[pve-devel] [PATCH pve-docs] sdn: update documentation
Stefan Lendl
s.lendl at proxmox.com
Mon Nov 13 16:08:46 CET 2023
Try to homogenize style and format
Title case naming conventions for configuration options
Simplify examples
Re-phrase descriptions
Signed-off-by: Stefan Lendl <s.lendl at proxmox.com>
---
Notes:
Used single line heading style
The multi line heading format just does not work with syntax
highlighting in my editor. The generated HTML from adoc is identical.
pvesdn.adoc | 947 ++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------------
1 file changed, 408 insertions(+), 539 deletions(-)
diff --git a/pvesdn.adoc b/pvesdn.adoc
index aadd8dc..600904d 100644
--- a/pvesdn.adoc
+++ b/pvesdn.adoc
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
[[chapter_pvesdn]]
-Software Defined Network
-========================
+= Software Defined Network
+
ifndef::manvolnum[]
:pve-toplevel:
endif::manvolnum[]
@@ -14,19 +14,16 @@ xref:getting_help[mailing lists or in the forum] for questions and feedback.
[[pvesdn_installation]]
-Installation
-------------
+== Installation
-To enable the experimental Software Defined Network (SDN) integration, you need
-to install the `libpve-network-perl` and `ifupdown2` packages on every node:
+To enable the _tech-preview_ SDN integration, you need to install the
+`libpve-network-perl` packages on every node:
----
apt update
-apt install libpve-network-perl ifupdown2
+apt install libpve-network-perl
----
-NOTE: {pve} version 7 and above come installed with ifupdown2.
-
After this, you need to add the following line to the end of the
`/etc/network/interfaces` configuration file, so that the SDN configuration gets
included and activated.
@@ -36,260 +33,266 @@ source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
----
-Basic Overview
---------------
+[[pvesdn_overview]]
+== Overview
The {pve} SDN allows for separation and fine-grained control of virtual guest
networks, using flexible, software-controlled configurations.
-Separation is managed through zones, where a zone is its own virtual separated
-network area. A 'VNet' is a type of a virtual network connected to a zone.
-Depending on which type or plugin the zone uses, it can behave differently and
-offer different features, advantages, and disadvantages. Normally, a 'VNet'
-appears as a common Linux bridge with either a VLAN or 'VXLAN' tag, however,
-some can also use layer 3 routing for control. 'VNets' are deployed locally on
-each node, after being configured from the cluster-wide datacenter SDN
-administration interface.
+Separation is managed through *zones*, virtual networks (*VNets*), and
+*subnets*. A zone is its own virtually separated network area. A VNet is a
+virtual network that belongs to a zone. A subnet is an IP range inside a VNet.
+
+Depending on the type of the zone, the network behaves differently and offers
+specific features, advantages, and limitations.
+Use cases for SDN range from an isolated private network on each individual node
+to complex overlay networks across multiple PVE clusters on different locations.
-Main Configuration
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+After configuring an VNet in the cluster-wide datacenter SDN administration
+interface, it is available as a common Linux bridge, locally on each node, to be
+assigned to VMs and Containers.
-Configuration is done at the datacenter (cluster-wide) level and is saved in
-files located in the shared configuration file system:
-`/etc/pve/sdn`
-On the web-interface, SDN features 3 main sections:
+[[pvesdn_main_configuration]]
+== Main Configuration
-* SDN: An overview of the SDN state
+Configuration is done at the web UI at datacenter level and is saved in files
+located in the shared configuration file system at `/etc/pve/sdn`.
-* Zones: Create and manage the virtually separated network zones
+On the web interface, SDN features the following sections:
-* VNets: Create virtual network bridges and manage subnets
+* xref:pvesdn_config_main_sdn[SDN]:: An overview of the SDN state
-In addition to this, the following options are offered:
+* xref:pvesdn_config_zone[Zones]: Create and manage the virtually separated
+ network zones
-* Controller: For controlling layer 3 routing in complex setups
+* xref:pvesdn_config_vnets[VNets] VNets: Create virtual network bridges and
+ manage subnets
-* Subnets: Used to defined IP networks on VNets
+The Options category allows adding and managing additional services to be used
+in your SDN setup.
-* IPAM: Enables the use of external tools for IP address management (guest
- IPs)
+* xref:pvesdn_config_controllers[Controllers]: For controlling layer 3 routing
+ in complex setups
-* DNS: Define a DNS server API for registering virtual guests' hostname and IP
+* xref:pvesdn_config_ipam[IPAM]: Enables external for IP address management for
+ guests
+
+* xref:pvesdn_config_dns[DNS]: Define a DNS server integration for registering
+ virtual guests' hostname and IP
addresses
-[[pvesdn_config_main_sdn]]
-SDN
-~~~
+[[pvesdn_config_main_sdn]]
+=== SDN
This is the main status panel. Here you can see the deployment status of zones
on different nodes.
-The 'Apply' button is used to push and reload local configuration on all cluster
+Pressing the 'Apply' button reloads the local configuration on all cluster
nodes.
-[[pvesdn_local_deployment_monitoring]]
-Local Deployment Monitoring
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-After applying the configuration through the main SDN panel,
-the local network configuration is generated locally on each node in
-the file `/etc/network/interfaces.d/sdn`, and reloaded with ifupdown2.
-
-You can monitor the status of local zones and VNets through the main tree.
-
-
[[pvesdn_config_zone]]
-Zones
------
+== Zones
-A zone defines a virtually separated network. Zones can be restricted to
+A zone defines a virtually separated network. Zones are restricted to
specific nodes and assigned permissions, in order to restrict users to a certain
zone and its contained VNets.
