- Server-Level
Commands:
- ovsdb-client [options] list-dbs [server]
- Database Schema
Commands:
- ovsdb-client [options] get-schema [server]
[database]
ovsdb-client [options] list-tables [server]
[database]
ovsdb-client [options] list-columns [server]
[database] [table]
- Database Version
Management Commands:
- ovsdb-client [options] convert [server]
schema
ovsdb-client [options] needs-conversion [server]
schema
ovsdb-client [options] get-schema-version
[server] [database]
- Data Management
Commands:
- ovsdb-client [options] transact [server]
transaction
ovsdb-client [options] query [server]
transaction
ovsdb-client [options] dump [server]
[database] [table [column...]]
ovsdb-client [options] backup [server]
[database] > snapshot
ovsdb-client [options] [--force] restore
[server] [database] < snapshot
ovsdb-client [options] monitor [server]
[database] table
[column[,column]...]...
ovsdb-client [options] monitor [server]
[database] ALL
ovsdb-client [options] monitor-cond [server]
[database] conditions table
[column[,column]...]...
ovsdb-client [options] monitor-cond-since
[server] [database] [last-id] conditions
table [column[,column]...]...
ovsdb-client [options] wait [server]
database state
- Testing
Commands:
- ovsdb-client [options] lock [server]
lock
ovsdb-client [options] steal [server]
lock
ovsdb-client [options] unlock [server]
lock
- Other Commands:
- ovsdb-client help
- Cluster
Options:
- [--no-leader-only]
- Output formatting
options:
- [--format=format] [--data=format]
[--no-headings] [--pretty] [--bare]
[--timestamp]
- Daemon options:
- [--pidfile[=pidfile]] [--overwrite-pidfile]
[--detach] [--no-chdir] [--no-self-confinement]
- Logging
options:
- [-v[module[:destination[:level]]]]...
[--verbose[=module[:destination[:level]]]]...
[--log-file[=file]]
- Public key infrastructure
options:
- [--private-key=privkey.pem]
[--certificate=cert.pem]
[--ca-cert=cacert.pem]
[--bootstrap-ca-cert=cacert.pem]
- SSL connection options:
- [--ssl-protocols=protocols]
[--ssl-ciphers=ciphers]
- Common options:
- [-h | --help] [-V | --version]
The ovsdb-client program is a command-line client for
interacting with a running ovsdb-server process. Each command
connects to the specified OVSDB server, which may be an OVSDB active
or passive connection method, as described in ovsdb(7). The default
server is unix:/var/run/openvswitch/db.sock and the default
database is Open_vSwitch.
ovsdb-client supports the
method1,method2,...,methodN syntax
described in ovsdb(7) for connecting to a cluster. When this syntax
is used, ovsdb-client tries the cluster members in random order until
it finds the cluster leader. Specify the --no-leader-only option to
instead accept any server that is connected to the cluster.
For an introduction to OVSDB and its implementation in Open
vSwitch, see ovsdb(7).
The following sections describe the commands that
ovsdb-client supports.
Most ovsdb-client commands work with an individual
database, but these commands apply to an entire database server.
- list-dbs
[server]
- Connects to server, retrieves the list of known databases, and
prints them one per line. These database names are the ones that other
commands may use for database.
These commands obtain the schema from a database and print it or
part of it.
- get-schema
[server] [database]
- Connects to server, retrieves the schema for database, and
prints it in JSON format.
- list-tables
[server] [database]
- Connects to server, retrieves the schema for database, and
prints a table listing the name of each table within the database.
- list-columns
[server] [database] table
- Connects to server, retrieves the schema for database, and
prints a table listing the name and type of each column. If table
is specified, only columns in that table are listed; otherwise, the tables
include columns in all tables.
An OVSDB schema has a schema version number, and an OVSDB database
embeds a particular version of an OVSDB schema. These version numbers take
the form x.y.z, e.g. 1.2.3. The
OVSDB implementation does not enforce a particular version numbering scheme,
but schemas managed within the Open vSwitch project use the following
approach. Whenever the database schema is changed in a non-backward
compatible way (e.g. deleting a column or a table), x is incremented
(and y and z are reset to 0). When the database schema is
changed in a backward compatible way (e.g. adding a new column), y is
incremented (and z is reset to 0). When the database schema is
changed cosmetically (e.g. reindenting its syntax), z is
incremented.
Some OVSDB databases and schemas, especially very old ones, do not
have a version number.
Schema version numbers and Open vSwitch version numbers are
independent.
These commands work with different versions of OVSDB schemas and
databases.
