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OVN-Kubernetes architecture - OVN-Kubernetes network plugin | Networking | OKD 4.12
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Introduction to OVN-Kubernetes architecture

The following diagram shows the OVN-Kubernetes architecture.

OVN-Kubernetes architecture
Figure 1. OVK-Kubernetes architecture

The key components are:

  • Cloud Management System (CMS) - A platform specific client for OVN that provides a CMS specific plugin for OVN integration. The plugin translates the cloud management system’s concept of the logical network configuration, stored in the CMS configuration database in a CMS-specific format, into an intermediate representation understood by OVN.

  • OVN Northbound database (nbdb) - Stores the logical network configuration passed by the CMS plugin.

  • OVN Southbound database (sbdb) - Stores the physical and logical network configuration state for OpenVswitch (OVS) system on each node, including tables that bind them.

  • ovn-northd - This is the intermediary client between nbdb and sbdb. It translates the logical network configuration in terms of conventional network concepts, taken from the nbdb, into logical data path flows in the sbdb below it. The container name is northd and it runs in the ovnkube-master pods.

  • ovn-controller - This is the OVN agent that interacts with OVS and hypervisors, for any information or update that is needed for sbdb. The ovn-controller reads logical flows from the sbdb, translates them into OpenFlow flows and sends them to the node’s OVS daemon. The container name is ovn-controller and it runs in the ovnkube-node pods.

The OVN northbound database has the logical network configuration passed down to it by the cloud management system (CMS). The OVN northbound Database contains the current desired state of the network, presented as a collection of logical ports, logical switches, logical routers, and more. The ovn-northd (northd container) connects to the OVN northbound database and the OVN southbound database. It translates the logical network configuration in terms of conventional network concepts, taken from the OVN northbound Database, into logical data path flows in the OVN southbound database.

The OVN southbound database has physical and logical representations of the network and binding tables that link them together. Every node in the cluster is represented in the southbound database, and you can see the ports that are connected to it. It also contains all the logic flows, the logic flows are shared with the ovn-controller process that runs on each node and the ovn-controller turns those into OpenFlow rules to program Open vSwitch.

The Kubernetes control plane nodes each contain an ovnkube-master pod which hosts containers for the OVN northbound and southbound databases. All OVN northbound databases form a Raft cluster and all southbound databases form a separate Raft cluster. At any given time a single ovnkube-master is the leader and the other ovnkube-master pods are followers.

Listing all resources in the OVN-Kubernetes project

Finding the resources and containers that run in the OVN-Kubernetes project is important to help you understand the OVN-Kubernetes networking implementation.

Prerequisites
  • Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin role.

  • The OpenShift CLI (oc) installed.

Procedure
  1. Run the following command to get all resources, endpoints, and ConfigMaps in the OVN-Kubernetes project:

    $ oc get all,ep,cm -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes
    Example output
    NAME                       READY   STATUS    RESTARTS      AGE
    pod/ovnkube-master-9g7zt   6/6     Running   1 (48m ago)   57m
    pod/ovnkube-master-lqs4v   6/6     Running   0             57m
    pod/ovnkube-master-vxhtq   6/6     Running   0             57m
    pod/ovnkube-node-9k9kc     5/5     Running   0             57m
    pod/ovnkube-node-jg52r     5/5     Running   0             51m
    pod/ovnkube-node-k8wf7     5/5     Running   0             57m
    pod/ovnkube-node-tlwk6     5/5     Running   0             47m
    pod/ovnkube-node-xsvnk     5/5     Running   0             57m
    
    NAME                            TYPE        CLUSTER-IP   EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)             AGE
    service/ovn-kubernetes-master   ClusterIP   None         <none>        9102/TCP            57m
    service/ovn-kubernetes-node     ClusterIP   None         <none>        9103/TCP,9105/TCP   57m
    service/ovnkube-db              ClusterIP   None         <none>        9641/TCP,9642/TCP   57m
    
    NAME                            DESIRED   CURRENT   READY   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   NODE SELECTOR                                                 AGE
    daemonset.apps/ovnkube-master   3         3         3       3            3           beta.kubernetes.io/os=linux,node-role.kubernetes.io/master=   57m
    daemonset.apps/ovnkube-node     5         5         5       5            5           beta.kubernetes.io/os=linux                                   57m
    