Different technologies can be used for separation:
+* Simple: Isolated Bridge. A simple layer 3 routing bridge (NAT)
+
* VLAN: Virtual LANs are the classic method of subdividing a LAN
* QinQ: Stacked VLAN (formally known as `IEEE 802.1ad`)
-* VXLAN: Layer2 VXLAN
+* VXLAN: Layer 2 VXLAN network via a UDP tunnel
-* Simple: Isolated Bridge. A simple layer 3 routing bridge (NAT)
+* EVPN (BGP EVPN): VXLAN with BGP to establish Layer 3 routing
-* EVPN (BGP EVPN): VXLAN using layer 3 border gateway protocol (BGP) routing
-Common options
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+[[pvesdn_config_common_options]]
+=== Common options
The following options are available for all zone types:
-nodes:: The nodes which the zone and associated VNets should be deployed on
+Nodes:: The nodes which the zone and associated VNets should be deployed on.
-ipam:: Optional. Use an IP Address Management (IPAM) tool to manage IPs in the
- zone.
+IPAM:: Use an IP Address Management (IPAM) tool to manage IPs in the
+ zone. Optional, defaults to `pve`.
-dns:: Optional. DNS API server.
+DNS:: DNS API server. Optional.
-reversedns:: Optional. Reverse DNS API server.
+ReverseDNS:: Reverse DNS API server. Optional.
-dnszone:: Optional. DNS domain name. Used to register hostnames, such as
- `<hostname>.<domain>`. The DNS zone must already exist on the DNS server.
+DNSZone:: DNS domain name. Used to register hostnames, such as
+ `<hostname>.<domain>`. The DNS zone must already exist on the DNS server. Optional.
[[pvesdn_zone_plugin_simple]]
-Simple Zones
-~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== Simple Zones
+
+This is the simplest plugin. It will create an isolated VNet bridge. This
+bridge is not linked to a physical interface, and VM traffic is only local on
+each the node.
+It can be used in NAT or routed setups.
-This is the simplest plugin. It will create an isolated VNet bridge.
-This bridge is not linked to a physical interface, and VM traffic is only
-local between the node(s).
-It can also be used in NAT or routed setups.
[[pvesdn_zone_plugin_vlan]]
-VLAN Zones
-~~~~~~~~~~
+=== VLAN Zones
-This plugin reuses an existing local Linux or OVS bridge, and manages the VLANs
-on it. The benefit of using the SDN module is that you can create different
-zones with specific VNet VLAN tags, and restrict virtual machines to separated
-zones.
+The VLAN plugin uses an existing local Linux or OVS bridge to connect to the
+node's physical interface. It uses VLAN tagging defined in the VNet to isolate
+the network segments. This allows connectivity of VMs between different nodes.
-Specific `VLAN` configuration options:
+VLAN zone configuration options:
+
+Bridge:: The local bridge or OVS switch, already configured on *each* node that
+ allows node-to-node connection.
-bridge:: Reuse this local bridge or OVS switch, already configured on *each*
- local node.
[[pvesdn_zone_plugin_qinq]]
-QinQ Zones
-~~~~~~~~~~
+=== QinQ Zones
-QinQ also known as VLAN stacking, wherein the first VLAN tag is defined for the
-zone (the 'service-vlan'), and the second VLAN tag is defined for the
-VNets.
+QinQ also known as VLAN stacking, that uses multiple layers of VLAN tags for
+isolation. The QinQ zone defines the outer VLAN tag (the 'Service VLAN')
+whereas the inner VLAN tag is defined by the VNet.
NOTE: Your physical network switches must support stacked VLANs for this
-configuration!
+configuration.
-Below are the configuration options specific to QinQ:
+QinQ zone configuration options:
-bridge:: A local, VLAN-aware bridge that is already configured on each local
+Bridge:: A local, VLAN-aware bridge that is already configured on each local
node
-service vlan:: The main VLAN tag of this zone
+Service VLAN:: The main VLAN tag of this zone
-service vlan protocol:: Allows you to choose between an 802.1q (default) or
+Service VLAN Protocol:: Allows you to choose between an 802.1q (default) or
802.1ad service VLAN type.
-mtu:: Due to the double stacking of tags, you need 4 more bytes for QinQ VLANs.
+MTU:: Due to the double stacking of tags, you need 4 more bytes for QinQ VLANs.
For example, you must reduce the MTU to `1496` if you physical interface MTU is
`1500`.
+
[[pvesdn_zone_plugin_vxlan]]
-VXLAN Zones
-~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== VXLAN Zones
-The VXLAN plugin establishes a tunnel (overlay) on top of an existing
-network (underlay). This encapsulates layer 2 Ethernet frames within layer
-4 UDP datagrams, using `4789` as the default destination port. You can, for
-example, create a private IPv4 VXLAN network on top of public internet network
-nodes.
+The VXLAN plugin establishes a tunnel (overlay) on top of an existing network
+(underlay). This encapsulates layer 2 Ethernet frames within layer 4 UDP
+datagrams using the default destination port `4789`.
+
+You have to configure the underlay network yourself to enable UDP connectivity
+between all peers.
-This is a layer 2 tunnel only, so no routing between different VNets is
-possible.
+You can, for example, create a VXLAN overlay network on top of public internet,
+appearing to the VMs as if they share the same local Layer 2 network.
-Each VNet will have a specific VXLAN ID in the range 1 - 16777215.