- convert
[server] schema
- Reads an OVSDB schema in JSON format, as specified in the OVSDB
specification, from schema, then connects to server and
requests the server to convert the database whose name is specified in
schema to the schema also specified in schema.
- The conversion is atomic, consistent, isolated, and durable. Following the
schema change, the server notifies clients that use the
set_db_change_aware RPC introduced in Open vSwitch 2.9 and cancels
their outstanding transactions and monitors. The server disconnects other
clients, enabling them to notice the change when they reconnect.
- This command can do simple ``upgrades'' and ``downgrades'' on a database's
schema. The data in the database must be valid when interpreted under
schema, with only one exception: data for tables and columns that
do not exist in schema are ignored. Columns that exist in
schema but not in the database are set to their default values. All
of schema's constraints apply in full.
- Some uses of this command can cause unrecoverable data loss. For example,
converting a database from a schema that has a given column or table to
one that does not will delete all data in that column or table. Back up
critical databases before converting them.
- This command works with clustered and standalone databases. Standalone
databases may also be converted (offline) with ovsdb-tool's
convert command.
- needs-conversion
[server] schema
- Reads the schema from schema, then connects to server and
requests the schema from the database whose name is specified in
schema. If the two schemas are the same, prints no on
stdout; if they differ, prints yes.
- get-schema-version
[server] [database]
- Connects to server, retrieves the schema for database, and
prints its version number on stdout. If database was created before
schema versioning was introduced, then it will not have a version number
and this command will print a blank line.
- get-schema-cksum
[server] [database]
- Connects to server, retrieves the schema for database, and
prints its checksum on stdout. If database does not include a
checksum, prints a blank line.
These commands read or modify the data in a database.
- transact
[server] transaction
- Connects to server, sends it the specified transaction,
which must be a JSON array appropriate for use as the params to a
JSON-RPC transact request, and prints the received reply on
stdout.
- query [server]
transaction
- This commands acts like a read-only version of transact. It
connects to server, sends it the specified transaction,
which must be a JSON array appropriate for use as the params to a
JSON-RPC transact request, and prints the received reply on stdout.
To ensure that the transaction does not modify the database, this command
appends an abort operation to the set of operations included in
transaction before sending it to the database, and then removes the
abort result from the reply (if it is present).
- dump [server]
[database] [table [column...]]
- Connects to server, retrieves all of the data in database,
and prints it on stdout as a series of tables. If table is
specified, only that table is retrieved. If at least one column is
specified, only those columns are retrieved.
- backup
[server] [database] > snapshot
- Connects to server, retrieves a snapshot of the schema and data in
database, and prints it on stdout in the format used for OVSDB
standalone and active-backup databases. This is an appropriate way to back
up any remote database. The database snapshot that it outputs is suitable
to be served up directly by ovsdb-server or used as the input to
ovsdb-client restore.
- Another way to back up a standalone or active-backup database is to copy
its database file, e.g. with cp. This is safe even if the database
is in use.
- The output does not include ephemeral columns, which by design do not
survive across restarts of ovsdb-server.
- [--force] restore [server] [database] <
snapshot
- Reads snapshot, which must be a OVSDB standalone or active-backup
database (possibly but not necessarily created by ovsdb-client backup).
Then, connects to server, verifies that database and
snapshot have the same schema, then deletes all of the data in
database and replaces it by snapshot. The replacement
happens atomically, in a single transaction.
- UUIDs for rows in the restored database will differ from those in
snapshot, because the OVSDB protocol does not allow clients to
specify row UUIDs. Another way to restore a standalone or active-backup
database, which does also restore row UUIDs, is to stop the server or
servers, replace the database file by the snapshot, then restart the
database. Either way, ephemeral columns are not restored, since by design
they do not survive across restarts of ovsdb-server.
- Normally restore exits with a failure if snapshot and the
server's database have different schemas. In such a case, it is a good
idea to convert the database to the new schema before restoring, e.g. with
ovsdb-client convert. Use --force to proceed regardless of
schema differences even though the restore might fail with an error or
succeed with surprising results.
- monitor
[server] [database] table
[column[,column]...]...
-
- monitor-cond
[server] [database] conditions table
[column[,column]...]...
-
- monitor-cond-since
[server] [database] [last-id] conditions
table [column[,column]...]...
- Connects to server and monitors the contents of rows that match
conditions in table in database. By default, the initial
contents of table are printed, followed by each change as it
occurs. If conditions empty, all rows will be monitored. If at least one
column is specified, only those columns are monitored. The
following column names have special meanings:
- !initial
- Do not print the initial contents of the specified columns.
- !insert
- Do not print newly inserted rows.
- !delete
- Do not print deleted rows.
- !modify
- Do not print modifications to existing rows.
