First, we can ping hostname(ip_addr) to add mac/ip mapping into arp table
or use arp command to do so:
> arp -s hostname(ip_addr) MAC_addr
Second, look up arp table:
> arp -n (I recommend to use "-n" for avoiding DNS lookup. It is faster.)
Address HWtype HWaddress Flags Mask Iface
10.3.207.245 ether 20:aa:4b:a3:4c:b7 C eth4
or there is another way:
> ip ne
10.3.207.245 dev eth4 lladdr 20:aa:4b:a3:4c:b7 REACHABLE
Monday, July 9, 2012
Thursday, June 28, 2012
[OpenFlow] Update and Setup TP-LINK TL-WR1043ND for OpenFlow
Currently the version of TP-LINK TL-WR1043ND which I can get in Taiwan is "(TW) ver:1.0" instead of ver:1.8 I want. But, fortunately, after asking the vendor about this issue, he responds that there is no difference in hardware between "(TW) ver:1.0"and ver:1.8 or ver:1.4. That is a good news to me though. The following items are my steps to transform original TP-LINK TL-WR1043ND to OpenFlow-enabled switch. Most of information is from http://www.openflow.org/wk/index.php/Pantou_:_OpenFlow_1.0_for_OpenWRT
1. Update firmware on your device
Installing OpenWrt this web site has 4 methods for us to do updating. Because my TL-WR1043ND is brand new one, I choose the simplest of method 1: via orginal firmware.
2. Modify Configuration
3. Restart networking to enable your changes
1. Update firmware on your device
Installing OpenWrt this web site has 4 methods for us to do updating. Because my TL-WR1043ND is brand new one, I choose the simplest of method 1: via orginal firmware.
- Download image (v1.8)
- Change your PC ip address to 192.168.1.2
- Connect to the switch with LAN port
- Browse http://192.168.1.1
- Choose function "update firmware" with the image bin file
2. Modify Configuration
- Login to 192.168.1.1 using telnet
- Setup your controller ip address (my controller ip is 192.168.1.244)
- vi /etc/config/openflow
config 'ofswitch'
option 'dp' 'dp0'
option 'dpid' '000000000011'
option 'ofports' 'eth0.0 eth0.1 eth0.2 eth0.3 '
option 'ofctl' 'tcp:192.168.1.244:6633'
option 'mode' 'outofband'
- Setup your network configuration and setup this switch ip address (my switch ip is 192.168.1.11)
- vi /etc/config/network and paste the following lines
config 'switch'
option 'name' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'reset' '1'
option 'enable_vlan' '1'
option 'enable_learning' '0'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '1'
option 'ports' '1 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '2'
option 'ports' '2 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '3'
option 'ports' '3 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '4'
option 'ports' '4 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '5'
option 'ports' '0 5t'
config 'interface' 'loopback'
option 'ifname' 'lo'
option 'proto' 'static'
option 'ipaddr' '127.0.0.1'
option 'netmask' '255.0.0.0'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.1'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.2'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.3'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.4'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.5'
option 'proto' 'static'
option 'ipaddr' '192.168.1.11'
option 'netmask' '255.255.255.0'
option 'name' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'reset' '1'
option 'enable_vlan' '1'
option 'enable_learning' '0'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '1'
option 'ports' '1 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '2'
option 'ports' '2 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '3'
option 'ports' '3 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '4'
option 'ports' '4 5t'
config 'switch_vlan'
option 'device' 'rtl8366rb'
option 'vlan' '5'
option 'ports' '0 5t'
config 'interface' 'loopback'
option 'ifname' 'lo'
option 'proto' 'static'
option 'ipaddr' '127.0.0.1'
option 'netmask' '255.0.0.0'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.1'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.2'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.3'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.4'
option 'proto' 'static'
config 'interface'
option 'ifname' 'eth0.5'
option 'proto' 'static'
option 'ipaddr' '192.168.1.11'
option 'netmask' '255.255.255.0'
3. Restart networking to enable your changes
/etc/init.d/network restart
- Connect your Ethernet cable from LAN port to WAN port
- Start any kind of Trema app
- for instance : ./trema run ./objects/examples/learning_switch/learning_switch
- Show switch description
- TREMA_HOME=`pwd` ../apps/show_description/show_description
- And then we can get the information as follows:
Manufacturer description: Stanford University
Hardware description: Reference Userspace Switch
Software description: 1.0.0
Serial number: None
Human readable description of datapath: OpenWrt pid=1933
Datapath ID: 0x11
Port no: 1(0x1)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.1
Port no: 2(0x2)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.2
Port no: 3(0x3)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.3
Port no: 4(0x4)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.4
Hardware description: Reference Userspace Switch
Software description: 1.0.0
Serial number: None
Human readable description of datapath: OpenWrt pid=1933
Datapath ID: 0x11
Port no: 1(0x1)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.1
Port no: 2(0x2)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.2
Port no: 3(0x3)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.3
Port no: 4(0x4)(Port up)
Hardware address: 90:f6:52:89:c9:d0
Port name: eth0.4
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
[OpenFlow] Summary of some current OpenFlow Related Articles
1. http://blog.ioshints.info/2011/11/openflow-enterprise-use-cases.html
This article discusses enterprise use cases in OpenFlow
- There are four functions you can easily implement with OpenFlow (Tony Bourke wrote about them in more details)
- packet filters – flow classifier followed by a drop or normal action
- policy based routing – flow classifier followed by outgoing interface and/or VLAN tag push
- static routes – flow classifiers using only destination IP prefix
- NAT – some OpenFlow switches might support source/destination IP address/port rewrites.