+WARNING: VXLAN on its own does does not provide any encryption. When joining
+ multiple sites via VXLAN, make sure to establish a secure connection between
+ the site, for example by using a site-to-site VPN.
-Specific EVPN configuration options:
+VXLAN zone configuration options:
-peers address list:: A list of IP addresses from each node through which you
- want to communicate. Can also be external nodes.
+Peers Address List:: A list of IP addresses of each node in the VXLAN zone. This
+ can be external nodes reachable at this IP address.
+ All nodes in the cluster need to be mentioned here.
-mtu:: Because VXLAN encapsulation uses 50 bytes, the MTU needs to be 50 bytes
+MTU:: Because VXLAN encapsulation uses 50 bytes, the MTU needs to be 50 bytes
lower than the outgoing physical interface.
+
[[pvesdn_zone_plugin_evpn]]
-EVPN Zones
-~~~~~~~~~~
+=== EVPN Zones
-This is the most complex of all the supported plugins.
+The EVPN zone creates a routable Layer 3 network, capable of spanning across
+multiple clusters. This is achieved by establishing a VPN and utilizing BGP as
+the routing protocol.
-BGP-EVPN allows you to create a routable layer 3 network. The VNet of EVPN can
-have an anycast IP address and/or MAC address. The bridge IP is the same on each
-node, meaning a virtual guest can use this address as gateway.
+The VNet of EVPN can have an anycast IP address and/or MAC address. The bridge
+IP is the same on each node, meaning a virtual guest can use this address as
+gateway.
Routing can work across VNets from different zones through a VRF (Virtual
Routing and Forwarding) interface.
-The configuration options specific to EVPN are as follows:
+EVPN zone configuration options:
-VRF VXLAN tag:: This is a VXLAN-ID used for routing interconnect between VNets.
+VRF VXLAN ID:: A VXLAN-ID used for dedicated routing interconnect between VNets.
It must be different than the VXLAN-ID of the VNets.
-controller:: An EVPN-controller must to be defined first (see controller plugins
+Controller:: The EVPN-controller to use for this zone. (See controller plugins
section).
-VNet MAC address:: A unique, anycast MAC address for all VNets in this zone.
- Will be auto-generated if not defined.
+VNet MAC Address:: Anycast MAC address that gets assigned to all VNets in this
+ zone. Will be auto-generated if not defined.
-Exit Nodes:: Optional. This is used if you want to define some {pve} nodes as
- exit gateways from the EVPN network, through the real network. The configured
- nodes will announce a default route in the EVPN network.
+Exit Nodes:: Nodes that shall be configured as exit gateways from the EVPN
+ network, through the real network. The configured nodes will announce a
+ default route in the EVPN network. Optional.
-Primary Exit Node:: Optional. If you use multiple exit nodes, this forces
- traffic to a primary exit node, instead of load-balancing on all nodes. This
- is required if you want to use SNAT or if your upstream router doesn't support
+Primary Exit Node:: If you use multiple exit nodes, force traffic through this
+ primary exit node, instead of load-balancing on all nodes. Optional but
+ necessary if you want to use SNAT or if your upstream router doesn't support
ECMP.
-Exit Nodes local routing:: Optional. This is a special option if you need to
- reach a VM/CT service from an exit node. (By default, the exit nodes only
- allow forwarding traffic between real network and EVPN network).
+Exit Nodes Local Routing:: This is a special option if you need to reach a VM/CT
+ service from an exit node. (By default, the exit nodes only allow forwarding
+ traffic between real network and EVPN network). Optional.
-Advertise Subnets:: Optional. If you have silent VMs/CTs (for example, if you
- have multiple IPs and the anycast gateway doesn't see traffic from theses IPs,
- the IP addresses won't be able to be reach inside the EVPN network). This
- option will announce the full subnet in the EVPN network in this case.
+Advertise Subnets:: Announce the full subnet in the EVPN network.
+ If you have silent VMs/CTs (for example, if you have multiple IPs and the
+ anycast gateway doesn't see traffic from theses IPs, the IP addresses won't be
+ able to be reached inside the EVPN network). Optional.
-Disable Arp-Nd Suppression:: Optional. Don't suppress ARP or ND packets.
- This is required if you use floating IPs in your guest VMs
- (IP are MAC addresses are being moved between systems).
+Disable ARP ND Suppression:: Don't suppress ARP or ND (Neighbor Discovery)
+ packets. This is required if you use floating IPs in your VMs (IP and MAC
+ addresses are being moved between systems). Optional.
-Route-target import:: Optional. Allows you to import a list of external EVPN
- route targets. Used for cross-DC or different EVPN network interconnects.
+Route-target Import:: Allows you to import a list of external EVPN route
+ targets. Used for cross-DC or different EVPN network interconnects. Optional.
MTU:: Because VXLAN encapsulation uses 50 bytes, the MTU needs to be 50 bytes
- less than the maximal MTU of the outgoing physical interface.
+ less than the maximal MTU of the outgoing physical interface. Optional,
+ defaults to 1450.
-[[pvesdn_config_vnet]]
-VNets
------
+[[pvesdn_config_vnets]]
+== VNets
+
+After creating a virtual network (VNet) through the SDN GUI, a local network
+interface with the same name is available on each node. To connect a guest to the
+VNet, assign the interface to the guest and set the IP address accordingly.
+
+Depending on the zone, these options have different meanings and are explained
+in the respective zone section in this document.
-A `VNet` is, in its basic form, a Linux bridge that will be deployed locally on
-the node and used for virtual machine communication.
