- Introduced TS common file in docker as well and moved common functions.
- TSA/B/C scripts run only in BGP instances for front end ASICs.
In addition skip enforcing it on route maps used between internal BGP sessions.
admin@str--acs-1:~$ sudo /usr/bin/TSA
System Mode: Normal -> Maintenance
and in case of Multi-ASIC
admin@str--acs-1:~$ sudo /usr/bin/TSA
BGP0 : System Mode: Normal -> Maintenance
BGP1 : System Mode: Normal -> Maintenance
BGP2 : System Mode: Normal -> Maintenance
The requirement for zebra to be ready to accept connections is a generic problem that is not
specific to bgpd. Making the script to wait for zebra socket a separate script and let bgpd and
staticd to wait for zebra socket.
- Support for non-template based FRR configurations (BGP, route-map, OSPF, static route..etc) using config DB schema.
- Support for save & restore - Jinja template based config-DB data read and apply to FRR during startup
**- How I did it**
- add frrcfgd service
- when frr_mgmg_framework_config is set, frrcfgd starts in bgp container
- when user changed the BGP or other related table entries in config DB, frrcfgd will run corresponding VTYSH commands to program on FRR.
- add jinja template to generate FRR config file to be used by FRR daemons while bgp container restarted
**- How to verify it**
1. Add/delete data on config DB and then run VTYSH "show running-config" command to check if FRR configuration changed.
1. Restart bgp container and check if generated FRR config file is correct and run VTYSH "show running-config" command to check if FRR configuration is consistent with attributes in config DB
Co-authored-by: Zhenhong Zhao <zhenhong.zhao@dell.com>
- Why I did it
Initially, we used Monit to monitor critical processes in each container. If one of critical processes was not running
or crashed due to some reasons, then Monit will write an alerting message into syslog periodically. If we add a new process
in a container, the corresponding Monti configuration file will also need to update. It is a little hard for maintenance.
Currently we employed event listener of Supervisod to do this monitoring. Since processes in each container are managed by
Supervisord, we can only focus on the logic of monitoring.
- How I did it
We borrowed the event listener of Supervisord to monitor critical processes in containers. The event listener will take
following steps if it was notified one of critical processes exited unexpectedly:
The event listener will first check whether the auto-restart mechanism was enabled for this container or not. If auto-restart mechanism was enabled, event listener will kill the Supervisord process, which should cause the container to exit and subsequently get restarted.
If auto-restart mechanism was not enabled for this contianer, the event listener will enter a loop which will first sleep 1 minute and then check whether the process is running. If yes, the event listener exits. If no, an alerting message will be written into syslog.
- How to verify it
First, we need checked whether the auto-restart mechanism of a container was enabled or not by running the command show feature status. If enabled, one critical process should be selected and killed manually, then we need check whether the container will be restarted or not.
Second, we can disable the auto-restart mechanism if it was enabled at step 1 by running the commnad sudo config feature autorestart <container_name> disabled. Then one critical process should be selected and killed. After that, we will see the alerting message which will appear in the syslog every 1 minute.
- Which release branch to backport (provide reason below if selected)
201811
201911
[x ] 202006
Fix#5026
There is a race condition between zebra server accepts connections and bgpd tries to connect. Bgpd has a chance to try to connect before zebra is ready. In this scenario, bgpd will try again after 10 seconds and operate as normal within these 10 seconds. As a consequence, whatever bgpd tries to sent to zebra will be missing in the 10 seconds. To avoid such a scenario, bgpd should start after zebra is ready to accept connections.
**- Why I did it**
Earlier today we found a bug in the SONiC TSA implementation.
TSC shows incorrect output (see below) in case we have a route-map which contains TSA route-map as a prefix.
