The BaGPipe driver for the BGPVPN service plugin is designed to work jointly with the openvswitch ML2 mechanism driver.
It relies on the use of the bagpipe-bgp BGP VPN implementation on compute nodes and the MPLS implementation in OpenVSwitch.
The bagpipe driver for the BGPVPN service plugin interacts with the openvswitch agent on each compute node, which is extended to support new RPCs to trigger the local configuration on compute nodes of BGP VPN instances and of their MPLS dataplane.
No connectivity will be setup with BGP VPNs for DHCP ports or Router interface ports, or other network specific ports. This improves the load on network nodes by avoiding them to import/export a significant amount of routes, without limiting BGP VPN deployment scenarios because no useful traffic would be exchanged between a router or DHCP interface of a network associated to a BGP VPN.
Similarly, the driver will not bind a port on an external network. This behavior will be revisited once a use case is well identified.
For Queens release, the mechanism used by this driver for RPCs was changed.
The v1 driver networking_bgpvpn.neutron.services.service_drivers.bagpipe.bagpipe.BaGPipeBGPVPNDriver
is backwards compatible with pre-Queens neutron agents and can be used during
a rolling upgrade, e.g. from Pike to Queens.
The v2 driver networking_bgpvpn.neutron.services.service_drivers.bagpipe.bagpipe_v2.BaGPipeBGPVPNDriver
does not produce the old RPCs anymore and can be used:
Future developments may happen only on the v2 driver and the v1 driver will be ultimately abandoned.
The steps to take to use this driver are generally:
Of course, the typical way is to have all this taken care of by an automated Openstack installer.
follow the instruction in README.rst
local.conf
:
add the following to enable the BaGPipe driver for the BGPVPN service plugin:
NETWORKING_BGPVPN_DRIVER="BGPVPN:BaGPipe:networking_bgpvpn.neutron.services.service_drivers.bagpipe.bagpipe_v2.BaGPipeBGPVPNDriver:default"
enable networking-bagpipe, which contains code for agent extensions:
enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git
# enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git stable/pike
# enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git stable/queens
on a control node, if you want to run the Fake Route-Reflector there (relevant only for a multinode setup):
enable_service b-fakerr
on compute nodes:
the compute node Neutron agent is the Neutron openvswitch agent, with the bagpipe_bgpvpn
agent extension:
install networking-bagpipe (the code to interact with bagpipe-bgp
comes from there):
enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git
# enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git stable/pike
# enable_plugin networking-bagpipe https://git.openstack.org/openstack/networking-bagpipe.git stable/queens
the bagpipe_bgpvpn
agent extension is automatically added to the agent configuration by the devstack plugin
bagpipe-bgp will be installed automatically (part of networking-bagpipe since Pike, or as a submodule before)
you need to enable and configure bagpipe-bgp, typically with a peering to a BGP Route-Reflector or BGP router(s):
enable_service b-bgp
BAGPIPE_DATAPLANE_DRIVER_IPVPN=mpls_ovs_dataplane.MPLSOVSDataplaneDriver
# BAGPIPE_DATAPLANE_DRIVER_IPVPN=ovs # simpler config available > after Ocata
# IP of your route-reflector or BGP router, or fakeRR
# BAGPIPE_BGP_PEERS defaults to $SERVICE_HOST, which will point to the controller in a
# multi-node devstack setup
#BAGPIPE_BGP_PEERS=1.2.3.4,2.3.4.5
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