Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
interface"
For easier maintenance and operability move the interface specific protocol
setting of OSPF to the OSPF protocol section. This is now also in-line with IS-IS.
This means to migrate:
ethernet eth0 {
vif 202 {
ip {
ospf {
authentication {
md5 {
key-id 10 {
md5-key vyosvyos
}
}
}
dead-interval 40
hello-interval 10
priority 1
retransmit-interval 5
transmit-delay 1
}
}
}
}
to
protocols {
ospf {
interface eth0.201 {
authentication {
md5 {
key-id 10 {
md5-key vyosvyos
}
}
}
dead-interval 40
hello-interval 10
priority 1
retransmit-interval 5
transmit-delay 1
}
}
|
|
|
|
This commit provides the implementation of the OSPF CLI with a Jinja2 template
that is loaded by FRR reload.
|
|
|
|
This is an amendment to commit 5ab6882f ("bgp: T2347: bugfix import/export
route-map") which did not take care about fixing the other two if/elif
statements.
|
|
There can be both an import and an export route-map - the Jinja2 template
syntax only allowed one direction and not the other.
|
|
This commit provides the implementation of the OSPFv3 (IPv6) CLI with a Jinja2
template that is loaded by FRR reload. It also contains some initial smoketests.
There is yet no verify() implementation!
|
|
|
|
This commit provides the implementation of the OSPF CLI with a Jinja2 template
that is loaded by FRR reload. It also contains some initial smoketests.
There is yet no verify() implementation!
|
|
|
|
bgp: T1875: Adding BGP listen range FRR feature
|
|
In this commit we are adding the FRR BGP listen
range feature. Specifically it is useful for being
able to specify a range in which BGP peers can
connect to the local router.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
is-is: T3210: Fix three-way-handshake
|
|
|
|
|
|
In this commit we add the segment routing portion for ISIS.
There's also an additional check that is added so that the
global block label ranges are properly configured. Also
added traffic engineering configurations as well.
|
|
In here we are adding the latest FRR update to
allow for LDP label distribution to operate in
ordered control mode.
|
|
trim blocks removes newlines after {% endif %} blocks. Added the required newlines.
|
|
mpls-conf: T915: Add LDP import and export control
|
|
In this commit we added the ability to control import and export
of LDP FECs. This allows for an operator to specify which to
filter on ingress, and which to not announce on egress.
|
|
|
|
In this commit we added the ability to control the local label allocation
control for FECs. It allows for the router to not allocate a label for every
interface, just the interfaces that are desired by the operator.
|
|
|
|
Commit a2ac9fac ("vyos.template: T2720: always enable Jinja2 trim_blocks
feature") globally enabled the trim_blocks feature. Some templates still used
in-line trim_blocks "{%"- or "-%}" which caused miss-placed line endings.
This is fixed by removing all in-line trim_block statememnts of Jinja2 templates.
|
|
Trimming blocks manually is not needed as the renderer is already called with
the 'trim_blocks' option.
|
|
mpls-conf: T915: Refactored template, handler, added global features
|
|
global features
So this is a big update.
The first thing that was done was a refactor to the FRR LDP template, MPLS handler, and XML conf tree MPLS global additions.
The refactors should work and I did test them in my lab. It seems that everything does work as needed so far in my testing.
There is something here that is considered configuration breaking from the old setup though. In the old setup the MPLS interface operation (as in the interfaces accepting MPLS labels and processing them) was tied with LDP. What this means is that MPLS processing was enabled at the same time as LDP interfaces were configured. We do not want this behavior for the future as there's other MPLS underlay technologies like SR and RSVP. If someone wants to enable SR or RSVP without enabling LDP then they now can. Before, they couldn't. The other additions are global changes to MPLS TTL propagation and MPLS max TTL enforcement. They have now been added.
Lastly, there is an frr-reload bug that Runar Borge found with this. We have found that when totally deleting LDP that there has to be 3 commits done. This is because frr-reload doesn't properly do what it needs to do in 1 operation so we had to do 3. This will only affect people that are doing an entire LDP clear using "delete protocols mpls ldp." Otherwise it isn't seen.
Anyway, this refactor now works with the FRR daemon directly for all changes. This also makes it much easier for adding stuff in the future.
Thank you
|
|
The Jinja2 template contained a lot of redundant paths which only differed in
either the address-family or neighbor vs. peer-group. This paths have been
combined into for loops and a macro for generating a neighbor statement as
peer-groups and regular neighbors share ~95% of the config.
|
|
Make the entire template code more human readable by denesting it, as there can
only be one ISIS daemon instance in FRR.
|
|
t1616-isis
* 'T1316_october' of https://github.com/sever-sever/vyos-1x:
isis: T1316: October steps
|
|
This commit has to do with the addition of miscellaneous MPLS parameters, as well as miscellaneous LDP parameters. Per c-po, for miscellaneous options and whatnot that do not fit anywhere we will put them into a specific "parameters" node.
I also did some global linux configuration changes here. We make changes to kernel options "net.mpls.ip_ttl_propagate" and "net.mpls.default_ttl" which should allow the behavior of VyOS to have the same as routers from the big vendors.
I added two LDP options for cisco interoperation TLV and for a dual stack preference.
Lastly, I went through and changes some of the help/description fields in the definitions page because I just felt they weren't uniform and the words seemed to not properly explain what they were doing. I also did some code clean up (or tried to...) with comments and whatnot.
|
|
The commit has to do with the addition of targeted LDP neighbors and parameters being added. FRR allows for this functionality and I just wanted to add it.
We have basically 4 options that are added. Enabling targeted LDP functionality, the targeted neighbor, the hello interval of targeted sessions, and the hold time of targeted sessions. Both IPv4 and IPv6 has been coded in.
|
|
The commit has to do with the addition of session hold time parameter for LDP neighbors. This allows for being able to change said hold time on a static neighbor.
The way that this works is to have it either delegated to a value (15-65535), or to just be default to whatever FRR stipulates or per the other session configuration values.
I opted to remove the "-ipv4-" only because we know it's an IPv4 session that one has to create first. I figure it's redundant to add it there so I removed it.
|
|
The commit has to do with the addition of TTL security for LDP neighbors. The code was 90% done by Viascheslav. I modified it a little bit to get it to properly work.
We added more parameters to the neighbors dynamic loop. Once this is merged then we should be able to add more for the dynamic neighbor statements.
The way that this works is to have either TTL disabled, or to add the amount of hops accepted for the neighbor.
|
|
mpls-conf: T915: Separate IPv4 and IPv6 hello timers, add IPv6 timers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The commit has to do with separating the hello/hold timers from being only IPv4 to being both IPv4 and IPv6.
I renamed the existing hello and hold timers with an "-ipv4" and added ones that were "-ipv6". I did verify that the commands properly commit under FRR as well. I also added some room on the protocols_mpls.py file for the different variables as it seems we're might end up having longer names. Removed some spaces that I found too that weren't needed on ldpd.frr.tmpl as well.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|