    NAME                              ENDPOINTS                                                        AGE
    endpoints/ovn-kubernetes-master   10.0.132.11:9102,10.0.151.18:9102,10.0.192.45:9102               57m
    endpoints/ovn-kubernetes-node     10.0.132.11:9105,10.0.143.72:9105,10.0.151.18:9105 + 7 more...   57m
    endpoints/ovnkube-db              10.0.132.11:9642,10.0.151.18:9642,10.0.192.45:9642 + 3 more...   57m
    
    NAME                                 DATA   AGE
    configmap/control-plane-status       1      55m
    configmap/kube-root-ca.crt           1      57m
    configmap/openshift-service-ca.crt   1      57m
    configmap/ovn-ca                     1      57m
    configmap/ovn-kubernetes-master      0      55m
    configmap/ovnkube-config             1      57m
    configmap/signer-ca                  1      57m

    There are three ovnkube-masters that run on the control plane nodes, and two daemon sets used to deploy the ovnkube-master and ovnkube-node pods. There is one ovnkube-node pod for each node in the cluster. In this example, there are 5, and since there is one ovnkube-node per node in the cluster, there are five nodes in the cluster. The ovnkube-config ConfigMap has the OKD OVN-Kubernetes configurations started by online-master and ovnkube-node. The ovn-kubernetes-master ConfigMap has the information of the current online master leader.

  2. List all the containers in the ovnkube-master pods by running the following command:

    $ oc get pods ovnkube-master-9g7zt \
    -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].name}' -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes
    Expected output
    northd nbdb kube-rbac-proxy sbdb ovnkube-master ovn-dbchecker

    The ovnkube-master pod is made up of several containers. It is responsible for hosting the northbound database (nbdb container), the southbound database (sbdb container), watching for cluster events for pods, egressIP, namespaces, services, endpoints, egress firewall, and network policy and writing them to the northbound database (ovnkube-master pod), as well as managing pod subnet allocation to nodes.

  3. List all the containers in the ovnkube-node pods by running the following command:

    $ oc get pods ovnkube-node-jg52r \
    -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].name}' -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes
    Expected output
    ovn-controller ovn-acl-logging kube-rbac-proxy kube-rbac-proxy-ovn-metrics ovnkube-node

    The ovnkube-node pod has a container (ovn-controller) that resides on each OKD node. Each node’s ovn-controller connects the OVN northbound to the OVN southbound database to learn about the OVN configuration. The ovn-controller connects southbound to ovs-vswitchd as an OpenFlow controller, for control over network traffic, and to the local ovsdb-server to allow it to monitor and control Open vSwitch configuration.

Listing the OVN-Kubernetes northbound database contents

To understand logic flow rules you need to examine the northbound database and understand what objects are there to see how they are translated into logic flow rules. The up to date information is present on the OVN Raft leader and this procedure describes how to find the Raft leader and subsequently query it to list the OVN northbound database contents.

Prerequisites
  • Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin role.

  • The OpenShift CLI (oc) installed.

Procedure
  1. Find the OVN Raft leader for the northbound database.

    The Raft leader stores the most up to date information.

    1. List the pods by running the following command:

      $ oc get po -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes
      Example output
      NAME                   READY   STATUS    RESTARTS       AGE
      ovnkube-master-7j97q   6/6     Running   2 (148m ago)   149m
      ovnkube-master-gt4ms   6/6     Running   1 (140m ago)   147m
      ovnkube-master-mk6p6   6/6     Running   0              148m
      ovnkube-node-8qvtr     5/5     Running   0              149m
      ovnkube-node-fqdc9     5/5     Running   0              149m
      ovnkube-node-tlfwv     5/5     Running   0              149m
      ovnkube-node-wlwkn     5/5     Running   0              142m
    2. Choose one of the master pods at random and run the following command:

