ovn-sbctl - Open Virtual Network southbound db management
utility
ovn-sbctl [options] command
[arg...]
The ovn-sbctl program configures the OVN_Southbound
database by providing a high-level interface to its configuration database.
See ovn-sb(5) for comprehensive documentation of the database
schema.
ovn-sbctl connects to an ovsdb-server process that
maintains an OVN_Southbound configuration database. Using this connection,
it queries and possibly applies changes to the database, depending on the
supplied commands.
ovn-sbctl can perform any number of commands in a single
run, implemented as a single atomic transaction against the database.
The ovn-sbctl command line begins with global options (see
OPTIONS below for details). The global options are followed by one or
more commands. Each command should begin with -- by itself as a
command-line argument, to separate it from the following commands. (The
-- before the first command is optional.) The command itself starts
with command-specific options, if any, followed by the command name and any
arguments.
When it is invoked in the most ordinary way, ovn-sbctl
connects to an OVSDB server that hosts the southbound database, retrieves a
partial copy of the database that is complete enough to do its work, sends a
transaction request to the server, and receives and processes the
server’s reply. In common interactive use, this is fine, but if the
database is large, the step in which ovn-sbctl retrieves a partial
copy of the database can take a long time, which yields poor performance
overall.
To improve performance in such a case, ovn-sbctl offers a
"daemon mode," in which the user first starts ovn-sbctl
running in the background and afterward uses the daemon to execute
operations. Over several ovn-sbctl command invocations, this performs
better overall because it retrieves a copy of the database only once at the
beginning, not once per program run.
Use the --detach option to start an ovn-sbctl
daemon. With this option, ovn-sbctl prints the name of a control
socket to stdout. The client should save this name in environment variable
OVN_SB_DAEMON. Under the Bourne shell this might be done like
this:
export OVN_SB_DAEMON=$(ovn-sbctl --pidfile --detach)
When OVN_SB_DAEMON is set, ovn-sbctl automatically
and transparently uses the daemon to execute its commands.
When the daemon is no longer needed, kill it and unset the
environment variable, e.g.:
kill $(cat $OVN_RUNDIR/ovn-sbctl.pid)
unset OVN_SB_DAEMON
When using daemon mode, an alternative to the OVN_SB_DAEMON
environment variable is to specify a path for the Unix socket. When starting
the ovn-sbctl daemon, specify the -u option with a full path to the
location of the socket file. Here is an exmple:
ovn-sbctl --detach -u /tmp/mysock.ctl
Then to connect to the running daemon, use the -u option
with the full path to the socket created when the daemon was started:
ovn-sbctl -u /tmp/mysock.ctl show
Daemon Commands
Daemon mode is internally implemented using the same mechanism
used by ovn-appctl. One may also use ovn-appctl directly with
the following commands:
- run [options]
command [arg...] [-- [options] command
[arg...] ...]
- Instructs the daemon process to run one or more ovn-sbctl commands
described above and reply with the results of running these commands.
Accepts the --no-wait, --wait, --timeout,
--dry-run, --oneline, and the options described under
Table Formatting Options in addition to the the command-specific
options.
- exit
- Causes ovn-sbctl to gracefully terminate.
The options listed below affect the behavior of ovn-sbctl
as a whole. Some individual commands also accept their own options, which
are given just before the command name. If the first command on the command
line has options, then those options must be separated from the global
options by --.
ovn-sbctl also accepts options from the
OVN_SBCTL_OPTIONS environment variable, in the same format as on the
command line. Options from the command line override those in the
environment.
- --db
database
- The OVSDB database remote to contact. If the OVN_SB_DB environment
variable is set, its value is used as the default. Otherwise, the default
is unix:/ovnsb_db.sock, but this default is unlikely to be useful
outside of single-machine OVN test environments.
- --leader-only
-
- --no-leader-only
- By default, or with --leader-only, when the database server is a
clustered database, ovn-sbctl will avoid servers other than the
cluster leader. This ensures that any data that ovn-sbctl reads and
reports is up-to-date. With --no-leader-only, ovn-sbctl will
use any server in the cluster, which means that for read-only transactions
it can report and act on stale data (transactions that modify the database
are always serialized even with --no-leader-only). Refer to
Understanding Cluster Consistency in ovsdb(7) for more
information.