- It suggests that security could be the killer app as the following URL:
2. http://routerjockey.com/2011/11/02/nec-and-programmableflow-switching/
This article writer give some information and comments about NEC programmableflow because he joined NEC presenting at Networking Tech Field Day 2
3. http://blog.ioshints.info/2011/11/openflow-deployment-models.html#of_native
This article provides four different models for OpenFlow deployment have already emerged:
- Native OpenFlow
- The controller performs all control-plane functions, including running control-plane protocols with the outside world.
- This model has at least two serious drawbacks even if we ignore the load placed on the controller by periodic control-plane protocols:
- The switches need IP connectivity to the controller for the OpenFlow control session.
- Fast control loops like BFD are hard to implement with a central controller, more so if you want to have very fast response time.
- NEC seems to be using this model quite successfully (although they probably have a few extensions), but already encountered inherent limitations: a single controller can control up to ~50 switches, ~600000 end points (VMs or Physical Nodes), and rerouting around failed links takes around 200 msec (depending on the network size). For more details, watch their Networking Tech Field Day presentation.
- Native OpenFlow with extensions
- A switch controlled entirely by the OpenFlow controller could perform some of the low-level control-plane functions independently.
- Using OpenFlow extensions or functionality implemented locally on the switch, you destroy the mirage of the “OpenFlow networking nirvana”-- smart open-source programmable controllers control dumb low-cost switches, busting the “networking = mainframes” model and bringing the Linux-like golden age to every network.
- Ships in the night
- Switches have traditional control plane; OpenFlow controller manages only certain ports or VLANs on trunked links. The local control plane (or linecards) can perform the tedious periodic tasks like running LACP, LLDP and BFD, passing only the link status to the OpenFlow controller.
- Integrated OpenFlow
- OpenFlow classifiers and forwarding entries are integrated with the traditional control plane. For example, Juniper’s OpenFlow implementation inserts compatible flow entries (those that contain only destination IP address matching) as ephemeral static routes into RIB (Routing Information Base)
- From my perspective, this approach makes most sense: don’t rip-and-replace the existing network with a totally new control plane, but augment the existing well-known mechanisms with functionality that’s currently hard (or impossible) to implement.
Monday, June 18, 2012
[OpenFlow] Wildcard Explanation
This article is about flow wildcard for match field. Basically, we can get understood most of them at a glance. But, for NW_SRC_MASK and NW_DST_MASK they need to do more a little bit math. I only give an example with NW_SRC_MASK because NW_DST_MASK is similar case. Please refer to the following picture:
The position of NW_SRC_MASK is from 8 to 13. If we want to setup a IP subnet mask as 192.168.1.0/24, we should give the value: 001000 (8 bits are wirdcarded). Another example, for instance, 192.168.0.0/16 (16 bits are wirdcarded), the value should be 010000.
The position of NW_SRC_MASK is from 8 to 13. If we want to setup a IP subnet mask as 192.168.1.0/24, we should give the value: 001000 (8 bits are wirdcarded). Another example, for instance, 192.168.0.0/16 (16 bits are wirdcarded), the value should be 010000.
