8 u/u
::1/128
(cherry picked from commit df22bc2c96d5095eaec978a58bf5d2361d758a86)
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WireGuard, Tunnel and also PPPoE all need a ways to calculate a synthetic MAC
address used for the EUI64 link-local addresses. Instead of copying the code
from Tunnel to WireGuard to PPPoE, use a generic implementation.
(cherry picked from commit b7d30137b17da49ed5099d4d96659b363fc7bcc9)
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(cherry picked from commit e1debb1b57a445fa2357f7dbb5b3f04383f8b1e3)
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In some cases, we need to wait until local address is assigned.
And only then l2tpv3 tunnel can be configured.
For example when ipv6 address is in "tentative" state
or we wait for some routing daemon/route for a remote address.
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This reverts commit e4d697b1d3aad0cb8e81f4c36bcaa4c089195f43.
We need those classes for the operational level "show interfaces" command.
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It is easier to backport the entire vyos.ifconfig library from 1.4 instead of
backporting single pieces which are required to add new feature to the tunnel
interface section.
In addition that both libraries are now back in sync it will become much easier
to backport any other new feature introduced in VyOS 1.4!
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PPPoE uses an entire different approach to setup the interface and VTI is still
implemented using the old node.def definitions from vyatta-cfg-system.
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(cherry picked from commit 4b2fef88644bb75dadbe33b9638a4150def7e14f)
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(cherry picked from commit c2a1c071e7d0a9ca754d7f5016eed7db188b3d1a)
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It is not possible to change the VLAN encapsulation protocol "on-the-fly". For
this "quirk" we need to actively delete and re-create the VIF-S interface.
(cherry picked from commit cd504035015dca62149b57bc07d8e002bd8723b1)
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Option specifying the rate in which we'll ask our link partner to transmit
LACPDU packets in 802.3ad mode.
set interfaces bonding bond0 lacp-rate <slow|fast>
slow: Request partner to transmit LACPDUs every 30 seconds (default)
fast: Request partner to transmit LACPDUs every 1 second
(cherry picked from commit 8e392a3dbc16f7b80a979f7b4e9c11408d700e6f)
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(cherry-picked from commit efa744c63b388773a4ea76d0f690042ec1689159)
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Removing a VLAN (VIF) interface from the CLI always deleted all interfaces the
kernel listed as "upper" in the /sys/class/net folder. This had the drawback
that when deleting a VIF, also the VRF interface was simply deleted - killing
all VRF related services.
(cherry picked from commit 6458f91735412fb2e6e7e37f7b3e6ca587a5a235)
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(cherry picked from commit dd2eb5e5686655c996ae95285b8ad7eb73d63d0b)
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This is an extension to commit 801c5235 ("xdp: T2666: disable this highly
experimental feature in 1.3 LTS") by dropping all XDP references in the
equuleus codebase.
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VyOS 1.2 had a default ttl of 16 hardcoded to the node.def file [1], so until
this is handled via a migration script we have to obey that particular
setting.
[1]: https://github.com/vyos/vyatta-cfg-system/blob/crux/templates/interfaces/vxlan/node.def#L23
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