xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/vxlan.4 (revision 61e21613)
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25.Dd March 30, 2021
26.Dt VXLAN 4
27.Os
28.Sh NAME
29.Nm vxlan
30.Nd "Virtual eXtensible LAN interface"
31.Sh SYNOPSIS
32To compile this driver into the kernel,
33place the following line in your
34kernel configuration file:
35.Bd -ragged -offset indent
36.Cd "device vxlan"
37.Ed
38.Pp
39Alternatively, to load the driver as a
40module at boot time, place the following line in
41.Xr loader.conf 5 :
42.Bd -literal -offset indent
43if_vxlan_load="YES"
44.Ed
45.Sh DESCRIPTION
46The
47.Nm
48driver creates a virtual tunnel endpoint in a
49.Nm
50segment.
51A
52.Nm
53segment is a virtual Layer 2 (Ethernet) network that is overlaid
54in a Layer 3 (IP/UDP) network.
55.Nm
56is analogous to
57.Xr vlan 4
58but is designed to be better suited for large, multiple tenant
59data center environments.
60.Pp
61Each
62.Nm
63interface is created at runtime using interface cloning.
64This is most easily done with the
65.Xr ifconfig 8
66.Cm create
67command or using the
68.Va cloned_interfaces
69variable in
70.Xr rc.conf 5 .
71The interface may be removed with the
72.Xr ifconfig 8
73.Cm destroy
74command.
75.Pp
76The
77.Nm
78driver creates a pseudo Ethernet network interface
79that supports the usual network
80.Xr ioctl 2 Ns s
81and thus can be used with
82.Xr ifconfig 8
83like any other Ethernet interface.
84The
85.Nm
86interface encapsulates the Ethernet frame
87by prepending IP/UDP and
88.Nm
89headers.
90Thus, the encapsulated (inner) frame is able to be transmitted
91over a routed, Layer 3 network to the remote host.
92.Pp
93The
94.Nm
95interface may be configured in either unicast or multicast mode.
96When in unicast mode,
97the interface creates a tunnel to a single remote host,
98and all traffic is transmitted to that host.
99When in multicast mode,
100the interface joins an IP multicast group,
101and receives packets sent to the group address,
102and transmits packets to either the multicast group address,
103or directly to the remote host if there is an appropriate
104forwarding table entry.
105.Pp
106When the
107.Nm
108interface is brought up, a
109.Xr udp 4
110.Xr socket 9
111is created based on the configuration,
112such as the local address for unicast mode or
113the group address for multicast mode,
114and the listening (local) port number.
115Since multiple
116.Nm
117interfaces may be created that either
118use the same local address
119or join the same group address,
120and use the same port,
121the driver may share a socket among multiple interfaces.
122However, each interface within a socket must belong to
123a unique
124.Nm
125segment.
126The analogous
127.Xr vlan 4
128configuration would be a physical interface configured as
129the parent device for multiple VLAN interfaces, each with
130a unique VLAN tag.
131Each
132.Nm
133segment is identified by a 24-bit value in the
134.Nm
135header called the
136.Dq VXLAN Network Identifier ,
137or VNI.
138.Pp
139When configured with the
140.Xr ifconfig 8
141.Cm vxlanlearn
142parameter, the interface dynamically creates forwarding table entries
143from received packets.
144An entry in the forwarding table maps the inner source MAC address
145to the outer remote IP address.
146During transmit, the interface attempts to lookup an entry for
147the encapsulated destination MAC address.
148If an entry is found, the IP address in the entry is used to directly
149transmit the encapsulated frame to the destination.
150Otherwise, when configured in multicast mode,
151the interface must flood the frame to all hosts in the group.
152The maximum number of entries in the table is configurable with the
153.Xr ifconfig 8
154.Cm vxlanmaxaddr
155command.
156Stale entries in the table are periodically pruned.
157The timeout is configurable with the
158.Xr ifconfig 8
159.Cm vxlantimeout
160command.
161The table may be viewed with the
162.Xr sysctl 8
163.Cm net.link.vxlan.N.ftable.dump
164command.