/* Flow wildcards. */
enum ofp_flow_wildcards {
OFPFW_IN_PORT = 1 << 0, /* Switch input port. */
OFPFW_DL_VLAN = 1 << 1, /* VLAN id. */
OFPFW_DL_SRC = 1 << 2, /* Ethernet source address. */
OFPFW_DL_DST = 1 << 3, /* Ethernet destination address. */
OFPFW_DL_TYPE = 1 << 4, /* Ethernet frame type. */
OFPFW_NW_PROTO = 1 << 5, /* IP protocol. */
OFPFW_TP_SRC = 1 << 6, /* TCP/UDP source port. */
OFPFW_TP_DST = 1 << 7, /* TCP/UDP destination port. */
/* IP source address wildcard bit count. 0 is exact match, 1 ignores the
* LSB, 2 ignores the 2 least-significant bits, ..., 32 and higher wildcard
* the entire field. This is the *opposite* of the usual convention where
* e.g. /24 indicates that 8 bits (not 24 bits) are wildcarded. */
OFPFW_NW_SRC_SHIFT = 8,
OFPFW_NW_SRC_BITS = 6,
OFPFW_NW_SRC_MASK = ((1 << OFPFW_NW_SRC_BITS) - 1) << OFPFW_NW_SRC_SHIFT,
OFPFW_NW_SRC_ALL = 32 << OFPFW_NW_SRC_SHIFT,
/* IP destination address wildcard bit count. Same format as source. */
OFPFW_NW_DST_SHIFT = 14,
OFPFW_NW_DST_BITS = 6,
OFPFW_NW_DST_MASK = ((1 << OFPFW_NW_DST_BITS) - 1) << OFPFW_NW_DST_SHIFT,
OFPFW_NW_DST_ALL = 32 << OFPFW_NW_DST_SHIFT,
OFPFW_DL_VLAN_PCP = 1 << 20, /* VLAN priority. */
OFPFW_NW_TOS = 1 << 21, /* IP ToS (DSCP field, 6 bits). */
/* Wildcard all fields. */
OFPFW_ALL = ((1 << 22) - 1)
};
Friday, June 15, 2012
[Summary] Data Center Network Issues
http://muratbuffalo.blogspot.tw/2010/11/vl2-scalable-and-flexible-data-center.html
The key points from my point of view in this article for Data Center :
Agility:
- Without agility, each service must pre-allocate enough servers to meet difficult to predict demand spikes, or risk failure at the brink of success. With agility, the data center operator can meet the fluctuating demands of individual services from a large shared server pool, resulting in higher server utilization and lower costs. In order to achieve agility, assigning servers to a service should be independent of network topology.
- Still, downtimes can be significant, and with no obvious way to eliminate all failures from the top of the hierarchy, this paper's approach is to broaden (fatten) the topmost levels of the network so that the impact of failures is muted and performance degrades gracefully.
- The paper proposes to use valiant load balancing (vlb) to randomize end-to-end communication paths to cope with volatility and achieve load balancing. In this scheme, the ToR switch randomly chooses an intermediate switch (among many available options) on a per flow basis.
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
[Demo] OpenFlow GUI demo
Here is a video about OpenFlow GUI demo on a simple topology.
I modified the flow animation so that the flow animation is different from the original one.
Check it out.
http://youtu.be/8r93qgt7VVE
I modified the flow animation so that the flow animation is different from the original one.
Check it out.
http://youtu.be/8r93qgt7VVE
Monday, June 11, 2012
[Tutorial] An example of using juju to deploy cloud services
Before you get started with juju, please refer to the official documens
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/getting-started.html
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/user-tutorial.html
P.S: When you lunch an instance, be careful about the instance type. Except t1.micro, others will charge you money~~
I strongly suggest to add parameter after juju bootstrap and deploy command as follows:
> juju set-constraints instance-type=t1.micro
For more info about this, please check out this document:
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/constraints.html
My environment is using EC2.
> vi .juju/environment.yaml
When you prepare your .juju/environment.yaml ready, you are able to do the following steps to try juju:
> juju bootstrap
> juju deploy wordpress
> juju deploy mysql
> juju add-relation mysql wordpress
> juju expose wordpress
After executing above commands, we can use "juju status" to see what we have now on Amazon EC2:
> juju status
2012-06-11 09:00:26,558 INFO Connecting to environment...
2012-06-11 09:00:43,657 INFO Connected to environment.
machines:
0:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-23-22-111-234.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-30fa4a49
instance-state: running
1:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-b055eac9
instance-state: running
2:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-23-22-205-88.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-de52eda7
instance-state: running
services:
mysql:
charm: cs:precise/mysql-2
relations:
db:
- wordpress
units:
mysql/0:
agent-state: started
machine: 2
public-address: ec2-23-22-205-88.compute-1.amazonaws.com
wordpress:
charm: cs:precise/wordpress-1
exposed: true
relations:
db:
- mysql
units:
wordpress/0:
agent-state: started
machine: 1
open-ports:
- 80/tcp
public-address: ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com
2012-06-11 09:01:18,809 INFO 'status' command finished successfully
From now on, we can check EC2 dashboard and see what instances are there ( it will be the same as the result of "juju status")
Because we do "expose" for wordpress, we have a public address ( ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com) and it looks like as below:
Once you are done with an juju deployment, you need to terminate all running instances in order to stop paying for them.
> juju destroy-environment
WARNING: this command will destroy the 'sample' environment (type: ec2).
