README.Debian for openvswitch-switch
---------------------------------
-* The switch must be configured before it can be used. Edit
- /etc/default/openvswitch-switch, then start the switch manually with
- "/etc/init.d/openvswitch-switch start".
+To use the Linux kernel-based switch implementation, you will need an
+Open vSwitch kernel module. There are multiple ways to obtain one.
+In order of increasing manual effort, these are:
-* To use the Linux kernel-based switch implementation, you will need
- to build and install the Open vSwitch kernel module. To do so, install
- the openvswitch-datapath-source package, then follow the instructions
- given in /usr/share/doc/openvswitch-datapath-source/README.Debian
+ * Use a Linux kernel 3.3 or later, which has an integrated Open
+ vSwitch kernel module.
-* This package does not yet support the userspace datapath-based
- switch implementation.
+ The upstream Linux kernel module lacks a few features that
+ are in the third-party module. For details, please see the
+ FAQ, "What features are not available in the Open vSwitch
+ kernel datapath that ships as part of the upstream Linux
+ kernel?".
+
+ * Install the "openvswitch-datapath-dkms" Debian package that
+ you built earlier. This should automatically build and
+ install the Open vSwitch kernel module for your running
+ kernel.
+
+ This option requires that you have a compiler and toolchain
+ installed on the machine where you run Open vSwitch, which
+ may be unacceptable in some production server environments.
+
+ * Install the "openvswitch-datapath-source" Debian package, use
+ "module-assistant" to build a Debian package of the Open
+ vSwitch kernel module for your kernel, and then install that
+ Debian package.
+
+ You can install the kernel module Debian packages that you
+ build this way on the same machine where you built it or on
+ another machine or machines, which means that you don't
+ necessarily have to have any build infrastructure on the
+ machines where you use the kernel module.
+
+ /usr/share/doc/openvswitch-datapath-source/README.Debian has
+ details on the build process.
+
+ * Build and install the kernel module by hand.
- -- Ben Pfaff <blp@nicira.com>, Mon, 30 Aug 2010 09:51:19 -0700
Debian network scripts integration
----------------------------------
The following OVS specific "command" options are supported:
- - ovs_type: This can either be OVSBridge, OVSPort, OVSIntPort or OVSBond
- depending on whether you configure a bridge, port, an internal port or
- a bond. This is a required option.
+ - ovs_type: This can either be OVSBridge, OVSPort, OVSIntPort, OVSBond,
+ OVSPatchPort or OVSTunnel depending on whether you configure a bridge,
+ port, an internal port, a bond, a patch port or a tunnel. This is a
+ required option.
- ovs_ports: This option specifies all the ports that belong to a bridge.
- ovs_bonds: This option specifies the list of physical interfaces to be
bonded together.
+ - ovs_patch_peer: For "OVSPatchPort" interfaces, this field specifies
+ the patch's peer on the other bridge.
+
+ - ovs_tunnel_type: For "OVSTunnel" interfaces, the type of the tunnel.
+ For example, "gre", "vxlan", etc.
+
+ - ovs_tunnel_options: For "OVSTunnel" interfaces, this field should be
+ used to specify the tunnel options like remote_ip, key, etc.
+
- ovs_options: This option lets you add extra arguments to a ovs-vsctl
command. See examples.
ovs_bonds eth2 eth3
ovs_options bond_mode=balance-tcp lacp=active
-ex 6: Create and destroy bridges.
+ex 6: Patch ports.
+
+allow-ovs br0
+iface br0 inet manual
+ ovs_type OVSBridge
+ ovs_ports patch0
+
+allow-br0 patch0
+iface patch0 inet manual
+ ovs_bridge br0
+ ovs_type OVSPatchPort
+ ovs_patch_peer patch1
+
+allow-ovs br1
+iface br1 inet manual
+ ovs_type OVSBridge
+ ovs_ports patch1
+
+allow-br1 patch1
+iface patch1 inet manual
+ ovs_bridge br1
+ ovs_type OVSPatchPort
+ ovs_patch_peer patch0
+
+ex 7: Tunnel.
+
+allow-ovs br1
+iface br1 inet static
+ address 192.168.1.1
+ netmask 255.255.255.0
+ ovs_type OVSBridge
+ ovs_ports gre1
+
+allow-br1 gre1
+iface gre1 inet manual
+ ovs_bridge br1
+ ovs_type OVSTunnel
+ ovs_tunnel_type gre
+ ovs_tunnel_options options:remote_ip=182.168.1.2 options:key=1
+
+ex 8: Create and destroy bridges.
ifup --allow=ovs $list_of_bridges
ifdown --allow=ovs $list_of_bridges
--- Gurucharan Shetty <gshetty@nicira.com>, Fri, 04 May 2012 12:58:19 -0700
+Notes on dependencies:
+---------------------
+
+openvswitch-switch depends on $network, $named $remote_fs and $syslog to start.
+This creates some startup dependency issues.
+
+* Since openvswitch utilities are placed in /usr and /usr can be mounted
+through NFS, openvswitch has to start after it. But if a user uses openvswitch
+for all his networking needs and hence to mount NFS, there will be a deadlock.
+So, if /usr is mounted through NFS and openvswitch is used for all networking,
+the administrator should figure out a way to mount NFS before starting OVS.
+One way to do this is in initramfs.
+
+* Since openvswitch starts after $network, $remote_fs and $syslog, any startup
+script that depends on openvswitch but starts before it, needs to be changed
+to depend on openvswitch-switch too.
+
+* Ideally, an admin should not add openvswitch bridges in the 'auto'
+section of the 'interfaces' file. This is because, when ifupdown starts
+working on bridges listed in 'auto', openvswitch has not yet started.
+
+But, if the admin wants to go down this route and adds openvswitch bridges
+in the 'auto' section, openvswitch-switch will forcefully be started when
+ifupdown kicks in. In a case like this, the admin needs to make sure that /usr
+has already been mounted and that a remote $syslog (if used) is ready to
+receive openvswitch logs.