Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
As we and FRR do not support multiple FRR process instances, there is no need
to make this configurable for a user. We rather rely on a solid default "VyOS".
|
|
VRF support can be tested using:
set vrf name red table 1000
set vrf name red protocols isis domain FOOO
set vrf name red protocols isis net 49.0001.1921.6800.1002.00
set vrf name red protocols isis interface eth1
|
|
As there can only be one running IS-IS process (FRR limitation) there is no need
in having a tagNode here. This adds artifical restrictions/limitations when
moving on to support VRFs for IS-IS protocol.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Private VLAN, also known as port isolation, is a technique in computer
networking where a VLAN contains switch ports that are restricted such that
they can only communicate with a given "uplink". The restricted ports are
called "private ports".
Each private VLAN typically contains many private ports, and a single uplink.
The uplink will typically be a port (or link aggregation group) connected to a
router, firewall, server, provider network, or similar central resource.
Q: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_VLAN
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VyOS 1.2 (crux) rejected prefixes other then of site /64.
[ interfaces ethernet eth0 ipv6 address eui64 2006:ab00:abe1::2/127 ]
Error: Prefix lenght is 127. It must be 64.
Same should be done on VyOS 1.3 and newer
|
|
|
|
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, it is getting
more and more crowsded, thuse introducing "per topic" subdirectories on the
filesystem to keep a clean structure makes sense.
|
|
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, it is getting
more and more crowsded, thuse introducing "per topic" subdirectories on the
filesystem to keep a clean structure makes sense.
|
|
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, it is getting
more and more crowsded, thuse introducing "per topic" subdirectories on the
filesystem to keep a clean structure makes sense.
|
|
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, it is getting
more and more crowsded, thuse introducing "per topic" subdirectories on the
filesystem to keep a clean structure makes sense.
|
|
conf-mode: T2425: Add XML for policy-lists
|
|
We must ensure that an interface is already added to a VRF before it is
referenced inside a VRF context, e.g. OSPF.
|
|
Instead of having the dynamic routing protocols OSPF and BGP residing under
the "protocols vrf <name> [ospf|bgp]" nodes, rather move them directly under
the "vrf name <name> protocols [ospf|bgp]" node. Now all VRF related parts
are placed under the same root node.
This eases the verify steps tremendously, as we do not need to check wheter a
VRF eists or not, it will always exist as we operate under a child node.
|
|
When including XML files they all contained a comment from where the snipped
had actually been included from. The comment had been "included start" and
"included end" instead of "include start" and "include end".
This commit corrects the glitch.
|
|
|
|
The following VyOS CLI config
vrf red {
bgp 100 {
neighbor 1.1.1.1 {
peer-group foo
}
peer-group foo {
passive
password bar
remote-as 200
}
}
}
Will generaste the FRR configuration:
!
router bgp 100 vrf red
no bgp ebgp-requires-policy
no bgp network import-check
neighbor foo peer-group
neighbor foo remote-as 200
neighbor foo password bar
neighbor foo passive
neighbor 1.1.1.1 peer-group foo
!
|
|
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, this also
introduces "per topic" subdirectories on the filesystem to keep a clean
structure.
This commit is related to the change in the OSPF structure done in 952c52ef01
("vrf: ospf: T2271: re-arrange xml include building blocks").
|
|
|
|
|
|
VyOS CLI config:
vrf red {
ospf {
default-information {
originate {
always
}
}
default-metric 30
passive-interface default
}
}
Will create the FRR configuration snippet:
!
router ospf vrf red
auto-cost reference-bandwidth 100
timers throttle spf 200 1000 10000
passive-interface default
default-metric 30
default-information originate always
!
|
|
In order to fully re-use the XML based OSPF CLI definition for per-VRF routing,
the file structure needs to be reorganized and the common OSPF definition is
moved to its dedicated ospf-common-config.xml.i file, which can then be fully
re-included at the VRF level.
As the amount of include files now has reached a certain amount, this also
introduces "per topic" subdirectories on the filesystem to keep a clean
structure.
|
|
|
|
set protocols bgp 65010 address-family l2vpn-evpn vni 100 route-target both 516:10516
set protocols bgp 65010 address-family l2vpn-evpn vni 100 rd 192.168.0.1:514
Todo: add verify() step to check if at least one evpn enabled BGP neighbor
exits, else FRR will error out with: This command is only supported under EVPN VRF
|
|
|
|
The completion helper was directly called on the /dev/serial/by-bus directory,
but it was not verified if the directory exists at all.
|
|
nptv6: T2518: Support IPv6 address translation
|
|
|
|
|
|
* set protocols bgp ASN address-family ipv4-unicast maximum-paths
* set protocols bgp ASN address-family ipv4-unicast maximum-paths-ibgp
* set protocols bgp ASN address-family ipv6-unicast maximum-paths
* set protocols bgp ASN address-family ipv6-unicast maximum-paths-ibgp
|
|
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
|
|
|
|
dhcp: T3300: add DHCP default route distance
|
|
|
|
* 'T3379' of https://github.com/sever-sever/vyos-1x:
dhcpv6-server: T3379: Add option global-parameters name-server
|
|
Support setting additional options to the GENEVE tunnel like:
- ttl
- tos
- do not fragment bit
- ipv6 flowlabel
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rename CLI options local-ip to source-address and remote-ip to remote to
get a consistent CLI experience for the user.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Streamline the CLI configuration where we try to use remote on other interfaces
like vxlan, geneve.
|