- --shuffle-remotes
-
- --no-shuffle-remotes
- By default, or with --shuffle-remotes, when there are multiple
remotes specified in the OVSDB connection string specified by --db
or the OVN_SB_DB environment variable, the order of the remotes
will be shuffled before the client tries to connect. The remotes will be
shuffled only once to a new order before the first connection attempt. The
following retries, if any, will follow the same new order. The default
behavior is to make sure clients of a clustered database can distribute
evenly to all members of the cluster. With --no-shuffle-remotes,
ovn-sbctl will use the original order specified in the connection
string to connect. This allows user to specify the preferred order, which
is particularly useful for testing.
- --no-syslog
- By default, ovn-sbctl logs its arguments and the details of any
changes that it makes to the system log. This option disables this
logging.
- This option is equivalent to --verbose=sbctl:syslog:warn.
- --oneline
- Modifies the output format so that the output for each command is printed
on a single line. New-line characters that would otherwise separate lines
are printed as \fB\\n\fR, and any instances of \fB\\\fR that would
otherwise appear in the output are doubled. Prints a blank line for each
command that has no output. This option does not affect the formatting of
output from the list or find commands; see Table
Formatting Options below.
- --dry-run
- Prevents ovn-sbctl from actually modifying the database.
- -t
secs
-
- --timeout=secs
- By default, or with a secs of 0, ovn-sbctl waits
forever for a response from the database. This option limits runtime to
approximately secs seconds. If the timeout expires,
ovn-sbctl will exit with a SIGALRM signal. (A timeout would
normally happen only if the database cannot be contacted, or if the system
is overloaded.)
- --pidfile[=pidfile]
- Causes a file (by default, program.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 .
- 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, the daemon 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 this program 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 this program. If it 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, the daemon changes its
current working directory to the root directory after it detaches.
Otherwise, invoking the daemon 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 the
daemon 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 this daemon will try to self-confine itself to work with files
under well-known directories determined at build time. 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=user:group
- Causes this program 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 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, the daemon 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/ovn/program.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 as how syslog messages should be sent to syslog
daemon. The following forms are supported:
- libc, to use the 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, to use a 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, to use a 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, to discard all messages logged to syslog.
- The default is taken from the OVS_SYSLOG_METHOD environment
variable; if it is unset, the default is libc.
These options control the format of output from the list
and find commands.
- -f format
-
- --format=format
- Sets the type of table formatting. The following types of format
are available:
- table
- 2-D text tables with aligned columns.
- list (default)
- 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.
PKI configuration is required to use SSL for the connection to the
database.
- -p
privkey.pem
-
- --private-key=privkey.pem
- Specifies a PEM file containing the private key used as 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 for verifying
certificates presented to this program 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 the executable
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.
- -h
-
- --help
- Prints a brief help message to the console.
- -V
-
- --version
- Prints version information to the console.
The following sections describe the commands that ovn-sbctl
supports.
These commands work with an OVN_Southbound database as a
whole.
- init
- Initializes the database, if it is empty. If the database has already been
initialized, this command has no effect.
- show
- Prints a brief overview of the database contents.
These commands manipulate OVN_Southbound chassis.
- [--may-exist] chassis-add chassis
encap-type encap-ip
- Creates a new chassis named chassis. encap-type is a
comma-separated list of tunnel types. The chassis will have one encap
entry for each specified tunnel type with encap-ip as the
destination IP for each.
- Without --may-exist, attempting to create a chassis that exists is
an error. With --may-exist, this command does nothing if
chassis already exists.
- [--if-exists] chassis-del chassis
- Deletes chassis and its encaps and
gateway_ports.
- Without --if-exists, attempting to delete a chassis that does not
exist is an error. With --if-exists attempting to delete a chassis
that does not exist has no effect.
These commands manipulate OVN_Southbound port bindings.
- [--may-exist] lsp-bind logical-port
chassis
- Binds the logical port named logical-port to chassis.
- Without --may-exist, attempting to bind a logical port that has
already been bound is an error. With --may-exist, this command does
nothing if logical-port has already been bound to a chassis.
- [--if-exists] lsp-unbind logical-port
- Removes the binding of logical-port.
- Without --if-exists, attempting to unbind a logical port that is
not bound is an error. With --if-exists, attempting to unbind
logical port that is not bound has no effect.
- [--uuid] [--ovs[=remote]]
[--stats] [--vflows] lflow-list
[logical-datapath] [lflow...]
- List logical flows. If logical-datapath is specified, only list
flows for that logical datapath. The logical-datapath may be given
as a UUID or as a datapath name (reporting an error if multiple datapaths
have the same name).
