1 2 Very funky action. I do plan to add to a few more things to it 3 This is the basic stuff. Idea borrowed from the way ethernet switches 4 mirror and redirect packets. The main difference with say a vannila 5 ethernet switch is that you can use u32 classifier to select a 6 flow to be mirrored. High end switches typically can select based 7 on more than just a port (eg a 5 tuple classifier). They may also be 8 capable of redirecting. 9 10 Usage: 11 12 mirred <DIRECTION> <ACTION> [index INDEX] <dev DEVICENAME> 13 where: 14 DIRECTION := <ingress | egress> 15 ACTION := <mirror | redirect> 16 INDEX is the specific policy instance id 17 DEVICENAME is the devicename 18 19 Direction: 20 - Ingress is not supported at the moment. It will be in the 21 future as well as mirror/redirecting to a socket. 22 23 Action: 24 - Mirror takes a copy of the packet and sends it to specified 25 dev ("port" in ethernet switch/bridging terminology) 26 - redirect 27 steals the packet and redirects to specified destination dev. 28 29 What NOT to do if you dont want your machine to crash: 30 ------------------------------------------------------ 31 32 Do not create loops! 33 Loops are not hard to create in the egress qdiscs. 34 35 Here are simple rules to follow if you dont want to get 36 hurt: 37 A) Do not have the same packet go to same netdevice twice 38 in a single graph of policies. Your machine will just hang! 39 This is design intent _not a bug_ to teach you some lessons. 40 41 In the future if there are easy ways to do this in the kernel 42 without affecting other packets not interested in this feature 43 I will add them. At the moment that is not clear. 44 45 Some examples of bad things NOT to do: 46 1) redirecting eth0 to eth0 47 2) eth0->eth1-> eth0 48 3) eth0->lo-> eth1-> eth0 49 50 B) Do not redirect from one IFB device to another. 51 Remember that IFB is a very specialized case of packet redirecting 52 device. Instead of redirecting it puts packets at the exact spot 53 on the stack it found them from. 54 Redirecting from ifbX->ifbY will actually not crash your machine but your 55 packets will all be dropped (this is much simpler to detect 56 and resolve and is only affecting users of ifb as opposed to the 57 whole stack). 58 59 In the case of A) the problem has to do with a recursive contention 60 for the devices queue lock and in the second case for the transmit lock. 61 62 Some examples: 63 ------------- 64 65 1) Mirror all packets arriving on eth0 to be sent out on eth1. 66 You may have a sniffer or some accounting box hooked up on eth1. 67 68 --- 69 tc qdisc add dev eth0 ingress 70 tc filter add dev eth0 parent ffff: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 71 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:2 action mirred egress mirror dev eth1 72 --- 73 74 If you replace "mirror" with "redirect" then not a copy but rather 75 the original packet is sent to eth1. 76 77 2) Host A is hooked up to us on eth0 78 79 # redirect all packets arriving on ingress of lo to eth0 80 --- 81 tc qdisc add dev lo ingress 82 tc filter add dev lo parent ffff: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 83 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:2 action mirred egress redirect dev eth0 84 --- 85 86 On host A start a tcpdump on interface connecting to us. 87 88 on our host ping -c 2 127.0.0.1 89 90 Ping would fail since all packets are heading out eth0 91 tcpudmp on host A would show them 92 93 if you substitute the redirect with mirror above as in: 94 tc filter add dev lo parent ffff: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 95 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:2 action mirred egress mirror dev eth0 96 97 Then you should see the packets on both host A and the local 98 stack (i.e ping would work). 99 100 3) Even more funky example: 101 102 # 103 #allow 1 out 10 packets on ingress of lo to randomly make it to the 104 # host A (Randomness uses the netrand generator) 105 # 106 --- 107 tc filter add dev lo parent ffff: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 108 match u32 0 0 flowid 1:2 \ 109 action drop random determ ok 10\ 110 action mirred egress mirror dev eth0 111 --- 112 113 4) 114 # for packets from 10.0.0.9 going out on eth0 (could be local 115 # IP or something # we are forwarding) - 116 # if exceeding a 100Kbps rate, then redirect to eth1 117 # 118 119 --- 120 tc qdisc add dev eth0 handle 1:0 root prio 121 tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1:0 protocol ip prio 6 u32 \ 122 match ip src 10.0.0.9/32 flowid 1:16 \ 123 action police rate 100kbit burst 90k ok \ 124 action mirred egress mirror dev eth1 125 --- 126 127 A more interesting example is when you mirror flows to a dummy device 128 so you could tcpdump them (dummy by defaults drops all packets it sees). 129 This is a very useful debug feature. 130 131 Lets say you are policing packets from alias 192.168.200.200/32 132 you dont want those to exceed 100kbps going out. 133 134 --- 135 tc qdisc add dev eth0 handle 1:0 root prio 136 tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 137 match ip src 192.168.200.200/32 flowid 1:2 \ 138 action police rate 100kbit burst 90k drop 139 --- 140 141 If you run tcpdump on eth0 you will see all packets going out 142 with src 192.168.200.200/32 dropped or not (since tcpdump shows 143 all packets being egressed). 144 Extend the rule a little to see only the packets making it out. 145 146 --- 147 tc qdisc add dev eth0 handle 1:0 root prio 148 tc filter add dev eth0 parent 1: protocol ip prio 10 u32 \ 149 match ip src 192.168.200.200/32 flowid 1:2 \ 150 action police rate 10kbit burst 90k drop \ 151 action mirred egress mirror dev dummy0 152 --- 153 154 Now fire tcpdump on dummy0 to see only those packets .. 155 tcpdump -n -i dummy0 -x -e -t 156 157 Essentially a good debugging/logging interface (sort of like 158 BSDs speacialized log device does without needing one). 159 160 If you replace mirror with redirect, those packets will be 161 blackholed and will never make it out. 162 163 cheers, 164 jamal 165