Kernel-4.18.0-80.el8_ila

Identifier Locator Addressing (ILA)

Introduction

Identifier-locator addressing (ILA) is a technique used with IPv6 that
differentiates between location and identity of a network node. Part of an
address expresses the immutable identity of the node, and another part
indicates the location of the node which can be dynamic. Identifier-locator
addressing can be used to efficiently implement overlay networks for
network virtualization as well as solutions for use cases in mobility.

ILA can be thought of as means to implement an overlay network without
encapsulation. This is accomplished by performing network address
translation on destination addresses as a packet traverses a network. To
the network, an ILA translated packet appears to be no different than any
other IPv6 packet. For instance, if the transport protocol is TCP then an
ILA translated packet looks like just another TCP/IPv6 packet. The
advantage of this is that ILA is transparent to the network so that
optimizations in the network, such as ECMP, RSS, GRO, GSO, etc., just work.

The ILA protocol is described in Internet-Draft draft-herbert-intarea-ila.

ILA terminology

  • Identifier A number that identifies an addressable node in the network

    independent of its location. ILA identifiers are sixty-four
    bit values.
    
  • Locator A network prefix that routes to a physical host. Locators

    provide the topological location of an addressed node. ILA
    locators are sixty-four bit prefixes.
    
  • ILA mapping

    A mapping of an ILA identifier to a locator (or to a
    locator and meta data). An ILA domain maintains a database
    that contains mappings for all destinations in the domain.
    
  • SIR address

    An IPv6 address composed of a SIR prefix (upper sixty-
    four bits) and an identifier (lower sixty-four bits).
    SIR addresses are visible to applications and provide a
    means for them to address nodes independent of their
    location.
    
  • ILA address

    An IPv6 address composed of a locator (upper sixty-four
    bits) and an identifier (low order sixty-four bits). ILA
    addresses are never visible to an application.
    
  • ILA host An end host that is capable of performing ILA translations

    on transmit or receive.
    
  • ILA router A network node that performs ILA translation and forwarding

    of translated packets.
    
  • ILA forwarding cache

    A type of ILA router that only maintains a working set
    cache of mappings.
    
  • ILA node A network node capable of performing ILA translations. This

    can be an ILA router, ILA forwarding cache, or ILA host.
    

Operation

There are two fundamental operations with ILA:

  • Translate a SIR address to an ILA address. This is performed on ingress
    to an ILA overlay.

  • Translate an ILA address to a SIR address. This is performed on egress
    from the ILA overlay.

ILA can be deployed either on end hosts or intermediate devices in the
network; these are provided by “ILA hosts” and “ILA routers” respectively.
Configuration and datapath for these two points of deployment is somewhat
different.

The diagram below illustrates the flow of packets through ILA as well
as showing ILA hosts and routers.

+--------+                                                +--------+
| Host A +-+                                         +--->| Host B |
|        | |              (2) ILA                   (')   |        |
+--------+ |            ...addressed....           (   )  +--------+
           V  +---+--+  .  packet      .  +---+--+  (_)

(1) SIR | | ILA |—–>——–>—->| ILA | | (3) SIR
addressed +->|router| . . |router|->-+ addressed
packet +—+–+ . IPv6 . +—+–+ packet
/ . Network .
/ . . +–+-++——–+
+——–+ / . . |ILA || Host |
| Host +–+ . .- -|host|| |
| | . . +–+-++——–+
+——–+ …………….

Transport checksum handling

When an address is translated by ILA, an encapsulated transport checksum
that includes the translated address in a pseudo header may be rendered
incorrect on the wire. This is a problem for intermediate devices,
including checksum offload in NICs, that process the checksum. There are
three options to deal with this:

  • no action Allow the checksum to be incorrect on the wire. Before

      a receiver verifies a checksum the ILA to SIR address
      translation must be done.
    
  • adjust transport checksum

      When ILA translation is performed the packet is parsed
      and if a transport layer checksum is found then it is
      adjusted to reflect the correct checksum per the
      translated address.
    
  • checksum neutral mapping

      When an address is translated the difference can be offset
      elsewhere in a part of the packet that is covered by
      the checksum. The low order sixteen bits of the identifier
      are used. This method is preferred since it doesn't require
      parsing a packet beyond the IP header and in most cases the
      adjustment can be precomputed and saved with the mapping.
    

Note that the checksum neutral adjustment affects the low order sixteen
bits of the identifier. When ILA to SIR address translation is done on
egress the low order bits are restored to the original value which
restores the identifier as it was originally sent.

