tools/testing/selftests/net/srv6_end_dt6_l3vpn_test.sh

Source file repositories/reference/linux-study-clean/tools/testing/selftests/net/srv6_end_dt6_l3vpn_test.sh

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System
Linux kernel
Corpus path
tools/testing/selftests/net/srv6_end_dt6_l3vpn_test.sh
Extension
.sh
Size
17524 bytes
Lines
502
Domain
Support Tooling And Documentation
Bucket
tools
Inferred role
Support Tooling And Documentation: tools
Status
atlas-only

Why This File Exists

Repository support layer: documentation, build tooling, samples, user-space helper tools, generated initramfs support, licenses, and validation utilities.

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Annotated Snippet

#!/bin/bash
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
#
# author: Andrea Mayer <andrea.mayer@uniroma2.it>
# author: Paolo Lungaroni <paolo.lungaroni@cnit.it>

# This test is designed for evaluating the new SRv6 End.DT6 behavior used for
# implementing IPv6 L3 VPN use cases.
#
# Hereafter a network diagram is shown, where two different tenants (named 100
# and 200) offer IPv6 L3 VPN services allowing hosts to communicate with each
# other across an IPv6 network.
#
# Only hosts belonging to the same tenant (and to the same VPN) can communicate
# with each other. Instead, the communication among hosts of different tenants
# is forbidden.
# In other words, hosts hs-t100-1 and hs-t100-2 are connected through the IPv6
# L3 VPN of tenant 100 while hs-t200-3 and hs-t200-4 are connected using the
# IPv6 L3 VPN of tenant 200. Cross connection between tenant 100 and tenant 200
# is forbidden and thus, for example, hs-t100-1 cannot reach hs-t200-3 and vice
# versa.
#
# Routers rt-1 and rt-2 implement IPv6 L3 VPN services leveraging the SRv6
# architecture. The key components for such VPNs are: a) SRv6 Encap behavior,
# b) SRv6 End.DT6 behavior and c) VRF.
#
# To explain how an IPv6 L3 VPN based on SRv6 works, let us briefly consider an
# example where, within the same domain of tenant 100, the host hs-t100-1 pings
# the host hs-t100-2.
#
# First of all, L2 reachability of the host hs-t100-2 is taken into account by
# the router rt-1 which acts as a ndp proxy.
#
# When the host hs-t100-1 sends an IPv6 packet destined to hs-t100-2, the
# router rt-1 receives the packet on the internal veth-t100 interface. Such
# interface is enslaved to the VRF vrf-100 whose associated table contains the
# SRv6 Encap route for encapsulating any IPv6 packet in a IPv6 plus the Segment
# Routing Header (SRH) packet. This packet is sent through the (IPv6) core
# network up to the router rt-2 that receives it on veth0 interface.
#
# The rt-2 router uses the 'localsid' routing table to process incoming
# IPv6+SRH packets which belong to the VPN of the tenant 100. For each of these
# packets, the SRv6 End.DT6 behavior removes the outer IPv6+SRH headers and
# performs the lookup on the vrf-100 table using the destination address of
# the decapsulated IPv6 packet. Afterwards, the packet is sent to the host
# hs-t100-2 through the veth-t100 interface.
#
# The ping response follows the same processing but this time the role of rt-1
# and rt-2 are swapped.
#
# Of course, the IPv6 L3 VPN for tenant 200 works exactly as the IPv6 L3 VPN
# for tenant 100. In this case, only hosts hs-t200-3 and hs-t200-4 are able to
# connect with each other.
#
#
# +-------------------+                                   +-------------------+
# |                   |                                   |                   |
# |  hs-t100-1 netns  |                                   |  hs-t100-2 netns  |
# |                   |                                   |                   |
# |  +-------------+  |                                   |  +-------------+  |
# |  |    veth0    |  |                                   |  |    veth0    |  |
# |  |  cafe::1/64 |  |                                   |  |  cafe::2/64 |  |
# |  +-------------+  |                                   |  +-------------+  |
# |        .          |                                   |         .         |
# +-------------------+                                   +-------------------+
#          .                                                        .
#          .                                                        .
#          .                                                        .
# +-----------------------------------+   +-----------------------------------+
# |        .                          |   |                         .         |

Annotation

Implementation Notes