VXLAN(4) | Device Drivers Manual | VXLAN(4) |
vxlan
— Virtual
eXtensible LAN interface
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following line in your kernel configuration file:
device vxlan
Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5):
if_vxlan_load="YES"
The vxlan
driver creates a virtual tunnel
endpoint in a vxlan
segment. A
vxlan
segment is a virtual Layer 2 (Ethernet)
network that is overlaid in a Layer 3 (IP/UDP) network.
vxlan
is analogous to vlan(4) but
is designed to be better suited for large, multiple tenant data center
environments.
Each vxlan
interface is created at runtime
using interface cloning. This is most easily done with the
ifconfig(8) create
command or
using the cloned_interfaces variable in
rc.conf(5). The interface may be removed with the
ifconfig(8) destroy
command.
The vxlan
driver creates a pseudo Ethernet
network interface that supports the usual network
ioctl(2)s and is thus can be used with
ifconfig(8) like any other Ethernet interface. The
vxlan
interface encapsulates the Ethernet frame by
prepending IP/UDP and vxlan
headers. Thus, the
encapsulated (inner) frame is able to transmitted over a routed, Layer 3
network to the remote host.
The vxlan
interface may be configured in
either unicast or multicast mode. When in unicast mode, the interface
creates a tunnel to a single remote host, and all traffic is transmitted to
that host. When in multicast mode, the interface joins an IP multicast
group, and receives packets sent to the group address, and transmits packets
to either the multicast group address, or directly the remote host if there
is an appropriate forwarding table entry.
When the vxlan
interface is brought up, a
UDP(4) socket(9) is created based on the
configuration, such as the local address for unicast mode or the group
address for multicast mode, and the listening (local) port number. Since
multiple vxlan
interfaces may be created that either
use the same local address or join the same group address, and use the same
port, the driver may share a socket among multiple interfaces. However, each
interface within a socket must belong to a unique
vxlan
segment. The analogous
vlan(4) configuration would be a physical interface
configured as the parent device for multiple VLAN interfaces, each with a
unique VLAN tag. Each vxlan
segment is identified by
a 24-bit value in the vxlan
header called the
“VXLAN Network Identifier”, or VNI.
When configured with the ifconfig(8)
vxlanlearn
parameter, the interface dynamically
creates forwarding table entries from received packets. An entry in the
forwarding table maps the inner source MAC address to the outer remote IP
address. During transmit, the interface attempts to lookup an entry for the
encapsulated destination MAC address. If an entry is found, the IP address
in the entry is used to directly transmit the encapsulated frame to the
destination. Otherwise, when configured in multicast mode, the interface
must flood the frame to all hosts in the group. The maximum number of
entries in the table is configurable with the ifconfig(8)
vxlanmaxaddr
command. Stale entries in the table
periodically pruned. The timeout is configurable with the
ifconfig(8) vxlantimeout
command.
The table may be viewed with the sysctl(8)
net.link.vxlan.N.ftable.dump
command.
Since the vxlan
interface encapsulates the
Ethernet frame with an IP, UDP, and vxlan
header,
the resulting frame may be larger than the MTU of the physical network. The
vxlan
specification recommends the physical network
MTU be configured to use jumbo frames to accommodate the encapsulated frame
size. Alternatively, the ifconfig(8)
mtu
command may be used to reduce the MTU size on
the vxlan
interface to allow the encapsulated frame
to fit in the current MTU of the physical network.
Create a vxlan
interface in unicast mode
with the vxlanlocal
tunnel address of 192.168.100.1,
and the vxlanremote
tunnel address of
192.168.100.2.
ifconfig vxlan create vxlanid 108 vxlanlocal 192.168.100.1 vxlanremote 192.168.100.2
Create a vxlan
interface in multicast
mode, with the local
address of 192.168.10.95, and
the group
address of 224.0.2.6. The em0 interface
will be used to transmit multicast packets.
ifconfig vxlan create vxlanid 42 vxlanlocal 192.168.10.95 vxlangroup 224.0.2.6 vxlandev em0
Once created, the vxlan
interface can be
configured with ifconfig(8).
The following when placed in the file
/etc/rc.conf will cause a vxlan interface called
“vxlan0
” to be created, and will
configure the interface in unicast mode.
cloned_interfaces="vxlan0" create_args_vxlan0="vxlanid 108 vxlanlocal 192.168.100.1 vxlanremote 192.168.100.2"
inet(4), inet6(4), vlan(4), rc.conf(5), ifconfig(8), sysctl(8)
M. Mahalingam and et al, Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network (VXLAN): A Framework for Overlaying Virtualized Layer 2 Networks over Layer 3 Networks, August 2014, RFC 7348.
The vxlan
driver was written by
Bryan Venteicher
⟨bryanv@freebsd.org⟩.
December 31, 2017 | Debian |