Provided by: openvswitch-switch_3.4.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ovs-vswitchd - Open vSwitch daemon

SYNOPSIS

       ovs-vswitchd [database]

DESCRIPTION

       A daemon that manages and controls any number of Open vSwitch switches on the local machine.

       The  database  argument  specifies  how  ovs-vswitchd connects to ovsdb-server.  database may be an OVSDB
       active   or   passive   connection   method,   as   described    in    ovsdb(7).     The    default    is
       unix:/var/run/openvswitch/db.sock.

       ovs-vswitchd retrieves its configuration from database at startup.  It sets up Open vSwitch datapaths and
       then  operates  switching  across  each  bridge  described  in  its configuration files.  As the database
       changes, ovs-vswitchd automatically updates its configuration to match.

       ovs-vswitchd switches may be configured with any of the following features:

       •      L2 switching with MAC learning.

       •      NIC bonding with automatic fail-over and source MAC-based TX load balancing ("SLB").

       •      802.1Q VLAN support.

       •      Port mirroring, with optional VLAN tagging.

       •      NetFlow v5 flow logging.

       •      sFlow(R) monitoring.

       •      Connectivity to an external OpenFlow controller, such as NOX.

       Only a single instance of ovs-vswitchd is intended to run at a time.  A single  ovs-vswitchd  can  manage
       any number of switch instances, up to the maximum number of supported Open vSwitch datapaths.

       ovs-vswitchd does all the necessary management of Open vSwitch datapaths itself.  Thus, ovs-dpctl(8) (and
       its  userspace  datapath  counterparts  accessible  via  ovs-appctl  dpctl/command)  are  not needed with
       ovs-vswitchd and should not be used because they can interfere with its operation.  These tools are still
       useful for diagnostics.

       An Open vSwitch datapath kernel module must be loaded for  ovs-vswitchd  to  be  useful.   Refer  to  the
       documentation for instructions on how to build and load the Open vSwitch kernel module.

OPTIONS

       --mlockall
              Causes  ovs-vswitchd to call the mlockall() function, to attempt to lock all of its process memory
              into physical RAM on page faults (on allocation, when running  on  Linux  kernel  4.4  or  older),
              preventing  the  kernel  from  paging  any  of its memory to disk.  This helps to avoid networking
              interruptions due to system memory pressure.

              Some systems do not support mlockall() at all, and other systems only allow privileged users, such
              as the superuser, to use it.  ovs-vswitchd emits a log message if  mlockall()  is  unavailable  or
              unsuccessful.

   DPDK Options
       For   details   on   initializing  ovs-vswitchd  to  use  DPDK  ports,  refer  to  the  documentation  or
       ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5).

   DPDK HW Access Options
       --hw-rawio-access
              Tells ovs-vswitchd to retain the CAP_SYS_RAWIO capability, to allow userspace  drivers  access  to
              raw  hardware  memory.   This  will also allow the ovs-vswitchd daemon to call iopl() and ioperm()
              functions as well as access  memory  devices  to  set  port  access.   This  is  a  very  powerful
              capability,  so  generally only enable as needed for specific hardware (for example mlx5 with full
              hardware offload via rte_flow).

   Daemon Options
       The following options are valid on POSIX based platforms.

       --pidfile[=pidfile]
              Causes a file (by default, ovs-vswitchd.pid) to be created  indicating  the  PID  of  the  running
              process.   If  the  pidfile  argument is not specified, or if it does not begin with /, then it is
              created in /var/run/openvswitch.

              If --pidfile is not specified, no pidfile is created.

       --overwrite-pidfile
              By default, when --pidfile is specified and the specified pidfile already exists and is locked  by
              a  running  process,  ovs-vswitchd  refuses  to start.  Specify --overwrite-pidfile to cause it to
              instead overwrite the pidfile.

              When --pidfile is not specified, this option has no effect.

       --detach
              Runs ovs-vswitchd as a background process.  The process forks, and in the child it  starts  a  new
              session,  closes  the standard file descriptors (which has the side effect of disabling logging to
              the console), and changes its current directory to the  root  (unless  --no-chdir  is  specified).
              After  the child completes its initialization, the parent exits.  ovs-vswitchd detaches only after
              it has  connected  to  the  database,  retrieved  the  initial  configuration,  and  set  up  that
              configuration.

       --monitor
              Creates  an  additional  process  to monitor the ovs-vswitchd daemon.  If the daemon dies due to a
              signal that indicates a programming error (SIGABRT,  SIGALRM,  SIGBUS,  SIGFPE,  SIGILL,  SIGPIPE,
              SIGSEGV,  SIGXCPU,  or  SIGXFSZ)  then the monitor process starts a new copy of it.  If the daemon
              dies or exits for another reason, the monitor process exits.

              This option is normally used with --detach, but it also functions without it.

       --no-chdir
              By default, when --detach is specified, ovs-vswitchd changes its current working directory to  the
              root  directory  after  it  detaches.   Otherwise,  invoking ovs-vswitchd from a carelessly chosen
              directory would prevent the  administrator  from  unmounting  the  file  system  that  holds  that
              directory.

              Specifying  --no-chdir suppresses this behavior, preventing ovs-vswitchd from changing its current
              working directory.  This may be useful for collecting core files, since it is common  behavior  to
              write core dumps into the current working directory and the root directory is not a good directory
              to use.

              This option has no effect when --detach is not specified.

       --no-self-confinement
              By  default daemon will try to self-confine itself to work with files under well-known directories
              determined during build.  It is better to stick with this default behavior and  not  to  use  this
              flag  unless  some other Access Control is used to confine daemon.  Note that in contrast to other
              access control implementations that are typically enforced from kernel-space (e.g.  DAC  or  MAC),
              self-confinement  is  imposed from the user-space daemon itself and hence should not be considered
              as a full confinement strategy, but instead should be viewed as an additional layer of security.

       --user Causes ovs-vswitchd to run as a different user specified in "user:group", thus  dropping  most  of
              the  root privileges. Short forms "user" and ":group" are also allowed, with current user or group
              are assumed respectively. Only daemons started by the root user accepts this argument.

              On Linux, daemons will be granted CAP_IPC_LOCK  and  CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICES  before  dropping  root
              privileges.  Daemons  that  interact  with a datapath, such as ovs-vswitchd, will be granted three
              additional capabilities, namely CAP_NET_ADMIN, CAP_NET_BROADCAST and CAP_NET_RAW.  The  capability
              change will apply even if the new user is root.

              On  Windows,  this option is not currently supported. For security reasons, specifying this option
              will cause the daemon process not to start.

   Service Options
       The following options are valid only on Windows platform.

       --service
              Causes ovs-vswitchd to run as a service in the background. The service should  already  have  been
              created through external tools like SC.exe.

       --service-monitor
              Causes  the  ovs-vswitchd service to be automatically restarted by the Windows services manager if
              the service dies or exits for unexpected reasons.

              When --service is not specified, this option has no effect.

   Public Key Infrastructure Options
       -p privkey.pem
       --private-key=privkey.pem
              Specifies a PEM file containing the private key used as ovs-vswitchd's identity for  outgoing  SSL
              connections.

       -c cert.pem
       --certificate=cert.pem
              Specifies  a  PEM  file containing a certificate that certifies the private key specified on -p or
              --private-key to be trustworthy.  The certificate must be signed by the certificate authority (CA)
              that the peer in SSL connections will use to verify it.

       -C cacert.pem
       --ca-cert=cacert.pem
              Specifies a PEM file containing  the  CA  certificate  that  ovs-vswitchd  should  use  to  verify
              certificates  presented  to it by SSL peers.  (This may be the same certificate that SSL peers use
              to verify the certificate specified on -c  or  --certificate,  or  it  may  be  a  different  one,
              depending on the PKI design in use.)

       -C none
       --ca-cert=none
              Disables  verification  of  certificates presented by SSL peers.  This introduces a security risk,
              because it means that certificates cannot be verified to be those of known trusted hosts.

