# Copyright 2020 VyOS maintainers and contributors # # This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public # License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either # version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU # Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with this library. If not, see . from vyos.ifconfig.interface import Interface @Interface.register class MACsecIf(Interface): """ MACsec is an IEEE standard (IEEE 802.1AE) for MAC security, introduced in 2006. It defines a way to establish a protocol independent connection between two hosts with data confidentiality, authenticity and/or integrity, using GCM-AES-128. MACsec operates on the Ethernet layer and as such is a layer 2 protocol, which means it's designed to secure traffic within a layer 2 network, including DHCP or ARP requests. It does not compete with other security solutions such as IPsec (layer 3) or TLS (layer 4), as all those solutions are used for their own specific use cases. """ default = { 'type': 'macsec', 'security_cipher': '', 'source_interface': '' } definition = { **Interface.definition, **{ 'section': 'macsec', 'prefixes': ['macsec', ], }, } options = Interface.options + \ ['security_cipher', 'source_interface'] def _create(self): """ Create MACsec interface in OS kernel. Interface is administrative down by default. """ # create tunnel interface cmd = 'ip link add link {source_interface} {ifname} type {type}' cmd += ' cipher {security_cipher}' self._cmd(cmd.format(**self.config)) # interface is always A/D down. It needs to be enabled explicitly self.set_admin_state('down') def update(self, config): """ General helper function which works on a dictionary retrived by get_config_dict(). It's main intention is to consolidate the scattered interface setup code and provide a single point of entry when workin on any interface. """ # call base class first super().update(config) # Enable/Disable of an interface must always be done at the end of the # derived class to make use of the ref-counting set_admin_state() # function. We will only enable the interface if 'up' was called as # often as 'down'. This is required by some interface implementations # as certain parameters can only be changed when the interface is # in admin-down state. This ensures the link does not flap during # reconfiguration. state = 'down' if 'disable' in config else 'up' self.set_admin_state(state)