- Multiple [column[,column]...] groups may be specified
as separate arguments, e.g. to apply different reporting parameters to
each group. Whether multiple groups or only a single group is specified,
any given column may only be mentioned once on the command line.
- conditions is a JSON array of <condition> as defined in RFC
7047 5.1 with the following change: A condition can be either a 3-element
JSON array as described in the RFC or a boolean value.
- If --detach is used with monitor, monitor-cond or
monitor-cond-since, then ovsdb-client detaches after it has
successfully received and printed the initial contents of
table.
- The monitor command uses RFC 7047 "monitor" method to
open a monitor session with the server. The monitor-cond and
monitor-cond-since commandls uses RFC 7047 extension
"monitor_cond" and "monitor_cond_since" methods. See
ovsdb-server(1) for details.
- monitor
[server] [database] ALL
- Connects to server and monitors the contents of all tables in
database. Prints initial values and all kinds of changes to all
columns in the database. The --detach option causes
ovsdb-client to detach after it successfully receives and prints
the initial database contents.
- The monitor command uses RFC 7047 "monitor" method to
open a monitor session with the server.
- wait [server]
database state
- Waits for database on server to enter a desired
state, which may be one of:
- added
- Waits until a database with the given name has been added to
server.
- connected
- Waits until a database with the given name has been added to
server. Then, if database is clustered, additionally waits
until it has joined and connected to its cluster.
- removed
- Waits until database has been removed from the database server.
This can also be used to wait for a database to complete leaving its
cluster, because ovsdb-server removes a database at that
point.
- database is mandatory for this command because it is often used to
check for databases that have not yet been added to the server, so that
the ovsdb-client semantics of acting on a default database do not
work.
- This command acts on a particular database server, not on a cluster, so
server must name a single server, not a comma-delimited list of
servers.
These commands are mostly of interest for testing the correctness
of the OVSDB server.
- lock [server]
lock
-
- steal [server]
lock
-
- unlock
[server] lock
- Connects to server and issues corresponding RFC 7047 lock
operations on lock. Prints json reply or subsequent update
messages. The --detach option causes ovsdb-client to detach
after it successfully receives and prints the initial reply.
- When running with the --detach option, lock, steal,
unlock and exit commands can be issued by using
ovs-appctl. exit command causes the ovsdb-client to
close its ovsdb-server connection before exit. The lock,
steal and unlock commands can be used to issue additional
lock operations over the same ovsdb-server connection. All above
commands take a single lock argument, which does not have to be the
same as the lock that ovsdb-client started with.
Much of the output from ovsdb-client is in the form of
tables. The following options controlling output formatting:
- -f format
-
- --format=format
- Sets the type of table formatting. The following types of format
are available:
- table
(default)
- 2-D text tables with aligned columns.
- list
- A list with one column per line and rows separated by a blank line.
- html
- HTML tables.
- csv
- Comma-separated values as defined in RFC 4180.
- json
- JSON format as defined in RFC 4627. The output is a sequence of JSON
objects, each of which corresponds to one table. Each JSON object has the
following members with the noted values:
- caption
- The table's caption. This member is omitted if the table has no
caption.
- headings
- An array with one element per table column. Each array element is a string
giving the corresponding column's heading.
- data
- An array with one element per table row. Each element is also an array
with one element per table column. The elements of this second-level array
are the cells that constitute the table. Cells that represent OVSDB data
or data types are expressed in the format described in the OVSDB
specification; other cells are simply expressed as text strings.
- -d format
-
- --data=format
- Sets the formatting for cells within output tables unless the table format
is set to json, in which case json formatting is always used
when formatting cells. The following types of format are
available:
- string
(default)
- The simple format described in the Database Values section of
ovs-vsctl(8).
- bare
- The simple format with punctuation stripped off: [] and {}
are omitted around sets, maps, and empty columns, items within sets and
maps are space-separated, and strings are never quoted. This format may be
easier for scripts to parse.
- json
- The RFC 4627 JSON format as described above.
- --no-headings
- This option suppresses the heading row that otherwise appears in the first
row of table output.
- --pretty
- By default, JSON in output is printed as compactly as possible. This
option causes JSON in output to be printed in a more readable fashion.
Members of objects and elements of arrays are printed one per line, with
indentation.
- This option does not affect JSON in tables, which is always printed
compactly.
- --bare
- Equivalent to --format=list --data=bare --no-headings.
- --max-column-width=n
- For table output only, limits the width of any column in the output to
n columns. Longer cell data is truncated to fit, as necessary.
Columns are always wide enough to display the column names, if the heading
row is printed.