       --bootstrap-ca-cert=cacert.pem
              When cacert.pem exists, this option has the same effect as -C or --ca-cert.  If it does not exist,
              then ovs-vswitchd will attempt to obtain the CA certificate from the SSL peer  on  its  first  SSL
              connection  and  save it to the named PEM file.  If it is successful, it will immediately drop the
              connection and reconnect, and from then  on  all  SSL  connections  must  be  authenticated  by  a
              certificate signed by the CA certificate thus obtained.

              This  option  exposes  the  SSL  connection to a man-in-the-middle attack obtaining the initial CA
              certificate, but it may be useful for bootstrapping.

              This option is only useful if the SSL peer sends its CA certificate as part of the SSL certificate
              chain.  The SSL protocol does not require the server to send the CA certificate.

              This option is mutually exclusive with -C and --ca-cert.

       --peer-ca-cert=peer-cacert.pem
              Specifies a PEM file that contains one or more additional  certificates  to  send  to  SSL  peers.
              peer-cacert.pem should be the CA certificate used to sign ovs-vswitchd's own certificate, that is,
              the  certificate  specified on -c or --certificate.  If ovs-vswitchd's certificate is self-signed,
              then --certificate and --peer-ca-cert should specify the same file.

              This option is not useful in normal operation, because the SSL  peer  must  already  have  the  CA
              certificate  for the peer to have any confidence in ovs-vswitchd's identity.  However, this offers
              a way for a new installation to bootstrap the CA certificate on its first SSL connection.

   Logging Options
       -v[spec]
       --verbose=[spec]
              Sets logging levels.  Without any spec, sets the log level for every  module  and  destination  to
              dbg.   Otherwise,  spec is a list of words separated by spaces or commas or colons, up to one from
              each category below:

              •      A valid module name, as displayed by the vlog/list command on ovs-appctl(8), limits the log
                     level change to the specified module.

              •      syslog, console, or file, to limit the log level change to only to the system log,  to  the
                     console,  or  to  a file, respectively.  (If --detach is specified, ovs-vswitchd closes its
                     standard file descriptors, so logging to the console will have no effect.)

                     On Windows platform, syslog is accepted as a  word  and  is  only  useful  along  with  the
                     --syslog-target option (the word has no effect otherwise).

              •      off,  emer,  err,  warn,  info,  or  dbg,  to control the log level.  Messages of the given
                     severity or higher will be logged, and messages of lower severity  will  be  filtered  out.
                     off filters out all messages.  See ovs-appctl(8) for a definition of each log level.

              Case is not significant within spec.

              Regardless of the log levels set for file, logging to a file will not take place unless --log-file
              is also specified (see below).

              For compatibility with older versions of OVS, any is accepted as a word but has no effect.

       -v
       --verbose
              Sets the maximum logging verbosity level, equivalent to --verbose=dbg.

       -vPATTERN:destination:pattern
       --verbose=PATTERN:destination:pattern
              Sets  the log pattern for destination to pattern.  Refer to ovs-appctl(8) for a description of the
              valid syntax for pattern.

       -vFACILITY:facility
       --verbose=FACILITY:facility
              Sets the RFC5424 facility of the log message. facility can be one of  kern,  user,  mail,  daemon,
              auth,  syslog,  lpr,  news,  uucp,  clock, ftp, ntp, audit, alert, clock2, local0, local1, local2,
              local3, local4, local5, local6 or local7. If this option is not specified, daemon is used  as  the
              default  for  the  local  system  syslog  and local0 is used while sending a message to the target
              provided via the --syslog-target option.

       --log-file[=file]
              Enables logging to a file.  If file is specified, then it is used as the exact name  for  the  log
              file.  The default log file name used if file is omitted is /var/log/openvswitch/ovs-vswitchd.log.

       --syslog-target=host:port
              Send  syslog  messages  to UDP port on host, in addition to the system syslog.  The host must be a
              numerical IP address, not a hostname.

       --syslog-method=method
              Specify method how syslog  messages  should  be  sent  to  syslog  daemon.   Following  forms  are
              supported:

              •      libc,  use  libc syslog() function.  Downside of using this options is that libc adds fixed
                     prefix to every message before it is actually sent to the syslog daemon over /dev/log  UNIX
                     domain socket.

              •      unix:file,  use  UNIX  domain socket directly.  It is possible to specify arbitrary message
                     format with this option.  However, rsyslogd 8.9 and older versions use  hard  coded  parser
                     function  anyway  that limits UNIX domain socket use.  If you want to use arbitrary message
                     format with older rsyslogd versions, then use UDP socket to localhost IP address instead.

              •      udp:ip:port, use UDP socket.  With this method it is  possible  to  use  arbitrary  message
                     format  also  with  older  rsyslogd.   When  sending  syslog messages over UDP socket extra
                     precaution needs to be  taken  into  account,  for  example,  syslog  daemon  needs  to  be
                     configured  to  listen  on  the  specified  UDP  port,  accidental  iptables rules could be
                     interfering with local syslog traffic and there are some security considerations that apply
                     to UDP sockets, but do not apply to UNIX domain sockets.

              •      null, discards all messages logged to syslog.

              The default is taken from the OVS_SYSLOG_METHOD environment variable; if it is unset, the  default
              is libc.

   Other Options
       --unixctl=socket
              Sets  the name of the control socket on which ovs-vswitchd listens for runtime management commands
              (see RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS, below).  If socket does not begin with /, it is  interpreted  as
              relative  to  /var/run/openvswitch.   If  --unixctl  is  not  used  at  all, the default socket is
              /var/run/openvswitch/ovs-vswitchd.pid.ctl, where pid is ovs-vswitchd's process ID.

              On Windows a local named pipe is used to listen  for  runtime  management  commands.   A  file  is
              created  in  the  absolute path as pointed by socket or if --unixctl is not used at all, a file is
              created as ovs-vswitchd.ctl in the configured OVS_RUNDIR directory.  The file exists just to mimic
              the behavior of a Unix domain socket.

              Specifying none for socket disables the control socket feature.

       -h
       --help Prints a brief help message to the console.

       -V
       --version
              Prints version information to the console.

RUNTIME MANAGEMENT COMMANDS

       ovs-appctl(8) can send commands to a running ovs-vswitchd process.  The currently supported commands  are
       described below.  The command descriptions assume an understanding of how to configure Open vSwitch.

   GENERAL COMMANDS
       exit --cleanup
              Causes  ovs-vswitchd  to  gracefully  terminate.  If  --cleanup  is  specified, deletes flows from
              datapaths and releases other datapath resources configured by ovs-vswitchd.   Otherwise,  datapath
              flows  and  other  resources  remains  undeleted.  Resources of datapaths that are integrated into
              ovs-vswitchd (e.g.  the netdev datapath type) are always released regardless of  --cleanup  except
              for ports with internal type. Use --cleanup to release internal ports too.

       qos/show-types interface
              Queries  the  interface  for  a  list  of  Quality of Service types that are configurable via Open
              vSwitch for the given interface.

       qos/show interface
              Queries the kernel for Quality of Service configuration and statistics associated with  the  given
              interface.

       bfd/show [interface]
              Displays  detailed  information  about Bidirectional Forwarding Detection configured on interface.
              If interface is not specified, then displays detailed information about all  interfaces  with  BFD
              enabled.

       bfd/set-forwarding [interface] status
              Force  the  fault status of the BFD module on interface (or all interfaces if none is given) to be
              status.  status can be "true", "false", or "normal" which reverts to the standard behavior.

       cfm/show [interface]
              Displays detailed information about Connectivity Fault Management  configured  on  interface.   If
              interface  is  not  specified,  then  displays  detailed information about all interfaces with CFM
              enabled.

       cfm/set-fault [interface] status
              Force the fault status of the CFM module on interface (or all interfaces if none is given)  to  be
              status.  status can be "true", "false", or "normal" which reverts to the standard behavior.

       stp/tcn [bridge]
              Forces  a topology change event on bridge if it's running STP.  This may cause it to send Topology
              Change Notifications to its peers and flush its MAC table.   If  no  bridge  is  given,  forces  a
              topology change event on all bridges.

       stp/show [bridge]
              Displays detailed information about spanning tree on the bridge.  If bridge is not specified, then
              displays detailed information about all bridges with STP enabled.

       rstp/tcn [bridge]
              Forces a topology change event on bridge if it's running RSTP.  This may cause it to send Topology
              Change  Notifications  to  its  peers  and  flush  its MAC table.  If no bridge is given, forces a
              topology change event on all bridges.

       rstp/show [bridge]
              Displays detailed information about  rapid  spanning  tree  on  the  bridge.   If  bridge  is  not
              specified, then displays detailed information about all bridges with RSTP enabled.

   BRIDGE COMMANDS
       These commands manage bridges.

       fdb/add bridge port vlan mac
              Adds  mac  address  to  a  port and vlan on a bridge. This utility can be used to pre-populate fdb
              table without relying on dynamic mac learning.

       fdb/del bridge vlan mac
              Deletes mac address from a port and vlan on a bridge.

       fdb/flush [bridge]
              Flushes bridge MAC address learning table, or all learning tables if no bridge is given.

       fdb/show bridge
              Lists each MAC address/VLAN pair learned by the specified bridge, along with the port on which  it
              was learned and the age of the entry, in seconds.

       fdb/stats-clear [bridge]
              Clear bridge MAC address learning table statistics, or all statistics if no bridge is given.

       fdb/stats-show bridge
              Show MAC address learning table statistics for the specified bridge.

       mdb/flush [bridge]
              Flushes bridge multicast snooping table, or all snooping tables if no bridge is given.

       mdb/show bridge
              Lists each multicast group/VLAN pair learned by the specified bridge, along with the port on which
              it was learned and the age of the entry, in seconds.

       bridge/reconnect [bridge]
              Makes  bridge  drop  all  of  its OpenFlow controller connections and reconnect.  If bridge is not
              specified, then all bridges drop their controller connections and reconnect.

              This command might be useful for debugging OpenFlow controller issues.

       bridge/dump-flows [--offload-stats] bridge
              Lists all flows in  bridge,  including  those  normally  hidden  to  commands  such  as  ovs-ofctl
              dump-flows.   Flows set up by mechanisms such as in-band control and fail-open are hidden from the
              controller since it is not allowed to modify or override them.  If --offload-stats  are  specified
              then also list statistics for offloaded packets and bytes, which are a subset of the total packets
              and bytes.

   BOND COMMANDS
       These  commands  manage bonded ports on an Open vSwitch's bridges.  To understand some of these commands,
       it is important to understand a detail of the bonding implementation  called  ``source  load  balancing''
       (SLB).   Instead  of  directly assigning Ethernet source addresses to members, the bonding implementation
       computes a function that maps an 48-bit Ethernet source addresses into an 8-bit  value  (a  ``MAC  hash''
       value).   All  of  the  Ethernet addresses that map to a single 8-bit value are then assigned to a single
       member.

       bond/list
              Lists all of the bonds, and their members, on each bridge.

       bond/show [port]
              Lists all of the bond-specific information (updelay, downdelay, time  until  the  next  rebalance)
              about  the  given  bonded  port,  or all bonded ports if no port is given.  Also lists information
              about each members: whether it is enabled or disabled, the time to completion  of  an  updelay  or
              downdelay  if  one  is  in  progress,  whether it is the active member, the hashes assigned to the
              member.  Any LACP information related to this bond may be found using the lacp/show command.

       bond/migrate port hash member
              Only valid for SLB bonds.  Assigns a given MAC hash to a new  member.   port  specifies  the  bond
              port, hash the MAC hash to be migrated (as a decimal number between 0 and 255), and member the new
              member to be assigned.

              The  reassignment is not permanent: rebalancing or fail-over will cause the MAC hash to be shifted
              to a new member in the usual manner.

              A MAC hash cannot be migrated to a disabled member.

       bond/set-active-member port member
              Sets member as the active member on port.  member must currently be enabled.

              The setting is not permanent: a new active member will be selected if member becomes disabled.

       bond/enable-member port member
       bond/disable-member port member
              Enables (or disables) member on the given bond port, skipping any updelay (or downdelay).

              This setting is not permanent: it persists only until the carrier status of member changes.

       bond/hash mac [vlan] [basis]
              Returns the hash value which would be used for mac with vlan and basis if specified.

       lacp/show [port]
              Lists all of the LACP related information about the given port:  active  or  passive,  aggregation
              key,  system  id,  and  system  priority.  Also lists information about each member: whether it is
              enabled or disabled, whether it is attached or detached, port id and priority, actor  information,
              and  partner  information.  If port is not specified, then displays detailed information about all
              interfaces with CFM enabled.

       lacp/stats-show [port]
              Lists various stats about LACP PDUs (number of RX/TX PDUs, bad PDUs  received)  and  member  state
              (number  of  times its state expired/defaulted and carrier status changed) for the given port.  If
              port is not specified, then displays stats of all interfaces with LACP enabled.

   DPCTL DATAPATH DEBUGGING COMMANDS
       The primary way to configure ovs-vswitchd is through the Open vSwitch database, e.g. using  ovs-vsctl(8).
       These  commands  provide  a debugging interface for managing datapaths.  They implement the same features
       (and syntax) as  ovs-dpctl(8).   Unlike  ovs-dpctl(8),  these  commands  work  with  datapaths  that  are
       integrated into ovs-vswitchd (e.g. the netdev datapath type).

       Do  not  use  commands  to  add  or  remove  or  modify datapaths if ovs-vswitchd is running because this
       interferes with ovs-vswitchd's own datapath management.

       dpctl/add-dp dp [netdev[,option]...]
              Creates datapath dp, with a local port also named dp.  This will  fail  if  a  network  device  dp
              already exists.

              If  netdevs  are  specified,  ovs-vswitchd  adds  them  to the new datapath, just as if add-if was
              specified.

       dpctl/del-dp dp
              Deletes datapath dp.  If dp is  associated  with  any  network  devices,  they  are  automatically
              removed.

       dpctl/add-if dp netdev[,option]...
              Adds  each  netdev  to the set of network devices datapath dp monitors, where dp is the name of an
              existing datapath, and netdev is the name of one of the host's network devices, e.g. eth0.  Once a
              network device has been added to a datapath, the datapath has complete ownership  of  the  network
              device's traffic and the network device appears silent to the rest of the system.

              A  netdev  may  be  followed  by  a  comma-separated  list  of options.  The following options are
              currently supported:

              type=type
                     Specifies the type of port to add.  The default type is system.

              port_no=port
                     Requests a specific port number within the datapath.  If this option is not specified  then
                     one will be automatically assigned.

              key=value
                     Adds an arbitrary key-value option to the port's configuration.

              ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) documents the available port types and options.

       dpctl/set-if dp port[,option]...
              Reconfigures  each  port  in  dp as specified.  An option of the form key=value adds the specified
              key-value option to the port or overrides an existing key's value.  An option of  the  form  key=,
              that  is,  without  a  value, deletes the key-value named key.  The type and port number of a port
              cannot be changed, so type and port_no are only allowed if they match the existing configuration.

       dpctl/del-if dp netdev...
              Removes each netdev from the list of network devices datapath dp monitors.

       dpctl/dump-dps
              Prints the name of each configured datapath on a separate line.

       dpctl/show [-s | --statistics] [dp...]
              Prints a summary of configured datapaths, including their datapath numbers and  a  list  of  ports
              connected  to  each datapath.  (The local port is identified as port 0.)  If -s or --statistics is
              specified, then packet and byte counters are also printed for each port.

              The datapath numbers consists of flow stats and mega flow mask stats.

              The "lookups" row displays three stats related to flow lookup  triggered  by  processing  incoming
              packets  in  the  datapath.  "hit"  displays  number  of  packets matches existing flows. "missed"
              displays the number of packets not matching any existing flow and require user  space  processing.
              "lost"  displays number of packets destined for user space process but subsequently dropped before
              reaching userspace. The sum of "hit" and "miss" equals to the total  number  of  packets  datapath
              processed.

              The "flows" row displays the number of flows in datapath.

              The  "masks"  row  displays  the  mega  flow  mask  stats.  This  row  is omitted for datapath not
              implementing mega flow. "hit" displays the total number of masks  visited  for  matching  incoming
              packets.  "total"  displays number of masks in the datapath. "hit/pkt" displays the average number
              of masks visited per packet; the ratio between "hit" and total number of packets processed by  the
              datapath.

              If  one  or  more  datapaths  are  specified,  information  on only those datapaths are displayed.
              Otherwise, ovs-vswitchd displays information about all configured datapaths.

   DATAPATH FLOW TABLE DEBUGGING COMMANDS
       The following commands are primarily useful for debugging Open vSwitch.  The  flow  table  entries  (both
       matches  and actions) that they work with are not OpenFlow flow entries.  Instead, they are different and
       considerably simpler flows maintained by the Open vSwitch kernel module.  Do not use commands to  add  or
       remove  or modify datapath flows if ovs-vswitchd is running because it interferes with ovs-vswitchd's own
       datapath flow management.  Use ovs-ofctl(8), instead, to work with OpenFlow flow entries.

       The dp argument to each of these commands is optional when exactly one datapath  exists,  in  which  case
       that datapath is the default.  When multiple datapaths exist, then a datapath name is required.

       dpctl/dump-flows [-m | --more] [--names | --no-names] [dp] [filter=filter] [type=type] [pmd=pmd]
              Prints  to the console all flow entries in datapath dp's flow table.  Without -m or --more, output
              omits match fields that a flow  wildcards  entirely;  with  -m  or  --more,  output  includes  all
              wildcarded fields.

              If  filter=filter is specified, only displays the flows that match the filter. filter is a flow in
              the form similar to that accepted by ovs-ofctl(8)'s add-flow command. (This  is  not  an  OpenFlow
              flow: besides other differences, it never contains wildcards.)  The filter is also useful to match
              wildcarded  fields  in  the  datapath  flow. As an example, filter='tcp,tp_src=100' will match the
              datapath flow containing 'tcp(src=80/0xff00,dst=8080/0xff)'.

              If pmd=pmd is specified, only displays flows of the specified pmd.  Using pmd=-1 will restrict the
              dump to flows from the main thread.  This option is only supported by the userspace datapath.

              If type=type is specified, only displays flows of the specified types.  This option supported only
              for ovs-appctl dpctl/dump-flows.  type is a comma separated list, which can  contain  any  of  the
              following:
                 ovs - displays flows handled in the ovs dp
                 tc - displays flows handled in the tc dp
                 dpdk - displays flows fully offloaded by dpdk
                 offloaded - displays flows offloaded to the HW
                 non-offloaded - displays flows not offloaded to the HW
                 partially-offloaded - displays flows where only part of their proccessing is done in HW
                 all - displays all the types of flows

              By default all the types of flows are displayed.  ovs-dpctl always acts as if the type was ovs.

       dpctl/add-flow [dp] flow actions

       dpctl/mod-flow [--clear] [--may-create] [-s | --statistics] [dp] flow actions
              Adds  or  modifies  a  flow  in  dp's flow table that, when a packet matching flow arrives, causes
              actions to be executed.

              The add-flow command succeeds only if flow does not already exist in dp.   Contrariwise,  mod-flow
              without  --may-create only modifies the actions for an existing flow.  With --may-create, mod-flow
              will add a new flow or modify an existing one.

              If -s or --statistics is specified, then mod-flow prints the modified flow's statistics.  A flow's
              statistics are the number of packets and bytes that have passed through the flow, the elapsed time
              since the flow last processed a packet (if ever), and (for TCP flows) the union of the  TCP  flags
              processed through the flow.

              With  --clear,  mod-flow  zeros  out  the  flow's  statistics.   The  statistics  printed if -s or
              --statistics is also specified are those from just before clearing the statistics.

              NOTE: flow and actions do not match the syntax used with ovs-ofctl(8)'s add-flow command.

              Usage Examples

              Forward ARP between ports 1 and 2 on datapath myDP:

                     ovs-dpctl add-flow myDP \
                       "in_port(1),eth(),eth_type(0x0806),arp()" 2

                     ovs-dpctl add-flow myDP \
                       "in_port(2),eth(),eth_type(0x0806),arp()" 1

              Forward all IPv4 traffic between two addresses on ports 1 and 2:

                     ovs-dpctl add-flow myDP \
                       "in_port(1),eth(),eth_type(0x800),\
                        ipv4(src=172.31.110.4,dst=172.31.110.5)" 2

                     ovs-dpctl add-flow myDP \
                       "in_port(2),eth(),eth_type(0x800),\
                        ipv4(src=172.31.110.5,dst=172.31.110.4)" 1

       dpctl/add-flows [dp] file
       dpctl/mod-flows [dp] file
       dpctl/del-flows [dp] file
              Reads flow entries from file (or stdin if file is -) and adds, modifies, or deletes each entry  to
              the  datapath.   Each  flow specification (e.g., each line in file) may start with add, modify, or
              delete keyword to  specify  whether  a  flow  is  to  be  added,  modified,  or  deleted.  A  flow
              specification  without  one  of  these  keywords  is  treated based on the used command.  All flow
              modifications are executed as individual transactions in the order specified.

       dpctl/del-flow [-s | --statistics] [dp] flow
              Deletes the flow from dp's flow table that matches flow.  If -s or --statistics is specified, then
              del-flow prints the deleted flow's statistics.

       dpctl/get-flow [dp] ufid:ufid [-m | --more] [--names | --no-names]
              Fetches the flow from dp's flow table with unique identifier ufid.  ufid must be  specified  as  a
              string of 32 hexadecimal characters.

       dpctl/del-flows [dp]
              Deletes all flow entries from datapath dp's flow table.

   DATAPATH FLOW CACHE COMMANDS
       The following commands are useful for debugging and configuring the datapath flow cache settings.

       dpctl/cache-get-size [dp]
              Prints the current cache sizes to the console.

       dpctl/cache-set-size dp cache size
              Set  the  dp's  specific  cache  to  the  given  size.   The  cache name can be found by using the
              cache-get-size command.

   CONNECTION TRACKING TABLE COMMANDS
       The following commands are useful for debugging and configuring the  connection  tracking  table  in  the
       datapath.

       The  dp  argument  to  each of these commands is optional when exactly one datapath exists, in which case
       that datapath is the default.  When multiple datapaths exist, then a datapath name is required.

       N.B.(Linux specific): the system datapaths (i.e. the Linux kernel module Open vSwitch datapaths) share  a
       single  connection  tracking  table  (which  is  also  used by other kernel subsystems, such as iptables,
       nftables and the regular host stack).  Therefore, the following commands do not apply specifically to one
       datapath.

       dpctl/ipf-set-enabled [dp] v4|v6
       dpctl/ipf-set-disabled [dp] v4|v6
              Enables or disables IP fragmentation handling for the userspace connection tracker.  Either v4  or
              v6  must  be  specified.   Both  IPv4  and  IPv6 fragment reassembly are enabled by default.  Only
              supported for the userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ipf-set-min-frag [dp] v4|v6 minfrag
              Sets the minimum fragment size (L3 header and data) for non-final fragments to minfrag.  Either v4
              or v6 must be specified.  For enhanced DOS security, higher minimum fragment sizes can usually  be
              used.   The  default IPv4 value is 1200 and the clamped minimum is 400.  The default IPv6 value is
              1280, with a clamped minimum of 400, for testing flexibility.  The maximum fragment  size  is  not
              clamped, however, setting this value too high might result in valid fragments being dropped.  Only
              supported for userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ipf-set-max-nfrags [dp] maxfrags
              Sets  the  maximum  number  of  fragments  tracked by the userspace datapath connection tracker to
              maxfrags.  The default value is 1000 and the clamped maximum is 5000.  Note  that  packet  buffers
              can  be held by the fragmentation module while fragments are incomplete, but will timeout after 15
              seconds.  Memory pool sizing should be  set  accordingly  when  fragmentation  is  enabled.   Only
              supported for userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ipf-get-status [dp] [-m | --more]
              Gets  the  configuration settings and fragment counters associated with the fragmentation handling
              of the userspace datapath connection tracker.  With -m or  --more,  also  dumps  the  IP  fragment
              lists.  Only supported for userspace datapath.

       dpctl/dump-conntrack [-m | --more] [-s | --statistics] [dp] [zone=zone]
              Prints  to  the  console  all  the  connection entries in the tracker used by dp.  If zone=zone is
              specified, only shows the connections in zone.  With --more, some implementation specific  details
              are included. With --statistics timeouts and timestamps are added to the output.

       dpctl/dump-conntrack-exp [dp] [zone=zone]
              Prints  to  the  console  all  the expectation entries in the tracker used by dp.  If zone=zone is
              specified, only shows the expectations in zone. Only supported for userspace datapath.

       dpctl/flush-conntrack [dp] [zone=zone] [ct-origin-tuple [ct-reply-tuple]]
              Flushes the connection entries in the tracker used by dp based on  zone  and  connection  tracking
              tuple  ct-origin-tuple.   If  ct-tuple  is  not  provided, flushes all the connection entries.  If
              zone=zone is specified, only flushes the connections in zone.

              If   ct-[orig|reply]-tuple   is   provided,   flushes   the   connection   entry   specified    by
              ct-[orig|reply]-tuple  in  zone.   The  zone  defaults  to 0 if it is not provided.  The userspace
              connection tracker requires flushing with the original pre-NATed tuple and a warning log  will  be
              otherwise  generated.   The tuple can be partial and will remove all connections that are matching
              on the specified fields.  In order to specify only ct-reply-tuple, provide  empty  string  as  ct-
              origin-tuple.

              Note:  Currently  there  is a limitation for matching on ICMP, in order to partially match on ICMP
              parameters the ct-[orig|reply]-tuple has to include either source or destination IP.

              An example of an IPv4 ICMP ct-[orig|reply]-tuple:

              "ct_nw_src=10.1.1.1,ct_nw_dst=10.1.1.2,ct_nw_proto=1,icmp_type=8,icmp_code=0,icmp_id=10"

              An example of an IPv6 TCP ct-[orig|reply]-tuple:

              "ct_ipv6_src=fc00::1,ct_ipv6_dst=fc00::2,ct_nw_proto=6,ct_tp_src=1,ct_tp_dst=2"

       dpctl/ct-stats-show [dp] [zone=zone] [-m | --more]
              Displays the number of connections grouped by protocol used by dp.   If  zone=zone  is  specified,
              numbers  refer  to  the  connections  in  zone.   With --more, groups by connection state for each
              protocol.

       dpctl/ct-bkts [dp] [gt=threshold]
              For each conntrack bucket, displays the number of connections used  by  dp.   If  gt=threshold  is
              specified, bucket numbers are displayed when the number of connections in a bucket is greater than
              threshold.

       dpctl/ct-set-maxconns [dp] maxconns
              Sets  the  maximum  limit  of  connection  tracker entries to maxconns on dp.  This can be used to
              reduce the processing load on the system due to connection tracking or simply limiting  connection
              tracking.  If the number of connections is already over the new maximum limit request then the new
              maximum  limit  will  be  enforced  when  the number of connections decreases to that limit, which
              normally happens due to connection expiry.  Only supported for userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ct-get-maxconns [dp]
              Prints the maximum limit of connection tracker  entries  on  dp.   Only  supported  for  userspace
              datapath.

       dpctl/ct-get-nconns [dp]
              Prints  the  current  number  of  connection  tracker entries on dp.  Only supported for userspace
              datapath.

       dpctl/ct-enable-tcp-seq-chk [dp]
       dpctl/ct-disable-tcp-seq-chk [dp]
              Enables or disables TCP sequence checking.  When set to disabled, all sequence number verification
              is disabled, including for TCP resets.  This is similar, but not the same as 'be_liberal' mode, as
              in Netfilter.  Disabling sequence number verification is not an optimization  in  itself,  but  is
              needed  for  some  hardware offload support which might offer some performance advantage. Sequence
              number checking is enabled by default to enforce better security and should only  be  disabled  if
              required for hardware offload support.  This command is only supported for the userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ct-get-tcp-seq-chk [dp]
              Prints  whether  TCP  sequence  checking  is  enabled  or  disabled on dp.  Only supported for the
              userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ct-set-sweep-interval [dp] ms
              Sets the sweep interval. Only supported for the userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ct-get-sweep-interval [dp]
              Prints the current sweep interval in ms. Only supported for the userspace datapath.

       dpctl/ct-set-limits [dp] [default=default_limit] [zone=zone,limit=limit]...
              Sets the maximum allowed number of connections in a connection tracking zone.  A specific zone may
              be set to limit, and multiple zones may be specified with a comma-separated list.  If  a  per-zone
              limit  for a particular zone is not specified in the datapath, it defaults to the default per-zone
              limit.  A default zone may be specified with the default=default_limit argument.   Initially,  the
              default per-zone limit is unlimited.  An unlimited number of entries may be set with 0 limit.

       dpctl/ct-del-limits [dp] zone=zone[,zone]...
              Deletes  the  connection  tracking  limit for zone.  Multiple zones may be specified with a comma-
              separated list.

       dpctl/ct-get-limits [dp] [zone=zone[,zone]...]
              Retrieves the maximum allowed number of connections and  current  counts  per-zone.   If  zone  is
              given, only the specified zone(s) are printed.  If no zones are specified, all the zone limits and
              counts are provided.  The command always displays the default zone limit.

   DPDK COMMANDS
       These commands manage DPDK components.

       dpdk/lcore-list
              Lists  the DPDK lcores and their cpu affinity.  When RTE_MAX_LCORE lcores are registered, some OVS
              PMD threads won't appear.

       dpdk/log-list
              Lists all DPDK components that emit logs and their logging levels.

       dpdk/log-set [spec]
              Sets DPDK components logging level. Without  any  spec,  sets  the  logging  level  for  all  DPDK
              components  to debug. Otherwise, spec is a list of words separated by spaces: a word can be either
              a logging level (emergency, alert, critical, error, warning, notice, info or debug) or  a  pattern
              matching  DPDK  components  (see dpdk/log-list command on ovs-appctl(8)) separated by a colon from
              the logging level to apply.

       dpdk/get-malloc-stats
              Prints the heap information statistics about DPDK malloc.

   DPIF-NETDEV COMMANDS
       These commands are used to expose  internal  information  (mostly  statistics)  about  the  "dpif-netdev"
       userspace  datapath.  If  there  is  only  one datapath (as is often the case, unless dpctl/ commands are
       used), the dp argument can be omitted. By default the commands present data for all pmd  threads  in  the
       datapath.  By  specifying  the  "-pmd  Core"  option  one  can  filter the output for a single pmd in the
       datapath.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-show [-pmd core] [dp]
              Shows performance statistics for one or all pmd threads of the datapath  dp.  The  special  thread
              "main" sums up the statistics of every non pmd thread.

              The  sum  of "phwol hits", "simple match hits", "emc hits", "smc hits", "megaflow hits" and "miss"
              is the number of packet lookups performed by the  datapath.  Beware  that  a  recirculated  packet
              experiences  one  additional lookup per recirculation, so there may be more lookups than forwarded
              packets in the datapath.

              The MFEX Opt hits displays the number of packets that are  processed  by  the  optimized  miniflow
              extract implementations.

              Cycles  are  counted  using  the  TSC  or similar facilities (when available on the platform). The
              duration of one cycle depends on the processing platform.

              "idle cycles" refers to cycles spent in PMD iterations not forwarding any any packets. "processing
              cycles" refers to cycles spent in PMD iterations forwarding at least  one  packet,  including  the
              cost for polling, processing and transmitting said packets.

              To reset these counters use dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-clear.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-clear [dp]
              Resets  to zero the per pmd thread performance numbers shown by the dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-show and
              dpif-netdev/pmd-perf-show commands.  It will NOT reset datapath or  bridge  statistics,  only  the
              values shown by the above commands.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-perf-show [-nh] [-it iter_len] [-ms ms_len] [-pmd core] [dp]
              Shows detailed performance metrics for one or all pmds threads of the user space datapath.