+WARNING: In the current state, some options may have no effect or won't work in
+certain zones.
-The VNet configuration properties are:
+VNet configuration options:
-ID:: An 8 character ID to name and identify a VNet
+ID:: An up to 8 character ID to identify a VNet
-Alias:: Optional longer name, if the ID isn't enough
+Comment:: More descriptive identifier. Assigned as an alias on the interface. Optional
Zone:: The associated zone for this VNet
Tag:: The unique VLAN or VXLAN ID
-VLAN Aware:: Enable adding an extra VLAN tag in the virtual machine or
-container's vNIC configuration, to allow the guest OS to manage the VLAN's tag.
+VLAN Aware:: Enables vlan-aware option on the interface, enabling configuration
+ in the quest.
+
[[pvesdn_config_subnet]]
-Subnets
-~~~~~~~~
+== Subnets
-A subnetwork (subnet) allows you to define a specific IP network
-(IPv4 or IPv6). For each VNet, you can define one or more subnets.
+A subnet define a specific IP range, described by the CIDR network address.
+Each VNet, can have one or more subnets.
A subnet can be used to:
@@ -302,52 +305,56 @@ A subnet can be used to:
If an IPAM server is associated with the subnet zone, the subnet prefix will be
automatically registered in the IPAM.
-Subnet properties are:
+Subnet configuration options:
ID:: A CIDR network address, for example 10.0.0.0/8
Gateway:: The IP address of the network's default gateway. On layer 3 zones
(Simple/EVPN plugins), it will be deployed on the VNet.
-SNAT:: Optional. Enable SNAT for layer 3 zones (Simple/EVPN plugins), for this
- subnet. The subnet's source IP will be NATted to server's outgoing interface/IP.
- On EVPN zones, this is only done on EVPN gateway-nodes.
+SNAT:: Enable Source NAT which allows VMs from inside a
+ VNet to connect to the outside network by forwarding the packets to the nodes
+ outgoing interface. On EVPN zones, forwarding is done on EVPN gateway-nodes.
+ Optional.
+
+DNS Zone Prefix:: Add a prefix to the domain registration, like
+ <hostname>.prefix.<domain> Optional.
-Dnszoneprefix:: Optional. Add a prefix to the domain registration, like
-<hostname>.prefix.<domain>
[[pvesdn_config_controllers]]
-Controllers
------------
+== Controllers
+
+Some zones implement a separated control and data plane that require an external
+external controller to manage the VNet's control plane.
+
+Currently, only the `EVPN` zone requires an external controller.
-Some zone types need an external controller to manage the VNet control-plane.
-Currently this is only required for the `bgp-evpn` zone plugin.
[[pvesdn_controller_plugin_evpn]]
-EVPN Controller
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== EVPN Controller
+
+The `EVPN`, zone requires an external controller to manage the control plane.
+The EVPN controller plugin configures the Free Range Routing (frr) router.
-For `BGP-EVPN`, we need a controller to manage the control plane.
-The currently supported software controller is the "frr" router.
-You may need to install it on each node where you want to deploy EVPN zones.
+To enable the EVPN controller, you need to install frr on every node that shall
+participate in the EVPN zone.
----
apt install frr frr-pythontools
----
-Configuration options:
+EVPN controller configuration options:
-asn:: A unique BGP ASN number. It's highly recommended to use a private ASN
+ASN #:: A unique BGP ASN number. It's highly recommended to use a private ASN
number (64512 – 65534, 4200000000 – 4294967294), as otherwise you could end up
breaking global routing by mistake.
-peers:: An IP list of all nodes where you want to communicate for the EVPN
- (could also be external nodes or route reflectors servers)
+Peers:: An IP list of all nodes that are part of the EVPN zone. (could also be
+ external nodes or route reflector servers)
[[pvesdn_controller_plugin_BGP]]
-BGP Controller
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== BGP Controller
The BGP controller is not used directly by a zone.
You can use it to configure FRR to manage BGP peers.
@@ -358,20 +365,20 @@ It can also be used to export EVPN routes to an external BGP peer.
NOTE: By default, for a simple full mesh EVPN, you don't need to define a BGP
controller.
-Configuration options:
+BGP controller configuration options:
-node:: The node of this BGP controller
+Node:: The node of this BGP controller
-asn:: A unique BGP ASN number. It's highly recommended to use a private ASN
+ASN #:: A unique BGP ASN number. It's highly recommended to use a private ASN
number in the range (64512 - 65534) or (4200000000 - 4294967294), as otherwise
you could break global routing by mistake.
-peers:: A list of peer IP addresses you want to communicate with using the
+Peer:: A list of peer IP addresses you want to communicate with using the
underlying BGP network.
-ebgp:: If your peer's remote-AS is different, this enables EBGP.
+EBGP:: If your peer's remote-AS is different, this enables EBGP.
-loopback:: Use a loopback or dummy interface as the source of the EVPN network
+Loopback Interface:: Use a loopback or dummy interface as the source of the EVPN network
(for multipath).
ebgp-mutltihop:: Increase the number of hops to reach peers, in case they are
@@ -381,177 +388,193 @@ bgp-multipath-as-path-relax:: Allow ECMP if your peers have different ASN.
[[pvesdn_controller_plugin_ISIS]]
-ISIS Controller
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== ISIS Controller
The ISIS controller is not used directly by a zone.
-You can use it to configure FRR to export evpn routes to an ISIS domain.
+You can use it to configure FRR to export EVPN routes to an ISIS domain.