      $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes ovnkube-master-7j97q \
      -- /usr/bin/ovn-appctl -t /var/run/ovn/ovnnb_db.ctl \
      --timeout=3 cluster/status OVN_Northbound
      Example output
      Defaulted container "northd" out of: northd, nbdb, kube-rbac-proxy, sbdb, ovnkube-master, ovn-dbchecker
      1c57
      Name: OVN_Northbound
      Cluster ID: c48a (c48aa5c0-a704-4c77-a066-24fe99d9b338)
      Server ID: 1c57 (1c57b6fc-2849-49b7-8679-fbf18bafe339)
      Address: ssl:10.0.147.219:9643
      Status: cluster member
      Role: follower (1)
      Term: 5
      Leader: 2b4f (2)
      Vote: unknown
      
      Election timer: 10000
      Log: [2, 3018]
      Entries not yet committed: 0
      Entries not yet applied: 0
      Connections: ->0000 ->0000 <-8844 <-2b4f
      Disconnections: 0
      Servers:
          1c57 (1c57 at ssl:10.0.147.219:9643) (self)
          8844 (8844 at ssl:10.0.163.212:9643) last msg 8928047 ms ago
          2b4f (2b4f at ssl:10.0.242.240:9643) last msg 620 ms ago (3)
      
      1 This pod is identified as a follower
      2 The leader is identified as 2b4f
      3 The 2b4f is on IP address 10.0.242.240
    3. Find the ovnkube-master pod running on IP Address 10.0.242.240 using the following command:

      $ oc get po -o wide -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes | grep 10.0.242.240 | grep -v ovnkube-node
      Example output
      ovnkube-master-gt4ms   6/6     Running             1 (143m ago)   150m   10.0.242.240   ip-10-0-242-240.ec2.internal   <none>           <none>

      The ovnkube-master-gt4ms pod runs on IP Address 10.0.242.240.

  2. Run the following command to show all the objects in the northbound database:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-gt4ms \
    -c northd -- ovn-nbctl show

    The output is too long to list here. The list includes the NAT rules, logical switches, load balancers and so on.

    Run the following command to display the options available with the command ovn-nbctl:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-mk6p6 \
    -c northd ovn-nbctl --help

    You can narrow down and focus on specific components by using some of the following commands:

  3. Run the following command to show the list of logical routers:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-gt4ms \
    -c northd -- ovn-nbctl lr-list
    Example output
    f971f1f3-5112-402f-9d1e-48f1d091ff04 (GR_ip-10-0-145-205.ec2.internal)
    69c992d8-a4cf-429e-81a3-5361209ffe44 (GR_ip-10-0-147-219.ec2.internal)
    7d164271-af9e-4283-b84a-48f2a44851cd (GR_ip-10-0-163-212.ec2.internal)
    111052e3-c395-408b-97b2-8dd0a20a29a5 (GR_ip-10-0-165-9.ec2.internal)
    ed50ce33-df5d-48e8-8862-2df6a59169a0 (GR_ip-10-0-209-170.ec2.internal)
    f44e2a96-8d1e-4a4d-abae-ed8728ac6851 (GR_ip-10-0-242-240.ec2.internal)
    ef3d0057-e557-4b1a-b3c6-fcc3463790b0 (ovn_cluster_router)

    From this output you can see there is router on each node plus an ovn_cluster_router.

  4. Run the following command to show the list of logical switches:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-gt4ms \
    -c northd -- ovn-nbctl ls-list
    Example output
    82808c5c-b3bc-414a-bb59-8fec4b07eb14 (ext_ip-10-0-145-205.ec2.internal)
    3d22444f-0272-4c51-afc6-de9e03db3291 (ext_ip-10-0-147-219.ec2.internal)
    bf73b9df-59ab-4c58-a456-ce8205b34ac5 (ext_ip-10-0-163-212.ec2.internal)
    bee1e8d0-ec87-45eb-b98b-63f9ec213e5e (ext_ip-10-0-165-9.ec2.internal)
    812f08f2-6476-4abf-9a78-635f8516f95e (ext_ip-10-0-209-170.ec2.internal)
    f65e710b-32f9-482b-8eab-8d96a44799c1 (ext_ip-10-0-242-240.ec2.internal)
    84dad700-afb8-4129-86f9-923a1ddeace9 (ip-10-0-145-205.ec2.internal)
    1b7b448b-e36c-4ca3-9f38-4a2cf6814bfd (ip-10-0-147-219.ec2.internal)
    d92d1f56-2606-4f23-8b6a-4396a78951de (ip-10-0-163-212.ec2.internal)
    6864a6b2-de15-4de3-92d8-f95014b6f28f (ip-10-0-165-9.ec2.internal)
    c26bf618-4d7e-4afd-804f-1a2cbc96ec6d (ip-10-0-209-170.ec2.internal)
    ab9a4526-44ed-4f82-ae1c-e20da04947d9 (ip-10-0-242-240.ec2.internal)
    a8588aba-21da-4276-ba0f-9d68e88911f0 (join)

