BRIDGE-UTILS-INTERFACES(5) | File formats | BRIDGE-UTILS-INTERFACES(5) |
bridge-utils-interfaces - bridge-utils extensions for the interfaces(5) file format
/etc/network/interfaces contains network interface configuration information for the ifup(8) and ifdown(8) commands. This manpage describes the bridge extensions to the standard interfaces(5) file format.
The main extension is the bridge_ports option, with it you describe that the interface is a bridge and what ports does it have. These ports are the interfaces that are part of the bridge, and they shouldn't have any stanzas defining them on the interfaces file. Other extensions allow you to tune the bridge options or change a bridge behaviour.
We'll see this with an example:
auto br0 iface br0 inet staticWell, after setting this, an ifup br0, or the next reboot, should let you have a bridge up and running, after waiting for the ports to get to the forwarding status, of course. This bridge will be using all your ethX interfaces, as we have stated on the bridge_ports line.
address 192.168.1.2
network 192.168.1.0
netmask 255.255.255.0
broadcast 192.168.1.255
gateway 192.168.1.1
bridge_ports all
The Debian bridge setup scripts will wait for it to get ready to work. They do this by trying to guess the maximum time that the bridge will need to get to the forwarding status, and by default, they will wait for the bridge to get there, or for the estimated maximum time to go by. This is done so that the services that are loaded after the bridge setup have a working network interface and don't fail because the bridge is still not working. See bridge_maxwait if you want to change this behaviour.
An example of how to setup a so called anonymous bridge (a bridge without an assigned IP) would look like this:
iface br1 inet manual bridge_ports eth1 eth2 bridge_maxwait 0Here we select the interfaces eth1 and eth2 to be added to the bridge interface br1, which will be an anonymous bridge, we also tell the scripts not to wait, as we won't be having any service running on that interface (it doesn't even have an IP).
An example of a little more complex bridge setup could be:
auto br0 iface br0 inet staticIn this example we select all the eth* devices plus a weird device to be added to the bridge, also we change the bridge default priority to a higher one so that this bridge becomes the root (if there are no bridges with higher priority on the net, that is) and also we lower priority of port eth0 so that it is not used if there are other ports with higher priority to reach the same destination, at the end we lower the default forward delay and we add a pre-up command to remove all addresses on eth0 as this interface had an address set up before (needed only on weird/broken setups).
address 192.168.1.2
network 192.168.1.0
netmask 255.255.255.0
broadcast 192.168.1.255
bridge_ports all weird0
bridge_bridgeprio 32767
bridge_portprio eth0 129
bridge_fd 5
pre-up ip addr flush dev eth0
If there is a need to set up any of the interfaces participating on the bridge and not the bridge itself, then we must add the commands to set up those settings in a "pre-up" or "up" statement. This means that if we have a wireless card that we want to add to a bridge and we want to set it to master, and select the essid, instead of using the typical wireless_* commands we could add to the bridge definition something like this:
pre-up iwconfig wlan0 mode master essid myESSIDBe aware, however, that using wireless cards as part of a bridge is not a good idea if the card belonging to the bridge is in managed mode. Trying to bridge packets coming out of our LAN through a wireless card that is set in managed mode (the card is a client of an AP) is bound to give problems, as the AP will probably refuse packets with source MAC addresses which are not associated (this will be the case of other machines going through the wireless card of the bridge into the AP).
Multiple stanzas of a bridge definition are currently not supported, so if you want to add a ipv6 and a ipv4 to a bridge do it all in one definition by using the "up" option. If however you still want to use multiple stanzas or would like to read more on this bug you can see it at http://bugs.debian.org/319832
A little explanation on the new options that can be used on /etc/network/interfaces to setup the bridge, so you don't have to go and look at the scripts...
bridge_ports eth0 eth4You should not put any lines to configure the interfaces that will be used by the bridge, as this will be setup automatically by the scripts when bringing the bridge up.
If you need to specify the interfaces more flexibly, you can use the following syntax (most useful on a Xen dom0):
bridge_ports regex (eth|vif).*This means to evaluate (as in egrep(1)) the expressions that follow after "regex" until either the end or a "noregex" statement is reached. The regular expressions are evaluated against all local interfaces and those that match are added.
Specifying "all" is short for "regex eth.* em.* p[0-9].* noregex" and will get all the ethX and biosdevname-format (emX and pX) interfaces added to the bridge.
Carrying this to the extremes, the following is valid syntax:
bridge_ports all regex if.0 noregex ext0 regex vif.*This will add all ethX interfaces, the ifX0 interfaces, the ext0 interface and all vifX interfaces.
The default values shown here are current values as of this writing, but as they are not related to this package but to the bridge code itself, can change anytime.
This manpage was written by Santiago Garcia Mantinan <manty@debian.org> based on interfaces(5).
brctl(8), interfaces(5), ifup(8), iwconfig(8), run-parts(8).
January 13 2008 | bridge-utils |