-Configuration options:
+ISIS controller configuration options:
-node:: The node of this ISIS controller.
+Node:: The node of this ISIS controller.
-domain:: A unique ISIS domain.
+Domain:: A unique ISIS domain.
-network entity title:: A Unique ISIS network address that identifies this node.
+Network Entity Title:: A Unique ISIS network address that identifies this node.
-interfaces:: A list of physical interface(s) used by ISIS.
+Interfaces:: A list of physical interface(s) used by ISIS.
-loopback:: Use a loopback or dummy interface as the source of the EVPN network
+Loopback:: Use a loopback or dummy interface as the source of the EVPN network
(for multipath).
+
[[pvesdn_config_ipam]]
-IPAMs
------
+== IPAM
+
+IP Address Management (IPAM) tools manage the IP addresses of clients on the
+network. SDN in {pve} uses IPAM for example to find free IP addresses for new
+guests.
-IPAM (IP Address Management) tools are used to manage/assign the IP addresses of
-guests on the network. It can be used to find free IP addresses when you create
-a VM/CT for example (not yet implemented).
+A single IPAM instance can be associated with one or more zones.
-An IPAM can be associated with one or more zones, to provide IP addresses
-for all subnets defined in those zones.
[[pvesdn_ipam_plugin_pveipam]]
-{pve} IPAM Plugin
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== PVE IPAM Plugin
-This is the default internal IPAM for your {pve} cluster, if you don't have
-external IPAM software.
+The default built-in IPAM for your {pve} cluster.
-[[pvesdn_ipam_plugin_phpipam]]
-phpIPAM Plugin
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-https://phpipam.net/
-You need to create an application in phpIPAM and add an API token with admin
-privileges.
+[[pvesdn_ipam_plugin_netbox]]
+=== NetBox IPAM Plugin
-The phpIPAM configuration properties are:
+link:https://github.com/netbox-community/netbox[NetBox] is an open-source IP
+Address Management (IPAM) and datacenter infrastructure management (DCIM) tool.
-url:: The REST-API endpoint: `http://phpipam.domain.com/api/<appname>/`
+To integrate NetBox with {pve} SDN, create an API token in NetBox as described
+here: https://docs.netbox.dev/en/stable/integrations/rest-api/#tokens
-token:: An API access token
+The NetBox configuration properties are:
-section:: An integer ID. Sections are a group of subnets in phpIPAM. Default
- installations use `sectionid=1` for customers.
+URL:: The NetBox REST API endpoint: `http://yournetbox.domain.com/api`
-[[pvesdn_ipam_plugin_netbox]]
-NetBox IPAM Plugin
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+Token:: An API access token
-NetBox is an IP address management (IPAM) and datacenter infrastructure
-management (DCIM) tool. See the source code repository for details:
-https://github.com/netbox-community/netbox
-You need to create an API token in NetBox to use it:
-https://docs.netbox.dev/en/stable/integrations/rest-api/#tokens
+[[pvesdn_ipam_plugin_phpipam]]
+=== phpIPAM Plugin
-The NetBox configuration properties are:
+In link:https://phpipam.net/[phpIPAM] you need to create an "application" and add
+an API token with admin privileges to the application.
+
+The phpIPAM configuration properties are:
+
+URL:: The REST-API endpoint: `http://phpipam.domain.com/api/<appname>/`
-url:: The REST API endpoint: `http://yournetbox.domain.com/api`
+Token:: An API access token
+
+Section:: An integer ID. Sections are a group of subnets in phpIPAM. Default
+ installations use `sectionid=1` for customers.
-token:: An API access token
[[pvesdn_config_dns]]
-DNS
----
+== DNS
The DNS plugin in {pve} SDN is used to define a DNS API server for registration
of your hostname and IP address. A DNS configuration is associated with one or
more zones, to provide DNS registration for all the subnet IPs configured for
a zone.
+
[[pvesdn_dns_plugin_powerdns]]
-PowerDNS Plugin
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== TODO PowerDNS Plugin
+
+link:https://www.powerdns.com/[PowerDNS]
+
https://doc.powerdns.com/authoritative/http-api/index.html
You need to enable the web server and the API in your PowerDNS config:
----
api=yes
-api-key=arandomgeneratedstring
+api-key=RandomGeneratedString
webserver=yes
webserver-port=8081
----
The PowerDNS configuration options are:
-url:: The REST API endpoint: http://yourpowerdnserver.domain.com:8081/api/v1/servers/localhost
+URL:: The REST API endpoint: http://yourpowerdnserver.domain.com:8081/api/v1/servers/localhost
-key:: An API access key
+API Key:: An API key defined in your PowerDNS config.
-ttl:: The default TTL for records
+TTL:: The default TTL for DNS records
-Examples
---------
+[[pvesdn_setup_examples]]
+== Examples
-[[pvesdn_setup_example_vlan]]
-VLAN Setup Example
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+This section presents multiple configuration examples tailored for common SDN
+use cases. It aims to offer tangible implementations, providing additional
+details to enhance comprehension of the available configuration options.
-TIP: While we show plaintext configuration content here, almost everything
-should be configurable using the web-interface only.
-Node1: /etc/network/interfaces
+[[pvesdn_setup_example_simple]]
+=== Simple Zone Example
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet manual
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- bridge-vlan-aware yes
- bridge-vids 2-4094
+Simple zone networks create an isolated network for quests on a single host to
+connect to each other.
-#management ip on vlan100
-auto vmbr0.100
-iface vmbr0.100 inet static
- address 192.168.0.1/24
+TIP: connection between quests are possible if all quests reside on a same host
+but cannot be reached on other nodes.