    From this output you can see there is an ext switch for each node plus switches with the node name itself and a join switch.

  5. Run the following command to show the list of load balancers:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-gt4ms \
    -c northd -- ovn-nbctl lb-list
    Example output
    UUID                                    LB                  PROTO      VIP                     IPs
    f0fb50f9-4968-4b55-908c-616bae4db0a2    Service_default/    tcp        172.30.0.1:443          10.0.147.219:6443,10.0.163.212:6443,169.254.169.2:6443
    0dc42012-4f5b-432e-ae01-2cc4bfe81b00    Service_default/    tcp        172.30.0.1:443          10.0.147.219:6443,169.254.169.2:6443,10.0.242.240:6443
    f7fff5d5-5eff-4a40-98b1-3a4ba8f7f69c    Service_default/    tcp        172.30.0.1:443          169.254.169.2:6443,10.0.163.212:6443,10.0.242.240:6443
    12fe57a0-50a4-4a1b-ac10-5f288badee07    Service_default/    tcp        172.30.0.1:443          10.0.147.219:6443,10.0.163.212:6443,10.0.242.240:6443
    3f137fbf-0b78-4875-ba44-fbf89f254cf7    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.23.153:443       10.130.0.14:8443
    174199fe-0562-4141-b410-12094db922a7    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.69.51:50051      10.130.0.84:50051
    5ee2d4bd-c9e2-4d16-a6df-f54cd17c9ac3    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.143.87:9001      10.0.145.205:9001,10.0.147.219:9001,10.0.163.212:9001,10.0.165.9:9001,10.0.209.170:9001,10.0.242.240:9001
    a056ae3d-83f8-45bc-9c80-ef89bce7b162    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.164.74:443       10.0.147.219:6443,10.0.163.212:6443,10.0.242.240:6443
    bac51f3d-9a6f-4f5e-ac02-28fd343a332a    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.0.10:53          10.131.0.6:5353
                                                                tcp        172.30.0.10:9154        10.131.0.6:9154
    48105bbc-51d7-4178-b975-417433f9c20a    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.26.159:2379      10.0.147.219:2379,169.254.169.2:2379,10.0.242.240:2379
                                                                tcp        172.30.26.159:9979      10.0.147.219:9979,169.254.169.2:9979,10.0.242.240:9979
    7de2b8fc-342a-415f-ac13-1a493f4e39c0    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.53.219:443       10.128.0.7:8443
                                                                tcp        172.30.53.219:9192      10.128.0.7:9192
    2cef36bc-d720-4afb-8d95-9350eff1d27a    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.81.66:443        10.128.0.23:8443
    365cb6fb-e15e-45a4-a55b-21868b3cf513    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.96.51:50051      10.130.0.19:50051
    41691cbb-ec55-4cdb-8431-afce679c5e8d    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.98.218:9099      169.254.169.2:9099
    82df10ba-8143-400b-977a-8f5f416a4541    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.26.159:2379      10.0.147.219:2379,10.0.163.212:2379,169.254.169.2:2379
                                                                tcp        172.30.26.159:9979      10.0.147.219:9979,10.0.163.212:9979,169.254.169.2:9979
    debe7f3a-39a8-490e-bc0a-ebbfafdffb16    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.23.244:443       10.128.0.48:8443,10.129.0.27:8443,10.130.0.45:8443
    8a749239-02d9-4dc2-8737-716528e0da7b    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.124.255:8443     10.128.0.14:8443
    880c7c78-c790-403d-a3cb-9f06592717a3    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.0.10:53          10.130.0.20:5353
                                                                tcp        172.30.0.10:9154        10.130.0.20:9154
    d2f39078-6751-4311-a161-815bbaf7f9c7    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.26.159:2379      169.254.169.2:2379,10.0.163.212:2379,10.0.242.240:2379
                                                                tcp        172.30.26.159:9979      169.254.169.2:9979,10.0.163.212:9979,10.0.242.240:9979
    30948278-602b-455c-934a-28e64c46de12    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.157.35:9443      10.130.0.43:9443
    2cc7e376-7c02-4a82-89e8-dfa1e23fb003    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.159.212:17698    10.128.0.48:17698,10.129.0.27:17698,10.130.0.45:17698
    e7d22d35-61c2-40c2-bc30-265cff8ed18d    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.143.87:9001      10.0.145.205:9001,10.0.147.219:9001,10.0.163.212:9001,10.0.165.9:9001,10.0.209.170:9001,169.254.169.2:9001
    75164e75-e0c5-40fb-9636-bfdbf4223a02    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.150.68:1936      10.129.4.8:1936,10.131.0.10:1936
                                                                tcp        172.30.150.68:443       10.129.4.8:443,10.131.0.10:443
                                                                tcp        172.30.150.68:80        10.129.4.8:80,10.131.0.10:80
    7bc4ee74-dccf-47e9-9149-b011f09aff39    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.164.74:443       10.0.147.219:6443,10.0.163.212:6443,169.254.169.2:6443
    0db59e74-1cc6-470c-bf44-57c520e0aa8f    Service_openshif    tcp        10.0.163.212:31460
                                                                tcp        10.0.163.212:32361
    c300e134-018c-49af-9f84-9deb1d0715f8    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.42.244:50051     10.130.0.47:50051
    5e352773-429b-4881-afb3-a13b7ba8b081    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.244.66:443       10.129.0.8:8443,10.130.0.8:8443
    54b82d32-1939-4465-a87d-f26321442a7a    Service_openshif    tcp        172.30.12.9:8443        10.128.0.35:8443

    From this truncated output you can see there are many OVN-Kubernetes load balancers. Load balancers in OVN-Kubernetes are representations of services.

Command line arguments for ovn-nbctl to examine northbound database contents

The following table describes the command line arguments that can be used with ovn-nbctl to examine the contents of the northbound database.

Table 1. Command line arguments to examine northbound database contents
Argument Description

ovn-nbctl show

An overview of the northbound database contents.

ovn-nbctl show <switch_or_router>

Show the details associated with the specified switch or router.

ovn-nbctl lr-list

Show the logical routers.

ovn-nbctl lrp-list <router>

Using the router information from ovn-nbctl lr-list to show the router ports.

ovn-nbctl lr-nat-list <router>

Show network address translation details for the specified router.

ovn-nbctl ls-list

Show the logical switches

ovn-nbctl lsp-list <switch>

Using the switch information from ovn-nbctl ls-list to show the switch port.

ovn-nbctl lsp-get-type <port>

Get the type for the logical port.

ovn-nbctl lb-list

Show the load balancers.

Listing the OVN-Kubernetes southbound database contents

Logic flow rules are stored in the southbound database that is a representation of your infrastructure. The up to date information is present on the OVN Raft leader and this procedure describes how to find the Raft leader and query it to list the OVN southbound database contents.

Prerequisites
  • Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin role.

  • The OpenShift CLI (oc) installed.

Procedure
  1. Find the OVN Raft leader for the southbound database.

    The Raft leader stores the most up to date information.

    1. List the pods by running the following command:

      $ oc get po -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes
      Example output
      NAME                   READY   STATUS    RESTARTS       AGE
      ovnkube-master-7j97q   6/6     Running   2 (134m ago)   135m
      ovnkube-master-gt4ms   6/6     Running   1 (126m ago)   133m
      ovnkube-master-mk6p6   6/6     Running   0              134m
      ovnkube-node-8qvtr     5/5     Running   0              135m
      ovnkube-node-bqztb     5/5     Running   0              117m
      ovnkube-node-fqdc9     5/5     Running   0              135m
      ovnkube-node-tlfwv     5/5     Running   0              135m
      ovnkube-node-wlwkn     5/5     Running   0              128m
    2. Choose one of the master pods at random and run the following command to find the OVN southbound Raft leader:

      $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes ovnkube-master-7j97q \
      -- /usr/bin/ovn-appctl -t /var/run/ovn/ovnsb_db.ctl \
      --timeout=3 cluster/status OVN_Southbound
      Example output
      Defaulted container "northd" out of: northd, nbdb, kube-rbac-proxy, sbdb, ovnkube-master, ovn-dbchecker
      1930
      Name: OVN_Southbound
      Cluster ID: f772 (f77273c0-7986-42dd-bd3c-a9f18e25701f)
      Server ID: 1930 (1930f4b7-314b-406f-9dcb-b81fe2729ae1)
      Address: ssl:10.0.147.219:9644
      Status: cluster member
      Role: follower (1)
      Term: 3
      Leader: 7081 (2)
      Vote: unknown
      
      Election timer: 16000
      Log: [2, 2423]
      Entries not yet committed: 0
      Entries not yet applied: 0
      Connections: ->0000 ->7145 <-7081 <-7145
      Disconnections: 0
      Servers:
          7081 (7081 at ssl:10.0.163.212:9644) last msg 59 ms ago (3)
          1930 (1930 at ssl:10.0.147.219:9644) (self)
          7145 (7145 at ssl:10.0.242.240:9644) last msg 7871735 ms ago
      1 This pod is identified as a follower
      2 The leader is identified as 7081
      3 The 7081 is on IP address 10.0.163.212
    3. Find the ovnkube-master pod running on IP Address 10.0.163.212 using the following command:

      $ oc get po -o wide -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes | grep 10.0.163.212 | grep -v ovnkube-node
      Example output
      ovnkube-master-mk6p6   6/6     Running   0              136m   10.0.163.212   ip-10-0-163-212.ec2.internal   <none>           <none>

      The ovnkube-master-mk6p6 pod runs on IP Address 10.0.163.212.

  2. Run the following command to show all the information stored in the southbound database:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-mk6p6 \
    -c northd -- ovn-sbctl show
    Example output
    Chassis "8ca57b28-9834-45f0-99b0-96486c22e1be"
        hostname: ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Encap geneve
            ip: "10.0.156.16"
            options: {csum="true"}
        Port_Binding k8s-ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding etor-GR_ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding jtor-GR_ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding openshift-ingress-canary_ingress-canary-hsblx
        Port_Binding rtoj-GR_ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding openshift-monitoring_prometheus-adapter-658fc5967-9l46x
        Port_Binding rtoe-GR_ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding openshift-multus_network-metrics-daemon-77nvz
        Port_Binding openshift-ingress_router-default-64fd8c67c7-df598
        Port_Binding openshift-dns_dns-default-ttpcq
        Port_Binding openshift-monitoring_alertmanager-main-0
        Port_Binding openshift-e2e-loki_loki-promtail-g2pbh
        Port_Binding openshift-network-diagnostics_network-check-target-m6tn4
        Port_Binding openshift-monitoring_thanos-querier-75b5cf8dcb-qf8qj
        Port_Binding cr-rtos-ip-10-0-156-16.ec2.internal
        Port_Binding openshift-image-registry_image-registry-7b7bc44566-mp9b8

    This detailed output shows the chassis and the ports that are attached to the chassis which in this case are all of the router ports and anything that runs like host networking. Any pods communicate out to the wider network using source network address translation (SNAT). Their IP address is translated into the IP address of the node that the pod is running on and then sent out into the network.

    In addition to the chassis information the southbound database has all the logic flows and those logic flows are then sent to the ovn-controller running on each of the nodes. The ovn-controller translates the logic flows into open flow rules and ultimately programs OpenvSwitch so that your pods can then follow open flow rules and make it out of the network.

    Run the following command to display the options available with the command ovn-sbctl:

    $ oc exec -n openshift-ovn-kubernetes -it ovnkube-master-mk6p6 \
    -c northd -- ovn-sbctl --help

Command line arguments for ovn-sbctl to examine southbound database contents

The following table describes the command line arguments that can be used with ovn-sbctl to examine the contents of the southbound database.

Table 2. Command line arguments to examine southbound database contents
Argument Description

ovn-sbctl show

Overview of the southbound database contents.

ovn-sbctl list Port_Binding <port>

List the contents of southbound database for a the specified port .

ovn-sbctl dump-flows

List the logical flows.

OVN-Kubernetes logical architecture

OVN is a network virtualization solution. It creates logical switches and routers. These switches and routers are interconnected to create any network topologies. When you run ovnkube-trace with the log level set to 2 or 5 the OVN-Kubernetes logical components are exposed. The following diagram shows how the routers and switches are connected in OKD.

OVN-Kubernetes logical architecture
Figure 2. OVN-Kubernetes router and switch components

The key components involved in packet processing are:

Gateway routers

Gateway routers sometimes called L3 gateway routers, are typically used between the distributed routers and the physical network. Gateway routers including their logical patch ports are bound to a physical location (not distributed), or chassis. The patch ports on this router are known as l3gateway ports in the ovn-southbound database (ovn-sbdb).

Distributed logical routers

Distributed logical routers and the logical switches behind them, to which virtual machines and containers attach, effectively reside on each hypervisor.

Join local switch

Join local switches are used to connect the distributed router and gateway routers. It reduces the number of IP addresses needed on the distributed router.

Logical switches with patch ports

Logical switches with patch ports are used to virtualize the network stack. They connect remote logical ports through tunnels.

Logical switches with localnet ports

Logical switches with localnet ports are used to connect OVN to the physical network. They connect remote logical ports by bridging the packets to directly connected physical L2 segments using localnet ports.

Patch ports

Patch ports represent connectivity between logical switches and logical routers and between peer logical routers. A single connection has a pair of patch ports at each such point of connectivity, one on each side.

l3gateway ports

l3gateway ports are the port binding entries in the ovn-sbdb for logical patch ports used in the gateway routers. They are called l3gateway ports rather than patch ports just to portray the fact that these ports are bound to a chassis just like the gateway router itself.

localnet ports

localnet ports are present on the bridged logical switches that allows a connection to a locally accessible network from each ovn-controller instance. This helps model the direct connectivity to the physical network from the logical switches. A logical switch can only have a single localnet port attached to it.

Installing network-tools on local host

Install network-tools on your local host to make a collection of tools available for debugging OKD cluster network issues.

Procedure
  1. Clone the network-tools repository onto your workstation with the following command:

    $ git clone git@github.com:openshift/network-tools.git
  2. Change into the directory for the repository you just cloned:

    $ cd network-tools
  3. Optional: List all available commands:

    $ ./debug-scripts/network-tools -h

Running network-tools

Get information about the logical switches and routers by running network-tools.

Prerequisites
  • You installed the OpenShift CLI (oc).

  • You are logged in to the cluster as a user with cluster-admin privileges.

  • You have installed network-tools on local host.

Procedure
  1. List the routers by running the following command:

    $ ./debug-scripts/network-tools ovn-db-run-command ovn-nbctl lr-list
    Example output
    Leader pod is ovnkube-master-vslqm
    5351ddd1-f181-4e77-afc6-b48b0a9df953 (GR_helix13.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com)
    ccf9349e-1948-4df8-954e-39fb0c2d4d06 (GR_helix14.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com)
    e426b918-75a8-4220-9e76-20b7758f92b7 (GR_hlxcl7-master-0.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com)
    dded77c8-0cc3-4b99-8420-56cd2ae6a840 (GR_hlxcl7-master-1.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com)
    4f6747e6-e7ba-4e0c-8dcd-94c8efa51798 (GR_hlxcl7-master-2.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com)
    52232654-336e-4952-98b9-0b8601e370b4 (ovn_cluster_router)
  2. List the localnet ports by running the following command:

    $ ./debug-scripts/network-tools ovn-db-run-command \
    ovn-sbctl find Port_Binding type=localnet
    Example output
    Leader pod is ovnkube-master-vslqm
    _uuid               : 3de79191-cca8-4c28-be5a-a228f0f9ebfc
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : []
    datapath            : 3f1a4928-7ff5-471f-9092-fe5f5c67d15c
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : br-ex_helix13.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com
    mac                 : [unknown]
    nat_addresses       : []
    options             : {network_name=physnet}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 2
    type                : localnet
    up                  : false
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    _uuid               : dbe21daf-9594-4849-b8f0-5efbfa09a455
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : []
    datapath            : db2a6067-fe7c-4d11-95a7-ff2321329e11
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : br-ex_hlxcl7-master-2.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com
    mac                 : [unknown]
    nat_addresses       : []
    options             : {network_name=physnet}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 2
    type                : localnet
    up                  : false
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    [...]
  3. List the l3gateway ports by running the following command:

    $ ./debug-scripts/network-tools ovn-db-run-command \
    ovn-sbctl find Port_Binding type=l3gateway
    Example output
    Leader pod is ovnkube-master-vslqm
    _uuid               : 9314dc80-39e1-4af7-9cc0-ae8a9708ed59
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : 336a923d-99e8-4e71-89a6-12564fde5760
    datapath            : db2a6067-fe7c-4d11-95a7-ff2321329e11
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : etor-GR_hlxcl7-master-2.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com
    mac                 : ["52:54:00:3e:95:d3"]
    nat_addresses       : ["52:54:00:3e:95:d3 10.46.56.77"]
    options             : {l3gateway-chassis="7eb1f1c3-87c2-4f68-8e89-60f5ca810971", peer=rtoe-GR_hlxcl7-master-2.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 1
    type                : l3gateway
    up                  : true
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    _uuid               : ad7eb303-b411-4e9f-8d36-d07f1f268e27
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : f41453b8-29c5-4f39-b86b-e82cf344bce4
    datapath            : 082e7a60-d9c7-464b-b6ec-117d3426645a
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : etor-GR_helix14.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com
    mac                 : ["34:48:ed:f3:e2:2c"]
    nat_addresses       : ["34:48:ed:f3:e2:2c 10.46.56.14"]
    options             : {l3gateway-chassis="2e8abe3a-cb94-4593-9037-f5f9596325e2", peer=rtoe-GR_helix14.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 1
    type                : l3gateway
    up                  : true
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    [...]
  4. List the patch ports by running the following command:

    $ ./debug-scripts/network-tools ovn-db-run-command \
    ovn-sbctl find Port_Binding type=patch
    Example output
    Leader pod is ovnkube-master-vslqm
    _uuid               : c48b1380-ff26-4965-a644-6bd5b5946c61
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : []
    datapath            : 72734d65-fae1-4bd9-a1ee-1bf4e085a060
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : jtor-ovn_cluster_router
    mac                 : [router]
    nat_addresses       : []
    options             : {peer=rtoj-ovn_cluster_router}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 4
    type                : patch
    up                  : false
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    _uuid               : 5df51302-f3cd-415b-a059-ac24389938f7
    additional_chassis  : []
    additional_encap    : []
    chassis             : []
    datapath            : 0551c90f-e891-4909-8e9e-acc7909e06d0
    encap               : []
    external_ids        : {}
    gateway_chassis     : []
    ha_chassis_group    : []
    logical_port        : rtos-hlxcl7-master-1.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com
    mac                 : ["0a:58:0a:82:00:01 10.130.0.1/23"]
    nat_addresses       : []
    options             : {chassis-redirect-port=cr-rtos-hlxcl7-master-1.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com, peer=stor-hlxcl7-master-1.hlxcl7.lab.eng.tlv2.redhat.com}
    parent_port         : []
    port_security       : []
    requested_additional_chassis: []
    requested_chassis   : []
    tag                 : []
    tunnel_key          : 4
    type                : patch
    up                  : false
    virtual_parent      : []
    
    [...]