1 2 Linux Ethernet Bonding Driver HOWTO 3 4 Latest update: 27 April 2011 5 6Initial release : Thomas Davis <tadavis at lbl.gov> 7Corrections, HA extensions : 2000/10/03-15 : 8 - Willy Tarreau <willy at meta-x.org> 9 - Constantine Gavrilov <const-g at xpert.com> 10 - Chad N. Tindel <ctindel at ieee dot org> 11 - Janice Girouard <girouard at us dot ibm dot com> 12 - Jay Vosburgh <fubar at us dot ibm dot com> 13 14Reorganized and updated Feb 2005 by Jay Vosburgh 15Added Sysfs information: 2006/04/24 16 - Mitch Williams <mitch.a.williams at intel.com> 17 18Introduction 19============ 20 21 The Linux bonding driver provides a method for aggregating 22multiple network interfaces into a single logical "bonded" interface. 23The behavior of the bonded interfaces depends upon the mode; generally 24speaking, modes provide either hot standby or load balancing services. 25Additionally, link integrity monitoring may be performed. 26 27 The bonding driver originally came from Donald Becker's 28beowulf patches for kernel 2.0. It has changed quite a bit since, and 29the original tools from extreme-linux and beowulf sites will not work 30with this version of the driver. 31 32 For new versions of the driver, updated userspace tools, and 33who to ask for help, please follow the links at the end of this file. 34 35Table of Contents 36================= 37 381. Bonding Driver Installation 39 402. Bonding Driver Options 41 423. Configuring Bonding Devices 433.1 Configuration with Sysconfig Support 443.1.1 Using DHCP with Sysconfig 453.1.2 Configuring Multiple Bonds with Sysconfig 463.2 Configuration with Initscripts Support 473.2.1 Using DHCP with Initscripts 483.2.2 Configuring Multiple Bonds with Initscripts 493.3 Configuring Bonding Manually with Ifenslave 503.3.1 Configuring Multiple Bonds Manually 513.4 Configuring Bonding Manually via Sysfs 523.5 Configuration with Interfaces Support 533.6 Overriding Configuration for Special Cases 54 554. Querying Bonding Configuration 564.1 Bonding Configuration 574.2 Network Configuration 58 595. Switch Configuration 60 616. 802.1q VLAN Support 62 637. Link Monitoring 647.1 ARP Monitor Operation 657.2 Configuring Multiple ARP Targets 667.3 MII Monitor Operation 67 688. Potential Trouble Sources 698.1 Adventures in Routing 708.2 Ethernet Device Renaming 718.3 Painfully Slow Or No Failed Link Detection By Miimon 72 739. SNMP agents 74 7510. Promiscuous mode 76 7711. Configuring Bonding for High Availability 7811.1 High Availability in a Single Switch Topology 7911.2 High Availability in a Multiple Switch Topology 8011.2.1 HA Bonding Mode Selection for Multiple Switch Topology 8111.2.2 HA Link Monitoring for Multiple Switch Topology 82 8312. Configuring Bonding for Maximum Throughput 8412.1 Maximum Throughput in a Single Switch Topology 8512.1.1 MT Bonding Mode Selection for Single Switch Topology 8612.1.2 MT Link Monitoring for Single Switch Topology 8712.2 Maximum Throughput in a Multiple Switch Topology 8812.2.1 MT Bonding Mode Selection for Multiple Switch Topology 8912.2.2 MT Link Monitoring for Multiple Switch Topology 90 9113. Switch Behavior Issues 9213.1 Link Establishment and Failover Delays 9313.2 Duplicated Incoming Packets 94 9514. Hardware Specific Considerations 9614.1 IBM BladeCenter 97 9815. Frequently Asked Questions 99 10016. Resources and Links 101 102 1031. Bonding Driver Installation 104============================== 105 106 Most popular distro kernels ship with the bonding driver 107already available as a module and the ifenslave user level control 108program installed and ready for use. If your distro does not, or you 109have need to compile bonding from source (e.g., configuring and 110installing a mainline kernel from kernel.org), you'll need to perform 111the following steps: 112 1131.1 Configure and build the kernel with bonding 114----------------------------------------------- 115 116 The current version of the bonding driver is available in the 117drivers/net/bonding subdirectory of the most recent kernel source 118(which is available on http://kernel.org). Most users "rolling their 119own" will want to use the most recent kernel from kernel.org. 120 121 Configure kernel with "make menuconfig" (or "make xconfig" or 122"make config"), then select "Bonding driver support" in the "Network 123device support" section. It is recommended that you configure the 124driver as module since it is currently the only way to pass parameters 125to the driver or configure more than one bonding device. 126 127 Build and install the new kernel and modules, then continue 128below to install ifenslave. 129 1301.2 Install ifenslave Control Utility 131------------------------------------- 132 133 The ifenslave user level control program is included in the 134kernel source tree, in the file Documentation/networking/ifenslave.c. 135It is generally recommended that you use the ifenslave that 136corresponds to the kernel that you are using (either from the same 137source tree or supplied with the distro), however, ifenslave 138executables from older kernels should function (but features newer 139than the ifenslave release are not supported). Running an ifenslave 140that is newer than the kernel is not supported, and may or may not 141work. 142 143 To install ifenslave, do the following: 144 145# gcc -Wall -O -I/usr/src/linux/include ifenslave.c -o ifenslave 146# cp ifenslave /sbin/ifenslave 147 148 If your kernel source is not in "/usr/src/linux," then replace 149"/usr/src/linux/include" in the above with the location of your kernel 150source include directory. 151 152 You may wish to back up any existing /sbin/ifenslave, or, for 153testing or informal use, tag the ifenslave to the kernel version 154(e.g., name the ifenslave executable /sbin/ifenslave-2.6.10). 155 156IMPORTANT NOTE: 157 158 If you omit the "-I" or specify an incorrect directory, you 159may end up with an ifenslave that is incompatible with the kernel 160you're trying to build it for. Some distros (e.g., Red Hat from 7.1 161onwards) do not have /usr/include/linux symbolically linked to the 162default kernel source include directory. 163 164SECOND IMPORTANT NOTE: 165 If you plan to configure bonding using sysfs or using the 166/etc/network/interfaces file, you do not need to use ifenslave. 167 1682. Bonding Driver Options 169========================= 170 171 Options for the bonding driver are supplied as parameters to the 172bonding module at load time, or are specified via sysfs. 173 174 Module options may be given as command line arguments to the 175insmod or modprobe command, but are usually specified in either the 176/etc/modrobe.d/*.conf configuration files, or in a distro-specific 177configuration file (some of which are detailed in the next section). 178 179 Details on bonding support for sysfs is provided in the 180"Configuring Bonding Manually via Sysfs" section, below. 181 182 The available bonding driver parameters are listed below. If a 183parameter is not specified the default value is used. When initially 184configuring a bond, it is recommended "tail -f /var/log/messages" be 185run in a separate window to watch for bonding driver error messages. 186 187 It is critical that either the miimon or arp_interval and 188arp_ip_target parameters be specified, otherwise serious network 189degradation will occur during link failures. Very few devices do not 190support at least miimon, so there is really no reason not to use it. 191 192 Options with textual values will accept either the text name 193or, for backwards compatibility, the option value. E.g., 194"mode=802.3ad" and "mode=4" set the same mode. 195 196 The parameters are as follows: 197 198active_slave 199 200 Specifies the new active slave for modes that support it 201 (active-backup, balance-alb and balance-tlb). Possible values 202 are the name of any currently enslaved interface, or an empty 203 string. If a name is given, the slave and its link must be up in order 204 to be selected as the new active slave. If an empty string is 205 specified, the current active slave is cleared, and a new active 206 slave is selected automatically. 207 208 Note that this is only available through the sysfs interface. No module 209 parameter by this name exists. 210 211 The normal value of this option is the name of the currently 212 active slave, or the empty string if there is no active slave or 213 the current mode does not use an active slave. 214 215ad_select 216 217 Specifies the 802.3ad aggregation selection logic to use. The 218 possible values and their effects are: 219 220 stable or 0 221 222 The active aggregator is chosen by largest aggregate 223 bandwidth. 224 225 Reselection of the active aggregator occurs only when all 226 slaves of the active aggregator are down or the active 227 aggregator has no slaves. 228 229 This is the default value. 230 231 bandwidth or 1 232 233 The active aggregator is chosen by largest aggregate 234 bandwidth. Reselection occurs if: 235 236 - A slave is added to or removed from the bond 237 238 - Any slave's link state changes 239 240 - Any slave's 802.3ad association state changes 241 242 - The bond's administrative state changes to up 243 244 count or 2 245 246 The active aggregator is chosen by the largest number of 247 ports (slaves). Reselection occurs as described under the 248 "bandwidth" setting, above. 249 250 The bandwidth and count selection policies permit failover of 251 802.3ad aggregations when partial failure of the active aggregator 252 occurs. This keeps the aggregator with the highest availability 253 (either in bandwidth or in number of ports) active at all times. 254 255 This option was added in bonding version 3.4.0. 256 257all_slaves_active 258 259 Specifies that duplicate frames (received on inactive ports) should be 260 dropped (0) or delivered (1). 261 262 Normally, bonding will drop duplicate frames (received on inactive 263 ports), which is desirable for most users. But there are some times 264 it is nice to allow duplicate frames to be delivered. 265 266 The default value is 0 (drop duplicate frames received on inactive 267 ports). 268 269arp_interval 270 271 Specifies the ARP link monitoring frequency in milliseconds. 272 273 The ARP monitor works by periodically checking the slave 274 devices to determine whether they have sent or received 275 traffic recently (the precise criteria depends upon the 276 bonding mode, and the state of the slave). Regular traffic is 277 generated via ARP probes issued for the addresses specified by 278 the arp_ip_target option. 279 280 This behavior can be modified by the arp_validate option, 281 below. 282 283 If ARP monitoring is used in an etherchannel compatible mode 284 (modes 0 and 2), the switch should be configured in a mode 285 that evenly distributes packets across all links. If the 286 switch is configured to distribute the packets in an XOR 287 fashion, all replies from the ARP targets will be received on 288 the same link which could cause the other team members to 289 fail. ARP monitoring should not be used in conjunction with 290 miimon. A value of 0 disables ARP monitoring. The default 291 value is 0. 292 293arp_ip_target 294 295 Specifies the IP addresses to use as ARP monitoring peers when 296 arp_interval is > 0. These are the targets of the ARP request 297 sent to determine the health of the link to the targets. 298 Specify these values in ddd.ddd.ddd.ddd format. Multiple IP 299 addresses must be separated by a comma. At least one IP 300 address must be given for ARP monitoring to function. The 301 maximum number of targets that can be specified is 16. The 302 default value is no IP addresses. 303 304arp_validate 305 306 Specifies whether or not ARP probes and replies should be 307 validated in the active-backup mode. This causes the ARP 308 monitor to examine the incoming ARP requests and replies, and 309 only consider a slave to be up if it is receiving the 310 appropriate ARP traffic. 311 312 Possible values are: 313 314 none or 0 315 316 No validation is performed. This is the default. 317 318 active or 1 319 320 Validation is performed only for the active slave. 321 322 backup or 2 323 324 Validation is performed only for backup slaves. 325 326 all or 3 327 328 Validation is performed for all slaves. 329 330 For the active slave, the validation checks ARP replies to 331 confirm that they were generated by an arp_ip_target. Since 332 backup slaves do not typically receive these replies, the 333 validation performed for backup slaves is on the ARP request 334 sent out via the active slave. It is possible that some 335 switch or network configurations may result in situations 336 wherein the backup slaves do not receive the ARP requests; in 337 such a situation, validation of backup slaves must be 338 disabled. 339 340 This option is useful in network configurations in which 341 multiple bonding hosts are concurrently issuing ARPs to one or 342 more targets beyond a common switch. Should the link between 343 the switch and target fail (but not the switch itself), the 344 probe traffic generated by the multiple bonding instances will 345 fool the standard ARP monitor into considering the links as 346 still up. Use of the arp_validate option can resolve this, as 347 the ARP monitor will only consider ARP requests and replies 348 associated with its own instance of bonding. 349 350 This option was added in bonding version 3.1.0. 351 352downdelay 353 354 Specifies the time, in milliseconds, to wait before disabling 355 a slave after a link failure has been detected. This option 356 is only valid for the miimon link monitor. The downdelay 357 value should be a multiple of the miimon value; if not, it 358 will be rounded down to the nearest multiple. The default 359 value is 0. 360 361fail_over_mac 362 363 Specifies whether active-backup mode should set all slaves to 364 the same MAC address at enslavement (the traditional 365 behavior), or, when enabled, perform special handling of the 366 bond's MAC address in accordance with the selected policy. 367 368 Possible values are: 369 370 none or 0 371 372 This setting disables fail_over_mac, and causes 373 bonding to set all slaves of an active-backup bond to 374 the same MAC address at enslavement time. This is the 375 default. 376 377 active or 1 378 379 The "active" fail_over_mac policy indicates that the 380 MAC address of the bond should always be the MAC 381 address of the currently active slave. The MAC 382 address of the slaves is not changed; instead, the MAC 383 address of the bond changes during a failover. 384 385 This policy is useful for devices that cannot ever 386 alter their MAC address, or for devices that refuse 387 incoming broadcasts with their own source MAC (which 388 interferes with the ARP monitor). 389 390 The down side of this policy is that every device on 391 the network must be updated via gratuitous ARP, 392 vs. just updating a switch or set of switches (which 393 often takes place for any traffic, not just ARP 394 traffic, if the switch snoops incoming traffic to 395 update its tables) for the traditional method. If the 396 gratuitous ARP is lost, communication may be 397 disrupted. 398 399 When this policy is used in conjunction with the mii 400 monitor, devices which assert link up prior to being 401 able to actually transmit and receive are particularly 402 susceptible to loss of the gratuitous ARP, and an 403 appropriate updelay setting may be required. 404 405 follow or 2 406 407 The "follow" fail_over_mac policy causes the MAC 408 address of the bond to be selected normally (normally 409 the MAC address of the first slave added to the bond). 410 However, the second and subsequent slaves are not set 411 to this MAC address while they are in a backup role; a 412 slave is programmed with the bond's MAC address at 413 failover time (and the formerly active slave receives 414 the newly active slave's MAC address). 415 416 This policy is useful for multiport devices that 417 either become confused or incur a performance penalty 418 when multiple ports are programmed with the same MAC 419 address. 420 421 422 The default policy is none, unless the first slave cannot 423 change its MAC address, in which case the active policy is 424 selected by default. 425 426 This option may be modified via sysfs only when no slaves are 427 present in the bond. 428 429 This option was added in bonding version 3.2.0. The "follow" 430 policy was added in bonding version 3.3.0. 431 432lacp_rate 433 434 Option specifying the rate in which we'll ask our link partner 435 to transmit LACPDU packets in 802.3ad mode. Possible values 436 are: 437 438 slow or 0 439 Request partner to transmit LACPDUs every 30 seconds 440 441 fast or 1 442 Request partner to transmit LACPDUs every 1 second 443 444 The default is slow. 445 446max_bonds 447 448 Specifies the number of bonding devices to create for this 449 instance of the bonding driver. E.g., if max_bonds is 3, and 450 the bonding driver is not already loaded, then bond0, bond1 451 and bond2 will be created. The default value is 1. Specifying 452 a value of 0 will load bonding, but will not create any devices. 453 454miimon 455 456 Specifies the MII link monitoring frequency in milliseconds. 457 This determines how often the link state of each slave is 458 inspected for link failures. A value of zero disables MII 459 link monitoring. A value of 100 is a good starting point. 460 The use_carrier option, below, affects how the link state is 461 determined. See the High Availability section for additional 462 information. The default value is 0. 463 464min_links 465 466 Specifies the minimum number of links that must be active before 467 asserting carrier. It is similar to the Cisco EtherChannel min-links 468 feature. This allows setting the minimum number of member ports that 469 must be up (link-up state) before marking the bond device as up 470 (carrier on). This is useful for situations where higher level services 471 such as clustering want to ensure a minimum number of low bandwidth 472 links are active before switchover. This option only affect 802.3ad 473 mode. 474 475 The default value is 0. This will cause carrier to be asserted (for 476 802.3ad mode) whenever there is an active aggregator, regardless of the 477 number of available links in that aggregator. Note that, because an 478 aggregator cannot be active without at least one available link, 479 setting this option to 0 or to 1 has the exact same effect. 480 481mode 482 483 Specifies one of the bonding policies. The default is 484 balance-rr (round robin). Possible values are: 485 486 balance-rr or 0 487 488 Round-robin policy: Transmit packets in sequential 489 order from the first available slave through the 490 last. This mode provides load balancing and fault 491 tolerance. 492 493 active-backup or 1 494 495 Active-backup policy: Only one slave in the bond is 496 active. A different slave becomes active if, and only 497 if, the active slave fails. The bond's MAC address is 498 externally visible on only one port (network adapter) 499 to avoid confusing the switch. 500 501 In bonding version 2.6.2 or later, when a failover 502 occurs in active-backup mode, bonding will issue one 503 or more gratuitous ARPs on the newly active slave. 504 One gratuitous ARP is issued for the bonding master 505 interface and each VLAN interfaces configured above 506 it, provided that the interface has at least one IP 507 address configured. Gratuitous ARPs issued for VLAN 508 interfaces are tagged with the appropriate VLAN id. 509 510 This mode provides fault tolerance. The primary 511 option, documented below, affects the behavior of this 512 mode. 513 514 balance-xor or 2 515 516 XOR policy: Transmit based on the selected transmit 517 hash policy. The default policy is a simple [(source 518 MAC address XOR'd with destination MAC address) modulo 519 slave count]. Alternate transmit policies may be 520 selected via the xmit_hash_policy option, described 521 below. 522 523 This mode provides load balancing and fault tolerance. 524 525 broadcast or 3 526 527 Broadcast policy: transmits everything on all slave 528 interfaces. This mode provides fault tolerance. 529 530 802.3ad or 4 531 532 IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation. Creates 533 aggregation groups that share the same speed and 534 duplex settings. Utilizes all slaves in the active 535 aggregator according to the 802.3ad specification. 536 537 Slave selection for outgoing traffic is done according 538 to the transmit hash policy, which may be changed from 539 the default simple XOR policy via the xmit_hash_policy 540 option, documented below. Note that not all transmit 541 policies may be 802.3ad compliant, particularly in 542 regards to the packet mis-ordering requirements of 543 section 43.2.4 of the 802.3ad standard. Differing 544 peer implementations will have varying tolerances for 545 noncompliance. 546 547 Prerequisites: 548 549 1. Ethtool support in the base drivers for retrieving 550 the speed and duplex of each slave. 551 552 2. A switch that supports IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link 553 aggregation. 554 555 Most switches will require some type of configuration 556 to enable 802.3ad mode. 557 558 balance-tlb or 5 559 560 Adaptive transmit load balancing: channel bonding that 561 does not require any special switch support. The 562 outgoing traffic is distributed according to the 563 current load (computed relative to the speed) on each 564 slave. Incoming traffic is received by the current 565 slave. If the receiving slave fails, another slave 566 takes over the MAC address of the failed receiving 567 slave. 568 569 Prerequisite: 570 571 Ethtool support in the base drivers for retrieving the 572 speed of each slave. 573 574 balance-alb or 6 575 576 Adaptive load balancing: includes balance-tlb plus 577 receive load balancing (rlb) for IPV4 traffic, and 578 does not require any special switch support. The 579 receive load balancing is achieved by ARP negotiation. 580 The bonding driver intercepts the ARP Replies sent by 581 the local system on their way out and overwrites the 582 source hardware address with the unique hardware 583 address of one of the slaves in the bond such that 584 different peers use different hardware addresses for 585 the server. 586 587 Receive traffic from connections created by the server 588 is also balanced. When the local system sends an ARP 589 Request the bonding driver copies and saves the peer's 590 IP information from the ARP packet. When the ARP 591 Reply arrives from the peer, its hardware address is 592 retrieved and the bonding driver initiates an ARP 593 reply to this peer assigning it to one of the slaves 594 in the bond. A problematic outcome of using ARP 595 negotiation for balancing is that each time that an 596 ARP request is broadcast it uses the hardware address 597 of the bond. Hence, peers learn the hardware address 598 of the bond and the balancing of receive traffic 599 collapses to the current slave. This is handled by 600 sending updates (ARP Replies) to all the peers with 601 their individually assigned hardware address such that 602 the traffic is redistributed. Receive traffic is also 603 redistributed when a new slave is added to the bond 604 and when an inactive slave is re-activated. The 605 receive load is distributed sequentially (round robin) 606 among the group of highest speed slaves in the bond. 607 608 When a link is reconnected or a new slave joins the 609 bond the receive traffic is redistributed among all 610 active slaves in the bond by initiating ARP Replies 611 with the selected MAC address to each of the 612 clients. The updelay parameter (detailed below) must 613 be set to a value equal or greater than the switch's 614 forwarding delay so that the ARP Replies sent to the 615 peers will not be blocked by the switch. 616 617 Prerequisites: 618 619 1. Ethtool support in the base drivers for retrieving 620 the speed of each slave. 621 622 2. Base driver support for setting the hardware 623 address of a device while it is open. This is 624 required so that there will always be one slave in the 625 team using the bond hardware address (the 626 curr_active_slave) while having a unique hardware 627 address for each slave in the bond. If the 628 curr_active_slave fails its hardware address is 629 swapped with the new curr_active_slave that was 630 chosen. 631 632num_grat_arp 633num_unsol_na 634 635 Specify the number of peer notifications (gratuitous ARPs and 636 unsolicited IPv6 Neighbor Advertisements) to be issued after a 637 failover event. As soon as the link is up on the new slave 638 (possibly immediately) a peer notification is sent on the 639 bonding device and each VLAN sub-device. This is repeated at 640 each link monitor interval (arp_interval or miimon, whichever 641 is active) if the number is greater than 1. 642 643 The valid range is 0 - 255; the default value is 1. These options 644 affect only the active-backup mode. These options were added for 645 bonding versions 3.3.0 and 3.4.0 respectively. 646 647 From Linux 3.0 and bonding version 3.7.1, these notifications 648 are generated by the ipv4 and ipv6 code and the numbers of 649 repetitions cannot be set independently. 650 651primary 652 653 A string (eth0, eth2, etc) specifying which slave is the 654 primary device. The specified device will always be the 655 active slave while it is available. Only when the primary is 656 off-line will alternate devices be used. This is useful when 657 one slave is preferred over another, e.g., when one slave has 658 higher throughput than another. 659 660 The primary option is only valid for active-backup mode. 661 662primary_reselect 663 664 Specifies the reselection policy for the primary slave. This 665 affects how the primary slave is chosen to become the active slave 666 when failure of the active slave or recovery of the primary slave 667 occurs. This option is designed to prevent flip-flopping between 668 the primary slave and other slaves. Possible values are: 669 670 always or 0 (default) 671 672 The primary slave becomes the active slave whenever it 673 comes back up. 674 675 better or 1 676 677 The primary slave becomes the active slave when it comes 678 back up, if the speed and duplex of the primary slave is 679 better than the speed and duplex of the current active 680 slave. 681 682 failure or 2 683 684 The primary slave becomes the active slave only if the 685 current active slave fails and the primary slave is up. 686 687 The primary_reselect setting is ignored in two cases: 688 689 If no slaves are active, the first slave to recover is 690 made the active slave. 691 692 When initially enslaved, the primary slave is always made 693 the active slave. 694 695 Changing the primary_reselect policy via sysfs will cause an 696 immediate selection of the best active slave according to the new 697 policy. This may or may not result in a change of the active 698 slave, depending upon the circumstances. 699 700 This option was added for bonding version 3.6.0. 701 702updelay 703 704 Specifies the time, in milliseconds, to wait before enabling a 705 slave after a link recovery has been detected. This option is 706 only valid for the miimon link monitor. The updelay value 707 should be a multiple of the miimon value; if not, it will be 708 rounded down to the nearest multiple. The default value is 0. 709 710use_carrier 711 712 Specifies whether or not miimon should use MII or ETHTOOL 713 ioctls vs. netif_carrier_ok() to determine the link 714 status. The MII or ETHTOOL ioctls are less efficient and 715 utilize a deprecated calling sequence within the kernel. The 716 netif_carrier_ok() relies on the device driver to maintain its 717 state with netif_carrier_on/off; at this writing, most, but 718 not all, device drivers support this facility. 719 720 If bonding insists that the link is up when it should not be, 721 it may be that your network device driver does not support 722 netif_carrier_on/off. The default state for netif_carrier is 723 "carrier on," so if a driver does not support netif_carrier, 724 it will appear as if the link is always up. In this case, 725 setting use_carrier to 0 will cause bonding to revert to the 726 MII / ETHTOOL ioctl method to determine the link state. 727 728 A value of 1 enables the use of netif_carrier_ok(), a value of 729 0 will use the deprecated MII / ETHTOOL ioctls. The default 730 value is 1. 731 732xmit_hash_policy 733 734 Selects the transmit hash policy to use for slave selection in 735 balance-xor and 802.3ad modes. Possible values are: 736 737 layer2 738 739 Uses XOR of hardware MAC addresses to generate the 740 hash. The formula is 741 742 (source MAC XOR destination MAC) modulo slave count 743 744 This algorithm will place all traffic to a particular 745 network peer on the same slave. 746 747 This algorithm is 802.3ad compliant. 748 749 layer2+3 750 751 This policy uses a combination of layer2 and layer3 752 protocol information to generate the hash. 753 754 Uses XOR of hardware MAC addresses and IP addresses to 755 generate the hash. The IPv4 formula is 756 757 (((source IP XOR dest IP) AND 0xffff) XOR 758 ( source MAC XOR destination MAC )) 759 modulo slave count 760 761 The IPv6 formula is 762 763 hash = (source ip quad 2 XOR dest IP quad 2) XOR 764 (source ip quad 3 XOR dest IP quad 3) XOR 765 (source ip quad 4 XOR dest IP quad 4) 766 767 (((hash >> 24) XOR (hash >> 16) XOR (hash >> 8) XOR hash) 768 XOR (source MAC XOR destination MAC)) 769 modulo slave count 770 771 This algorithm will place all traffic to a particular 772 network peer on the same slave. For non-IP traffic, 773 the formula is the same as for the layer2 transmit 774 hash policy. 775 776 This policy is intended to provide a more balanced 777 distribution of traffic than layer2 alone, especially 778 in environments where a layer3 gateway device is 779 required to reach most destinations. 780 781 This algorithm is 802.3ad compliant. 782 783 layer3+4 784 785 This policy uses upper layer protocol information, 786 when available, to generate the hash. This allows for 787 traffic to a particular network peer to span multiple 788 slaves, although a single connection will not span 789 multiple slaves. 790 791 The formula for unfragmented IPv4 TCP and UDP packets is 792 793 ((source port XOR dest port) XOR 794 ((source IP XOR dest IP) AND 0xffff) 795 modulo slave count 796 797 The formula for unfragmented IPv6 TCP and UDP packets is 798 799 hash = (source port XOR dest port) XOR 800 ((source ip quad 2 XOR dest IP quad 2) XOR 801 (source ip quad 3 XOR dest IP quad 3) XOR 802 (source ip quad 4 XOR dest IP quad 4)) 803 804 ((hash >> 24) XOR (hash >> 16) XOR (hash >> 8) XOR hash) 805 modulo slave count 806 807 For fragmented TCP or UDP packets and all other IPv4 and 808 IPv6 protocol traffic, the source and destination port 809 information is omitted. For non-IP traffic, the 810 formula is the same as for the layer2 transmit hash 811 policy. 812 813 The IPv4 policy is intended to mimic the behavior of 814 certain switches, notably Cisco switches with PFC2 as 815 well as some Foundry and IBM products. 816 817 This algorithm is not fully 802.3ad compliant. A 818 single TCP or UDP conversation containing both 819 fragmented and unfragmented packets will see packets 820 striped across two interfaces. This may result in out 821 of order delivery. Most traffic types will not meet 822 this criteria, as TCP rarely fragments traffic, and 823 most UDP traffic is not involved in extended 824 conversations. Other implementations of 802.3ad may 825 or may not tolerate this noncompliance. 826 827 The default value is layer2. This option was added in bonding 828 version 2.6.3. In earlier versions of bonding, this parameter 829 does not exist, and the layer2 policy is the only policy. The 830 layer2+3 value was added for bonding version 3.2.2. 831 832resend_igmp 833 834 Specifies the number of IGMP membership reports to be issued after 835 a failover event. One membership report is issued immediately after 836 the failover, subsequent packets are sent in each 200ms interval. 837 838 The valid range is 0 - 255; the default value is 1. A value of 0 839 prevents the IGMP membership report from being issued in response 840 to the failover event. 841 842 This option is useful for bonding modes balance-rr (0), active-backup 843 (1), balance-tlb (5) and balance-alb (6), in which a failover can 844 switch the IGMP traffic from one slave to another. Therefore a fresh 845 IGMP report must be issued to cause the switch to forward the incoming 846 IGMP traffic over the newly selected slave. 847 848 This option was added for bonding version 3.7.0. 849 8503. Configuring Bonding Devices 851============================== 852 853 You can configure bonding using either your distro's network 854initialization scripts, or manually using either ifenslave or the 855sysfs interface. Distros generally use one of three packages for the 856network initialization scripts: initscripts, sysconfig or interfaces. 857Recent versions of these packages have support for bonding, while older 858versions do not. 859 860 We will first describe the options for configuring bonding for 861distros using versions of initscripts, sysconfig and interfaces with full 862or partial support for bonding, then provide information on enabling 863bonding without support from the network initialization scripts (i.e., 864older versions of initscripts or sysconfig). 865 866 If you're unsure whether your distro uses sysconfig, 867initscripts or interfaces, or don't know if it's new enough, have no fear. 868Determining this is fairly straightforward. 869 870 First, look for a file called interfaces in /etc/network directory. 871If this file is present in your system, then your system use interfaces. See 872Configuration with Interfaces Support. 873 874 Else, issue the command: 875 876$ rpm -qf /sbin/ifup 877 878 It will respond with a line of text starting with either 879"initscripts" or "sysconfig," followed by some numbers. This is the 880package that provides your network initialization scripts. 881 882 Next, to determine if your installation supports bonding, 883issue the command: 884 885$ grep ifenslave /sbin/ifup 886 887 If this returns any matches, then your initscripts or 888sysconfig has support for bonding. 889 8903.1 Configuration with Sysconfig Support 891---------------------------------------- 892 893 This section applies to distros using a version of sysconfig 894with bonding support, for example, SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 9. 895 896 SuSE SLES 9's networking configuration system does support 897bonding, however, at this writing, the YaST system configuration 898front end does not provide any means to work with bonding devices. 899Bonding devices can be managed by hand, however, as follows. 900 901 First, if they have not already been configured, configure the 902slave devices. On SLES 9, this is most easily done by running the 903yast2 sysconfig configuration utility. The goal is for to create an 904ifcfg-id file for each slave device. The simplest way to accomplish 905this is to configure the devices for DHCP (this is only to get the 906file ifcfg-id file created; see below for some issues with DHCP). The 907name of the configuration file for each device will be of the form: 908 909ifcfg-id-xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx 910 911 Where the "xx" portion will be replaced with the digits from 912the device's permanent MAC address. 913 914 Once the set of ifcfg-id-xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx files has been 915created, it is necessary to edit the configuration files for the slave 916devices (the MAC addresses correspond to those of the slave devices). 917Before editing, the file will contain multiple lines, and will look 918something like this: 919 920BOOTPROTO='dhcp' 921STARTMODE='on' 922USERCTL='no' 923UNIQUE='XNzu.WeZGOGF+4wE' 924_nm_name='bus-pci-0001:61:01.0' 925 926 Change the BOOTPROTO and STARTMODE lines to the following: 927 928BOOTPROTO='none' 929STARTMODE='off' 930 931 Do not alter the UNIQUE or _nm_name lines. Remove any other 932lines (USERCTL, etc). 933 934 Once the ifcfg-id-xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx files have been modified, 935it's time to create the configuration file for the bonding device 936itself. This file is named ifcfg-bondX, where X is the number of the 937bonding device to create, starting at 0. The first such file is 938ifcfg-bond0, the second is ifcfg-bond1, and so on. The sysconfig 939network configuration system will correctly start multiple instances 940of bonding. 941 942 The contents of the ifcfg-bondX file is as follows: 943 944BOOTPROTO="static" 945BROADCAST="10.0.2.255" 946IPADDR="10.0.2.10" 947NETMASK="255.255.0.0" 948NETWORK="10.0.2.0" 949REMOTE_IPADDR="" 950STARTMODE="onboot" 951BONDING_MASTER="yes" 952BONDING_MODULE_OPTS="mode=active-backup miimon=100" 953BONDING_SLAVE0="eth0" 954BONDING_SLAVE1="bus-pci-0000:06:08.1" 955 956 Replace the sample BROADCAST, IPADDR, NETMASK and NETWORK 957values with the appropriate values for your network. 958 959 The STARTMODE specifies when the device is brought online. 960The possible values are: 961 962 onboot: The device is started at boot time. If you're not 963 sure, this is probably what you want. 964 965 manual: The device is started only when ifup is called 966 manually. Bonding devices may be configured this 967 way if you do not wish them to start automatically 968 at boot for some reason. 969 970 hotplug: The device is started by a hotplug event. This is not 971 a valid choice for a bonding device. 972 973 off or ignore: The device configuration is ignored. 974 975 The line BONDING_MASTER='yes' indicates that the device is a 976bonding master device. The only useful value is "yes." 977 978 The contents of BONDING_MODULE_OPTS are supplied to the 979instance of the bonding module for this device. Specify the options 980for the bonding mode, link monitoring, and so on here. Do not include 981the max_bonds bonding parameter; this will confuse the configuration 982system if you have multiple bonding devices. 983 984 Finally, supply one BONDING_SLAVEn="slave device" for each 985slave. where "n" is an increasing value, one for each slave. The 986"slave device" is either an interface name, e.g., "eth0", or a device 987specifier for the network device. The interface name is easier to 988find, but the ethN names are subject to change at boot time if, e.g., 989a device early in the sequence has failed. The device specifiers 990(bus-pci-0000:06:08.1 in the example above) specify the physical 991network device, and will not change unless the device's bus location 992changes (for example, it is moved from one PCI slot to another). The 993example above uses one of each type for demonstration purposes; most 994configurations will choose one or the other for all slave devices. 995 996 When all configuration files have been modified or created, 997networking must be restarted for the configuration changes to take 998effect. This can be accomplished via the following: 999 1000# /etc/init.d/network restart
1001 1002 Note that the network control script (/sbin/ifdown) will 1003remove the bonding module as part of the network shutdown processing, 1004so it is not necessary to remove the module by hand if, e.g., the 1005module parameters have changed. 1006 1007 Also, at this writing, YaST/YaST2 will not manage bonding 1008devices (they do not show bonding interfaces on its list of network 1009devices). It is necessary to edit the configuration file by hand to 1010change the bonding configuration. 1011 1012 Additional general options and details of the ifcfg file 1013format can be found in an example ifcfg template file: 1014 1015/etc/sysconfig/network/ifcfg.template 1016 1017 Note that the template does not document the various BONDING_ 1018settings described above, but does describe many of the other options. 1019 10203.1.1 Using DHCP with Sysconfig 1021------------------------------- 1022 1023 Under sysconfig, configuring a device with BOOTPROTO='dhcp' 1024will cause it to query DHCP for its IP address information. At this 1025writing, this does not function for bonding devices; the scripts 1026attempt to obtain the device address from DHCP prior to adding any of 1027the slave devices. Without active slaves, the DHCP requests are not 1028sent to the network. 1029 10303.1.2 Configuring Multiple Bonds with Sysconfig 1031----------------------------------------------- 1032 1033 The sysconfig network initialization system is capable of 1034handling multiple bonding devices. All that is necessary is for each 1035bonding instance to have an appropriately configured ifcfg-bondX file 1036(as described above). Do not specify the "max_bonds" parameter to any 1037instance of bonding, as this will confuse sysconfig. If you require 1038multiple bonding devices with identical parameters, create multiple 1039ifcfg-bondX files. 1040 1041 Because the sysconfig scripts supply the bonding module 1042options in the ifcfg-bondX file, it is not necessary to add them to 1043the system /etc/modules.d/*.conf configuration files. 1044 10453.2 Configuration with Initscripts Support 1046------------------------------------------ 1047 1048 This section applies to distros using a recent version of 1049initscripts with bonding support, for example, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 1050version 3 or later, Fedora, etc. On these systems, the network 1051initialization scripts have knowledge of bonding, and can be configured to 1052control bonding devices. Note that older versions of the initscripts 1053package have lower levels of support for bonding; this will be noted where 1054applicable. 1055 1056 These distros will not automatically load the network adapter 1057driver unless the ethX device is configured with an IP address. 1058Because of this constraint, users must manually configure a 1059network-script file for all physical adapters that will be members of 1060a bondX link. Network script files are located in the directory: 1061 1062/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts 1063 1064 The file name must be prefixed with "ifcfg-eth" and suffixed 1065with the adapter's physical adapter number. For example, the script 1066for eth0 would be named /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0. 1067Place the following text in the file: 1068 1069DEVICE=eth0 1070USERCTL=no 1071ONBOOT=yes 1072MASTER=bond0 1073SLAVE=yes 1074BOOTPROTO=none 1075 1076 The DEVICE= line will be different for every ethX device and 1077must correspond with the name of the file, i.e., ifcfg-eth1 must have 1078a device line of DEVICE=eth1. The setting of the MASTER= line will 1079also depend on the final bonding interface name chosen for your bond. 1080As with other network devices, these typically start at 0, and go up 1081one for each device, i.e., the first bonding instance is bond0, the 1082second is bond1, and so on. 1083 1084 Next, create a bond network script. The file name for this 1085script will be /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-bondX where X is 1086the number of the bond. For bond0 the file is named "ifcfg-bond0", 1087for bond1 it is named "ifcfg-bond1", and so on. Within that file, 1088place the following text: 1089 1090DEVICE=bond0 1091IPADDR=192.168.1.1 1092NETMASK=255.255.255.0 1093NETWORK=192.168.1.0 1094BROADCAST=192.168.1.255 1095ONBOOT=yes 1096BOOTPROTO=none 1097USERCTL=no 1098 1099 Be sure to change the networking specific lines (IPADDR, 1100NETMASK, NETWORK and BROADCAST) to match your network configuration. 1101 1102 For later versions of initscripts, such as that found with Fedora 11037 (or later) and Red Hat Enterprise Linux version 5 (or later), it is possible, 1104and, indeed, preferable, to specify the bonding options in the ifcfg-bond0 1105file, e.g. a line of the format: 1106 1107BONDING_OPTS="mode=active-backup arp_interval=60 arp_ip_target=192.168.1.254" 1108 1109 will configure the bond with the specified options. The options 1110specified in BONDING_OPTS are identical to the bonding module parameters 1111except for the arp_ip_target field when using versions of initscripts older 1112than and 8.57 (Fedora 8) and 8.45.19 (Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.2). When 1113using older versions each target should be included as a separate option and 1114should be preceded by a '+' to indicate it should be added to the list of 1115queried targets, e.g., 1116 1117 arp_ip_target=+192.168.1.1 arp_ip_target=+192.168.1.2 1118 1119 is the proper syntax to specify multiple targets. When specifying 1120options via BONDING_OPTS, it is not necessary to edit /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf. 1121 1122 For even older versions of initscripts that do not support 1123BONDING_OPTS, it is necessary to edit /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf, depending upon 1124your distro) to load the bonding module with your desired options when the 1125bond0 interface is brought up. The following lines in /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf 1126will load the bonding module, and select its options: 1127 1128alias bond0 bonding 1129options bond0 mode=balance-alb miimon=100 1130 1131 Replace the sample parameters with the appropriate set of 1132options for your configuration. 1133 1134 Finally run "/etc/rc.d/init.d/network restart" as root. This 1135will restart the networking subsystem and your bond link should be now 1136up and running. 1137 11383.2.1 Using DHCP with Initscripts 1139--------------------------------- 1140 1141 Recent versions of initscripts (the versions supplied with Fedora 1142Core 3 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4, or later versions, are reported to 1143work) have support for assigning IP information to bonding devices via 1144DHCP. 1145 1146 To configure bonding for DHCP, configure it as described 1147above, except replace the line "BOOTPROTO=none" with "BOOTPROTO=dhcp" 1148and add a line consisting of "TYPE=Bonding". Note that the TYPE value 1149is case sensitive. 1150 11513.2.2 Configuring Multiple Bonds with Initscripts 1152------------------------------------------------- 1153 1154 Initscripts packages that are included with Fedora 7 and Red Hat 1155Enterprise Linux 5 support multiple bonding interfaces by simply 1156specifying the appropriate BONDING_OPTS= in ifcfg-bondX where X is the 1157number of the bond. This support requires sysfs support in the kernel, 1158and a bonding driver of version 3.0.0 or later. Other configurations may 1159not support this method for specifying multiple bonding interfaces; for 1160those instances, see the "Configuring Multiple Bonds Manually" section, 1161below. 1162 11633.3 Configuring Bonding Manually with Ifenslave 1164----------------------------------------------- 1165 1166 This section applies to distros whose network initialization 1167scripts (the sysconfig or initscripts package) do not have specific 1168knowledge of bonding. One such distro is SuSE Linux Enterprise Server 1169version 8. 1170 1171 The general method for these systems is to place the bonding 1172module parameters into a config file in /etc/modprobe.d/ (as 1173appropriate for the installed distro), then add modprobe and/or 1174ifenslave commands to the system's global init script. The name of 1175the global init script differs; for sysconfig, it is 1176/etc/init.d/boot.local and for initscripts it is /etc/rc.d/rc.local. 1177 1178 For example, if you wanted to make a simple bond of two e100 1179devices (presumed to be eth0 and eth1), and have it persist across 1180reboots, edit the appropriate file (/etc/init.d/boot.local or 1181/etc/rc.d/rc.local), and add the following: 1182 1183modprobe bonding mode=balance-alb miimon=100 1184modprobe e100 1185ifconfig bond0 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up 1186ifenslave bond0 eth0 1187ifenslave bond0 eth1 1188 1189 Replace the example bonding module parameters and bond0 1190network configuration (IP address, netmask, etc) with the appropriate 1191values for your configuration. 1192 1193 Unfortunately, this method will not provide support for the 1194ifup and ifdown scripts on the bond devices. To reload the bonding 1195configuration, it is necessary to run the initialization script, e.g., 1196 1197# /etc/init.d/boot.local 1198 1199 or 1200 1201# /etc/rc.d/rc.local 1202 1203 It may be desirable in such a case to create a separate script 1204which only initializes the bonding configuration, then call that 1205separate script from within boot.local. This allows for bonding to be 1206enabled without re-running the entire global init script. 1207 1208 To shut down the bonding devices, it is necessary to first 1209mark the bonding device itself as being down, then remove the 1210appropriate device driver modules. For our example above, you can do 1211the following: 1212 1213# ifconfig bond0 down 1214# rmmod bonding 1215# rmmod e100 1216 1217 Again, for convenience, it may be desirable to create a script 1218with these commands. 1219 1220 12213.3.1 Configuring Multiple Bonds Manually 1222----------------------------------------- 1223 1224 This section contains information on configuring multiple 1225bonding devices with differing options for those systems whose network 1226initialization scripts lack support for configuring multiple bonds. 1227 1228 If you require multiple bonding devices, but all with the same 1229options, you may wish to use the "max_bonds" module parameter, 1230documented above. 1231 1232 To create multiple bonding devices with differing options, it is 1233preferable to use bonding parameters exported by sysfs, documented in the 1234section below. 1235 1236 For versions of bonding without sysfs support, the only means to 1237provide multiple instances of bonding with differing options is to load 1238the bonding driver multiple times. Note that current versions of the 1239sysconfig network initialization scripts handle this automatically; if 1240your distro uses these scripts, no special action is needed. See the 1241section Configuring Bonding Devices, above, if you're not sure about your 1242network initialization scripts. 1243 1244 To load multiple instances of the module, it is necessary to 1245specify a different name for each instance (the module loading system 1246requires that every loaded module, even multiple instances of the same 1247module, have a unique name). This is accomplished by supplying multiple 1248sets of bonding options in /etc/modprobe.d/*.conf, for example: 1249 1250alias bond0 bonding 1251options bond0 -o bond0 mode=balance-rr miimon=100 1252 1253alias bond1 bonding 1254options bond1 -o bond1 mode=balance-alb miimon=50 1255 1256 will load the bonding module two times. The first instance is 1257named "bond0" and creates the bond0 device in balance-rr mode with an 1258miimon of 100. The second instance is named "bond1" and creates the 1259bond1 device in balance-alb mode with an miimon of 50. 1260 1261 In some circumstances (typically with older distributions), 1262the above does not work, and the second bonding instance never sees 1263its options. In that case, the second options line can be substituted 1264as follows: 1265 1266install bond1 /sbin/modprobe --ignore-install bonding -o bond1 \ 1267 mode=balance-alb miimon=50 1268 1269 This may be repeated any number of times, specifying a new and 1270unique name in place of bond1 for each subsequent instance. 1271 1272 It has been observed that some Red Hat supplied kernels are unable 1273to rename modules at load time (the "-o bond1" part). Attempts to pass 1274that option to modprobe will produce an "Operation not permitted" error. 1275This has been reported on some Fedora Core kernels, and has been seen on 1276RHEL 4 as well. On kernels exhibiting this problem, it will be impossible 1277to configure multiple bonds with differing parameters (as they are older 1278kernels, and also lack sysfs support). 1279 12803.4 Configuring Bonding Manually via Sysfs 1281------------------------------------------ 1282 1283 Starting with version 3.0.0, Channel Bonding may be configured 1284via the sysfs interface. This interface allows dynamic configuration 1285of all bonds in the system without unloading the module. It also 1286allows for adding and removing bonds at runtime. Ifenslave is no 1287longer required, though it is still supported. 1288 1289 Use of the sysfs interface allows you to use multiple bonds 1290with different configurations without having to reload the module. 1291It also allows you to use multiple, differently configured bonds when 1292bonding is compiled into the kernel. 1293 1294 You must have the sysfs filesystem mounted to configure 1295bonding this way. The examples in this document assume that you 1296are using the standard mount point for sysfs, e.g. /sys. If your 1297sysfs filesystem is mounted elsewhere, you will need to adjust the 1298example paths accordingly. 1299 1300Creating and Destroying Bonds 1301----------------------------- 1302To add a new bond foo: 1303# echo +foo > /sys/class/net/bonding_masters 1304 1305To remove an existing bond bar: 1306# echo -bar > /sys/class/net/bonding_masters 1307 1308To show all existing bonds: 1309# cat /sys/class/net/bonding_masters 1310 1311NOTE: due to 4K size limitation of sysfs files, this list may be 1312truncated if you have more than a few hundred bonds. This is unlikely 1313to occur under normal operating conditions. 1314 1315Adding and Removing Slaves 1316-------------------------- 1317 Interfaces may be enslaved to a bond using the file 1318/sys/class/net/<bond>/bonding/slaves. The semantics for this file 1319are the same as for the bonding_masters file. 1320 1321To enslave interface eth0 to bond bond0: 1322# ifconfig bond0 up 1323# echo +eth0 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/slaves 1324 1325To free slave eth0 from bond bond0: 1326# echo -eth0 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/slaves 1327 1328 When an interface is enslaved to a bond, symlinks between the 1329two are created in the sysfs filesystem. In this case, you would get 1330/sys/class/net/bond0/slave_eth0 pointing to /sys/class/net/eth0, and 1331/sys/class/net/eth0/master pointing to /sys/class/net/bond0. 1332 1333 This means that you can tell quickly whether or not an 1334interface is enslaved by looking for the master symlink. Thus: 1335# echo -eth0 > /sys/class/net/eth0/master/bonding/slaves 1336will free eth0 from whatever bond it is enslaved to, regardless of 1337the name of the bond interface. 1338 1339Changing a Bond's Configuration 1340------------------------------- 1341 Each bond may be configured individually by manipulating the 1342files located in /sys/class/net/<bond name>/bonding 1343 1344 The names of these files correspond directly with the command- 1345line parameters described elsewhere in this file, and, with the 1346exception of arp_ip_target, they accept the same values. To see the 1347current setting, simply cat the appropriate file. 1348 1349 A few examples will be given here; for specific usage 1350guidelines for each parameter, see the appropriate section in this 1351document. 1352 1353To configure bond0 for balance-alb mode: 1354# ifconfig bond0 down 1355# echo 6 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/mode 1356 - or - 1357# echo balance-alb > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/mode 1358 NOTE: The bond interface must be down before the mode can be 1359changed. 1360 1361To enable MII monitoring on bond0 with a 1 second interval: 1362# echo 1000 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/miimon 1363 NOTE: If ARP monitoring is enabled, it will disabled when MII 1364monitoring is enabled, and vice-versa. 1365 1366To add ARP targets: 1367# echo +192.168.0.100 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/arp_ip_target 1368# echo +192.168.0.101 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/arp_ip_target 1369 NOTE: up to 16 target addresses may be specified. 1370 1371To remove an ARP target: 1372# echo -192.168.0.100 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/arp_ip_target 1373 1374Example Configuration 1375--------------------- 1376 We begin with the same example that is shown in section 3.3, 1377executed with sysfs, and without using ifenslave. 1378 1379 To make a simple bond of two e100 devices (presumed to be eth0 1380and eth1), and have it persist across reboots, edit the appropriate 1381file (/etc/init.d/boot.local or /etc/rc.d/rc.local), and add the 1382following: 1383 1384modprobe bonding 1385modprobe e100 1386echo balance-alb > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/mode 1387ifconfig bond0 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up 1388echo 100 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/miimon 1389echo +eth0 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/slaves 1390echo +eth1 > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/slaves 1391 1392 To add a second bond, with two e1000 interfaces in 1393active-backup mode, using ARP monitoring, add the following lines to 1394your init script: 1395 1396modprobe e1000 1397echo +bond1 > /sys/class/net/bonding_masters 1398echo active-backup > /sys/class/net/bond1/bonding/mode 1399ifconfig bond1 192.168.2.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up 1400echo +192.168.2.100 /sys/class/net/bond1/bonding/arp_ip_target 1401echo 2000 > /sys/class/net/bond1/bonding/arp_interval 1402echo +eth2 > /sys/class/net/bond1/bonding/slaves 1403echo +eth3 > /sys/class/net/bond1/bonding/slaves 1404 14053.5 Configuration with Interfaces Support 1406----------------------------------------- 1407 1408 This section applies to distros which use /etc/network/interfaces file 1409to describe network interface configuration, most notably Debian and it's 1410derivatives. 1411 1412 The ifup and ifdown commands on Debian don't support bonding out of 1413the box. The ifenslave-2.6 package should be installed to provide bonding 1414support. Once installed, this package will provide bond-* options to be used 1415into /etc/network/interfaces. 1416 1417 Note that ifenslave-2.6 package will load the bonding module and use 1418the ifenslave command when appropriate. 1419 1420Example Configurations 1421---------------------- 1422 1423In /etc/network/interfaces, the following stanza will configure bond0, in 1424active-backup mode, with eth0 and eth1 as slaves. 1425 1426auto bond0 1427iface bond0 inet dhcp 1428 bond-slaves eth0 eth1 1429 bond-mode active-backup 1430 bond-miimon 100 1431 bond-primary eth0 eth1 1432 1433If the above configuration doesn't work, you might have a system using 1434upstart for system startup. This is most notably true for recent 1435Ubuntu versions. The following stanza in /etc/network/interfaces will 1436produce the same result on those systems. 1437 1438auto bond0 1439iface bond0 inet dhcp 1440 bond-slaves none 1441 bond-mode active-backup 1442 bond-miimon 100 1443 1444auto eth0 1445iface eth0 inet manual 1446 bond-master bond0 1447 bond-primary eth0 eth1 1448 1449auto eth1 1450iface eth1 inet manual 1451 bond-master bond0 1452 bond-primary eth0 eth1 1453 1454For a full list of bond-* supported options in /etc/network/interfaces and some 1455more advanced examples tailored to you particular distros, see the files in 1456/usr/share/doc/ifenslave-2.6. 1457 14583.6 Overriding Configuration for Special Cases 1459---------------------------------------------- 1460 1461When using the bonding driver, the physical port which transmits a frame is 1462typically selected by the bonding driver, and is not relevant to the user or 1463system administrator. The output port is simply selected using the policies of 1464the selected bonding mode. On occasion however, it is helpful to direct certain 1465classes of traffic to certain physical interfaces on output to implement 1466slightly more complex policies. For example, to reach a web server over a 1467bonded interface in which eth0 connects to a private network, while eth1 1468connects via a public network, it may be desirous to bias the bond to send said 1469traffic over eth0 first, using eth1 only as a fall back, while all other traffic 1470can safely be sent over either interface. Such configurations may be achieved 1471using the traffic control utilities inherent in linux. 1472 1473By default the bonding driver is multiqueue aware and 16 queues are created 1474when the driver initializes (see Documentation/networking/multiqueue.txt 1475for details). If more or less queues are desired the module parameter 1476tx_queues can be used to change this value. There is no sysfs parameter 1477available as the allocation is done at module init time. 1478 1479The output of the file /proc/net/bonding/bondX has changed so the output Queue 1480ID is now printed for each slave: 1481 1482Bonding Mode: fault-tolerance (active-backup) 1483Primary Slave: None 1484Currently Active Slave: eth0 1485MII Status: up 1486MII Polling Interval (ms): 0 1487Up Delay (ms): 0 1488Down Delay (ms): 0 1489 1490Slave Interface: eth0 1491MII Status: up 1492Link Failure Count: 0 1493Permanent HW addr: 00:1a:a0:12:8f:cb 1494Slave queue ID: 0 1495 1496Slave Interface: eth1 1497MII Status: up 1498Link Failure Count: 0 1499Permanent HW addr: 00:1a:a0:12:8f:cc 1500Slave queue ID: 2 1501 1502The queue_id for a slave can be set using the command: 1503 1504# echo "eth1:2" > /sys/class/net/bond0/bonding/queue_id 1505 1506Any interface that needs a queue_id set should set it with multiple calls 1507like the one above until proper priorities are set for all interfaces. On 1508distributions that allow configuration via initscripts, multiple 'queue_id' 1509arguments can be added to BONDING_OPTS to set all needed slave queues. 1510 1511These queue id's can be used in conjunction with the tc utility to configure 1512a multiqueue qdisc and filters to bias certain traffic to transmit on certain 1513slave devices. For instance, say we wanted, in the above configuration to 1514force all traffic bound to 192.168.1.100 to use eth1 in the bond as its output 1515device. The following commands would accomplish this: 1516 1517# tc qdisc add dev bond0 handle 1 root multiq 1518 1519# tc filter add dev bond0 protocol ip parent 1: prio 1 u32 match ip dst \ 1520 192.168.1.100 action skbedit queue_mapping 2 1521 1522These commands tell the kernel to attach a multiqueue queue discipline to the 1523bond0 interface and filter traffic enqueued to it, such that packets with a dst 1524ip of 192.168.1.100 have their output queue mapping value overwritten to 2. 1525This value is then passed into the driver, causing the normal output path 1526selection policy to be overridden, selecting instead qid 2, which maps to eth1. 1527 1528Note that qid values begin at 1. Qid 0 is reserved to initiate to the driver 1529that normal output policy selection should take place. One benefit to simply 1530leaving the qid for a slave to 0 is the multiqueue awareness in the bonding 1531driver that is now present. This awareness allows tc filters to be placed on 1532slave devices as well as bond devices and the bonding driver will simply act as 1533a pass-through for selecting output queues on the slave device rather than 1534output port selection. 1535 1536This feature first appeared in bonding driver version 3.7.0 and support for 1537output slave selection was limited to round-robin and active-backup modes. 1538 15394 Querying Bonding Configuration 1540================================= 1541 15424.1 Bonding Configuration 1543------------------------- 1544 1545 Each bonding device has a read-only file residing in the 1546/proc/net/bonding directory. The file contents include information 1547about the bonding configuration, options and state of each slave. 1548 1549 For example, the contents of /proc/net/bonding/bond0 after the 1550driver is loaded with parameters of mode=0 and miimon=1000 is 1551generally as follows: 1552 1553 Ethernet Channel Bonding Driver: 2.6.1 (October 29, 2004) 1554 Bonding Mode: load balancing (round-robin) 1555 Currently Active Slave: eth0 1556 MII Status: up 1557 MII Polling Interval (ms): 1000 1558 Up Delay (ms): 0 1559 Down Delay (ms): 0 1560 1561 Slave Interface: eth1 1562 MII Status: up 1563 Link Failure Count: 1 1564 1565 Slave Interface: eth0 1566 MII Status: up 1567 Link Failure Count: 1 1568 1569 The precise format and contents will change depending upon the 1570bonding configuration, state, and version of the bonding driver. 1571 15724.2 Network configuration 1573------------------------- 1574 1575 The network configuration can be inspected using the ifconfig 1576command. Bonding devices will have the MASTER flag set; Bonding slave 1577devices will have the SLAVE flag set. The ifconfig output does not 1578contain information on which slaves are associated with which masters. 1579 1580 In the example below, the bond0 interface is the master 1581(MASTER) while eth0 and eth1 are slaves (SLAVE). Notice all slaves of 1582bond0 have the same MAC address (HWaddr) as bond0 for all modes except 1583TLB and ALB that require a unique MAC address for each slave. 1584 1585# /sbin/ifconfig 1586bond0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:C0:F0:1F:37:B4 1587 inet addr:XXX.XXX.XXX.YYY Bcast:XXX.XXX.XXX.255 Mask:255.255.252.0 1588 UP BROADCAST RUNNING MASTER MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 1589 RX packets:7224794 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 1590 TX packets:3286647 errors:1 dropped:0 overruns:1 carrier:0 1591 collisions:0 txqueuelen:0 1592 1593eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:C0:F0:1F:37:B4 1594 UP BROADCAST RUNNING SLAVE MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 1595 RX packets:3573025 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 1596 TX packets:1643167 errors:1 dropped:0 overruns:1 carrier:0 1597 collisions:0 txqueuelen:100 1598 Interrupt:10 Base address:0x1080 1599 1600eth1 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 00:C0:F0:1F:37:B4 1601 UP BROADCAST RUNNING SLAVE MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1 1602 RX packets:3651769 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0 1603 TX packets:1643480 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 1604 collisions:0 txqueuelen:100 1605 Interrupt:9 Base address:0x1400 1606 16075. Switch Configuration 1608======================= 1609 1610 For this section, "switch" refers to whatever system the 1611bonded devices are directly connected to (i.e., where the other end of 1612the cable plugs into). This may be an actual dedicated switch device, 1613or it may be another regular system (e.g., another computer running 1614Linux), 1615 1616 The active-backup, balance-tlb and balance-alb modes do not 1617require any specific configuration of the switch. 1618 1619 The 802.3ad mode requires that the switch have the appropriate 1620ports configured as an 802.3ad aggregation. The precise method used 1621to configure this varies from switch to switch, but, for example, a 1622Cisco 3550 series switch requires that the appropriate ports first be 1623grouped together in a single etherchannel instance, then that 1624etherchannel is set to mode "lacp" to enable 802.3ad (instead of 1625standard EtherChannel). 1626 1627 The balance-rr, balance-xor and broadcast modes generally 1628require that the switch have the appropriate ports grouped together. 1629The nomenclature for such a group differs between switches, it may be 1630called an "etherchannel" (as in the Cisco example, above), a "trunk 1631group" or some other similar variation. For these modes, each switch 1632will also have its own configuration options for the switch's transmit 1633policy to the bond. Typical choices include XOR of either the MAC or 1634IP addresses. The transmit policy of the two peers does not need to 1635match. For these three modes, the bonding mode really selects a 1636transmit policy for an EtherChannel group; all three will interoperate 1637with another EtherChannel group. 1638 1639 16406. 802.1q VLAN Support 1641====================== 1642 1643 It is possible to configure VLAN devices over a bond interface 1644using the 8021q driver. However, only packets coming from the 8021q 1645driver and passing through bonding will be tagged by default. Self 1646generated packets, for example, bonding's learning packets or ARP 1647packets generated by either ALB mode or the ARP monitor mechanism, are 1648tagged internally by bonding itself. As a result, bonding must 1649"learn" the VLAN IDs configured above it, and use those IDs to tag 1650self generated packets. 1651 1652 For reasons of simplicity, and to support the use of adapters 1653that can do VLAN hardware acceleration offloading, the bonding 1654interface declares itself as fully hardware offloading capable, it gets 1655the add_vid/kill_vid notifications to gather the necessary 1656information, and it propagates those actions to the slaves. In case 1657of mixed adapter types, hardware accelerated tagged packets that 1658should go through an adapter that is not offloading capable are 1659"un-accelerated" by the bonding driver so the VLAN tag sits in the 1660regular location. 1661 1662 VLAN interfaces *must* be added on top of a bonding interface 1663only after enslaving at least one slave. The bonding interface has a 1664hardware address of 00:00:00:00:00:00 until the first slave is added. 1665If the VLAN interface is created prior to the first enslavement, it 1666would pick up the all-zeroes hardware address. Once the first slave 1667is attached to the bond, the bond device itself will pick up the 1668slave's hardware address, which is then available for the VLAN device. 1669 1670 Also, be aware that a similar problem can occur if all slaves 1671are released from a bond that still has one or more VLAN interfaces on 1672top of it. When a new slave is added, the bonding interface will 1673obtain its hardware address from the first slave, which might not 1674match the hardware address of the VLAN interfaces (which was 1675ultimately copied from an earlier slave). 1676 1677 There are two methods to insure that the VLAN device operates 1678with the correct hardware address if all slaves are removed from a 1679bond interface: 1680 1681 1. Remove all VLAN interfaces then recreate them 1682 1683 2. Set the bonding interface's hardware address so that it 1684matches the hardware address of the VLAN interfaces. 1685 1686 Note that changing a VLAN interface's HW address would set the 1687underlying device -- i.e. the bonding interface -- to promiscuous 1688mode, which might not be what you want. 1689 1690 16917. Link Monitoring 1692================== 1693 1694 The bonding driver at present supports two schemes for 1695monitoring a slave device's link state: the ARP monitor and the MII 1696monitor. 1697 1698 At the present time, due to implementation restrictions in the 1699bonding driver itself, it is not possible to enable both ARP and MII 1700monitoring simultaneously. 1701 17027.1 ARP Monitor Operation 1703------------------------- 1704 1705 The ARP monitor operates as its name suggests: it sends ARP 1706queries to one or more designated peer systems on the network, and 1707uses the response as an indication that the link is operating. This 1708gives some assurance that traffic is actually flowing to and from one 1709or more peers on the local network. 1710 1711 The ARP monitor relies on the device driver itself to verify 1712that traffic is flowing. In particular, the driver must keep up to 1713date the last receive time, dev->last_rx, and transmit start time, 1714dev->trans_start. If these are not updated by the driver, then the 1715ARP monitor will immediately fail any slaves using that driver, and 1716those slaves will stay down. If networking monitoring (tcpdump, etc) 1717shows the ARP requests and replies on the network, then it may be that 1718your device driver is not updating last_rx and trans_start. 1719 17207.2 Configuring Multiple ARP Targets 1721------------------------------------ 1722 1723 While ARP monitoring can be done with just one target, it can 1724be useful in a High Availability setup to have several targets to 1725monitor. In the case of just one target, the target itself may go 1726down or have a problem making it unresponsive to ARP requests. Having 1727an additional target (or several) increases the reliability of the ARP 1728monitoring. 1729 1730 Multiple ARP targets must be separated by commas as follows: 1731 1732# example options for ARP monitoring with three targets 1733alias bond0 bonding 1734options bond0 arp_interval=60 arp_ip_target=192.168.0.1,192.168.0.3,192.168.0.9 1735 1736 For just a single target the options would resemble: 1737 1738# example options for ARP monitoring with one target 1739alias bond0 bonding 1740options bond0 arp_interval=60 arp_ip_target=192.168.0.100 1741 1742 17437.3 MII Monitor Operation 1744------------------------- 1745 1746 The MII monitor monitors only the carrier state of the local 1747network interface. It accomplishes this in one of three ways: by 1748depending upon the device driver to maintain its carrier state, by 1749querying the device's MII registers, or by making an ethtool query to 1750the device. 1751 1752 If the use_carrier module parameter is 1 (the default value), 1753then the MII monitor will rely on the driver for carrier state 1754information (via the netif_carrier subsystem). As explained in the 1755use_carrier parameter information, above, if the MII monitor fails to 1756detect carrier loss on the device (e.g., when the cable is physically 1757disconnected), it may be that the driver does not support 1758netif_carrier. 1759 1760 If use_carrier is 0, then the MII monitor will first query the 1761device's (via ioctl) MII registers and check the link state. If that 1762request fails (not just that it returns carrier down), then the MII 1763monitor will make an ethtool ETHOOL_GLINK request to attempt to obtain 1764the same information. If both methods fail (i.e., the driver either 1765does not support or had some error in processing both the MII register 1766and ethtool requests), then the MII monitor will assume the link is 1767up. 1768 17698. Potential Sources of Trouble 1770=============================== 1771 17728.1 Adventures in Routing 1773------------------------- 1774 1775 When bonding is configured, it is important that the slave 1776devices not have routes that supersede routes of the master (or, 1777generally, not have routes at all). For example, suppose the bonding 1778device bond0 has two slaves, eth0 and eth1, and the routing table is 1779as follows: 1780 1781Kernel IP routing table 1782Destination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface 178310.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 U 40 0 0 eth0 178410.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 U 40 0 0 eth1 178510.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 U 40 0 0 bond0 1786127.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 U 40 0 0 lo 1787 1788 This routing configuration will likely still update the 1789receive/transmit times in the driver (needed by the ARP monitor), but 1790may bypass the bonding driver (because outgoing traffic to, in this 1791case, another host on network 10 would use eth0 or eth1 before bond0). 1792 1793 The ARP monitor (and ARP itself) may become confused by this 1794configuration, because ARP requests (generated by the ARP monitor) 1795will be sent on one interface (bond0), but the corresponding reply 1796will arrive on a different interface (eth0). This reply looks to ARP 1797as an unsolicited ARP reply (because ARP matches replies on an 1798interface basis), and is discarded. The MII monitor is not affected 1799by the state of the routing table. 1800 1801 The solution here is simply to insure that slaves do not have 1802routes of their own, and if for some reason they must, those routes do 1803not supersede routes of their master. This should generally be the 1804case, but unusual configurations or errant manual or automatic static 1805route additions may cause trouble. 1806 18078.2 Ethernet Device Renaming 1808---------------------------- 1809 1810 On systems with network configuration scripts that do not 1811associate physical devices directly with network interface names (so 1812that the same physical device always has the same "ethX" name), it may 1813be necessary to add some special logic to config files in 1814/etc/modprobe.d/. 1815 1816 For example, given a modules.conf containing the following: 1817 1818alias bond0 bonding 1819options bond0 mode=some-mode miimon=50 1820alias eth0 tg3 1821alias eth1 tg3 1822alias eth2 e1000 1823alias eth3 e1000 1824 1825 If neither eth0 and eth1 are slaves to bond0, then when the 1826bond0 interface comes up, the devices may end up reordered. This 1827happens because bonding is loaded first, then its slave device's 1828drivers are loaded next. Since no other drivers have been loaded, 1829when the e1000 driver loads, it will receive eth0 and eth1 for its 1830devices, but the bonding configuration tries to enslave eth2 and eth3 1831(which may later be assigned to the tg3 devices). 1832 1833 Adding the following: 1834 1835add above bonding e1000 tg3 1836 1837 causes modprobe to load e1000 then tg3, in that order, when 1838bonding is loaded. This command is fully documented in the 1839modules.conf manual page. 1840 1841 On systems utilizing modprobe an equivalent problem can occur. 1842In this case, the following can be added to config files in 1843/etc/modprobe.d/ as: 1844 1845softdep bonding pre: tg3 e1000 1846 1847 This will load tg3 and e1000 modules before loading the bonding one. 1848Full documentation on this can be found in the modprobe.d and modprobe 1849manual pages. 1850 18518.3. Painfully Slow Or No Failed Link Detection By Miimon 1852--------------------------------------------------------- 1853 1854 By default, bonding enables the use_carrier option, which 1855instructs bonding to trust the driver to maintain carrier state. 1856 1857 As discussed in the options section, above, some drivers do 1858not support the netif_carrier_on/_off link state tracking system. 1859With use_carrier enabled, bonding will always see these links as up, 1860regardless of their actual state. 1861 1862 Additionally, other drivers do support netif_carrier, but do 1863not maintain it in real time, e.g., only polling the link state at 1864some fixed interval. In this case, miimon will detect failures, but 1865only after some long period of time has expired. If it appears that 1866miimon is very slow in detecting link failures, try specifying 1867use_carrier=0 to see if that improves the failure detection time. If 1868it does, then it may be that the driver checks the carrier state at a 1869fixed interval, but does not cache the MII register values (so the 1870use_carrier=0 method of querying the registers directly works). If 1871use_carrier=0 does not improve the failover, then the driver may cache 1872the registers, or the problem may be elsewhere. 1873 1874 Also, remember that miimon only checks for the device's 1875carrier state. It has no way to determine the state of devices on or 1876beyond other ports of a switch, or if a switch is refusing to pass 1877traffic while still maintaining carrier on. 1878 18799. SNMP agents 1880=============== 1881 1882 If running SNMP agents, the bonding driver should be loaded 1883before any network drivers participating in a bond. This requirement 1884is due to the interface index (ipAdEntIfIndex) being associated to 1885the first interface found with a given IP address. That is, there is 1886only one ipAdEntIfIndex for each IP address. For example, if eth0 and 1887eth1 are slaves of bond0 and the driver for eth0 is loaded before the 1888bonding driver, the interface for the IP address will be associated 1889with the eth0 interface. This configuration is shown below, the IP 1890address 192.168.1.1 has an interface index of 2 which indexes to eth0 1891in the ifDescr table (ifDescr.2). 1892 1893 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.1 = lo 1894 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.2 = eth0 1895 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.3 = eth1 1896 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.4 = eth2 1897 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.5 = eth3 1898 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.6 = bond0 1899 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.10.10.10.10 = 5 1900 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.192.168.1.1 = 2 1901 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.10.74.20.94 = 4 1902 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.127.0.0.1 = 1 1903 1904 This problem is avoided by loading the bonding driver before 1905any network drivers participating in a bond. Below is an example of 1906loading the bonding driver first, the IP address 192.168.1.1 is 1907correctly associated with ifDescr.2. 1908 1909 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.1 = lo 1910 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.2 = bond0 1911 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.3 = eth0 1912 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.4 = eth1 1913 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.5 = eth2 1914 interfaces.ifTable.ifEntry.ifDescr.6 = eth3 1915 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.10.10.10.10 = 6 1916 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.192.168.1.1 = 2 1917 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.10.74.20.94 = 5 1918 ip.ipAddrTable.ipAddrEntry.ipAdEntIfIndex.127.0.0.1 = 1 1919 1920 While some distributions may not report the interface name in 1921ifDescr, the association between the IP address and IfIndex remains 1922and SNMP functions such as Interface_Scan_Next will report that 1923association. 1924 192510. Promiscuous mode 1926==================== 1927 1928 When running network monitoring tools, e.g., tcpdump, it is 1929common to enable promiscuous mode on the device, so that all traffic 1930is seen (instead of seeing only traffic destined for the local host). 1931The bonding driver handles promiscuous mode changes to the bonding 1932master device (e.g., bond0), and propagates the setting to the slave 1933devices. 1934 1935 For the balance-rr, balance-xor, broadcast, and 802.3ad modes, 1936the promiscuous mode setting is propagated to all slaves. 1937 1938 For the active-backup, balance-tlb and balance-alb modes, the 1939promiscuous mode setting is propagated only to the active slave. 1940 1941 For balance-tlb mode, the active slave is the slave currently 1942receiving inbound traffic. 1943 1944 For balance-alb mode, the active slave is the slave used as a 1945"primary." This slave is used for mode-specific control traffic, for 1946sending to peers that are unassigned or if the load is unbalanced. 1947 1948 For the active-backup, balance-tlb and balance-alb modes, when 1949the active slave changes (e.g., due to a link failure), the 1950promiscuous setting will be propagated to the new active slave. 1951 195211. Configuring Bonding for High Availability 1953============================================= 1954 1955 High Availability refers to configurations that provide 1956maximum network availability by having redundant or backup devices, 1957links or switches between the host and the rest of the world. The 1958goal is to provide the maximum availability of network connectivity 1959(i.e., the network always works), even though other configurations 1960could provide higher throughput. 1961 196211.1 High Availability in a Single Switch Topology 1963-------------------------------------------------- 1964 1965 If two hosts (or a host and a single switch) are directly 1966connected via multiple physical links, then there is no availability 1967penalty to optimizing for maximum bandwidth. In this case, there is 1968only one switch (or peer), so if it fails, there is no alternative 1969access to fail over to. Additionally, the bonding load balance modes 1970support link monitoring of their members, so if individual links fail, 1971the load will be rebalanced across the remaining devices. 1972 1973 See Section 12, "Configuring Bonding for Maximum Throughput" 1974for information on configuring bonding with one peer device. 1975 197611.2 High Availability in a Multiple Switch Topology 1977---------------------------------------------------- 1978 1979 With multiple switches, the configuration of bonding and the 1980network changes dramatically. In multiple switch topologies, there is 1981a trade off between network availability and usable bandwidth. 1982 1983 Below is a sample network, configured to maximize the 1984availability of the network: 1985 1986 | | 1987 |port3 port3| 1988 +-----+----+ +-----+----+ 1989 | |port2 ISL port2| | 1990 | switch A +--------------------------+ switch B | 1991 | | | | 1992 +-----+----+ +-----++---+ 1993 |port1 port1| 1994 | +-------+ | 1995 +-------------+ host1 +---------------+ 1996 eth0 +-------+ eth1 1997 1998 In this configuration, there is a link between the two 1999switches (ISL, or inter switch link), and multiple ports connecting to 2000the outside world ("port3" on each switch). There is no technical
2001reason that this could not be extended to a third switch. 2002 200311.2.1 HA Bonding Mode Selection for Multiple Switch Topology 2004------------------------------------------------------------- 2005 2006 In a topology such as the example above, the active-backup and 2007broadcast modes are the only useful bonding modes when optimizing for 2008availability; the other modes require all links to terminate on the 2009same peer for them to behave rationally. 2010 2011active-backup: This is generally the preferred mode, particularly if 2012 the switches have an ISL and play together well. If the 2013 network configuration is such that one switch is specifically 2014 a backup switch (e.g., has lower capacity, higher cost, etc), 2015 then the primary option can be used to insure that the 2016 preferred link is always used when it is available. 2017 2018broadcast: This mode is really a special purpose mode, and is suitable 2019 only for very specific needs. For example, if the two 2020 switches are not connected (no ISL), and the networks beyond 2021 them are totally independent. In this case, if it is 2022 necessary for some specific one-way traffic to reach both 2023 independent networks, then the broadcast mode may be suitable. 2024 202511.2.2 HA Link Monitoring Selection for Multiple Switch Topology 2026---------------------------------------------------------------- 2027 2028 The choice of link monitoring ultimately depends upon your 2029switch. If the switch can reliably fail ports in response to other 2030failures, then either the MII or ARP monitors should work. For 2031example, in the above example, if the "port3" link fails at the remote 2032end, the MII monitor has no direct means to detect this. The ARP 2033monitor could be configured with a target at the remote end of port3, 2034thus detecting that failure without switch support. 2035 2036 In general, however, in a multiple switch topology, the ARP 2037monitor can provide a higher level of reliability in detecting end to 2038end connectivity failures (which may be caused by the failure of any 2039individual component to pass traffic for any reason). Additionally, 2040the ARP monitor should be configured with multiple targets (at least 2041one for each switch in the network). This will insure that, 2042regardless of which switch is active, the ARP monitor has a suitable 2043target to query. 2044 2045 Note, also, that of late many switches now support a functionality 2046generally referred to as "trunk failover." This is a feature of the 2047switch that causes the link state of a particular switch port to be set 2048down (or up) when the state of another switch port goes down (or up). 2049Its purpose is to propagate link failures from logically "exterior" ports 2050to the logically "interior" ports that bonding is able to monitor via 2051miimon. Availability and configuration for trunk failover varies by 2052switch, but this can be a viable alternative to the ARP monitor when using 2053suitable switches. 2054 205512. Configuring Bonding for Maximum Throughput 2056============================================== 2057 205812.1 Maximizing Throughput in a Single Switch Topology 2059------------------------------------------------------ 2060 2061 In a single switch configuration, the best method to maximize 2062throughput depends upon the application and network environment. The 2063various load balancing modes each have strengths and weaknesses in 2064different environments, as detailed below. 2065 2066 For this discussion, we will break down the topologies into 2067two categories. Depending upon the destination of most traffic, we 2068categorize them into either "gatewayed" or "local" configurations. 2069 2070 In a gatewayed configuration, the "switch" is acting primarily 2071as a router, and the majority of traffic passes through this router to 2072other networks. An example would be the following: 2073 2074 2075 +----------+ +----------+ 2076 | |eth0 port1| | to other networks 2077 | Host A +---------------------+ router +-------------------> 2078 | +---------------------+ | Hosts B and C are out 2079 | |eth1 port2| | here somewhere 2080 +----------+ +----------+ 2081 2082 The router may be a dedicated router device, or another host 2083acting as a gateway. For our discussion, the important point is that 2084the majority of traffic from Host A will pass through the router to 2085some other network before reaching its final destination. 2086 2087 In a gatewayed network configuration, although Host A may 2088communicate with many other systems, all of its traffic will be sent 2089and received via one other peer on the local network, the router. 2090 2091 Note that the case of two systems connected directly via 2092multiple physical links is, for purposes of configuring bonding, the 2093same as a gatewayed configuration. In that case, it happens that all 2094traffic is destined for the "gateway" itself, not some other network 2095beyond the gateway. 2096 2097 In a local configuration, the "switch" is acting primarily as 2098a switch, and the majority of traffic passes through this switch to 2099reach other stations on the same network. An example would be the 2100following: 2101 2102 +----------+ +----------+ +--------+ 2103 | |eth0 port1| +-------+ Host B | 2104 | Host A +------------+ switch |port3 +--------+ 2105 | +------------+ | +--------+ 2106 | |eth1 port2| +------------------+ Host C | 2107 +----------+ +----------+port4 +--------+ 2108 2109 2110 Again, the switch may be a dedicated switch device, or another 2111host acting as a gateway. For our discussion, the important point is 2112that the majority of traffic from Host A is destined for other hosts 2113on the same local network (Hosts B and C in the above example). 2114 2115 In summary, in a gatewayed configuration, traffic to and from 2116the bonded device will be to the same MAC level peer on the network 2117(the gateway itself, i.e., the router), regardless of its final 2118destination. In a local configuration, traffic flows directly to and 2119from the final destinations, thus, each destination (Host B, Host C) 2120will be addressed directly by their individual MAC addresses. 2121 2122 This distinction between a gatewayed and a local network 2123configuration is important because many of the load balancing modes 2124available use the MAC addresses of the local network source and 2125destination to make load balancing decisions. The behavior of each 2126mode is described below. 2127 2128 212912.1.1 MT Bonding Mode Selection for Single Switch Topology 2130----------------------------------------------------------- 2131 2132 This configuration is the easiest to set up and to understand, 2133although you will have to decide which bonding mode best suits your 2134needs. The trade offs for each mode are detailed below: 2135 2136balance-rr: This mode is the only mode that will permit a single 2137 TCP/IP connection to stripe traffic across multiple 2138 interfaces. It is therefore the only mode that will allow a 2139 single TCP/IP stream to utilize more than one interface's 2140 worth of throughput. This comes at a cost, however: the 2141 striping generally results in peer systems receiving packets out 2142 of order, causing TCP/IP's congestion control system to kick 2143 in, often by retransmitting segments. 2144 2145 It is possible to adjust TCP/IP's congestion limits by 2146 altering the net.ipv4.tcp_reordering sysctl parameter. The 2147 usual default value is 3, and the maximum useful value is 127. 2148 For a four interface balance-rr bond, expect that a single 2149 TCP/IP stream will utilize no more than approximately 2.3 2150 interface's worth of throughput, even after adjusting 2151 tcp_reordering. 2152 2153 Note that the fraction of packets that will be delivered out of 2154 order is highly variable, and is unlikely to be zero. The level 2155 of reordering depends upon a variety of factors, including the 2156 networking interfaces, the switch, and the topology of the 2157 configuration. Speaking in general terms, higher speed network 2158 cards produce more reordering (due to factors such as packet 2159 coalescing), and a "many to many" topology will reorder at a 2160 higher rate than a "many slow to one fast" configuration. 2161 2162 Many switches do not support any modes that stripe traffic 2163 (instead choosing a port based upon IP or MAC level addresses); 2164 for those devices, traffic for a particular connection flowing 2165 through the switch to a balance-rr bond will not utilize greater 2166 than one interface's worth of bandwidth. 2167 2168 If you are utilizing protocols other than TCP/IP, UDP for 2169 example, and your application can tolerate out of order 2170 delivery, then this mode can allow for single stream datagram 2171 performance that scales near linearly as interfaces are added 2172 to the bond. 2173 2174 This mode requires the switch to have the appropriate ports 2175 configured for "etherchannel" or "trunking." 2176 2177active-backup: There is not much advantage in this network topology to 2178 the active-backup mode, as the inactive backup devices are all 2179 connected to the same peer as the primary. In this case, a 2180 load balancing mode (with link monitoring) will provide the 2181 same level of network availability, but with increased 2182 available bandwidth. On the plus side, active-backup mode 2183 does not require any configuration of the switch, so it may 2184 have value if the hardware available does not support any of 2185 the load balance modes. 2186 2187balance-xor: This mode will limit traffic such that packets destined 2188 for specific peers will always be sent over the same 2189 interface. Since the destination is determined by the MAC 2190 addresses involved, this mode works best in a "local" network 2191 configuration (as described above), with destinations all on 2192 the same local network. This mode is likely to be suboptimal 2193 if all your traffic is passed through a single router (i.e., a 2194 "gatewayed" network configuration, as described above). 2195 2196 As with balance-rr, the switch ports need to be configured for 2197 "etherchannel" or "trunking." 2198 2199broadcast: Like active-backup, there is not much advantage to this 2200 mode in this type of network topology. 2201 2202802.3ad: This mode can be a good choice for this type of network 2203 topology. The 802.3ad mode is an IEEE standard, so all peers 2204 that implement 802.3ad should interoperate well. The 802.3ad 2205 protocol includes automatic configuration of the aggregates, 2206 so minimal manual configuration of the switch is needed 2207 (typically only to designate that some set of devices is 2208 available for 802.3ad). The 802.3ad standard also mandates 2209 that frames be delivered in order (within certain limits), so 2210 in general single connections will not see misordering of 2211 packets. The 802.3ad mode does have some drawbacks: the 2212 standard mandates that all devices in the aggregate operate at 2213 the same speed and duplex. Also, as with all bonding load 2214 balance modes other than balance-rr, no single connection will 2215 be able to utilize more than a single interface's worth of 2216 bandwidth. 2217 2218 Additionally, the linux bonding 802.3ad implementation 2219 distributes traffic by peer (using an XOR of MAC addresses), 2220 so in a "gatewayed" configuration, all outgoing traffic will 2221 generally use the same device. Incoming traffic may also end 2222 up on a single device, but that is dependent upon the 2223 balancing policy of the peer's 8023.ad implementation. In a 2224 "local" configuration, traffic will be distributed across the 2225 devices in the bond. 2226 2227 Finally, the 802.3ad mode mandates the use of the MII monitor, 2228 therefore, the ARP monitor is not available in this mode. 2229 2230balance-tlb: The balance-tlb mode balances outgoing traffic by peer. 2231 Since the balancing is done according to MAC address, in a 2232 "gatewayed" configuration (as described above), this mode will 2233 send all traffic across a single device. However, in a 2234 "local" network configuration, this mode balances multiple 2235 local network peers across devices in a vaguely intelligent 2236 manner (not a simple XOR as in balance-xor or 802.3ad mode), 2237 so that mathematically unlucky MAC addresses (i.e., ones that 2238 XOR to the same value) will not all "bunch up" on a single 2239 interface. 2240 2241 Unlike 802.3ad, interfaces may be of differing speeds, and no 2242 special switch configuration is required. On the down side, 2243 in this mode all incoming traffic arrives over a single 2244 interface, this mode requires certain ethtool support in the 2245 network device driver of the slave interfaces, and the ARP 2246 monitor is not available. 2247 2248balance-alb: This mode is everything that balance-tlb is, and more. 2249 It has all of the features (and restrictions) of balance-tlb, 2250 and will also balance incoming traffic from local network 2251 peers (as described in the Bonding Module Options section, 2252 above). 2253 2254 The only additional down side to this mode is that the network 2255 device driver must support changing the hardware address while 2256 the device is open. 2257 225812.1.2 MT Link Monitoring for Single Switch Topology 2259---------------------------------------------------- 2260 2261 The choice of link monitoring may largely depend upon which 2262mode you choose to use. The more advanced load balancing modes do not 2263support the use of the ARP monitor, and are thus restricted to using 2264the MII monitor (which does not provide as high a level of end to end 2265assurance as the ARP monitor). 2266 226712.2 Maximum Throughput in a Multiple Switch Topology 2268----------------------------------------------------- 2269 2270 Multiple switches may be utilized to optimize for throughput 2271when they are configured in parallel as part of an isolated network 2272between two or more systems, for example: 2273 2274 +-----------+ 2275 | Host A | 2276 +-+---+---+-+ 2277 | | | 2278 +--------+ | +---------+ 2279 | | | 2280 +------+---+ +-----+----+ +-----+----+ 2281 | Switch A | | Switch B | | Switch C | 2282 +------+---+ +-----+----+ +-----+----+ 2283 | | | 2284 +--------+ | +---------+ 2285 | | | 2286 +-+---+---+-+ 2287 | Host B | 2288 +-----------+ 2289 2290 In this configuration, the switches are isolated from one 2291another. One reason to employ a topology such as this is for an 2292isolated network with many hosts (a cluster configured for high 2293performance, for example), using multiple smaller switches can be more 2294cost effective than a single larger switch, e.g., on a network with 24 2295hosts, three 24 port switches can be significantly less expensive than 2296a single 72 port switch. 2297 2298 If access beyond the network is required, an individual host 2299can be equipped with an additional network device connected to an 2300external network; this host then additionally acts as a gateway. 2301 230212.2.1 MT Bonding Mode Selection for Multiple Switch Topology 2303------------------------------------------------------------- 2304 2305 In actual practice, the bonding mode typically employed in 2306configurations of this type is balance-rr. Historically, in this 2307network configuration, the usual caveats about out of order packet 2308delivery are mitigated by the use of network adapters that do not do 2309any kind of packet coalescing (via the use of NAPI, or because the 2310device itself does not generate interrupts until some number of 2311packets has arrived). When employed in this fashion, the balance-rr 2312mode allows individual connections between two hosts to effectively 2313utilize greater than one interface's bandwidth. 2314 231512.2.2 MT Link Monitoring for Multiple Switch Topology 2316------------------------------------------------------ 2317 2318 Again, in actual practice, the MII monitor is most often used 2319in this configuration, as performance is given preference over 2320availability. The ARP monitor will function in this topology, but its 2321advantages over the MII monitor are mitigated by the volume of probes 2322needed as the number of systems involved grows (remember that each 2323host in the network is configured with bonding). 2324 232513. Switch Behavior Issues 2326========================== 2327 232813.1 Link Establishment and Failover Delays 2329------------------------------------------- 2330 2331 Some switches exhibit undesirable behavior with regard to the 2332timing of link up and down reporting by the switch. 