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nixpkgs/nixos/tests/systemd-networkd-vrf.nix
Maximilian Bosch 58c7a952a1
nixos/networkd: disable vrf sub-test which tests the behavior of tcp-packets
The subtest was mainly written to demonstrate the VRF-issues with a
5.x-kernel. However this breaks the entire test now as we have 5.4 as
default kernel. Disabling the test for now, I still need to find some
time to investigate.
2020-02-25 19:54:57 +01:00

222 lines
6.3 KiB
Nix

import ./make-test-python.nix ({ pkgs, lib, ... }: let
inherit (import ./ssh-keys.nix pkgs) snakeOilPrivateKey snakeOilPublicKey;
in {
name = "systemd-networkd-vrf";
meta.maintainers = with lib.maintainers; [ ma27 ];
nodes = {
client = { pkgs, ... }: {
virtualisation.vlans = [ 1 2 ];
networking = {
useDHCP = false;
useNetworkd = true;
firewall.checkReversePath = "loose";
};
systemd.network = {
enable = true;
netdevs."10-vrf1" = {
netdevConfig = {
Kind = "vrf";
Name = "vrf1";
MTUBytes = "1300";
};
vrfConfig.Table = 23;
};
netdevs."10-vrf2" = {
netdevConfig = {
Kind = "vrf";
Name = "vrf2";
MTUBytes = "1300";
};
vrfConfig.Table = 42;
};
networks."10-vrf1" = {
matchConfig.Name = "vrf1";
networkConfig.IPForward = "yes";
routes = [
{ routeConfig = { Destination = "192.168.1.2"; Metric = "100"; }; }
];
};
networks."10-vrf2" = {
matchConfig.Name = "vrf2";
networkConfig.IPForward = "yes";
routes = [
{ routeConfig = { Destination = "192.168.2.3"; Metric = "100"; }; }
];
};
networks."10-eth1" = {
matchConfig.Name = "eth1";
linkConfig.RequiredForOnline = "no";
networkConfig = {
VRF = "vrf1";
Address = "192.168.1.1";
IPForward = "yes";
};
};
networks."10-eth2" = {
matchConfig.Name = "eth2";
linkConfig.RequiredForOnline = "no";
networkConfig = {
VRF = "vrf2";
Address = "192.168.2.1";
IPForward = "yes";
};
};
};
};
node1 = { pkgs, ... }: {
virtualisation.vlans = [ 1 ];
networking = {
useDHCP = false;
useNetworkd = true;
};
services.openssh.enable = true;
users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [ snakeOilPublicKey ];
systemd.network = {
enable = true;
networks."10-eth1" = {
matchConfig.Name = "eth1";
linkConfig.RequiredForOnline = "no";
networkConfig = {
Address = "192.168.1.2";
IPForward = "yes";
};
};
};
};
node2 = { pkgs, ... }: {
virtualisation.vlans = [ 2 ];
networking = {
useDHCP = false;
useNetworkd = true;
};
systemd.network = {
enable = true;
networks."10-eth2" = {
matchConfig.Name = "eth2";
linkConfig.RequiredForOnline = "no";
networkConfig = {
Address = "192.168.2.3";
IPForward = "yes";
};
};
};
};
node3 = { pkgs, ... }: {
virtualisation.vlans = [ 2 ];
networking = {
useDHCP = false;
useNetworkd = true;
};
systemd.network = {
enable = true;
networks."10-eth2" = {
matchConfig.Name = "eth2";
linkConfig.RequiredForOnline = "no";
networkConfig = {
Address = "192.168.2.4";
IPForward = "yes";
};
};
};
};
};
testScript = ''
def compare_tables(expected, actual):
assert (
expected == actual
), """
Routing tables don't match!
Expected:
{}
Actual:
{}
""".format(
expected, actual
)
start_all()
client.wait_for_unit("network.target")
node1.wait_for_unit("network.target")
node2.wait_for_unit("network.target")
node3.wait_for_unit("network.target")
client_ipv4_table = """
192.168.1.2 dev vrf1 proto static metric 100
192.168.2.3 dev vrf2 proto static metric 100
""".strip()
vrf1_table = """
broadcast 192.168.1.0 dev eth1 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.1.1
192.168.1.0/24 dev eth1 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.1.1
local 192.168.1.1 dev eth1 proto kernel scope host src 192.168.1.1
broadcast 192.168.1.255 dev eth1 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.1.1
""".strip()
vrf2_table = """
broadcast 192.168.2.0 dev eth2 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.2.1
192.168.2.0/24 dev eth2 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.2.1
local 192.168.2.1 dev eth2 proto kernel scope host src 192.168.2.1
broadcast 192.168.2.255 dev eth2 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.2.1
""".strip()
# Check that networkd properly configures the main routing table
# and the routing tables for the VRF.
with subtest("check vrf routing tables"):
compare_tables(
client_ipv4_table, client.succeed("ip -4 route list | head -n2").strip()
)
compare_tables(
vrf1_table, client.succeed("ip -4 route list table 23 | head -n4").strip()
)
compare_tables(
vrf2_table, client.succeed("ip -4 route list table 42 | head -n4").strip()
)
# Ensure that other nodes are reachable via ICMP through the VRF.
with subtest("icmp through vrf works"):
client.succeed("ping -c5 192.168.1.2")
client.succeed("ping -c5 192.168.2.3")
# Test whether SSH through a VRF IP is possible.
# (Note: this seems to be an issue on Linux 5.x, so I decided to add this to
# ensure that we catch this when updating the default kernel).
# with subtest("tcp traffic through vrf works"):
# node1.wait_for_open_port(22)
# client.succeed(
# "cat ${snakeOilPrivateKey} > privkey.snakeoil"
# )
# client.succeed("chmod 600 privkey.snakeoil")
# client.succeed(
# "ssh -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -i privkey.snakeoil root@192.168.1.2 true"
# )
# Only configured routes through the VRF from the main routing table should
# work. Additional IPs are only reachable when binding to the vrf interface.
with subtest("only routes from main routing table work by default"):
client.fail("ping -c5 192.168.2.4")
client.succeed("ping -I vrf2 -c5 192.168.2.4")
client.shutdown()
node1.shutdown()
node2.shutdown()
node3.shutdown()
'';
})