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| 1. Introduction |
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| Linux distinguishes between administrative and operational state of an |
| interface. Administrative state is the result of "ip link set dev |
| <dev> up or down" and reflects whether the administrator wants to use |
| the device for traffic. |
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| However, an interface is not usable just because the admin enabled it |
| - ethernet requires to be plugged into the switch and, depending on |
| a site's networking policy and configuration, an 802.1X authentication |
| to be performed before user data can be transferred. Operational state |
| shows the ability of an interface to transmit this user data. |
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| Thanks to 802.1X, userspace must be granted the possibility to |
| influence operational state. To accommodate this, operational state is |
| split into two parts: Two flags that can be set by the driver only, and |
| a RFC2863 compatible state that is derived from these flags, a policy, |
| and changeable from userspace under certain rules. |
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| 2. Querying from userspace |
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| Both admin and operational state can be queried via the netlink |
| operation RTM_GETLINK. It is also possible to subscribe to RTMGRP_LINK |
| to be notified of updates. This is important for setting from userspace. |
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| These values contain interface state: |
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| ifinfomsg::if_flags & IFF_UP: |
| Interface is admin up |
| ifinfomsg::if_flags & IFF_RUNNING: |
| Interface is in RFC2863 operational state UP or UNKNOWN. This is for |
| backward compatibility, routing daemons, dhcp clients can use this |
| flag to determine whether they should use the interface. |
| ifinfomsg::if_flags & IFF_LOWER_UP: |
| Driver has signaled netif_carrier_on() |
| ifinfomsg::if_flags & IFF_DORMANT: |
| Driver has signaled netif_dormant_on() |
| |
| TLV IFLA_OPERSTATE |
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| contains RFC2863 state of the interface in numeric representation: |
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| IF_OPER_UNKNOWN (0): |
| Interface is in unknown state, neither driver nor userspace has set |
| operational state. Interface must be considered for user data as |
| setting operational state has not been implemented in every driver. |
| IF_OPER_NOTPRESENT (1): |
| Unused in current kernel (notpresent interfaces normally disappear), |
| just a numerical placeholder. |
| IF_OPER_DOWN (2): |
| Interface is unable to transfer data on L1, f.e. ethernet is not |
| plugged or interface is ADMIN down. |
| IF_OPER_LOWERLAYERDOWN (3): |
| Interfaces stacked on an interface that is IF_OPER_DOWN show this |
| state (f.e. VLAN). |
| IF_OPER_TESTING (4): |
| Unused in current kernel. |
| IF_OPER_DORMANT (5): |
| Interface is L1 up, but waiting for an external event, f.e. for a |
| protocol to establish. (802.1X) |
| IF_OPER_UP (6): |
| Interface is operational up and can be used. |
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| This TLV can also be queried via sysfs. |
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| TLV IFLA_LINKMODE |
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| contains link policy. This is needed for userspace interaction |
| described below. |
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| This TLV can also be queried via sysfs. |
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| 3. Kernel driver API |
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| Kernel drivers have access to two flags that map to IFF_LOWER_UP and |
| IFF_DORMANT. These flags can be set from everywhere, even from |
| interrupts. It is guaranteed that only the driver has write access, |
| however, if different layers of the driver manipulate the same flag, |
| the driver has to provide the synchronisation needed. |
| |
| __LINK_STATE_NOCARRIER, maps to !IFF_LOWER_UP: |
| |
| The driver uses netif_carrier_on() to clear and netif_carrier_off() to |
| set this flag. On netif_carrier_off(), the scheduler stops sending |
| packets. The name 'carrier' and the inversion are historical, think of |
| it as lower layer. |
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| netif_carrier_ok() can be used to query that bit. |
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| __LINK_STATE_DORMANT, maps to IFF_DORMANT: |
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| Set by the driver to express that the device cannot yet be used |
| because some driver controlled protocol establishment has to |
| complete. Corresponding functions are netif_dormant_on() to set the |
| flag, netif_dormant_off() to clear it and netif_dormant() to query. |
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| On device allocation, networking core sets the flags equivalent to |
| netif_carrier_ok() and !netif_dormant(). |
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| |
| Whenever the driver CHANGES one of these flags, a workqueue event is |
| scheduled to translate the flag combination to IFLA_OPERSTATE as |
| follows: |
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| !netif_carrier_ok(): |
| IF_OPER_LOWERLAYERDOWN if the interface is stacked, IF_OPER_DOWN |
| otherwise. Kernel can recognise stacked interfaces because their |
| ifindex != iflink. |
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| netif_carrier_ok() && netif_dormant(): |
| IF_OPER_DORMANT |
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| netif_carrier_ok() && !netif_dormant(): |
| IF_OPER_UP if userspace interaction is disabled. Otherwise |
| IF_OPER_DORMANT with the possibility for userspace to initiate the |
| IF_OPER_UP transition afterwards. |
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| 4. Setting from userspace |
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| Applications have to use the netlink interface to influence the |
| RFC2863 operational state of an interface. Setting IFLA_LINKMODE to 1 |
| via RTM_SETLINK instructs the kernel that an interface should go to |
| IF_OPER_DORMANT instead of IF_OPER_UP when the combination |
| netif_carrier_ok() && !netif_dormant() is set by the |
| driver. Afterwards, the userspace application can set IFLA_OPERSTATE |
| to IF_OPER_DORMANT or IF_OPER_UP as long as the driver does not set |
| netif_carrier_off() or netif_dormant_on(). Changes made by userspace |
| are multicasted on the netlink group RTMGRP_LINK. |
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| So basically a 802.1X supplicant interacts with the kernel like this: |
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| -subscribe to RTMGRP_LINK |
| -set IFLA_LINKMODE to 1 via RTM_SETLINK |
| -query RTM_GETLINK once to get initial state |
| -if initial flags are not (IFF_LOWER_UP && !IFF_DORMANT), wait until |
| netlink multicast signals this state |
| -do 802.1X, eventually abort if flags go down again |
| -send RTM_SETLINK to set operstate to IF_OPER_UP if authentication |
| succeeds, IF_OPER_DORMANT otherwise |
| -see how operstate and IFF_RUNNING is echoed via netlink multicast |
| -set interface back to IF_OPER_DORMANT if 802.1X reauthentication |
| fails |
| -restart if kernel changes IFF_LOWER_UP or IFF_DORMANT flag |
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| if supplicant goes down, bring back IFLA_LINKMODE to 0 and |
| IFLA_OPERSTATE to a sane value. |
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| A routing daemon or dhcp client just needs to care for IFF_RUNNING or |
| waiting for operstate to go IF_OPER_UP/IF_OPER_UNKNOWN before |
| considering the interface / querying a DHCP address. |
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| For technical questions and/or comments please e-mail to Stefan Rompf |
| (stefan at loplof.de). |