</p>
<p>
- A given logical switch may have at most one logical port of type
- <code>router</code>. (This is not a significant restriction because
- logical routers may be connected into arbitrary topologies.)
+ If a given logical switch has multiple <code>router</code> ports, the
+ <ref table="Logical_Router_Port"/> rows that they reference must be
+ all on the same <ref table="Logical_Router"/> (for different
+ subnets).
</p>
<column name="options" key="router-port" type='{"type": "uuid"}'>
column="action"/> column for the highest-<ref column="priority"/>
matching row in this table determines a packet's treatment. If no row
matches, packets are allowed by default. (Default-deny treatment is
- possible: add a rule with <ref column="priority"/> 1, <code>1</code> as
+ possible: add a rule with <ref column="priority"/> 0, <code>0</code> as
<ref column="match"/>, and <code>deny</code> as <ref column="action"/>.)
</p>
The Ethernet address that belongs to this router port.
</column>
+ <column name="enabled">
+ This column is used to administratively set port state. If this column
+ is empty or is set to <code>true</code>, the port is enabled. If this
+ column is set to <code>false</code>, the port is disabled. A disabled
+ port has all ingress and egress traffic dropped.
+ </column>
+
<group title="Attachment">
<p>
A given router port serves one of two purposes: