vlcp-docker-plugin

Docker network plugin for VLCP


Keywords
SDN, VLCP, docker
License
MIT-feh
Install
pip install vlcp-docker-plugin==0.2.8

Documentation

VLCP docker plugin: integrate VLCP SDN network into docker engine

There is always a time when you want your docker containers directly connected to external networks instead of using NAT from the docker node. Integrate your docker cluster with VLCP gives you full access to a modern, professional SDN solution with little effort.

Prepare for Installation

Using an external network plugin is supported by docker and docker swarm standalone, but not yet in swarmkit (swarm mode in docker engine 1.12). VCLP is a global scope network so you must configure your Docker cluster with an [external key-value store] (https://docs.docker.com/engine/userguide/networking/#/an-overlay-network-with-an-external-key-value-store)

After configuring the cluster, there are still some preparations:

  1. Install OpenvSwitch (2.3+, 2.5, any recent versions) on every node. Start OpenvSwitch service.
  2. Ensure Python 2.7 or Python 3.x or PyPy is installed (virtualenv is OK) on every node

VLCP currently uses Redis as the storage server (supporting other KV-storages e.g. etcd is in future plan). Install a Redis server and configure it to listen on an IP address accessable by all the other nodes. Configure Redis server with persistent storage (RDB or/and AOF).

Install VLCP and Docker Plugin

Install the VLCP package and vlcp-docker-plugin on all nodes with pip. Also install python-daemon to support daemonize:

pip install vlcp-docker-plugin python-daemon

A few optional packages are also recommended if you are using CPython. They are not needed in PyPy:

pip install vlcp_event_cython hiredis

In every node, copy /examples/vlcp.conf from the git repo to /etc/vlcp.conf, modify the Redis server address to IP or domain name of your Redis server:

module.redisdb.url='tcp://<yourserverhere>[:<yourport>]/'
# Examples:
module.redisdb.url='tcp://10.1.9.7/'
module.redisdb.url='tcp://redis-server.mydomain.priv/'
module.redisdb.url='tcp://10.1.9.7:6379/'   # Specify port. Default to 6379 if not specified
module.redisdb.url='ssl://10.1.9.7/'    # Through a SSL proxy

Example configuration also bind the management API to localhost:8081, it is recommended but not necessary on every node. Remove or comment out that line to disable the port. You should leave at least one node to have the management API opened for creating physical network.

Create the docker plugins directory if not already created:

mkdir -p /run/docker/plugins

Start VLCP:

python -m vlcp.start -d

To start VLCP as a service, it is recommended to start with the following bash:

#!/bin/bash
start(){
mkdir -p /run/docker/plugins
rm -f /run/docker/plugins/vlcp.sock
# remove -d if using systemd
/usr/bin/python -m vlcp.start -d
}
start

Configuring OpenvSwitch and Physical Network

In every node, start OpenvSwitch, create the default bridge and connect it to VLCP controller:

ovs-vsctl add-br dockerbr0
ovs-vsctl set-fail-mode dockerbr0 secure
ovs-vsctl set-controller dockerbr0 tcp:127.0.0.1

One or more physical networks should be created before creating networks in docker engine. Most types of physical networks have physical ports for external connection. The physical port should be added to OpenvSwitch in every node, but the physical network and physical port only need to be created once with VLCP management API.

VLAN-tagged networks

Assume trunk0 is a trunk port connected to external switches)

For OpenvSwitch:

ovs-vsctl add-port dockerbr0 trunk0

For VLCP API (on any node):

curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalnetwork?type=vlan&vlanrange=`[[1000,1100]]`&id=vlan'
curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalport?physicalnetwork=vlan&name=trunk0'

Replace [1000,1100] to your vlan tag range ([[begin1, end1], [begin2, end2]]). 'vlan' is the physicalnetwork id, you may replace it with any string you like, or remove the parameter and let VLCP generate an UUID for you. For Docker integration, since usually you do not have many physical networks, it is always simplier to use a meanful name instead of an UUID.

VXLAN (overlay) networks

For OpenvSwitch:

ovs-vsctl add-port dockerbr0 vxlan0 -- set interface vxlan0 type=vxlan options:local_ip=10.9.1.2 options:remote_ip=flow options:key=flow

Replace '10.9.1.2' to your node's IP address. Correctly configuring the endpoint IP address is the key for VLCP overlay network, it should be different for every node, you can obtain the IP address from an piece of bash script.

For VLCP API (on any node):

curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalnetwork?type=vxlan&vnirange=`[[10000,11000]]`&id=vxlan'
curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalport?physicalnetwork=vxlan&name=vxlan0'

Replace [[10000,11000]] to your vni range ([[begin1, end1], [begin2, end2]])

Bridge network

Assume eth0 is the port with external network that you want to bridge to.

WARNING: bridging the NIC your management IP address is on DISCONNECT YOUR SERVER from network. NEVER DO THAT. Always use a separated NIC which does not break your management network.

For OpenvSwitch:

ovs-vsctl add-port dockerbr0 eth0

For VLCP API (on any node):

curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalnetwork?type=native&id=native'
curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalport?physicalnetwork=native&name=eth0'

Host local network

Host local networks do not have physical port for external connection, so they are only connected in the same host.

For VLCP API (on any node):

curl -g 'http://localhost:8081/viperflow/createphysicalnetwork?type=local&id=local'

Create networks in Docker

docker network create -d vlcp --subnet 192.168.1.0/24 --ip-range 192.168.1.64/28 --gateway 192.168.1.1 --internal -o physicalnetwork=vlan vlcp_network

-d vlcp specify the network plugin to be VLCP. Other options are:

  • --subnet: The subnet CIDR
  • --ip-range: A CIDR which ip address can be allocated from. If not specified subnet is used.
  • --gateway: Default gateway for this network
  • --internal: Do not use docker default bridge network. It is necessary if you want the SDN network to provide L3 routing and external network access. If you want to use docker built-in NAT and PAT access, remove this option.
  • -o specify the ID of physical network you created earlier. Also, use additional -o to provide other options:
    • -o vlan=vlantag: For VLAN-tagged network, specify the network VLAN tag
    • -o vni=vni: For VXLAN overlay network, specify the VNI.
    • -o mtu=mtu: Specify network MTU. For VXLAN network, better set MTU to MTU of outer network - 50, i.e. if the outer network MTU = 1500, you should specify -o mtu=1450 for VXLAN network.
  • 'vlcp_network': the docker network name, replace this to any name you preferred.

Create container connecting to VLCP networks in docker

docker create --network vlcp_network --ip 192.168.1.65 ...

Use --network to specify vlcp_network (or any name you decided earlier). Use --ip to choose an IP address manually, if not specified, docker chhoses an IP address automatically from the ip-range. Other parameters are the same as normal docker create. docker run has the same parameters.