This includes all machines, services, data, and other resources. Continue [y/N]y
2012-06-11 09:53:03,181 INFO Destroying environment 'sample' (type: ec2)...
2012-06-11 09:53:10,018 INFO Waiting on 3 EC2 instances to transition to terminated state, this may take a while
2012-06-11 09:53:53,257 INFO 'destroy_environment' command finished successfully
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/getting-started.html
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/user-tutorial.html
P.S: When you lunch an instance, be careful about the instance type. Except t1.micro, others will charge you money~~
I strongly suggest to add parameter after juju bootstrap and deploy command as follows:
--constraints "instance-type=m1.micro"
or execute this command:> juju set-constraints instance-type=t1.micro
For more info about this, please check out this document:
https://juju.ubuntu.com/docs/constraints.html
My environment is using EC2.
> vi .juju/environment.yaml
environments:
sample:
type: ec2
access-key: << your access key >>
secret-key: << your secret key >>
control-bucket: juju-0f3b4bce2d944893a74967016c98b903
admin-secret: 0d748130374946babe1f2531d77620d0
default-series: precise
ssl-hostname-verification: true
sample:
type: ec2
access-key: << your access key >>
secret-key: << your secret key >>
control-bucket: juju-0f3b4bce2d944893a74967016c98b903
admin-secret: 0d748130374946babe1f2531d77620d0
default-series: precise
ssl-hostname-verification: true
When you prepare your .juju/environment.yaml ready, you are able to do the following steps to try juju:
> juju bootstrap
> juju deploy wordpress
> juju deploy mysql
> juju add-relation mysql wordpress
> juju expose wordpress
After executing above commands, we can use "juju status" to see what we have now on Amazon EC2:
> juju status
2012-06-11 09:00:26,558 INFO Connecting to environment...
2012-06-11 09:00:43,657 INFO Connected to environment.
machines:
0:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-23-22-111-234.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-30fa4a49
instance-state: running
1:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-b055eac9
instance-state: running
2:
agent-state: running
dns-name: ec2-23-22-205-88.compute-1.amazonaws.com
instance-id: i-de52eda7
instance-state: running
services:
mysql:
charm: cs:precise/mysql-2
relations:
db:
- wordpress
units:
mysql/0:
agent-state: started
machine: 2
public-address: ec2-23-22-205-88.compute-1.amazonaws.com
wordpress:
charm: cs:precise/wordpress-1
exposed: true
relations:
db:
- mysql
units:
wordpress/0:
agent-state: started
machine: 1
open-ports:
- 80/tcp
public-address: ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com
2012-06-11 09:01:18,809 INFO 'status' command finished successfully
From now on, we can check EC2 dashboard and see what instances are there ( it will be the same as the result of "juju status")
Because we do "expose" for wordpress, we have a public address ( ec2-50-17-117-72.compute-1.amazonaws.com) and it looks like as below:
Once you are done with an juju deployment, you need to terminate all running instances in order to stop paying for them.
> juju destroy-environment
WARNING: this command will destroy the 'sample' environment (type: ec2).
This includes all machines, services, data, and other resources. Continue [y/N]y
2012-06-11 09:53:03,181 INFO Destroying environment 'sample' (type: ec2)...
2012-06-11 09:53:10,018 INFO Waiting on 3 EC2 instances to transition to terminated state, this may take a while
2012-06-11 09:53:53,257 INFO 'destroy_environment' command finished successfully
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
[How to] do trouble shooting with LLDP setting on Switch
Let me assume if there is a simple topology here
A. Make sure Switch and Switch could ping each other
C. Use snmpwalk to check 172.17.255.254 has remote ip address of 172.17.4.1
D. Use snmpwalk to check 172.17.4.1if it has remote ip address of 172.17.255.254
+------------------+ Switch | 172.17.255.254 | +-----+------------+ +-----------------+ | Switch | 172.17.4.1 |<--+ +----------+------+ +--------------+ | | Your Server: | | | 172.17.2.200 |<-------+ +--------------+
A. Make sure Switch and Switch could ping each other
- telnet 172.17.255.254
- ping 172.17.4.1
C. Use snmpwalk to check 172.17.255.254 has remote ip address of 172.17.4.1
- exp: snmpwalk -c public -v2c 172.17.255.254 1.0.8802.1.1.2.1.4.2.1.3
- if we cannot see the result as follows, it means that the LLDP configuration setting on Switch 172.17.255.254 is wrong.
D. Use snmpwalk to check 172.17.4.1if it has remote ip address of 172.17.255.254
- exp: snmpwalk -c public -v2c 172.17.4.1 1.0.8802.1.1.2.1.4.2.1.3
- if we cannot see the result as follows, it means that the LLDP configuration setting on Switch 172.17.4.1 is wrong.
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