- --timestamp
- For the monitor, monitor-cond and monitor-cond-since
commands, add a timestamp to each table update. Most output formats add
the timestamp on a line of its own just above the table. The JSON output
format puts the timestamp in a member of the top-level JSON object named
time.
- -t
-
- --timeout=secs
- Limits ovsdb-client runtime to approximately secs seconds.
If the timeout expires, ovsdb-client will exit with a
SIGALRM signal.
The daemon options apply only to the monitor,
monitor-cond and monitor-cond-since commands. With any other
command, they have no effect.
The following options are valid on POSIX based platforms.
- --pidfile[=pidfile]
- Causes a file (by default, ovsdb-client.pid) to be created
indicating the PID of the running process. If the pidfile argument
is not specified, or if it does not begin with /, then it is
created in /var/run/openvswitch.
- If --pidfile is not specified, no pidfile is created.
- --overwrite-pidfile
- By default, when --pidfile is specified and the specified pidfile
already exists and is locked by a running process, ovsdb-client
refuses to start. Specify --overwrite-pidfile to cause it to
instead overwrite the pidfile.
- When --pidfile is not specified, this option has no effect.
- --detach
- Runs ovsdb-client as a background process. The process forks, and
in the child it starts a new session, closes the standard file descriptors
(which has the side effect of disabling logging to the console), and
changes its current directory to the root (unless --no-chdir is
specified). After the child completes its initialization, the parent
exits.
- --monitor
- Creates an additional process to monitor the ovsdb-client daemon.
If the daemon dies due to a signal that indicates a programming error
(SIGABRT, SIGALRM, SIGBUS, SIGFPE,
SIGILL, SIGPIPE, SIGSEGV, SIGXCPU, or
SIGXFSZ) then the monitor process starts a new copy of it. If the
daemon dies or exits for another reason, the monitor process exits.
- This option is normally used with --detach, but it also functions
without it.
- --no-chdir
- By default, when --detach is specified, ovsdb-client changes
its current working directory to the root directory after it detaches.
Otherwise, invoking ovsdb-client from a carelessly chosen directory
would prevent the administrator from unmounting the file system that holds
that directory.
- Specifying --no-chdir suppresses this behavior, preventing
ovsdb-client from changing its current working directory. This may
be useful for collecting core files, since it is common behavior to write
core dumps into the current working directory and the root directory is
not a good directory to use.
- This option has no effect when --detach is not specified.
- --no-self-confinement
- By default daemon will try to self-confine itself to work with files under
well-known directories determined during build. It is better to stick with
this default behavior and not to use this flag unless some other Access
Control is used to confine daemon. Note that in contrast to other access
control implementations that are typically enforced from kernel-space
(e.g. DAC or MAC), self-confinement is imposed from the user-space daemon
itself and hence should not be considered as a full confinement strategy,
but instead should be viewed as an additional layer of security.
- --user
- Causes ovsdb-client to run as a different user specified in
"user:group", thus dropping most of the root privileges. Short
forms "user" and ":group" are also allowed, with
current user or group are assumed respectively. Only daemons started by
the root user accepts this argument.
- On Linux, daemons will be granted CAP_IPC_LOCK and CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICES
before dropping root privileges. Daemons that interact with a datapath,
such as ovs-vswitchd, will be granted three additional
capabilities, namely CAP_NET_ADMIN, CAP_NET_BROADCAST and CAP_NET_RAW. The
capability change will apply even if the new user is root.
- On Windows, this option is not currently supported. For security reasons,
specifying this option will cause the daemon process not to start.
- -v[spec]
-
- --verbose=[spec]
- Sets logging levels. Without any spec, sets the log level for every
module and destination to dbg. Otherwise, spec is a list of
words separated by spaces or commas or colons, up to one from each
category below:
- A valid module name, as displayed by the vlog/list command on
ovs-appctl(8), limits the log level change to the specified
module.
- syslog, console, or file, to limit the log level
change to only to the system log, to the console, or to a file,
respectively. (If --detach is specified, ovsdb-client closes
its standard file descriptors, so logging to the console will have no
effect.)
- On Windows platform, syslog is accepted as a word and is only
useful along with the --syslog-target option (the word has no
effect otherwise).
- •
- off, emer, err, warn, info, or
dbg, to control the log level. Messages of the given severity or
higher will be logged, and messages of lower severity will be filtered
out. off filters out all messages. See ovs-appctl(8) for a
definition of each log level.
- Case is not significant within spec.
- Regardless of the log levels set for file, logging to a file will
not take place unless --log-file is also specified (see
below).
- For compatibility with older versions of OVS, any is accepted as a
word but has no effect.