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
+* Create a simple zone named `simple`.
+* Add a VNet names `vnet1`.
+* Create a Subnet with a gateway and the SNAT option enabled.
+* This creates a network bridge `vnet1` on the node. Assign this bridge to the
+ quests that shall join the network and configure an IP address.
-Node2: /etc/network/interfaces
+The network interface configuration in two VMs may look like this which allows
+them to communicate via the 10.0.1.0/24 network.
----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet manual
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- bridge-vlan-aware yes
- bridge-vids 2-4094
+allow-hotplug ens19
+iface ens19 inet static
+ address 10.0.1.14/24
+----
-#management ip on vlan100
-auto vmbr0.100
-iface vmbr0.100 inet static
- address 192.168.0.2/24
+----
+allow-hotplug ens19
+iface ens19 inet static
+ address 10.0.1.15/24
+----
+
+
+[[pvesdn_setup_example_nat]]
+=== Source NAT Example
+
+If you want to allow outgoing connections for quests in the simple network zone
+the simple zone offers a Source NAT (SNAT) option.
+
+Starting from the configuration xref:pvesdn_setup_example_simple[above], Add a
+Subnet to the VNet `vnet1`, set a gateway IP and enable the SNAT option.
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
----
+Subnet: 172.16.0.0/24
+Gateway: 172.16.0.1
+SNAT: checked
+----
+
+In the quests configure the static IP address inside the subnet's IP range.
+
+The node itself will join this network with the Gateway IP '172.16.0.1' and
+function as the NAT gateway for quests within the subnet range.
+
+
+[[pvesdn_setup_example_vlan]]
+=== VLAN Setup Example
+
+When VMs on different nodes need to communicate through an isolated network, the
+VLAN zone allows network level isolation using VLAN tags.
-Create a VLAN zone named `myvlanzone':
+Create a VLAN zone named `myvlanzone`:
----
-id: myvlanzone
-bridge: vmbr0
+ID: myvlanzone
+Bridge: vmbr0
----
-Create a VNet named `myvnet1' with `vlan-id` `10' and the previously created
-`myvlanzone' as its zone.
+Create a VNet named `myvnet1` with VLAN tag 10 and the previously created
+`myvlanzone`.
----
-id: myvnet1
-zone: myvlanzone
-tag: 10
+ID: myvnet1
+Zone: myvlanzone
+Tag: 10
----
Apply the configuration through the main SDN panel, to create VNets locally on
each node.
-Create a Debian-based virtual machine (vm1) on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1'.
+Create a Debian-based virtual machine ('vm1') on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1`.
Use the following network configuration for this VM:
@@ -561,8 +584,8 @@ iface eth0 inet static
address 10.0.3.100/24
----
-Create a second virtual machine (vm2) on node2, with a vNIC on the same VNet
-`myvnet1' as vm1.
+Create a second virtual machine ('vm2') on node2, with a vNIC on the same VNet
+`myvnet1` as vm1.
Use the following network configuration for this VM:
@@ -572,372 +595,216 @@ iface eth0 inet static
address 10.0.3.101/24
----
-Following this, you should be able to ping between both VMs over that network.
+Following this, you should be able to ping between both VMs using that network.
[[pvesdn_setup_example_qinq]]
-QinQ Setup Example
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-TIP: While we show plaintext configuration content here, almost everything
-should be configurable using the web-interface only.
-
-Node1: /etc/network/interfaces
-
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet manual
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- bridge-vlan-aware yes
- bridge-vids 2-4094
-
-#management ip on vlan100
-auto vmbr0.100
-iface vmbr0.100 inet static
- address 192.168.0.1/24
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
-
-Node2: /etc/network/interfaces
+=== QinQ Setup Example
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet manual
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- bridge-vlan-aware yes
- bridge-vids 2-4094
-#management ip on vlan100
-auto vmbr0.100
-iface vmbr0.100 inet static
- address 192.168.0.2/24
+This example configures two QinQ zones and adds two VMs to each zone to
+demonstrate the additional layer of VLAN tags which allows the configuration of
+more isolated VLANs.
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
+A typical use case for this configuration is a hosting provider that provides an
+isolated network to customers for VM communication but isolates the VMs from
+other customers.
-Create a QinQ zone named `qinqzone1' with service VLAN 20
+Create a QinQ zone named `qinqzone1` with service VLAN 20
----
-id: qinqzone1
-bridge: vmbr0
-service vlan: 20
+ID: qinqzone1
+Bridge: vmbr0
+Service VLAN: 20
----
-Create another QinQ zone named `qinqzone2' with service VLAN 30
-
+Create another QinQ zone named `qinqzone2` with service VLAN 30
----
-id: qinqzone2
-bridge: vmbr0
-service vlan: 30
+ID: qinqzone2
+Bridge: vmbr0
+Service VLAN: 30
----
-Create a VNet named `myvnet1' with customer VLAN-ID 100 on the previously
-created `qinqzone1' zone.
+Create a VNet named `myvnet1` with VLAN-ID 100 on the previously created
+`qinqzone1` zone.
----
-id: myvnet1
-zone: qinqzone1
-tag: 100
+ID: qinqvnet1
+Zone: qinqzone1
+Tag: 100
----
-Create a `myvnet2' with customer VLAN-ID 100 on the previously created
-`qinqzone2' zone.
+Create a `myvnet2` with VLAN-ID 100 on the `qinqzone2` zone.
