VLANd support in LAVA test jobs

What is a VLAN?

VLANs are a networking technology that can be used to provide control and isolation of network ports. Setting up VLANs can create multiple separate private networks between specified switch ports. This is equivalent to setting up multiple different physical networks with separate switches, but with the benefit that it is configured in software instead of needing physical connection changes. This means that networks can be reconfigured on the fly, even remotely.

VLANd and LAVA

VLANd is a simple utility to control switches on a single-site, single-network basis. LAVA V2 supports the use of VLANd as one of its Protocol Reference, allowing for integration of control of VLANs as part of the setup of a MultiNode test job.

Unlike the MultiNode Protocol, the lava-vland protocol has only a minimal API for use during the test shell, providing static information about the network interfaces on the device. The MultiNode API is also available, as with all other multinode jobs.

Important

MultiNode can be hard to understand and debug in a test job; adding VLANd control adds yet more flexibility and therefore more complexity to the test configuration. Although helpers are provided to access specific pieces of information, the difficulty of turning the helpers into a usable test definition should not be underestimated. Custom scripts are strongly recommended. The helpers simply echo out variables set by LAVA, so placeholders can be used when testing custom scripts, allowing test writers to debug scripts on local machines outside of LAVA.

VLANd test shell helpers

VLANd configuration is used to control networking of the devices in a test. Accordingly, the VLANd test shell helpers give a test writer more information about the networking setup of those devices during a test.

The information about each of the interfaces on a test device will include the following data elements:

  • interface label - this is an arbitrary unique label assigned by the admin in device configuration, used purely as a key to enable lookup of other data elements. It is not the interface name that would be used/configured using system tools such as ifconfig or ip (e.g. eth0, ens3), as those interface names are assigned at boot in potentially random order and may change from test to test on the same device.

  • MAC address - the MAC address set by the admin in the device configuration for the specified interface label.

  • sysfs path - the path in /sys to the device as declared by the admin in the device configuration for the specified interface label. The path itself will typically not include an interface name (eth0 etc.) as this can be changed with a different userspace.

  • interface tags - the tags specified by the test writer. The tag needs to match the available tags specified by the admin in the device configuration. Interface tags determine which devices of the requested device type are scheduled for the test job.

  • vlan_name - the name specified by the test writer for the VLAN using the requested tags. Each VLAN will relate to one or more interface labels.

The test writer is responsible for finding out the current interface name assigned by the kernel for the relevant interface label by using the sysfs path and the MAC address. Interface names can be modified by userspace so must be identified after boot.

lava-vland-self

Prints details of the admin-assigned interface label, mac address and sysfs path for each interface on this device, comma separated without whitespace:

iface1,00:e0:4c:53:44:58,/sys/devices/platform/ocp/47400000.usb/47401c00.usb/musb-hdrc.1.auto/usb1/1-1/1-1:1.0/net/
iface0,90:59:af:5e:69:fd,/sys/devices/platform/ocp/4a100000.ethernet/net/

If the interface label is iface0, this will output the MAC address:

- lava-vland-self | grep iface0 | cut -d',' -f2

The sysfs path is allowed to contain commas and other characters, so to get the path use - to get all fields after the third match:

- lava-vland-self | grep iface0 | cut -d',' -f3-

lava-vland-tags

Prints the interface tag details of the Interfaces and link speeds for this device, comma separated without whitespace:

iface1,100M
iface0,1G
iface0,100M

lava-vland-names

Lists all the vlan names for this device and the interface labels associated with each vlan. Each entry is comma separated on one line, with no whitespace.

vlan_one,iface0
vland_two,iface1

Identifying interface names

The MAC address is usually the best way to identify specific interfaces, but in some cases this may not work (e.g. badly designed test devices without persistent MAC addresses) so it’s possible to use the sysfs path as a fallback here. The runtime interface name of a particular interface may change from boot to boot, so it is necessary to look this up during your test.

It’s possible to use other tools like ifconfig and ip to look up an interface name, but the easiest way to use a MAC address to look up an interface name is typically by looking directly in sysfs:

#!/bin/sh

# MAC and SYSFS would have been determined already
# using lava-vland-self
MAC="a0:36:9f:39:0b:d7"
SYSFS="/sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:03.0/0000:07:00.1/net/"

# match the MAC to the address in sysfs
# identify the interface name from the matching sysfs path.
NAME=`grep -l ${MAC} ${SYSFS}*/address | awk -F/ '{print $(NF-1)}'`
echo ${NAME}

Possible output would be:

eth4

Combined with lava-vland-self, this provides a way for the test writer to know that vlan_one on this device uses eth0. This information can then be used to derive the IP address.

Note

This kind of operation is best done with a custom script using a language better suited to these kinds of operations (like perl or python). These examples try to use the lowest common denominator - busybox. As a result, the examples can appear to be more complex than strictly necessary.

The MultiNode API can then be used to broadcast the information about this device using lava-send and retrieve information from other devices in the group using lava-wait.

VLANd Restrictions

The design of VLANd set out some clear constraints on the support to be created:

  • 1 access port on 1 switch being on 1 VLAN, no more, no less.
    • aka a port-based or static or manually-created VLAN (depending on which vendor’s docs you read!).
  • No support for dynamic VLANs
    • (switch calling out to external services to determine which VLAN a newly-detected connection should be connected to)
  • No support for filtering on ports to set up VLANs by traffic analysis etc.
  • No support for egress/ingress control such that a port may interact with ports outside of its own defined VLAN.
  • No support for cross-site VLANs via QinQ or similar.
  • Ports defined in terms of the switch/port combination.
  • Some switch/port combinations are to be locked so that test jobs cannot put infrastructure devices into a test VLAN.