Identifier types

ILA defines different types of identifiers for different use cases.

The defined types are:

  0: interface identifier

  1: locally unique identifier

  2: virtual networking identifier for IPv4 address

  3: virtual networking identifier for IPv6 unicast address

  4: virtual networking identifier for IPv6 multicast address

  5: non-local address identifier

In the current implementation of kernel ILA only locally unique identifiers
(LUID) are supported. LUID allows for a generic, unformatted 64 bit
identifier.

Identifier formats

Kernel ILA supports two optional fields in an identifier for formatting:
“C-bit” and “identifier type”. The presence of these fields is determined
by configuration as demonstrated below.

If the identifier type is present it occupies the three highest order
bits of an identifier. The possible values are given in the above list.

If the C-bit is present, this is used as an indication that checksum
neutral mapping has been done. The C-bit can only be set in an
ILA address, never a SIR address.

In the simplest format the identifier types, C-bit, and checksum
adjustment value are not present so an identifier is considered an
unstructured sixty-four bit value.

 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                            Identifier                         |
 +                                                               +
 |                                                               |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The checksum neutral adjustment may be configured to always be
present using neutral-map-auto. In this case there is no C-bit, but the
checksum adjustment is in the low order 16 bits. The identifier is
still sixty-four bits.

 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                            Identifier                         |
 |                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                               |  Checksum-neutral adjustment  |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The C-bit may used to explicitly indicate that checksum neutral
mapping has been applied to an ILA address. The format is:

 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |     |C|                    Identifier                         |
 |     +-+                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                               |  Checksum-neutral adjustment  |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The identifier type field may be present to indicate the identifier
type. If it is not present then the type is inferred based on mapping
configuration. The checksum neutral adjustment may automatically
used with the identifier type as illustrated below.

 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Type|                      Identifier                         |
 +-+-+-+                         +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                               |  Checksum-neutral adjustment  |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

If the identifier type and the C-bit can be present simultaneously so
the identifier format would be:

 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Type|C|                    Identifier                         |
 +-+-+-+-+                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                               |  Checksum-neutral adjustment  |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Configuration

There are two methods to configure ILA mappings. One is by using LWT routes
and the other is ila_xlat (called from NFHOOK PREROUTING hook). ila_xlat
is intended to be used in the receive path for ILA hosts .

An ILA router has also been implemented in XDP. Description of that is
outside the scope of this document.

The usage of for ILA LWT routes is:

ip route add DEST/128 encap ila LOC csum-mode MODE ident-type TYPE via ADDR

Destination (DEST) can either be a SIR address (for an ILA host or ingress
ILA router) or an ILA address (egress ILA router). LOC is the sixty-four
bit locator (with format W:X:Y:Z) that overwrites the upper sixty-four
bits of the destination address. Checksum MODE is one of “no-action”,
“adj-transport”, “neutral-map”, and “neutral-map-auto”. If neutral-map is
set then the C-bit will be present. Identifier TYPE one of “luid” or
“use-format.” In the case of use-format, the identifier type field is
present and the effective type is taken from that.

The usage of ila_xlat is:

ip ila add loc_match MATCH loc LOC csum-mode MODE ident-type TYPE

MATCH indicates the incoming locator that must be matched to apply
a the translaiton. LOC is the locator that overwrites the upper
sixty-four bits of the destination address. MODE and TYPE have the
same meanings as described above.

Some examples

Configure an ILA route that uses checksum neutral mapping as well

as type field. Note that the type field is set in the SIR address

(the 2000 implies type is 1 which is LUID).

ip route add 3333:0:0:1:2000:0:1:87/128 encap ila 2001:0:87:0
csum-mode neutral-map ident-type use-format

Configure an ILA LWT route that uses auto checksum neutral mapping

(no C-bit) and configure identifier type to be LUID so that the

identifier type field will not be present.

ip route add 3333:0:0:1:2000:0:2:87/128 encap ila 2001:0:87:1
csum-mode neutral-map-auto ident-type luid

ila_xlat configuration

Configure an ILA to SIR mapping that matches a locator and overwrites

it with a SIR address (3333:0:0:1 in this example). The C-bit and

identifier field are used.

ip ila add loc_match 2001:0:119:0 loc 3333:0:0:1
csum-mode neutral-map-auto ident-type use-format

Configure an ILA to SIR mapping where checksum neutral is automatically

set without the C-bit and the identifier type is configured to be LUID

so that the identifier type field is not present.

ip ila add loc_match 2001:0:119:0 loc 3333:0:0:1
csum-mode neutral-map-auto ident-type use-format