- -v
-
- --verbose
- Sets the maximum logging verbosity level, equivalent to
--verbose=dbg.
- -vPATTERN:destination:pattern
-
- --verbose=PATTERN:destination:pattern
- Sets the log pattern for destination to pattern. Refer to
ovs-appctl(8) for a description of the valid syntax for
pattern.
- -vFACILITY:facility
-
- --verbose=FACILITY:facility
- Sets the RFC5424 facility of the log message. facility can be one
of kern, user, mail, daemon, auth,
syslog, lpr, news, uucp, clock,
ftp, ntp, audit, alert, clock2,
local0, local1, local2, local3, local4,
local5, local6 or local7. If this option is not
specified, daemon is used as the default for the local system
syslog and local0 is used while sending a message to the target
provided via the --syslog-target option.
- --log-file[=file]
- Enables logging to a file. If file is specified, then it is used as
the exact name for the log file. The default log file name used if
file is omitted is
/var/log/openvswitch/ovsdb-client.log.
- --syslog-target=host:port
- Send syslog messages to UDP port on host, in addition to the
system syslog. The host must be a numerical IP address, not a
hostname.
- --syslog-method=method
- Specify method how syslog messages should be sent to syslog daemon.
Following forms are supported:
- libc, use libc syslog() function. Downside of using this
options is that libc adds fixed prefix to every message before it is
actually sent to the syslog daemon over /dev/log UNIX domain
socket.
- unix:file, use UNIX domain socket directly. It is possible
to specify arbitrary message format with this option. However, rsyslogd
8.9 and older versions use hard coded parser function anyway that
limits UNIX domain socket use. If you want to use arbitrary message format
with older rsyslogd versions, then use UDP socket to localhost IP
address instead.
- udp:ip:port, use UDP socket. With this method it is
possible to use arbitrary message format also with older rsyslogd.
When sending syslog messages over UDP socket extra precaution needs to be
taken into account, for example, syslog daemon needs to be configured to
listen on the specified UDP port, accidental iptables rules could be
interfering with local syslog traffic and there are some security
considerations that apply to UDP sockets, but do not apply to UNIX domain
sockets.
- null, discards all messages logged to syslog.
- The default is taken from the OVS_SYSLOG_METHOD environment
variable; if it is unset, the default is libc.
- -p
privkey.pem
-
- --private-key=privkey.pem
- Specifies a PEM file containing the private key used as
ovsdb-client's identity for outgoing SSL connections.
- -c cert.pem
-
- --certificate=cert.pem
- Specifies a PEM file containing a certificate that certifies the private
key specified on -p or --private-key to be trustworthy. The
certificate must be signed by the certificate authority (CA) that the peer
in SSL connections will use to verify it.
- -C cacert.pem
-
- --ca-cert=cacert.pem
- Specifies a PEM file containing the CA certificate that
ovsdb-client should use to verify certificates presented to it by
SSL peers. (This may be the same certificate that SSL peers use to verify
the certificate specified on -c or --certificate, or it may
be a different one, depending on the PKI design in use.)
- -C none
-
- --ca-cert=none
- Disables verification of certificates presented by SSL peers. This
introduces a security risk, because it means that certificates cannot be
verified to be those of known trusted hosts.
- --bootstrap-ca-cert=cacert.pem
- When cacert.pem exists, this option has the same effect as
-C or --ca-cert. If it does not exist, then
ovsdb-client will attempt to obtain the CA certificate from the SSL
peer on its first SSL connection and save it to the named PEM file. If it
is successful, it will immediately drop the connection and reconnect, and
from then on all SSL connections must be authenticated by a certificate
signed by the CA certificate thus obtained.
- This option exposes the SSL connection to a man-in-the-middle
attack obtaining the initial CA certificate, but it may be useful
for bootstrapping.
- This option is only useful if the SSL peer sends its CA certificate as
part of the SSL certificate chain. The SSL protocol does not require the
server to send the CA certificate.
- This option is mutually exclusive with -C and
--ca-cert.
- --ssl-protocols=protocols
- Specifies, in a comma- or space-delimited list, the SSL protocols
ovsdb-client will enable for SSL connections. Supported
protocols include TLSv1, TLSv1.1, and TLSv1.2.
Regardless of order, the highest protocol supported by both sides will be
chosen when making the connection. The default when this option is omitted
is TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2.
- --ssl-ciphers=ciphers
- Specifies, in OpenSSL cipher string format, the ciphers
ovsdb-client will support for SSL connections. The default when
this option is omitted is HIGH:!aNULL:!MD5.
- -h
-
- --help
- Prints a brief help message to the console.
- -V
-
- --version
- Prints version information to the console.