VLANd Design goals and considerations

  • Set up arbitrary sets of VLANs
  • Map interfaces to switch ports in the LAVA device instance configuration.
  • Run a single VLAN daemon instance per lab
  • Switches are identified by IP or hostname - DNS must work for names to be used
  • Support a regular background read-only check that the switch config is reflected in the DB

LAVA and VLANd Device considerations

Requirement for multiple interfaces

Initial support for VLANd in LAVA sets up the VLANs at the start of the job. Many test jobs will require the device to download artifacts from the dispatcher (which itself has downloaded from third party sites) using protocols like TFTP. The device therefore needs to be able to reach the dispatcher over the network and this has implications for which devices are usable with VLANd at this stage.

Devices to be used with VLANd must have multiple network interfaces. It is not required that all interfaces are enabled at boot, simply that the boot process has a usable network interface. It is up to the test job writer whether the other interface(s) are enabled at boot or enabled/disabled during the test job - VLANd has no requirement other than that the physical hardware has a cable attached to the specified switch/port.

Future changes are expected to allow for devices with only a single interface to use VLANd but this requires code changes to support setting up the VLAN after the device has downloaded files using TFTP but before the serial connection is used to run the boot commands. This could result in a test job where the device has no access to the internet or the dispatcher during the rest of the test job. LAVA continues to control the physical device using the serial connection, including to implement the MultiNode API but some test jobs may use dynamic connections made from the dispatcher - such test jobs would not be able to use VLANd on devices with only a single network interface.

LAVA and locked switch/port combinations

VLANd supports locking particular switch/port combinations to prevent test jobs interfering with critical lab infrastructure (like a PDU or the dispatcher itself). The dispatcher is serving many jobs simultaneously, so cannot be part of any VLAN created by a test job.

The lava-vland protocol will not be allowed to modify locked switch/port combinations or to lock switch/port combinations used within the test job. LAVA will control the raising and tear down of VLANs using the lava-vland protocol, so that each test job gets access only to the VLANs that the test job itself defines.

VLANd and MultiNode

  • VLANd is restricted to a single mapping of a switch and port to a single interface on a device
  • A VLAN which only ever contains a single device is not typically a useful test of the networking support on that device.
  • The MultiNode role determines which devices go onto which named VLAN.

So the lava-vland protocol is directly tied to the lava-multinode protocol, with one additional restriction:

  • Any role used by lava-vland must only set a count of one. There is no limit to the number of roles as long as each is unique across the MultiNode job.

LAVA VLANd database support

Details of which interface of which board is on which port of which switch is collectively called the network map which is maintained by the lab admins. See Administering VLANd support in LAVA.

Test writers get to see which types of device support which interfaces and which interface tag, together with device tags. This allows test writers to specify which devices are used for a particular test, without being tied to a set of device hostnames that may change from time to time. LAVA then maps the test writer request to a specific device, interface and switch/port combination and constructs the commands to pass to VLANd.

Test writers do not provide explicit switch/port instructions; the test job simply defines the type of device to use, the interfaces to use and any device tags required. LAVA then assembles this into a series of instructions to VLANd. This allows test jobs to be re-used without regard to whether the lab admins have had to change the physical topology of the network, as long as the same services remain available.

Assigning roles to a VLAN

The name for the VLAN, as specified by the test writer, is an arbitrary label - the actual name used by VLANd will be calculated by LAVA based on the test job ID and the MultiNode target group ID. In a similar way to a role, the name is used to associate different roles onto the same VLAN.

Example vland protocol YAML

All uses of the lava-vland protocol also require the MultiNode Protocol, this example just looks at the vland component.

lava-vland:
  client:
    vlan_one:
      - 10G
  server:
    vlan_one:
      - 1G

Any one role can be put onto multiple vlans. Managing the routing and specifying which interface is up or down at any particular point of a test job is entirely within the remit of the test writer:

lava-vland:
  master:
    vlan_one:
      - 10G
    vlan_two:
      - 1G
  slave:
    vlan_one:
      - 1G
  soldier:
    vlan_two:
      - 1G

Example YAML for the protocols

Combining the lava-vland protocol with the lava-multinode protocol shows how the roles match up.

Note

VLANd and MultiNode support dictates that the count for roles which are used by lava-vland can only ever be 1.

This example will create a single VLAN which the test writer will be able to see as vlan_one and this VLAN will contain a single beaglebone-black and a single cubietruck. The beaglebone-black is required to provide at least one interface capable of a 10G link speed (so this example is unlikely to ever find a suitable device) and the cubietruck is required to provide an interface capable of 1G. (The actual meaning of the interface tags is up to the lab admins but it is expected that most admins will use the established convention of G === gigabit per second.) In addition, this example stipulates that the beaglebone-black is to support a device tag called usb-eth and the cubietruck is to support a device tag called sata. Depending on the setup of the lab, these tags can be used to indicate that the beaglebone-black has a USB ethernet converter as well as the on-board physical ethernet support and that the cubietruck has an accessible SATA drive.

protocols:
  lava-multinode:
    roles:
      client:
        device_type: bbb
        count: 1
        tags:
        - usb-eth
      server:
         device_type: cubietruck
        count: 1
        tags:
        - sata
    timeout:
      seconds: 60
  lava-vland:
    client:
      vlan_one:
        - 10G
    server:
      vlan_one:
        - 1G