----
-id: myvnet2
-zone: qinqzone2
-tag: 100
+ID: qinqvnet2
+Zone: qinqzone2
+Tag: 100
----
Apply the configuration on the main SDN web-interface panel to create VNets
-locally on each nodes.
-
-Create a Debian-based virtual machine (vm1) on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1'.
-
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
-
-----
-auto eth0
-iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.100/24
-----
-
-Create a second virtual machine (vm2) on node2, with a vNIC on the same VNet
-`myvnet1' as vm1.
-
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
-
-----
-auto eth0
-iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.101/24
-----
+locally on each node.
-Create a third virtual machine (vm3) on node1, with a vNIC on the other VNet
-`myvnet2'.
+Create four Debian-bases virtual machines (vm1, vm2, vm3, vm4) and add network
+interfaces to vm1 and vm2 with bridge `qinqvnet1` and vm3 and vm4 with bridge
+`qinqvnet2`.
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
+Inside the VM, configure the IP addresses of the interfaces, for example via
+`/etc/network/interfaces`:
----
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.102/24
-----
-
-Create another virtual machine (vm4) on node2, with a vNIC on the same VNet
-`myvnet2' as vm3.
-
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
-
-----
-auto eth0
-iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.103/24
+ address 10.0.3.101/24
----
+Configure the four VMs to have IP addresses from 10.0.3.101 to 10.0.3.104.
-Then, you should be able to ping between the VMs 'vm1' and 'vm2', as well as
+Now you should be able to ping between the VMs 'vm1' and 'vm2', as well as
between 'vm3' and 'vm4'. However, neither of VMs 'vm1' or 'vm2' can ping VMs
-'vm3' or 'vm4', as they are on a different zone with a different service-vlan.
+'vm3' or 'vm4', as they are on a different zone with a different service-VLAN.
[[pvesdn_setup_example_vxlan]]
-VXLAN Setup Example
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-TIP: While we show plaintext configuration content here, almost everything
-is configurable through the web-interface.
-
-node1: /etc/network/interfaces
-
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.1/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
+=== VXLAN Setup Example
-node2: /etc/network/interfaces
+The example assumes a cluster with three nodes, with the node IP addresses
+192.168.0.1, 192.168.0.2 and 192.168.0.3.
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.2/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
-
-node3: /etc/network/interfaces
+Create a VXLAN zone named `myvxlanzone` and add all IPs from the nodes to the
+peer address list. Use the default MTU of 1450 or configure accordingly.
----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.3/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
+ID: myvxlanzone
+Peers Address List: 192.168.0.1,192.168.0.2,192.168.0.3
----
-Create a VXLAN zone named `myvxlanzone', using a lower MTU to ensure the extra
-50 bytes of the VXLAN header can fit. Add all previously configured IPs from
-the nodes to the peer address list.
-
-----
-id: myvxlanzone
-peers address list: 192.168.0.1,192.168.0.2,192.168.0.3
-mtu: 1450
-----
-
-Create a VNet named `myvnet1' using the VXLAN zone `myvxlanzone' created
+Create a VNet named `vxvnet1` using the VXLAN zone `myvxlanzone` created
previously.
----
-id: myvnet1
-zone: myvxlanzone
-tag: 100000
+ID: vxvnet1
+Zone: myvxlanzone
+Tag: 100000
----
Apply the configuration on the main SDN web-interface panel to create VNets
locally on each nodes.
-Create a Debian-based virtual machine (vm1) on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1'.
+Create a Debian-based virtual machine ('vm1') on node1, with a vNIC on `vxvnet1`.
Use the following network configuration for this VM (note the lower MTU).
----
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.100/24
- mtu 1450
+ address 10.0.3.100/24
+ mtu 1450
----
-Create a second virtual machine (vm2) on node3, with a vNIC on the same VNet
-`myvnet1' as vm1.
+Create a second virtual machine ('vm2') on node3, with a vNIC on the same VNet
+`vxvnet1` as vm1.
Use the following network configuration for this VM:
----
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.3.101/24
- mtu 1450
+ address 10.0.3.101/24
+ mtu 1450
----
Then, you should be able to ping between between 'vm1' and 'vm2'.
[[pvesdn_setup_example_evpn]]
-EVPN Setup Example
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-node1: /etc/network/interfaces
-
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.1/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
+=== EVPN Setup Example
-node2: /etc/network/interfaces
-
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.2/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
-
-node3: /etc/network/interfaces
-
-----
-auto vmbr0
-iface vmbr0 inet static
- address 192.168.0.3/24
- gateway 192.168.0.254
- bridge-ports eno1
- bridge-stp off
- bridge-fd 0
- mtu 1500
-
-source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
-----
+The example assumes a cluster with three nodes (node1, node2, node3) with IP
+addresses 192.168.0.1, 192.168.0.2 and 192.168.0.3.
Create an EVPN controller, using a private ASN number and the above node
addresses as peers.
----
-id: myevpnctl
-asn: 65000
-peers: 192.168.0.1,192.168.0.2,192.168.0.3
+ID: myevpnctl
+ASN#: 65000
+Peers: 192.168.0.1,192.168.0.2,192.168.0.3
----
-Create an EVPN zone named `myevpnzone', using the previously created
-EVPN-controller. Define 'node1' and 'node2' as exit nodes.
+Create an EVPN zone named `myevpnzone`, assign the previously created
+EVPN-controller and define 'node1' and 'node2' as exit nodes.