- If at least one lflow is given, only matching logical flows, if
any, are listed. Each lflow may be specified as a UUID or the first
few characters of a UUID, optionally prefixed by 0x. (Because
ovn-controller sets OpenFlow flow cookies to the first 32 bits of
the corresponding logical flow’s UUID, this makes it easy to look
up the logical flow that generated a particular OpenFlow flow.)
- If --uuid is specified, the output includes the first 32 bits of
each logical flow’s UUID. This makes it easier to find the OpenFlow
flows that correspond to a given logical flow.
- If --ovs is included, ovn-sbctl attempts to obtain and
display the OpenFlow flows that correspond to each OVN logical flow. To do
so, ovn-sbctl connects to remote (by default,
unix:/br-int.mgmt) over OpenFlow and retrieves the flows. If
remote is specified, it must be an active OpenFlow connection
method described in ovsdb(7). Please see the discussion of the
similar --ovs option in ovn-trace(8) for more information
about the OpenFlow flow output.
- By default, OpenFlow flow output includes only match and actions. Add
--stats to include all OpenFlow information, such as packet and
byte counters, duration, and timeouts.
- If --vflows is included, other southbound database records directly
used for generating OpenFlow flows are also listed. This includes:
port-bindings, mac-bindings, multicast-groups,
chassis. The --ovs and --stats can also be used in
conjunction with --vflows.
- [--uuid] dump-flows [logical-datapath]
- Alias for lflow-list.
- count-flows
[logical-datapath]
- prints numbers of logical flows per table and per datapath.
These commands manipulate the connections column in the
SB_Global table and rows in the Connection table. When
ovsdb-server is configured to use the connections column for
OVSDB connections, this allows the administrator to use \fBovn\-sbctl\fR to
configure database connections.
- get-connection
- Prints the configured connection(s).
- del-connection
- Deletes the configured connection(s).
- [--inactivity-probe=msecs] set-connection
target...
- Sets the configured manager target or targets. Use
--inactivity-probe=msecs to override the default idle
connection inactivity probe time. Use 0 to disable inactivity probes.
When ovsdb-server is configured to connect using SSL, the
following parameters are required:
- private-key
- Specifies a PEM file containing the private key used for SSL
connections.
- certificate
- Specifies a PEM file containing a certificate, signed by the certificate
authority (CA) used by the connection peers, that certifies the private
key, identifying a trustworthy peer.
- ca-cert
- Specifies a PEM file containing the CA certificate used to verify that the
connection peers are trustworthy.
These SSL settings apply to all SSL connections made by the
southbound database server.
- get-ssl
- Prints the SSL configuration.
- del-ssl
- Deletes the current SSL configuration.
- [--bootstrap] set-ssl private-key certificate
ca-cert [ssl-protocol-list [ssl-cipher-list]]
- Sets the SSL configuration.
These commands query and modify the contents of ovsdb
tables. They are a slight abstraction of the ovsdb interface and as
such they operate at a lower level than other ovn-sbctl commands.
Identifying Tables, Records, and Columns
Each of these commands has a table parameter to identify a
table within the database. Many of them also take a record parameter
that identifies a particular record within a table. The record
parameter may be the UUID for a record, which may be abbreviated to its
first 4 (or more) hex digits, as long as that is unique. Many tables offer
additional ways to identify records. Some commands also take column
parameters that identify a particular field within the records in a
table.
For a list of tables and their columns, see ovn-sb(5) or
see the table listing from the --help option.
Record names must be specified in full and with correct
capitalization, except that UUIDs may be abbreviated to their first 4 (or
more) hex digits, as long as that is unique within the table. Names of
tables and columns are not case-sensitive, and - and _ are
treated interchangeably. Unique abbreviations of table and column names are
acceptable, e.g. d or dhcp is sufficient to identify the
DHCP_Options table.
Database Values
Each column in the database accepts a fixed type of data. The
currently defined basic types, and their representations, are:
- integer
- A decimal integer in the range -2**63 to 2**63-1, inclusive.
- real
- A floating-point number.
- Boolean
- True or false, written true or false, respectively.
- string
- An arbitrary Unicode string, except that null bytes are not allowed.
Quotes are optional for most strings that begin with an English letter or
underscore and consist only of letters, underscores, hyphens, and periods.
However, true and false and strings that match the syntax of
UUIDs (see below) must be enclosed in double quotes to distinguish them
from other basic types. When double quotes are used, the syntax is that of
strings in JSON, e.g. backslashes may be used to escape special
characters. The empty string must be represented as a pair of double
quotes ("").