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ TSC
Traffic Shift Check:
System Mode: Not consistent
```
The reason is that TSC implementation has too loose regexps in TSA utilities, which match wrong route-map entries:
For example, current TSC matches following
```
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V4 permit 200
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V6 permit 200
```
But it should match only
```
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V4 permit 20
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V4 deny 30
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V6 permit 20
route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V6 deny 30
```
**- How I did it**
I fixed it by using egrep with `^` and `$` regexp markers which match begin and end of the line.
**- How to verify it**
1. Add follwing entry to FRR config:
```
str-s6100-acs-1#
str-s6100-acs-1# conf t
str-s6100-acs-1(config)# route-map TO_BGP_PEER_V4 permit 200
str-s6100-acs-1(config-route-map)# end
```
2. Use the TSC command and check output. It should show normal.
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ TSC
Traffic Shift Check:
System Mode: Normal```
* Use 20 and 30 route-map entries instead of 2 and 3 for TSA
* Added support for dynamic "Allow list" default action.
Co-authored-by: Pavel Shirshov <pavel.contrib@gmail.com>
frr does not advertise route if local route is not reachable, as a result
loopback route /64 is not advertised to the neighbors. Add static route
allows frr to advertise the route to its peers
Signed-off-by: Guohan Lu <lguohan@gmail.com>
**- Why I did it**
We were building a custom version of Supervisor because I had added patches to prevent hangs and crashes if the system clock ever rolled backward. Those changes were merged into the upstream Supervisor repo as of version 3.4.0 (http://supervisord.org/changes.html#id9), therefore, we should be able to simply install the vanilla package via pip. This will also allow us to easily move to Python 3, as Python 3 support was added in version 4.0.0.
**- How I did it**
- Remove Makefiles and patches for building supervisor package from source
- Install Python 3 supervisor package version 4.2.1 in Buster base container
- Also install Python 3 version of supervisord-dependent-startup in Buster base container
- Debian package installed binary in `/usr/bin/`, but pip package installs in `/usr/local/bin/`, so rather than update all absolute paths, I changed all references to simply call `supervisord` and let the system PATH find the executable to prevent future need for changes just in case we ever need to switch back to build a Debian package, then we won't need to modify these again.
- Install Python 2 supervisor package >= 3.4.0 in Stretch and Jessie base containers
Fixed TSA bugs:
1. TSA didn't advertise Loopback ipv6 address
2. TSA and TSB changed BGP dynamic and BGP monitors sessions
**- How to verify it**
Build an image and run on your DUT.
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ TSA
System Mode: Normal -> Maintenance
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ vtysh -c 'show bgp ipv4 neighbors 10.0.0.1 advertised-routes'
BGP table version is 6, local router ID is 10.1.0.32, vrf id 0
Default local pref 100, local AS 64601
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> 10.1.0.32/32 0.0.0.0 0 32768 i
Total number of prefixes 1
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ vtysh -c 'show bgp ipv6 neighbors fc00::a advertised-routes'
BGP table version is 6, local router ID is 10.1.0.32, vrf id 0
Default local pref 100, local AS 64601
Status codes: s suppressed, d damped, h history, * valid, > best, = multipath,
i internal, r RIB-failure, S Stale, R Removed
Nexthop codes: @NNN nexthop's vrf id, < announce-nh-self
Origin codes: i - IGP, e - EGP, ? - incomplete
Network Next Hop Metric LocPrf Weight Path
*> fc00:1::/64 :: 0 32768 i
Total number of prefixes 1
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ TSB
System Mode: Maintenance -> Normal
```
Co-authored-by: Pavel Shirshov <pavel.contrib@gmail.com>
- Why I did it
Update the routine is_bgp_session_internal() by checking the BGP_INTERNAL_NEIGHBOR table.
Additionally to address the review comment #5520 (comment)
Add timer settings as will in the internal session templates and keep it minimal as these sessions which will always be up.
Updates to the internal tests data + add all of it to template tests.
- How I did it
Updated the APIs and the template files.
- How to verify it
Verified the internal BGP sessions are displayed correctly with show commands with this API is_bgp_session_internal()
lldpmgrd, bgpcfgd, and bgpmon are reported error status not running due
to recent change of shebang to use `Python3`. Modifying the argument of
`process_checker` to follow this change.
Signed-off-by: Longxiang Lyu <lolv@microsoft.com>
* Convert bgpcfgd to python3
Convert bgpmon to python3
Fix some issues in bgpmon
* Add python3-swsscommon as depends
* Install dependencies
* reorder deps
Co-authored-by: Pavel Shirshov <pavel.contrib@gmail.com>
Why/How I did:
Make sure first error syslog is triggered based on FAULT TOLERANCE condition.
Added support of repeat clause with alert action. This is used as trigger
for generation of periodic syslog error messages if error is persistent
Updated the monit conf files with repeat every x cycles for the alert action
* Initial commit for BGP internal neighbor table support.
> Add new template named "internal" for the internal BGP sessions
> Add a new table in database "BGP_INTERNAL_NEIGHBOR"
> The internal BGP sessions will be stored in this new table "BGP_INTERNAL_NEIGHBOR"
* Changes in template generation tests with the introduction of internal neighbor template files.
**- Why I did it**
To introduce dynamic support of BBR functionality into bgpcfgd.
BBR is adding `neighbor PEER_GROUP allowas-in 1' for all BGP peer-groups which points to T0
Now we can add and remove this configuration based on CONFIG_DB entry
**- How I did it**
I introduced a new CONFIG_DB entry:
- table name: "BGP_BBR"
- key value: "all". Currently only "all" is supported, which means that all peer-groups which points to T0s will be updated
- data value: a dictionary: {"status": "status_value"}, where status_value could be either "enabled" or "disabled"
Initially, when bgpcfgd starts, it reads initial BBR status values from the [constants.yml](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/pull/5626/files#diff-e6f2fe13a6c276dc2f3b27a5bef79886f9c103194be4fcb28ce57375edf2c23cR34). Then you can control BBR status by changing "BGP_BBR" table in the CONFIG_DB (see examples below).
bgpcfgd knows what peer-groups to change fron [constants.yml](https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/pull/5626/files#diff-e6f2fe13a6c276dc2f3b27a5bef79886f9c103194be4fcb28ce57375edf2c23cR39). The dictionary contains peer-group names as keys, and a list of address-families as values. So when bgpcfgd got a request to change the BBR state, it changes the state only for peer-groups listed in the constants.yml dictionary (and only for address families from the peer-group value).
**- How to verify it**
Initially, when we start SONiC FRR has BBR enabled for PEER_V4 and PEER_V6:
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ vtysh -c 'show run' | egrep 'PEER_V.? allowas'
neighbor PEER_V4 allowas-in 1
neighbor PEER_V6 allowas-in 1
```
Then we apply following configuration to the db:
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ cat disable.json
{
"BGP_BBR": {
"all": {
"status": "disabled"
}
}
}
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ sonic-cfggen -j disable.json -w
```
The log output are:
```
Oct 14 18:40:22.450322 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: Received message : '('all', 'SET', (('status', 'disabled'),))'
Oct 14 18:40:22.450620 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-f', '/tmp/tmpmWTiuq']'.
Oct 14 18:40:22.681084 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-c', 'clear bgp peer-group PEER_V4 soft in']'.
Oct 14 18:40:22.904626 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-c', 'clear bgp peer-group PEER_V6 soft in']'.
```
Check FRR configuraiton and see that no allowas parameters are there:
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ vtysh -c 'show run' | egrep 'PEER_V.? allowas'
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$
```
Then we apply enabling configuration back:
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ cat enable.json
{
"BGP_BBR": {
"all": {
"status": "enabled"
}
}
}
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ sonic-cfggen -j enable.json -w
```
The log output:
```
Oct 14 18:40:41.074720 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: Received message : '('all', 'SET', (('status', 'enabled'),))'
Oct 14 18:40:41.074720 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-f', '/tmp/tmpDD6SKv']'.
Oct 14 18:40:41.587257 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-c', 'clear bgp peer-group PEER_V4 soft in']'.
Oct 14 18:40:42.042967 str-s6100-acs-1 DEBUG bgp#bgpcfgd: execute command '['vtysh', '-c', 'clear bgp peer-group PEER_V6 soft in']'.
```
Check FRR configuraiton and see that the BBR configuration is back:
```
admin@str-s6100-acs-1:~$ vtysh -c 'show run' | egrep 'PEER_V.? allowas'
neighbor PEER_V4 allowas-in 1
neighbor PEER_V6 allowas-in 1
```
*** The test coverage ***
Below is the test coverage
```
---------- coverage: platform linux2, python 2.7.12-final-0 ----------
Name Stmts Miss Cover
----------------------------------------------------
bgpcfgd/__init__.py 0 0 100%
bgpcfgd/__main__.py 3 3 0%
bgpcfgd/config.py 78 41 47%
bgpcfgd/directory.py 63 34 46%
bgpcfgd/log.py 15 3 80%
bgpcfgd/main.py 51 51 0%
bgpcfgd/manager.py 41 23 44%
bgpcfgd/managers_allow_list.py 385 21 95%
bgpcfgd/managers_bbr.py 76 0 100%
bgpcfgd/managers_bgp.py 193 193 0%
bgpcfgd/managers_db.py 9 9 0%
bgpcfgd/managers_intf.py 33 33 0%
bgpcfgd/managers_setsrc.py 45 45 0%
bgpcfgd/runner.py 39 39 0%
bgpcfgd/template.py 64 11 83%
bgpcfgd/utils.py 32 24 25%
bgpcfgd/vars.py 1 0 100%
----------------------------------------------------
TOTAL 1128 530 53%
```
**- Which release branch to backport (provide reason below if selected)**
- [ ] 201811
- [x] 201911
- [x] 202006
**- Why I did it**
FRR introduced [next hop tracking](http://docs.frrouting.org/projects/dev-guide/en/latest/next-hop-tracking.html) functionality.
That functionality requires resolving BGP neighbors before setting BGP connection (or explicit ebgp-multihop command). Sometimes (BGP MONITORS) our neighbors are not directly connected and sessions are IBGP. In this case current configuration prevents FRR to establish BGP connections. Reason would be "waiting for NHT". To fix that we need either add static routes for each not-directly connected ibgp neighbor, or enable command `ip nht resolve-via-default`
**- How I did it**
Put `ip nht resolve-via-default` into the config
**- How to verify it**
Build an image. Enable BGP_MONITOR entry and check that entry is Established or Connecting in FRR
Co-authored-by: Pavel Shirshov <pavel.contrib@gmail.com>
implements a new feature: "BGP Allow list."
This feature allows us to control which IP prefixes are going to be advertised via ebgp from the routes received from EBGP neighbors.
Jinja2 templates rendered using Python 3 interpreter, are required
to conform with Python 3 new semantics.
singed-off-by: Tamer Ahmed <tamer.ahmed@microsoft.com>
implements a new feature: "BGP Allow list."
This feature allows us to control which IP prefixes are going to be advertised via ebgp from the routes received from EBGP neighbors.
We want to let Monit to unmonitor the processes in containers which are disabled in `FEATURE` table such that
Monit will not generate false alerting messages into the syslog.
Signed-off-by: Yong Zhao <yozhao@microsoft.com>
We are moving toward building all Python packages for SONiC as wheel packages rather than Debian packages. This will also allow us to more easily transition to Python 3.
Python files are now packaged in "sonic-utilities" Pyhton wheel. Data files are now packaged in "sonic-utilities-data" Debian package.
**- How I did it**
- Build and install sonic-utilities as a Python package
- Remove explicit installation of wheel dependencies, as these will now get installed implicitly by pip when installing sonic-utilities as a wheel
- Build and install new sonic-utilities-data package to install data files required by sonic-utilities applications
- Update all references to sonic-utilities scripts/entrypoints to either reference the new /usr/local/bin/ location or remove absolute path entirely where applicable
Submodule updates:
* src/sonic-utilities aa27dd9...2244d7b (5):
> Support building sonic-utilities as a Python wheel package instead of a Debian package (#1122)
> [consutil] Display remote device name in show command (#1120)
> [vrf] fix check state_db error when vrf moving (#1119)
> [consutil] Fix issue where the ConfigDBConnector's reference is missing (#1117)
> Update to make config load/reload backward compatible. (#1115)
* src/sonic-ztp dd025bc...911d622 (1):
> Update paths to reflect new sonic-utilities install location, /usr/local/bin/ (#19)
* Add bgpmon under sonic-bgpcfgd to be started as a new daemon under BGP docker
* Added bgpmon to be monitored by Monit so that if it crashed, it gets alerted
* use console_scripts entry point to package bgpmon
When stopping the swss, pmon or bgp containers, log messages like the following can be seen:
```
Aug 23 22:50:43.789760 sonic-dut INFO swss#supervisord 2020-08-23 22:50:10,061 ERRO pool dependent-startup event buffer overflowed, discarding event 34
Aug 23 22:50:43.789760 sonic-dut INFO swss#supervisord 2020-08-23 22:50:10,063 ERRO pool dependent-startup event buffer overflowed, discarding event 35
Aug 23 22:50:43.789760 sonic-dut INFO swss#supervisord 2020-08-23 22:50:10,064 ERRO pool dependent-startup event buffer overflowed, discarding event 36
Aug 23 22:50:43.789760 sonic-dut INFO swss#supervisord 2020-08-23 22:50:10,066 ERRO pool dependent-startup event buffer overflowed, discarding event 37
```
This is due to the number of programs in the container managed by supervisor, all generating events at the same time. The default event queue buffer size in supervisor is 10. This patch increases that value in all containers in order to eliminate these errors. As more programs are added to the containers, we may need to further adjust these values. I increased all buffer sizes to 25 except for containers with more programs or templated supervisor.conf files which allow for a variable number of programs. In these cases I increased the buffer size to 50. One final exception is the swss container, where the buffer fills up to ~50, so I increased this buffer to 100.
Resolves https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/issues/5241
Calls to sonic-cfggen is CPU expensive. This PR reduces calls to
sonic-cfggen to two calls during startup when starting frr service.
singed-off-by: Tamer Ahmed <tamer.ahmed@microsoft.com>
Verify that /etc/apt/sources.list points to buster using docker exec bgp cat /etc/apt/sources.list
BGP neighborship is established.
root@sonic:~# show ip bgp summary
IPv4 Unicast Summary:
BGP router identifier 10.1.0.1, local AS number 65100 vrf-id 0
BGP table version 1
RIB entries 1, using 184 bytes of memory
Peers 1, using 20 KiB of memory
Neighbor V AS MsgRcvd MsgSent TblVer InQ OutQ Up/Down State/PfxRcd
6.1.1.1 4 100 96 96 0 0 0 01:32:04 0
Total number of neighbors 1
root@sonic:~#
Signed-off-by: Joyas Joseph <joyas_joseph@dell.com>
fixes https://github.com/Azure/sonic-buildimage/issues/5026
Explanation:
In the log from the issue I found:
```
I see following in the log
Jul 22 21:13:06.574831 vlab-01 WARNING bgp#bgpd[49]: [EC 33554499] sendmsg_nexthop: zclient_send_message() failed
```
Analyzing source code I found that the error message could be issues only when `zclient_send_rnh()` return less than 0.
```
ret = zclient_send_rnh(zclient, command, p, exact_match,
bnc->bgp->vrf_id);
/* TBD: handle the failure */
if (ret < 0)
flog_warn(EC_BGP_ZEBRA_SEND,
"sendmsg_nexthop: zclient_send_message() failed");
```
I checked [zclient_send_rnh()](88351c8f6d/lib/zclient.c (L654)) and found that this function will return the exit code which the function gets from [zclient_send_message()](88351c8f6d/lib/zclient.c (L266)) But the latter function could return not 0 in two cases:
1. bgpd didn’t connect to the zclient socket yet [code](88351c8f6d/lib/zclient.c (L269))
2. The socket was closed. But in this case we would receive the error message in the log. (And I can find the message in the log when we reboot sonic) [code](88351c8f6d/lib/zclient.c (L277))
Also I see from the logs that client connection was set later we had the issue in bgpd.
Bgpd.log
```
Jul 22 21:13:06.574831 vlab-01 WARNING bgp#bgpd[49]: [EC 33554499] sendmsg_nexthop: zclient_send_message() failed
```
Vs
Zebra.log
```
Jul 22 21:13:12.713249 vlab-01 NOTICE bgp#zebra[48]: client 25 says hello and bids fair to announce only static routes vrf=0
Jul 22 21:13:12.820352 vlab-01 NOTICE bgp#zebra[48]: client 30 says hello and bids fair to announce only bgp routes vrf=0
Jul 22 21:13:12.820352 vlab-01 NOTICE bgp#zebra[48]: client 33 says hello and bids fair to announce only vnc routes vrf=0
```
So in our case we should start zebra first. Wait until it is started and then start bgpd and other daemons.
**- How I did it**
I changed a graph to start daemons in the following order:
1. First start zebra
2. Then starts staticd and bgpd
3. Then starts vtysh -b and bgpeoi after bgpd is started.
Resubmitting the changes for (#4825) with fixes for sonic-bgpcdgd test failures
Signed-off-by: Arvindsrinivasan Lakshmi Narasimhan <arlakshm@microsoft.com>
* Loopback IP changes for multi ASIC devices
multi ASIC will have 2 Loopback Interfaces
- Loopback0 has globally unique IP address, which is advertised by the multi ASIC device to its peers.
This way all the external devices will see this device as a single device.
- Loopback4096 is assigned an IP address which has a scope is within the device. Each ASIC has a different ip address for Loopback4096. This ip address will be used as Router-Id by the bgp instance on multi ASIC devices.
This PR implements this change for multi ASIC devices
Signed-off-by: Arvindsrinivasan Lakshmi Narasimhan <arlakshm@microsoft.com>
* Changes to make default route programming
correct in multi-asic platform where frr is not running
in host namespace. Change is to set correct administrative distance.
Also make NAMESPACE* enviroment variable available for all dockers
so that it can be used when needed.
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Dosi <abdosi@microsoft.com>
* Fix review comments
* Review comment to check to add default route
only if default route exist and delete is successful.
**- Why I did it**
Initially, the critical_processes file contains either the name of critical process or the name of group.
For example, the critical_processes file in the dhcp_relay container contains a single group name
`isc-dhcp-relay`. When testing the autorestart feature of each container, we need get all the critical
processes and test whether a container can be restarted correctly if one of its critical processes is
killed. However, it will be difficult to differentiate whether the names in the critical_processes file are
the critical processes or group names. At the same time, changing the syntax in this file will separate the individual process from the groups and also makes it clear to the user.
Right now the critical_processes file contains two different kind of entries. One is "program:xxx" which indicates a critical process. Another is "group:xxx" which indicates a group of critical processes
managed by supervisord using the name "xxx". At the same time, I also updated the logic to
parse the file critical_processes in supervisor-proc-event-listener script.
**- How to verify it**
We can first enable the autorestart feature of a specified container for example `dhcp_relay` by running the comman `sudo config container feature autorestart dhcp_relay enabled` on DUT. Then we can select a critical process from the command `docker top dhcp_relay` and use the command `sudo kill -SIGKILL <pid>` to kill that critical process. Final step is to check whether the container is restarted correctly or not.