              The  collection  of  detailed  statistics  can  be  controlled  by  a  new configuration parameter
              "other_config:pmd-perf-metrics". By default it is disabled. The run-time overhead,  when  enabled,
              is in the order of 1%.

              —      used cycles
              —      forwared packets
              —      number of rx batches
              —      packets/rx batch
              —      max. vhostuser queue fill level
              —      number of upcalls
              —      cycles spent in upcalls

              This raw recorded data is used threefold:

              1.     In histograms for each of the following metrics:
                     —      cycles/iteration (logarithmic)
                     —      packets/iteration (logarithmic)
                     —      cycles/packet
                     —      packets/batch
                     —      max. vhostuser qlen (logarithmic)
                     —      upcalls
                     —      cycles/upcall (logarithmic) The histograms bins are divided linear or logarithmic.
              2.     A cyclic history of the above metrics for 1024 iterations
              3.     A  cyclic history of the cummulative/average values per millisecond wall clock for the last
                     1024 milliseconds:
                     —      number of iterations
                     —      avg. cycles/iteration
                     —      packets (Kpps)
                     —      avg. packets/batch
                     —      avg. max vhost qlen
                     —      upcalls
                     —      avg. cycles/upcall

              The command options are:

              -nh    Suppress the histograms

              -it iter_len
                     Display the last iter_len iteration stats

              -ms ms_len
                     Display the last ms_len millisecond stats

              The output always contains the following global PMD statistics:

                     Time: 15:24:55.270
                     Measurement duration: 1.008 s

                     pmd thread numa_id 0 core_id 1:

                       Iterations:              572817  (1.76 us/it)
                       - Used TSC cycles:   2419034712  ( 99.9 % of total cycles)
                       - idle iterations:       486808  ( 15.9 % of used cycles)
                       - busy iterations:        86009  ( 84.1 % of used cycles)
                       Rx packets:             2399607  (2381 Kpps, 848 cycles/pkt)
                       Datapath passes:        3599415  (1.50 passes/pkt)
                       - PHWOL hits:                 0  (  0.0 %)
                       - MFEX Opt hits:        3570133  ( 99.2 %)
                       - Simple Match hits:          0  (  0.0 %)
                       - EMC hits:              336472  (  9.3 %)
                       - SMC hits:                   0  (  0.0 %)
                       - Megaflow hits:        3262943  ( 90.7 %, 1.00 subtbl lookups/hit)
                       - Upcalls:                    0  (  0.0 %, 0.0 us/upcall)
                       - Lost upcalls:               0  (  0.0 %)
                       Tx packets:             2399607  (2381 Kpps)
                       Tx batches:              171400  (14.00 pkts/batch)

              Here "Rx packets" actually reflects the number of packets forwarded  by  the  datapath.  "Datapath
              passes"  matches  the  number  of  packet  lookups  as  reported by the dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-show
              command.

              To reset the counters and start a new measurement use dpif-netdev/pmd-stats-clear.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-perf-log-set on|off [-b before] [-a after] [-e|-ne] [-us usec] [-q qlen]
              The userspace "netdev" datapath is able to  supervise  the  PMD  performance  metrics  and  detect
              iterations with suspicious statistics according to the following criteria:

              —      The  iteration  lasts  longer  than  usec  microseconds (default 250).  This can be used to
                     capture events where a PMD is blocked or interrupted for such a period of time  that  there
                     is a risk for dropped packets on any of its Rx queues.

              —      The max vhost qlen exceeds a threshold qlen (default 128). This can be used to infer virtio
                     queue overruns and dropped packets inside a VM, which are not visible in OVS otherwise.

              Such  suspicious  iterations  can  be  logged together with their iteration statistics in the ovs-
              vswitchd.log to be able to correlate them to packet drop or other events outside OVS.

              The above command enables (on) or disables (off) supervision and logging at run-time  and  can  be
              used  to  adjust  the above thresholds for detecting suspicious iterations. By default supervision
              and logging is disabled.

              The command options are:

              -b before
                     The number of iterations before the suspicious iteration to be logged (default 5).

              -a after
                     The number of iterations after the suspicious iteration to be logged (default 5).

              -e     Extend logging interval if another suspicious iteration is detected before logging occurs.

              -ne    Do not extend logging interval if another suspicious iteration is detected  before  logging
                     occurs (default).

              -q qlen
                     Suspicious vhost queue fill level threshold. Increase this to 512 if the Qemu supports 1024
                     virtio queue length (default 128).

              -us usec
                     Change the duration threshold for a suspicious iteration (default 250 us).

       Note:  Logging  of  suspicious iterations itself consumes a considerable amount of processing cycles of a
       PMD which may be visible in the iteration history.  In the worst case this can lead OVS to detect another
       suspicious iteration caused by logging.

       If more than 100 iterations around a suspicious iteration have been logged once, OVS falls  back  to  the
       safe  default  values (-b 5 -a 5 -ne) to avoid that logging itself continuously causes logging of further
       suspicious iterations.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-rxq-show [-pmd core] [dp]
              For one or all pmd threads of the datapath dp show the list of queue-ids with  port  names,  which
              this thread polls.

       dpif-netdev/pmd-rxq-rebalance [dp]
              Reassigns rxqs to pmds in the datapath dp based on their current usage.

       dpif-netdev/bond-show [dp]
              When  "other_config:lb-output-action"  is  set  to "true", the userspace datapath handles the load
              balancing of bonds directly instead of depending on flow recirculation (only in balance-tcp mode).

              When this is the case, the above command  prints  the  load-balancing  information  of  the  bonds
              configured in datapath dp showing the interface associated with each bucket (hash).

       dpif-netdev/subtable-lookup-prio-get
              Lists  the  DPCLS  implementations  or  lookup  functions  that  are  available  as  well as their
              priorities.

       dpif-netdev/subtable-lookup-prio-set lookup_function prio
              Sets the priority of a lookup function by name, lookup_function, and priority, prio, which  should
              be a positive integer value.  The highest priority lookup function is used for classification.

              The number of affected dpcls ports and subtables is returned.

       dpif-netdev/dpif-impl-get
              Lists the DPIF implementations that are available.

       dpif-netdev/dpif-impl-set dpif_impl
              Sets the DPIF to be used to dpif_impl. By default "dpif_scalar" is used.

       dpif-netdev/miniflow-parser-get
              Lists the miniflow extract implementations that are available.

       dpif-netdev/miniflow-parser-set [-pmd core] miniflow_impl [study_cnt]
              Sets  the  miniflow  extract to miniflow_impl for a specified PMD or all PMDs in the case where no
              value is specified.  By default "scalar" is used.  study_cnt defaults to  128  and  indicates  the
              number  of  packets that the "study" miniflow implementation must parse before choosing an optimal
              implementation.

   DPIF-NETLINK COMMANDS
       These commands are used to expose internal information of the "dpif-netlink" kernel space datapath.

       dpif-netlink/dispatch-mode
              Displays the "dispatch-mode" for all datapaths.

   NETDEV-DPDK COMMANDS
       These commands manage DPDK related ports (type=dpdk*).

       netdev-dpdk/set-admin-state [interface] up | down
              Change the admin state for DPDK interface to up or down.  If interface is not specified,  then  it
              applies to all DPDK ports.

       netdev-dpdk/detach pci-address
              Detaches  device  with  corresponding  pci-address  from DPDK.  This command can be used to detach
              device if it wasn't detached automatically after port deletion. Refer  to  the  documentation  for
              details and instructions.

       netdev-dpdk/get-mempool-info [interface]
              Prints  the  debug  information  about  memory  pool  used  by  DPDK interface.  If called without
              arguments, information of all the available mempools  will  be  printed.  For  additional  mempool
              statistics enable CONFIG_RTE_LIBRTE_MEMPOOL_DEBUG while building DPDK.

   ODP-EXECUTE COMMANDS
       These commands manage the "odp-execute" component.

       odp-execute/action-impl-show
              Lists the actions implementations that are available and highlights the currently enabled one.

       odp-execute/action-impl-set action_impl
              Sets the action implementation to any available implementation. By default "scalar" is used.