2333 2334 First, when a link comes up, some switches may indicate that 2335the link is up (carrier available), but not pass traffic over the 2336interface for some period of time. This delay is typically due to 2337some type of autonegotiation or routing protocol, but may also occur 2338during switch initialization (e.g., during recovery after a switch 2339failure). If you find this to be a problem, specify an appropriate 2340value to the updelay bonding module option to delay the use of the 2341relevant interface(s). 2342 2343 Second, some switches may "bounce" the link state one or more 2344times while a link is changing state. This occurs most commonly while 2345the switch is initializing. Again, an appropriate updelay value may 2346help. 2347 2348 Note that when a bonding interface has no active links, the 2349driver will immediately reuse the first link that goes up, even if the 2350updelay parameter has been specified (the updelay is ignored in this 2351case). If there are slave interfaces waiting for the updelay timeout 2352to expire, the interface that first went into that state will be 2353immediately reused. This reduces down time of the network if the 2354value of updelay has been overestimated, and since this occurs only in 2355cases with no connectivity, there is no additional penalty for 2356ignoring the updelay. 2357 2358 In addition to the concerns about switch timings, if your 2359switches take a long time to go into backup mode, it may be desirable 2360to not activate a backup interface immediately after a link goes down. 2361Failover may be delayed via the downdelay bonding module option. 2362 236313.2 Duplicated Incoming Packets 2364-------------------------------- 2365 2366 NOTE: Starting with version 3.0.2, the bonding driver has logic to 2367suppress duplicate packets, which should largely eliminate this problem. 2368The following description is kept for reference. 2369 2370 It is not uncommon to observe a short burst of duplicated 2371traffic when the bonding device is first used, or after it has been 2372idle for some period of time. This is most easily observed by issuing 2373a "ping" to some other host on the network, and noticing that the 2374output from ping flags duplicates (typically one per slave). 2375 2376 For example, on a bond in active-backup mode with five slaves 2377all connected to one switch, the output may appear as follows: 2378 2379# ping -n 10.0.4.2 2380PING 10.0.4.2 (10.0.4.2) from 10.0.3.10 : 56(84) bytes of data. 238164 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=13.7 ms 238264 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=13.8 ms (DUP!) 238364 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=13.8 ms (DUP!) 238464 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=13.8 ms (DUP!) 238564 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=13.8 ms (DUP!) 238664 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.216 ms 238764 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.267 ms 238864 bytes from 10.0.4.2: icmp_seq=4 ttl=64 time=0.222 ms 2389 2390 This is not due to an error in the bonding driver, rather, it 2391is a side effect of how many switches update their MAC forwarding 2392tables. Initially, the switch does not associate the MAC address in 2393the packet with a particular switch port, and so it may send the 2394traffic to all ports until its MAC forwarding table is updated. Since 2395the interfaces attached to the bond may occupy multiple ports on a 2396single switch, when the switch (temporarily) floods the traffic to all 2397ports, the bond device receives multiple copies of the same packet 2398(one per slave device). 2399 2400 The duplicated packet behavior is switch dependent, some 2401switches exhibit this, and some do not. On switches that display this 2402behavior, it can be induced by clearing the MAC forwarding table (on 2403most Cisco switches, the privileged command "clear mac address-table 2404dynamic" will accomplish this). 2405 240614. Hardware Specific Considerations 2407==================================== 2408 2409 This section contains additional information for configuring 2410bonding on specific hardware platforms, or for interfacing bonding 2411with particular switches or other devices. 2412 241314.1 IBM BladeCenter 2414-------------------- 2415 2416 This applies to the JS20 and similar systems. 2417 2418 On the JS20 blades, the bonding driver supports only 2419balance-rr, active-backup, balance-tlb and balance-alb modes. This is 2420largely due to the network topology inside the BladeCenter, detailed 2421below. 2422 2423JS20 network adapter information 2424-------------------------------- 2425 2426 All JS20s come with two Broadcom Gigabit Ethernet ports 2427integrated on the planar (that's "motherboard" in IBM-speak). In the 2428BladeCenter chassis, the eth0 port of all JS20 blades is hard wired to 2429I/O Module #1; similarly, all eth1 ports are wired to I/O Module #2. 2430An add-on Broadcom daughter card can be installed on a JS20 to provide 2431two more Gigabit Ethernet ports. These ports, eth2 and eth3, are 2432wired to I/O Modules 3 and 4, respectively. 2433 2434 Each I/O Module may contain either a switch or a passthrough 2435module (which allows ports to be directly connected to an external 2436switch). Some bonding modes require a specific BladeCenter internal 2437network topology in order to function; these are detailed below. 2438 2439 Additional BladeCenter-specific networking information can be 2440found in two IBM Redbooks (www.ibm.com/redbooks): 2441 2442"IBM eServer BladeCenter Networking Options" 2443"IBM eServer BladeCenter Layer 2-7 Network Switching" 2444 2445BladeCenter networking configuration 2446------------------------------------ 2447 2448 Because a BladeCenter can be configured in a very large number 2449of ways, this discussion will be confined to describing basic 2450configurations. 2451 2452 Normally, Ethernet Switch Modules (ESMs) are used in I/O 2453modules 1 and 2. In this configuration, the eth0 and eth1 ports of a 2454JS20 will be connected to different internal switches (in the 2455respective I/O modules). 2456 2457 A passthrough module (OPM or CPM, optical or copper, 2458passthrough module) connects the I/O module directly to an external 2459switch. By using PMs in I/O module #1 and #2, the eth0 and eth1 2460interfaces of a JS20 can be redirected to the outside world and 2461connected to a common external switch. 2462 2463 Depending upon the mix of ESMs and PMs, the network will 2464appear to bonding as either a single switch topology (all PMs) or as a 2465multiple switch topology (one or more ESMs, zero or more PMs). It is 2466also possible to connect ESMs together, resulting in a configuration 2467much like the example in "High Availability in a Multiple Switch 2468Topology," above. 2469 2470Requirements for specific modes 2471------------------------------- 2472 2473 The balance-rr mode requires the use of passthrough modules 2474for devices in the bond, all connected to an common external switch. 2475That switch must be configured for "etherchannel" or "trunking" on the 2476appropriate ports, as is usual for balance-rr. 2477 2478 The balance-alb and balance-tlb modes will function with 2479either switch modules or passthrough modules (or a mix). The only 2480specific requirement for these modes is that all network interfaces 2481must be able to reach all destinations for traffic sent over the 2482bonding device (i.e., the network must converge at some point outside 2483the BladeCenter). 2484 2485 The active-backup mode has no additional requirements. 2486 2487Link monitoring issues 2488---------------------- 2489 2490 When an Ethernet Switch Module is in place, only the ARP 2491monitor will reliably detect link loss to an external switch. This is 2492nothing unusual, but examination of the BladeCenter cabinet would 2493suggest that the "external" network ports are the ethernet ports for 2494the system, when it fact there is a switch between these "external" 2495ports and the devices on the JS20 system itself. The MII monitor is 2496only able to detect link failures between the ESM and the JS20 system. 2497 2498 When a passthrough module is in place, the MII monitor does 2499detect failures to the "external" port, which is then directly 2500connected to the JS20 system. 2501 2502Other concerns 2503-------------- 2504 2505 The Serial Over LAN (SoL) link is established over the primary 2506ethernet (eth0) only, therefore, any loss of link to eth0 will result 2507in losing your SoL connection. It will not fail over with other 2508network traffic, as the SoL system is beyond the control of the 2509bonding driver. 2510 2511 It may be desirable to disable spanning tree on the switch 2512(either the internal Ethernet Switch Module, or an external switch) to 2513avoid fail-over delay issues when using bonding. 2514 2515 251615. Frequently Asked Questions 2517============================== 2518 25191. Is it SMP safe? 2520 2521 Yes. The old 2.0.xx channel bonding patch was not SMP safe. 2522The new driver was designed to be SMP safe from the start. 2523 25242. What type of cards will work with it? 2525 2526 Any Ethernet type cards (you can even mix cards - a Intel 2527EtherExpress PRO/100 and a 3com 3c905b, for example). For most modes, 2528devices need not be of the same speed. 2529 2530 Starting with version 3.2.1, bonding also supports Infiniband 2531slaves in active-backup mode. 2532 25333. How many bonding devices can I have? 2534 2535 There is no limit. 2536 25374. How many slaves can a bonding device have? 2538 2539 This is limited only by the number of network interfaces Linux 2540supports and/or the number of network cards you can place in your 2541system. 2542 25435. What happens when a slave link dies? 2544 2545 If link monitoring is enabled, then the failing device will be 2546disabled. The active-backup mode will fail over to a backup link, and 2547other modes will ignore the failed link. The link will continue to be 2548monitored, and should it recover, it will rejoin the bond (in whatever 2549manner is appropriate for the mode). See the sections on High 2550Availability and the documentation for each mode for additional 2551information. 2552 2553 Link monitoring can be enabled via either the miimon or 2554arp_interval parameters (described in the module parameters section, 2555above). In general, miimon monitors the carrier state as sensed by 2556the underlying network device, and the arp monitor (arp_interval) 2557monitors connectivity to another host on the local network. 2558 2559 If no link monitoring is configured, the bonding driver will 2560be unable to detect link failures, and will assume that all links are 2561always available. This will likely result in lost packets, and a 2562resulting degradation of performance. The precise performance loss 2563depends upon the bonding mode and network configuration. 2564 25656. Can bonding be used for High Availability? 2566 2567 Yes. See the section on High Availability for details. 2568 25697. Which switches/systems does it work with? 2570 2571 The full answer to this depends upon the desired mode. 2572 2573 In the basic balance modes (balance-rr and balance-xor), it 2574works with any system that supports etherchannel (also called 2575trunking). Most managed switches currently available have such 2576support, and many unmanaged switches as well. 2577 2578 The advanced balance modes (balance-tlb and balance-alb) do 2579not have special switch requirements, but do need device drivers that 2580support specific features (described in the appropriate section under 2581module parameters, above). 2582 2583 In 802.3ad mode, it works with systems that support IEEE 2584802.3ad Dynamic Link Aggregation. Most managed and many unmanaged 2585switches currently available support 802.3ad. 2586 2587 The active-backup mode should work with any Layer-II switch. 2588 25898. Where does a bonding device get its MAC address from? 2590 2591 When using slave devices that have fixed MAC addresses, or when 2592the fail_over_mac option is enabled, the bonding device's MAC address is 2593the MAC address of the active slave. 2594 2595 For other configurations, if not explicitly configured (with 2596ifconfig or ip link), the MAC address of the bonding device is taken from 2597its first slave device. This MAC address is then passed to all following 2598slaves and remains persistent (even if the first slave is removed) until 2599the bonding device is brought down or reconfigured. 2600 2601 If you wish to change the MAC address, you can set it with 2602ifconfig or ip link: 2603 2604# ifconfig bond0 hw ether 00:11:22:33:44:55 2605 2606# ip link set bond0 address 66:77:88:99:aa:bb 2607 2608 The MAC address can be also changed by bringing down/up the 2609device and then changing its slaves (or their order): 2610 2611# ifconfig bond0 down ; modprobe -r bonding 2612# ifconfig bond0 .... up 2613# ifenslave bond0 eth... 2614 2615 This method will automatically take the address from the next 2616slave that is added. 2617 2618 To restore your slaves' MAC addresses, you need to detach them 2619from the bond (`ifenslave -d bond0 eth0'). The bonding driver will 2620then restore the MAC addresses that the slaves had before they were 2621enslaved. 2622 262316. Resources and Links 2624======================= 2625 2626 The latest version of the bonding driver can be found in the latest 2627version of the linux kernel, found on http://kernel.org 2628 2629 The latest version of this document can be found in the latest kernel 2630source (named Documentation/networking/bonding.txt). 2631 2632 Discussions regarding the usage of the bonding driver take place on the 2633bonding-devel mailing list, hosted at sourceforge.net. If you have questions or 2634problems, post them to the list. The list address is: 2635 2636bonding-devel@lists.sourceforge.net 2637 2638 The administrative interface (to subscribe or unsubscribe) can 2639be found at: 2640 2641https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bonding-devel 2642 2643 Discussions regarding the development of the bonding driver take place 2644on the main Linux network mailing list, hosted at vger.kernel.org. The list 2645address is: 2646 2647netdev@vger.kernel.org 2648 2649 The administrative interface (to subscribe or unsubscribe) can 2650be found at: 2651 2652http://vger.kernel.org/vger-lists.html#netdev 2653 2654Donald Becker's Ethernet Drivers and diag programs may be found at : 2655 - http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.scyld.com/network/ 2656 2657You will also find a lot of information regarding Ethernet, NWay, MII, 2658etc. at www.scyld.com. 2659 2660-- END -- 2661