----
-id: myevpnzone
-vrf vxlan tag: 10000
-controller: myevpnctl
-mtu: 1450
-vnet mac address: 32:F4:05:FE:6C:0A
-exitnodes: node1,node2
+ID: myevpnzone
+VRF VXLAN Tag: 10000
+Controller: myevpnctl
+MTU: 1450
+VNet MAC Address: 32:F4:05:FE:6C:0A
+Exit Nodes: node1,node2
----
-Create the first VNet named `myvnet1' using the EVPN zone `myevpnzone'.
+Create the first VNet named `myvnet1` using the EVPN zone `myevpnzone`.
+
----
-id: myvnet1
-zone: myevpnzone
-tag: 11000
+ID: myvnet1
+Zone: myevpnzone
+Tag: 11000
----
-Create a subnet 10.0.1.0/24 with 10.0.1.1 as gateway on `myvnet1`.
+Create a subnet on `myvnet1`:
----
-subnet: 10.0.1.0/24
-gateway: 10.0.1.1
+Subnet: 10.0.1.0/24
+Gateway: 10.0.1.1
----
-Create the second VNet named `myvnet2' using the same EVPN zone `myevpnzone', a
-different IPv4 CIDR network.
+Create the second VNet named `myvnet2` using the same EVPN zone `myevpnzone`.
----
-id: myvnet2
-zone: myevpnzone
-tag: 12000
+ID: myvnet2
+Zone: myevpnzone
+Tag: 12000
----
-Create a different subnet 10.0.2.0/24 with 10.0.2.1 as gateway on vnet2
+Create a different subnet on `myvnet2``:
----
-subnet: 10.0.2.0/24
-gateway: 10.0.2.1
+Subnet: 10.0.2.0/24
+Gateway: 10.0.2.1
----
-
Apply the configuration from the main SDN web-interface panel to create VNets
-locally on each node and generate the FRR config.
+locally on each node and generate the FRR configuration.
-Create a Debian-based virtual machine (vm1) on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1'.
+Create a Debian-based virtual machine ('vm1') on node1, with a vNIC on `myvnet1`.
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
+Use the following network configuration for 'vm1':
----
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.1.100/24
- gateway 10.0.1.1 #this is the ip of the vnet1
- mtu 1450
+ address 10.0.1.100/24
+ gateway 10.0.1.1
+ mtu 1450
----
-Create a second virtual machine (vm2) on node2, with a vNIC on the other VNet
-`myvnet2'.
+Create a second virtual machine ('vm2') on node2, with a vNIC on the other VNet
+`myvnet2`.
-Use the following network configuration for this VM:
+Use the following network configuration for 'vm2':
----
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
- address 10.0.2.100/24
- gateway 10.0.2.1 #this is the ip of the myvnet2
- mtu 1450
+ address 10.0.2.100/24
+ gateway 10.0.2.1
+ mtu 1450
----
-Then, you should be able to ping vm2 from vm1, and vm1 from vm2.
+Now you should be able to ping vm2 from vm1, and vm1 from vm2.
-If you ping an external IP from 'vm2' on the non-gateway 'node3', the packet
+If you ping an external IP from 'vm2' on the non-gateway node3, the packet
will go to the configured 'myvnet2' gateway, then will be routed to the exit
nodes ('node1' or 'node2') and from there it will leave those nodes over the
default gateway configured on node1 or node2.
@@ -950,38 +817,40 @@ If you have configured an external BGP router, the BGP-EVPN routes (10.0.1.0/24
and 10.0.2.0/24 in this example), will be announced dynamically.
-Notes
------
+[[pvesdn_notes]]
+== Notes
-Multiple EVPN Exit Nodes
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== Multiple EVPN Exit Nodes
If you have multiple gateway nodes, you should disable the `rp_filter` (Strict
Reverse Path Filter) option, because packets can arrive at one node but go out
from another node.
-.sysctl.conf disabling `rp_filter`
+Add the following to `/etc/sysctl.conf`:
+
-----
net.ipv4.conf.default.rp_filter=0
net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter=0
-----
-VXLAN IPSEC Encryption
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+=== VXLAN IPSEC Encryption
-If you need to add encryption on top of a VXLAN, it's possible to do so with
-IPSEC, through `strongswan`. You'll need to reduce the 'MTU' by 60 bytes (IPv4)
-or 80 bytes (IPv6) to handle encryption.
+To add IPSEC encryption on top of a VXLAN, this example shows how to use
+`strongswan`.
+
+You`ll need to reduce the 'MTU' by additional 60 bytes for IPv4 or 80 bytes for
+IPv6 to handle encryption.
So with default real 1500 MTU, you need to use a MTU of 1370 (1370 + 80 (IPSEC)
+ 50 (VXLAN) == 1500).
-.Install strongswan
+Install strongswan on the host.
+
----
apt install strongswan
----
-Add configuration to `/etc/ipsec.conf'. We only need to encrypt traffic from
+Add configuration to `/etc/ipsec.conf`. We only need to encrypt traffic from
the VXLAN UDP port '4789'.
----
@@ -1004,16 +873,16 @@ conn input
auto=route
----
-Then generate a pre-shared key with:
+Generate a pre-shared key with:
----
openssl rand -base64 128
----
-and add the key to `/etc/ipsec.secrets', so that the file contents looks like:
+and add the key to `/etc/ipsec.secrets`, so that the file contents looks like:
----
-: PSK <generatedbase64key>
+#: PSK \<generatedbase64key>
----
-You need to copy the PSK and the configuration onto the other nodes.
+Copy the PSK and the configuration to all nodes participating in the VXLAN network.
--
2.42.0
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