   DATAPATH DEBUGGING COMMANDS
       These commands query and modify datapaths.  They are are similar to ovs-dpctl(8) commands.  dpif/show has
       the  additional  functionality,  beyond dpctl/show of printing OpenFlow port numbers.  The other commands
       are redundant and will be removed in a future release.

       dpif/dump-dps
              Prints the name of each configured datapath on a separate line.

       dpif/show
              Prints a summary of configured datapaths, including statistics and a list of connected ports.  The
              port information includes the OpenFlow port number, datapath port  number,  and  the  type.   (The
              local port is identified as OpenFlow port 65534.)

       dpif/dump-flows [-m] dp
              Prints to the console all flow entries in datapath dp's flow table. Without -m, output omits match
              fields that a flow wildcards entirely; with -m output includes all wildcarded fields.

              This  command  is  primarily  useful  for  debugging Open vSwitch.  The flow table entries that it
              displays are not OpenFlow flow entries.  Instead, they  are  different  and  considerably  simpler
              flows  maintained  by  the  datapath  module.   If  you wish to see the OpenFlow flow entries, use
              ovs-ofctl dump-flows.

       dpif/del-flows dp
              Deletes all flow entries from datapath dp's flow  table  and  underlying  datapath  implementation
              (e.g., kernel datapath module).

              This  command  is  primarily  useful for debugging Open vSwitch.  As discussed in dpif/dump-flows,
              these entries are not OpenFlow flow entries.

   OFPROTO COMMANDS
       These commands manage the core OpenFlow switch implementation (called ofproto).

       ofproto/list
              Lists the names of the running ofproto instances.  These  are  the  names  that  may  be  used  on
              ofproto/trace.

       ofproto/trace [options] [dpname] odp_flow [packet]
       ofproto/trace [options] bridge br_flow [packet]]
       ofproto/trace-packet-out [options] [dpname] odp_flow [packet] actions
       ofproto/trace-packet-out [options] bridge br_flow [packet] actions
              Traces  the  path  of  an  imaginary packet through switch and reports the path that it took.  The
              initial treatment of the packet varies based on the command:

              •      ofproto/trace looks the packet up in the OpenFlow flow table, as if the packet had  arrived
                     on an OpenFlow port.

              •      ofproto/trace-packet-out  applies  the  specified OpenFlow actions, as if the packet, flow,
                     and actions had been specified in an OpenFlow ``packet-out'' request.

              The packet's headers (e.g. source and destination) and metadata (e.g. input port), together called
              its ``flow,'' are usually all that matter for the purpose of tracing a packet.   You  can  specify
              the flow in the following ways:

              dpname odp_flow
                     odp_flow  is  a  flow  in the form printed by ovs-dpctl(8)'s dump-flows command.  If all of
                     your bridges have the same type, which is the common case, then you can omit dpname, but if
                     you have bridges of different types (say, both ovs-netdev and ovs-system), then you need to
                     specify a dpname to disambiguate.

              bridge br_flow
                     br_flow is a flow in the form similar to that accepted by ovs-ofctl(8)'s add-flow  command.
                     (This  is  not  an  OpenFlow flow: besides other differences, it never contains wildcards.)
                     bridge names of the bridge through which br_flow should be traced.

              These commands support the following options:

              --generate
                     Generate a packet from the flow (see below for more information).

              --l7 payload
              --l7-len length
                     Accepted only with --generate (see below for more information).

              --consistent
                     Accepted by ofproto-trace-packet-out only.  With this option, the command  rejects  actions
                     that  are  inconsistent  with  the  specified  packet.   (An example of an inconsistency is
                     attempting to strip the VLAN tag from a packet that  does  not  have  a  VLAN  tag.)   Open
                     vSwitch  ignores most forms of inconsistency in OpenFlow 1.0 and rejects inconsistencies in
                     later versions of  OpenFlow.   The  option  is  necessary  because  the  command  does  not
                     ordinarily  imply  a  particular  OpenFlow  version.   One  exception is that, when actions
                     includes an action  that  only  OpenFlow  1.1  and  later  supports  (such  as  push_vlan),
                     --consistent is automatically enabled.

              --ct-next flags
                     When the traced flow triggers conntrack actions, ofproto/trace will automatically trace the
                     forked  packet  processing  pipeline  with  user  specified ct_state.  This option sets the
                     ct_state flags that the conntrack module will report. The flags must be a comma- or  space-
                     separated list of the following connection tracking flags:

                     •      trk: Include to indicate connection tracking has taken place.

                     •      new: Include to indicate a new flow.

                     •      est: Include to indicate an established flow.

                     •      rel: Include to indicate a related flow.

                     •      rpl: Include to indicate a reply flow.

                     •      inv: Include to indicate a connection entry in a bad state.

                     •      dnat: Include to indicate a packet whose destination IP address has been changed.

                     •      snat: Include to indicate a packet whose source IP address has been changed.

                     When  --ct-next  is unspecified, or when there are fewer --ct-next options than ct actions,
                     the flags default to trk,new.

              Most commonly, one specifies only a flow, using one of the forms above, but  sometimes  one  might
              need to specify an actual packet instead of just a flow:

              Side effects.
                     Some actions have side effects.  For example, the normal action can update the MAC learning
                     table,  and  the  learn action can change OpenFlow tables.  The trace commands only perform
                     side effects when a packet is specified.  If you want side effects to take place, then  you
                     must supply a packet.

                     (Output  actions are obviously side effects too, but the trace commands never execute them,
                     even when one specifies a packet.)

              Incomplete information.
                     Most of the time, Open vSwitch can figure out everything about the path of a  packet  using
                     just  the  flow,  but in some special circumstances it needs to look at parts of the packet
                     that are not included in the flow.  When this is the case, and you do not supply a  packet,
                     then a trace command will tell you it needs a packet.

              If you wish to include a packet as part of a trace operation, there are two ways to do it:

              --generate
                     This  option,  added  to  one  of the ways to specify a flow already described, causes Open
                     vSwitch to internally generate a packet with the  flow  described  and  then  to  use  that
                     packet.   If your goal is to execute side effects, then --generate is the easiest way to do
                     it, but --generate is not a  good  way  to  fill  in  incomplete  information,  because  it
                     generates  packets  based on only the flow information, which means that the packets really
                     do not have any more information than the flow.

                     By default, for protocols that allow arbitrary L7 payloads, the  generated  packet  has  64
                     bytes  of payload.  Use --l7-len to change the payload length, or --l7 to specify the exact
                     contents of the payload.

              packet This form supplies an explicit packet as a sequence of hex digits.  An Ethernet frame is at
                     least 14 bytes long,  so  there  must  be  at  least  28  hex  digits.   Obviously,  it  is
                     inconvenient  to  type  in  the hex digits by hand, so the ovs-pcap(1) and ovs-tcpundump(1)
                     utilities provide easier ways.

                     With this form, packet headers are extracted directly  from  packet,  so  the  odp_flow  or
                     br_flow should specify only metadata. The metadata can be:

                     skb_priority
                            Packet QoS priority.

                     pkt_mark
                            Mark of the packet.

                     ct_state
                            Connection state of the packet.

                     ct_zone
                            Connection tracking zone for packet.

                     ct_mark
                            Connection mark of the packet.

                     ct_label
                            Connection label of the packet.

                     tun_id The tunnel ID on which the packet arrived.

                     in_port
                            The port on which the packet arrived.

              The in_port value is kernel datapath port number for the first format and OpenFlow port number for
              the  second  format.  The  numbering  of  these  two types of port usually differs and there is no
              relationship.

       Usage examples:

           Trace an unicast ICMP echo request on ingress port 1 to destination MAC 00:00:5E:00:53:01
               ofproto/trace br in_port=1,icmp,icmp_type=8,\
               dl_dst=00:00:5E:00:53:01

           Trace an unicast ICMP echo reply on ingress port 1 to destination MAC 00:00:5E:00:53:01
               ofproto/trace br in_port=1,icmp,icmp_type=0,\
               dl_dst=00:00:5E:00:53:01

           Trace an ARP request on ingress port 1
               ofproto/trace br in_port=1,arp,arp_op=1

           Trace an ARP reply on ingress port 1
               ofproto/trace br in_port=1,arp,arp_op=2

   VLOG COMMANDS
       These commands manage ovs-vswitchd's logging settings.

       vlog/set [spec]
              Sets logging levels.  Without any spec, sets the log level for every  module  and  destination  to
              dbg.   Otherwise,  spec is a list of words separated by spaces or commas or colons, up to one from
              each category below:

              •      A valid module name, as displayed by the vlog/list command on ovs-appctl(8), limits the log
                     level change to the specified module.

              •      syslog, console, or file, to limit the log level change to only to the system log,  to  the
                     console, or to a file, respectively.

                     On  Windows  platform,  syslog  is  accepted  as  a  word and is only useful along with the
                     --syslog-target option (the word has no effect otherwise).

              •      off, emer, err, warn, info, or dbg, to control  the  log  level.   Messages  of  the  given
                     severity  or  higher  will  be logged, and messages of lower severity will be filtered out.
                     off filters out all messages.  See ovs-appctl(8) for a definition of each log level.

              Case is not significant within spec.

              Regardless of the log levels set  for  file,  logging  to  a  file  will  not  take  place  unless
              ovs-vswitchd was invoked with the --log-file option.

              For compatibility with older versions of OVS, any is accepted as a word but has no effect.

       vlog/set PATTERN:destination:pattern
              Sets  the log pattern for destination to pattern.  Refer to ovs-appctl(8) for a description of the
              valid syntax for pattern.

       vlog/list
              Lists the supported logging modules and their current levels.

       vlog/list-pattern
              Lists logging patterns used for each destination.

       vlog/close
              Causes ovs-vswitchd to close its log file, if it is open.  (Use vlog/reopen to reopen it later.)

       vlog/reopen
              Causes ovs-vswitchd to close its log file, if it is open, and then reopen  it.   (This  is  useful
              after rotating log files, to cause a new log file to be used.)

              This has no effect unless ovs-vswitchd was invoked with the --log-file option.

       vlog/disable-rate-limit [module]...
       vlog/enable-rate-limit [module]...
              By  default, ovs-vswitchd limits the rate at which certain messages can be logged.  When a message
              would appear more frequently than the limit, it is suppressed.  This saves disk space, makes  logs
              easier  to  read,  and speeds up execution, but occasionally troubleshooting requires more detail.
              Therefore, vlog/disable-rate-limit allows rate limits to be disabled at the level of an individual
              log module.  Specify one or more module names, as displayed by the vlog/list command.   Specifying
              either no module names at all or the keyword any disables rate limits for every log module.

              The  vlog/enable-rate-limit  command,  whose syntax is the same as vlog/disable-rate-limit, can be
              used to re-enable a rate limit that was previously disabled.

   MEMORY COMMANDS
       These commands report memory usage.

       memory/show
              Displays some basic statistics about ovs-vswitchd's memory usage.   ovs-vswitchd  also  logs  this
              information soon after startup and periodically as its memory consumption grows.

   COVERAGE COMMANDS
       These  commands  manage  ovs-vswitchd's ``coverage counters,'' which count the number of times particular
       events occur during a daemon's runtime.  In addition to these commands, ovs-vswitchd  automatically  logs
       coverage  counter values, at INFO level, when it detects that the daemon's main loop takes unusually long
       to run.

       Coverage counters are useful mainly for performance analysis and debugging.

       coverage/show
              Displays the averaged per-second rates for the last few seconds, the  last  minute  and  the  last
              hour, and the total counts of all of the coverage counters.

       coverage/read-counter counter
              Displays the total count for the given coverage counter.

   OPENVSWITCH TUNNELING COMMANDS
       These commands query and modify OVS tunnel components.

       ovs/route/add ip/plen output_bridge [gw] [pkt_mark=mark] [src=src_ip]
              Adds  ip/plen  route  to  vswitchd routing table. output_bridge needs to be OVS bridge name.  This
              command is useful if OVS cached routes does not look right.

       ovs/route/show
              Print all routes in OVS routing table, This includes routes cached from system routing  table  and
              user configured routes.

       ovs/route/del ip/plen [pkt_mark=mark]
              Delete ip/plen route from OVS routing table.

       tnl/neigh/show

       tnl/arp/show
              OVS builds ARP cache by snooping are messages. This command shows ARP cache table.

       tnl/neigh/set bridge ip mac

       tnl/arp/set bridge ip mac
              Adds or modifies an ARP cache entry in bridge, mapping ip to mac.

       tnl/neigh/flush

       tnl/arp/flush
              Flush ARP table.

       tnl/neigh/aging [seconds]

       tnl/arp/aging [seconds]
              Changes  the  aging  time.  The accepted values of seconds are between 1 and 3600. The new entries
              will get the value as specified in seconds. For the existing entries, the aging  time  is  updated
              only if the current expiration is greater than seconds.

              If used without arguments, it prints the current aging value.

       tnl/egress_port_range [num1] [num2]
              Set  range  for  UDP  source  port  used for UDP based Tunnels. For example VxLAN. If case of zero
              arguments this command prints current range in use.

OPENFLOW IMPLEMENTATION

       This section documents aspects of OpenFlow for which the OpenFlow specification requires documentation.

   Packet buffering.
       The OpenFlow specification, version 1.2, says:

              Switches that implement buffering are expected to expose, through documentation, both  the  amount
              of available buffering, and the length of time before buffers may be reused.

       Open vSwitch does not maintains any packet buffers.

   Bundle lifetime
       The OpenFlow specification, version 1.4, says:

              If  the  switch does not receive any OFPT_BUNDLE_CONTROL or OFPT_BUNDLE_ADD_MESSAGE message for an
              opened bundle_id for a switch defined time greater than 1s, it  may  send  an  ofp_error_msg  with
              OFPET_BUNDLE_FAILED  type and OFPBFC_TIMEOUT code.  If the switch does not receive any new message
              in a bundle apart from echo request and replies for a switch defined time greater than 1s, it  may
              send an ofp_error_msg with OFPET_BUNDLE_FAILED type and OFPBFC_TIMEOUT code.

       Open  vSwitch  implements  default  idle bundle lifetime of 10 seconds.  (This is configurable via other-
       config:bundle-idle-timeout in the Open_vSwitch table. See ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for details.)

LIMITS

       We believe these limits to be accurate as of this writing.  These limits assume  the  use  of  the  Linux
       kernel datapath.

       •      ovs-vswitchd started through ovs-ctl(8) provides a limit of 65535 file descriptors.  The limits on
              the  number  of  bridges  and  ports is decided by the availability of file descriptors.  With the
              Linux kernel datapath, creation of a single bridge consumes three file descriptors and  each  port
              consumes one additional file descriptor.  Other platforms may have different limitations.

       •      8,192   MAC   learning   entries   per   bridge,   by   default.    (This   is   configurable  via
              other-config:mac-table-size in the Bridge table.  See ovs-vswitchd.conf.db(5) for details.)

       •      Kernel flows are limited only by memory available to the kernel.  Performance will degrade  beyond
              1,048,576  kernel  flows  per  bridge  with  a 32-bit kernel, beyond 262,144 with a 64-bit kernel.
              (ovs-vswitchd should never install anywhere near that many flows.)

       •      OpenFlow flows are limited only by available memory.  Performance  is  linear  in  the  number  of
              unique  wildcard  patterns.  That is, an OpenFlow table that contains many flows that all match on
              the same fields in the same way has a constant-time lookup, but a table that contains  many  flows
              that match on different fields requires lookup time linear in the number of flows.

       •      255 ports per bridge participating in 802.1D Spanning Tree Protocol.

       •      32 mirrors per bridge.

       •      15  bytes for the name of a port, for ports implemented in the Linux kernel.  Ports implemented in
              userspace, such as patch ports, do not have an arbitrary length limitation.  OpenFlow  also  limit
              port names to 15 bytes.

SEE ALSO

       ovs-appctl(8), ovsdb-server(1).

Open vSwitch                                          3.4.0                                      ovs-vswitchd(8)