165.Sh MTU
166Since the
167.Nm
168interface encapsulates the Ethernet frame with an IP, UDP, and
169.Nm
170header, the resulting frame may be larger than the MTU of the
171physical network.
172The
173.Nm
174specification recommends the physical network MTU be configured
175to use jumbo frames to accommodate the encapsulated frame size.
176.Pp
177By default, the
178.Nm
179driver sets its MTU to usual ethernet MTU of 1500 bytes, reduced by
180the size of vxlan headers prepended to the encapsulated packets.
181.Pp
182Alternatively, the
183.Xr ifconfig 8
184.Cm mtu
185command may be used to set the fixed MTU size on the
186.Nm
187interface to allow the encapsulated frame to fit in the
188current MTU of the physical network.
189If the
190.Cm mtu
191command was used, system no longer adjust the
192.Nm
193interface MTU on routing or address changes.
194.Sh HARDWARE
195The
196.Nm
197driver supports hardware checksum offload (receive and transmit) and TSO on the
198encapsulated traffic over physical interfaces that support these features.
199The
200.Nm
201interface examines the
202.Cm vxlandev
203interface, if one is specified, or the interface hosting the
204.Cm vxlanlocal
205address, and configures its capabilities based on the hardware offload
206capabilities of that physical interface.
207If multiple physical interfaces will transmit or receive traffic for the
208.Nm
209then they all must have the same hardware capabilities.
210The transmit routine of a
211.Nm
212interface may fail with
213.Er ENXIO
214if an outbound physical interface does not support
215an offload that the
216.Nm
217interface is requesting.
218This can happen if there are multiple physical interfaces involved, with
219different hardware capabilities, or an interface capability was disabled after
220the
221.Nm
222interface had already started.
223.Pp
224At present, these devices are capable of generating checksums and performing TSO
225on the inner frames in hardware:
226.Xr cxgbe 4 .
227.Sh EXAMPLES
228Create a
229.Nm
230interface in unicast mode
231with the
232.Cm vxlanlocal
233tunnel address of 192.168.100.1,
234and the
235.Cm vxlanremote
236tunnel address of 192.168.100.2.
237.Bd -literal -offset indent
238ifconfig vxlan create vxlanid 108 vxlanlocal 192.168.100.1 vxlanremote 192.168.100.2
239.Ed
240.Pp
241Create a
242.Nm
243interface in multicast mode,
244with the
245.Cm local
246address of 192.168.10.95,
247and the
248.Cm group
249address of 224.0.2.6.
250The em0 interface will be used to transmit multicast packets.
251.Bd -literal -offset indent
252ifconfig vxlan create vxlanid 42 vxlanlocal 192.168.10.95 vxlangroup 224.0.2.6 vxlandev em0
253.Ed
254.Pp
255Once created, the
256.Nm
257interface can be configured with
258.Xr ifconfig 8 .
259.Pp
260The following when placed in the file
261.Pa /etc/rc.conf
262will cause a vxlan interface called
263.Dq Li vxlan0
264to be created, and will configure the interface in unicast mode.
265.Bd -literal -offset indent
266cloned_interfaces="vxlan0"
267create_args_vxlan0="vxlanid 108 vxlanlocal 192.168.100.1 vxlanremote 192.168.100.2"
268.Ed
269.Sh SEE ALSO
270.Xr inet 4 ,
271.Xr inet6 4 ,
272.Xr vlan 4 ,
273.Xr rc.conf 5 ,
274.Xr ifconfig 8 ,
275.Xr sysctl 8
276.Rs
277.%A "M. Mahalingam"
278.%A "et al"
279.%T "Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network (VXLAN): A Framework for Overlaying Virtualized Layer 2 Networks over Layer 3 Networks"
280.%D August 2014
281.%O "RFC 7348"
282.Re
283.Sh AUTHORS
284.An -nosplit
285The
286.Nm
287driver was written by
288.An Bryan Venteicher Aq bryanv@freebsd.org .
289Support for stateless hardware offloads was added by
290.An Navdeep Parhar Aq np@freebsd.org
291in
292.Fx 13.0 .
293