- UUID
- Either a universally unique identifier in the style of RFC 4122, e.g.
f81d4fae-7dec-11d0-a765-00a0c91e6bf6, or an @name
defined by a get or create command within the same
ovs-vsctl invocation.
Multiple values in a single column may be separated by spaces or a
single comma. When multiple values are present, duplicates are not allowed,
and order is not important. Conversely, some database columns can have an
empty set of values, represented as [], and square brackets may
optionally enclose other non-empty sets or single values as well.
A few database columns are ``maps’’ of key-value
pairs, where the key and the value are each some fixed database type. These
are specified in the form key=value, where key
and value follow the syntax for the column’s key type and
value type, respectively. When multiple pairs are present (separated by
spaces or a comma), duplicate keys are not allowed, and again the order is
not important. Duplicate values are allowed. An empty map is represented as
{}. Curly braces may optionally enclose non-empty maps as well (but
use quotes to prevent the shell from expanding other-config={0=x,1=y}
into other-config=0=x other-config=1=y, which may not have the
desired effect).
Database Command Syntax
- [--if-exists]
[--columns=column[,column]...] list
table [record]...
- Lists the data in each specified record. If no records are
specified, lists all the records in table.
- If --columns is specified, only the requested columns are listed,
in the specified order. Otherwise, all columns are listed, in alphabetical
order by column name.
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if any specified record
does not exist. With --if-exists, the command ignores any
record that does not exist, without producing any output.
- [--columns=column[,column]...] find
table [column[:key]=value]...
- Lists the data in each record in table whose column equals
value or, if key is specified, whose column contains
a key with the specified value. The following operators may
be used where = is written in the syntax summary:
- = != < > <= >=
- Selects records in which column[:key] equals, does
not equal, is less than, is greater than, is less than or equal to, or is
greater than or equal to value, respectively.
- Consider column[:key] and value as sets of
elements. Identical sets are considered equal. Otherwise, if the sets have
different numbers of elements, then the set with more elements is
considered to be larger. Otherwise, consider a element from each set
pairwise, in increasing order within each set. The first pair that differs
determines the result. (For a column that contains key-value pairs, first
all the keys are compared, and values are considered only if the two sets
contain identical keys.)
- {=} {!=}
- Test for set equality or inequality, respectively.
- {<=}
- Selects records in which column[:key] is a subset of
value. For example, flood-vlans{<=}1,2 selects records in
which the flood-vlans column is the empty set or contains 1 or 2 or
both.
- {<}
- Selects records in which column[:key] is a proper
subset of value. For example, flood-vlans{<}1,2 selects
records in which the flood-vlans column is the empty set or
contains 1 or 2 but not both.
- {>=} {>}
- Same as {<=} and {<}, respectively, except that the
relationship is reversed. For example, flood-vlans{>=}1,2
selects records in which the flood-vlans column contains both 1 and
2.
- The following operators are available only in Open vSwitch 2.16 and
later:
- {in}
- Selects records in which every element in
column[:key] is also in value. (This is the
same as {<=}.)
- {not-in}
- Selects records in which every element in
column[:key] is not in value.
- For arithmetic operators (= != < > <= >=), when
key is specified but a particular record’s column
does not contain key, the record is always omitted from the
results. Thus, the condition other-config:mtu!=1500 matches records
that have a mtu key whose value is not 1500, but not those that
lack an mtu key.
- For the set operators, when key is specified but a particular
record’s column does not contain key, the comparison
is done against an empty set. Thus, the condition
other-config:mtu{!=}1500 matches records that have a mtu key
whose value is not 1500 and those that lack an mtu key.
- Don’t forget to escape < or > from
interpretation by the shell.
- If --columns is specified, only the requested columns are listed,
in the specified order. Otherwise all columns are listed, in alphabetical
order by column name.
- The UUIDs shown for rows created in the same ovs-vsctl invocation
will be wrong.
- [--if-exists] [--id=@name] get table
record [column[:key]]...
- Prints the value of each specified column in the given
record in table. For map columns, a key may
optionally be specified, in which case the value associated with
key in the column is printed, instead of the entire map.
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if record does not exist
or key is specified, if key does not exist in record.
With --if-exists, a missing record yields no output and a
missing key prints a blank line.
- If @name is specified, then the UUID for record may
be referred to by that name later in the same ovs-vsctl invocation
in contexts where a UUID is expected.
- Both --id and the column arguments are optional, but usually
at least one or the other should be specified. If both are omitted, then
get has no effect except to verify that record exists in
table.
