W dniu 09.02.2021 o 00:35, Alexander V. Chernikov pisze:
08.02.2021, 20:10, "Marek Zarychta" <zarych...@plan-b.pwste.edu.pl>:
W dniu 08.02.2021 o 19:32, Alexander V. Chernikov pisze:
  08.02.2021, 14:33, "Marek Zarychta" <zarych...@plan-b.pwste.edu.pl>:
  W dniu 08.02.2021 o 13:10, mike tancsa pisze:
   I have been setting up some tests to see if

   option FIB_ALGO and dpdk_lpm4.ko

   will help with my pkt forwarding needs and large routing tables. So far so 
good. But one thing I noticed, is that its very chatty to dmesg.
   eg
   alloc_nhgrp: new mpath group: num_nhops: 2
   compile_nhgrp: O: 2/2
   compile_nhgrp: OO[0]: 1/1 curr=1 slot_idx=0
   compile_nhgrp: OO[1]: 0/0 curr=1 slot_idx=1
   alloc_nhgrp: new mpath group: num_nhops: 2
   compile_nhgrp: O: 2/2
   compile_nhgrp: OO[0]: 1/1 curr=1 slot_idx=0
   compile_nhgrp: OO[1]: 0/0 curr=1 slot_idx=1
   alloc_nhgrp: new mpath group: num_nhops: 2
   compile_nhgrp: O: 2/2
   compile_nhgrp: OO[0]: 1/1 curr=1 slot_idx=0
   compile_nhgrp: OO[1]: 0/0 curr=1 slot_idx=1

   are these debugging messages that forgot to be turned off ? What do they 
mean ?
   Thanks for this work!

   13.0-STABLE #11 stable/13-cc1352c1f-dirty
  Thank you for sharing this Mike. Could you please reveal us how do you
  feed your routing tables? Is net/bird{,2} or net/frr7 involved? Any
  problems or hints to make the routing daemon working with new routing stack?
  Non-multipath should work as before, multipath works for quagga/frr but needs 
some patches for bird.
Thank you for the clarification, so is with anything but quagga or frr
the sysctl setting net.route.multipath=0 obligatory now?
  The new routing stack looks very promising, please let me also give this
  way some appreciations to melifaro@ and other people who worked on it.

  I was also trying to test it with legacy net/bird and multiple fib
  tables, but I was early hit by: "KRT: Error sending route x.x.x.x/y to
  kernel: Operation not supported"
  Any chance you could clarify what are these routes? "Operation not supported" 
looks a bit weird, it shouln't happen.
  Setting net.add_net.add_addr_allfibs=1addr_allfibs=1 changed it a bit,
  but still some blackhole /32 routes seem to get rejected.
  Just "blackhole" route in the bird config? /32 or all?
I used for tests the feed from Peter Hessler's OpenBSD spam trapping
project[1]. On FreeBSD 11.4 I see these routes in net/bird as
blackholed, for example:
x.x.x.x/32 blackhole [bgp_spamd 20:20:43 from y.y.y.y] * (100) [ASzzzz]
They work the same was as routes added by route(8) with option "-blackhole"

With new routing stack, these routes are rejected with the message
above. Now in net/bird, they appear like the example below and import to
the fib (fib number is not equal to 0 in this case) is blocked:
x.x.x.x/32 unreachable [SPAM 19:58:18 from y.y.y.y] ! (100/-) [ASzzzz]
Does the change in https://reviews.freebsd.org/D28549 fix bird?

Thank you for the fix. It solves the issue for net/bird.

So it's probably time to push it a bit further and test in a production environment.

Probably it all should be tested in normal peering, but my initial test
was performed on the old lab setup where multiple fibs and policy
routing[2] were involved. The config was loosely based on the example by
Ondrej Filip from the[2].

Once again thank you for implementing all these improvements into
FreeBSD routing stack and please don't get me wrong, I am just testing
it a bit before migration from 11.4-STABLE, but not complaining about
anything.
No problem! Thank you for the report. It's really nice it's been caught before 
the release.
[1] http://rs.bgp-spamd.net/client/index.html
[2] https://gitlab.nic.cz/labs/bird/-/wikis/Policy_routing


--
Marek Zarychta


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