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-rw-r--r--docs/routing/pbr.rst39
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 18 deletions
diff --git a/docs/routing/pbr.rst b/docs/routing/pbr.rst
index 5d2678ff..797f79e3 100644
--- a/docs/routing/pbr.rst
+++ b/docs/routing/pbr.rst
@@ -5,15 +5,16 @@
PBR
---
-:abbr:`PBR (Policy-Based Routing)` allowing traffic to be assigned to different
-routing tables. Traffic can be matched using standard 5-tuple matching (source
-address, destination address, protocol, source port, destination port).
+:abbr:`PBR (Policy-Based Routing)` allowing traffic to be assigned to
+different routing tables. Traffic can be matched using standard 5-tuple
+matching (source address, destination address, protocol, source port,
+destination port).
Transparent Proxy
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-The following example will show how VyOS can be used to redirect web traffic to
-an external transparent proxy:
+The following example will show how VyOS can be used to redirect web
+traffic to an external transparent proxy:
.. code-block:: none
@@ -21,9 +22,9 @@ an external transparent proxy:
set policy route FILTER-WEB rule 1000 protocol tcp
set policy route FILTER-WEB rule 1000 set table 100
-This creates a route policy called FILTER-WEB with one rule to set the routing
-table for matching traffic (TCP port 80) to table ID 100 instead of the
-default routing table.
+This creates a route policy called FILTER-WEB with one rule to set the
+routing table for matching traffic (TCP port 80) to table ID 100
+instead of the default routing table.
To create routing table 100 and add a new default gateway to be used by
traffic matching our route policy:
@@ -32,10 +33,11 @@ traffic matching our route policy:
set protocols static table 100 route 0.0.0.0/0 next-hop 10.255.0.2
-This can be confirmed using the show ip route table 100 operational command.
+This can be confirmed using the ``show ip route table 100`` operational
+command.
-Finally, to apply the policy route to ingress traffic on our LAN interface,
-we use:
+Finally, to apply the policy route to ingress traffic on our LAN
+interface, we use:
.. code-block:: none
@@ -45,15 +47,15 @@ we use:
Multiple Uplinks
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-VyOS Policy-Based Routing (PBR) works by matching source IP address ranges and
-forwarding the traffic using different routing tables.
+VyOS Policy-Based Routing (PBR) works by matching source IP address
+ranges and forwarding the traffic using different routing tables.
Routing tables that will be used in this example are:
* ``table 10`` Routing table used for VLAN 10 (192.168.188.0/24)
* ``table 11`` Routing table used for VLAN 11 (192.168.189.0/24)
-* ``main`` Routing table used by VyOS and other interfaces not participating in
- PBR
+* ``main`` Routing table used by VyOS and other interfaces not
+ participating in PBR
.. figure:: ../_static/images/pbr_example_1.png
:scale: 80 %
@@ -89,7 +91,8 @@ Apply routing policy to **inbound** direction of out VLAN interfaces
set interfaces ethernet eth0 vif 11 policy route 'PBR'
-**OPTIONAL:** Exclude Inter-VLAN traffic (between VLAN10 and VLAN11) from PBR
+**OPTIONAL:** Exclude Inter-VLAN traffic (between VLAN10 and VLAN11)
+from PBR
.. code-block:: none
@@ -98,5 +101,5 @@ Apply routing policy to **inbound** direction of out VLAN interfaces
set policy route PBR rule 10 destination address '192.168.189.0/24'
set policy route PBR rule 10 set table 'main'
-.. note:: Allows the VLAN10 and VLAN20 hosts to communicate with each other
- using the main routing table.
+These commands allow the VLAN10 and VLAN20 hosts to communicate with
+each other using the main routing table.