- --id and --if-exists cannot be used together.
- [--if-exists] set table record
column[:key]=value...
- Sets the value of each specified column in the given record
in table to value. For map columns, a key may
optionally be specified, in which case the value associated with
key in that column is changed (or added, if none exists), instead
of the entire map.
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if record does not
exist. With --if-exists, this command does nothing if record
does not exist.
- [--if-exists] add table record column
[key=]value...
- Adds the specified value or key-value pair to column in
record in table. If column is a map, then key
is required, otherwise it is prohibited. If key already exists in a
map column, then the current value is not replaced (use the
set command to replace an existing value).
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if record does not
exist. With --if-exists, this command does nothing if record
does not exist.
- [--if-exists] remove table record column
value...
- [--if-exists] remove table record column key...
- [--if-exists] remove table record column
key=value... Removes the specified values or key-value
pairs from column in record in table. The first form
applies to columns that are not maps: each specified value is
removed from the column. The second and third forms apply to map columns:
if only a key is specified, then any key-value pair with the given
key is removed, regardless of its value; if a value is given
then a pair is removed only if both key and value match.
- It is not an error if the column does not contain the specified key or
value or pair.
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if record does not
exist. With --if-exists, this command does nothing if record
does not exist.
- [--if-exists] clear table record column...
- Sets each column in record in table to the empty set
or empty map, as appropriate. This command applies only to columns that
are allowed to be empty.
- Without --if-exists, it is an error if record does not
exist. With --if-exists, this command does nothing if record
does not exist.
- [--id=(@name|uuid)] create table
column[:key]=value...
- Creates a new record in table and sets the initial values of each
column. Columns not explicitly set will receive their default
values. Outputs the UUID of the new row.
- If @name is specified, then the UUID for the new row may be
referred to by that name elsewhere in the same \*(PN invocation in
contexts where a UUID is expected. Such references may precede or follow
the create command.
- If a valid uuid is specified, then it is used as the UUID of the
new row.
- Caution (ovs-vsctl as
example)
- Records in the Open vSwitch database are significant only when they can be
reached directly or indirectly from the Open_vSwitch table. Except
for records in the QoS or Queue tables, records that are not
reachable from the Open_vSwitch table are automatically deleted
from the database. This deletion happens immediately, without waiting for
additional ovs-vsctl commands or other database activity. Thus, a
create command must generally be accompanied by additional commands
within the same ovs-vsctl invocation to add a chain
of references to the newly created record from the top-level
Open_vSwitch record. The EXAMPLES section gives some
examples that show how to do this.
- [--if-exists] destroy table record...
- Deletes each specified record from table. Unless
--if-exists is specified, each records must exist.
- --all destroy
table
- Deletes all records from the table.
- Caution (ovs-vsctl
as example)
- The destroy command is only useful for records in the QoS or
Queue tables. Records in other tables are automatically deleted
from the database when they become unreachable from the
Open_vSwitch table. This means that deleting the last reference to
a record is sufficient for deleting the record itself. For records in
these tables, destroy is silently ignored. See the EXAMPLES
section below for more information.
- wait-until table
record
[column[:key]=value]...
- Waits until table contains a record named record whose
column equals value or, if key is specified, whose
column contains a key with the specified value. This
command supports the same operators and semantics described for the
find command above.
- If no column[:key]=value arguments are
given, this command waits only until record exists. If more than
one such argument is given, the command waits until all of them are
satisfied.
- Caution (ovs-vsctl
as example)
- Usually wait-until should be placed at the beginning of a set of
ovs-vsctl commands. For example, wait-until bridge br0 --
get bridge br0 datapath_id waits until a bridge named br0 is
created, then prints its datapath_id column, whereas get bridge
br0 datapath_id -- wait-until bridge br0 will abort if no bridge named
br0 exists when ovs-vsctl initially connects to the
database.
- Consider specifying --timeout=0 along with --wait-until, to
prevent ovs-vsctl from terminating after waiting only at most 5
seconds.
- This command has no effect on behavior, but any database log record
created by the command will include the command and its arguments.
- OVN_SB_DAEMON
- If set, this should name the Unix domain socket for an ovn-sbctl
server process. See Daemon Mode, above, for more information.
- OVN_SBCTL_OPTIONS
- If set, a set of options for ovn-sbctl to apply automatically, in
the same form as on the command line.
- OVN_SB_DB
- If set, the default database to contact when the --db option is not
used.
- 0
- Successful program execution.
- 1
- Usage, syntax, or network error.