On 05/03/2013 03:24 PM, Michael H. Warfield wrote:
On Wed, 2013-05-01 at 17:52 -0400, Michael Mol wrote:
[snip]
Curiously, at least one guy has reported success:
http://sysadminsjourney.com/content/2009/04/15/doing-simple-source-policy-ro...
Now, the only thing different between his setup and mine (apart from my using ethN:1 instead of ethN, as all three routers hang off the same ethernet segment) is that were his guide says:
echo "default table CorpNet via 10.0.0.1" > /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route-eth1
Ok... Wow... If that's the only difference between his description and what you did, you certainly left A LOT out. He's using both rules and tables neither of which you made any mention of in your original post.
I tried it both ways, honestly. I've been blasted (postfix) or ignored (samba) more than a few times in other environments for providing too much information, so I didn't think it wise doing a writeup of both approaches. Can't win. Can't even break even...
At this point, having read that article, I will eat my earlier words (not the first time and certainly won't be the last time). I guess you can now do this using the standard files, it's just that I haven't done it in so long that you couldn't do it back then (my excuse and I'm sticking with it). Following his description, I could easily reproduce my old setups using ifcfg-ethN, rule-ethN, and route-ethN. I'm impressed. I don't need it any more but - nice... That makes it a lot easier than what I had to figure out.
I was going to ask you how you tied in your manual script...
Ok... So, I'm assuming you properly set up the rules-ethN file as well (and the proper entry in /etc/iproute2/rt_tables? You made no mention of that in your OP. That's a very crucial bit there.
So, this is interesting. I'd read that you could use a command like
ip route add 1.2.3.4/32 dev eth0 via 10.1.0.1 src 10.1.0.12 from 4.3.2.1/24
with the "from 8.3.2.1/24" portion as part of the IP command, but that using tables was usually done because it was easier.
What's bizarre is that I could have sworn I had this type of rule even working. But when I run it on my laptop, and follow up with "ip rule show", the "from X" clause is gone.
This calls into question everything else I was convinced I had working, too. But I do know my 'table CorpNet' approach worked when applied manually, but not when I tried converting it to route-ethN. I won't be able to try it again for a while, either, but I've got a hunch why it didn't work.
Also, in your OP you mentioned this:
On Wed, 2013-05-01 at 16:05 -0400, Michael Mol wrote:
I've created a route-eth0:1 file that looks roughly like this:
10.0.0.1 dev eth0:1 \ src 10.0.0.2 \ from 10.0.0.0/29
default via 10.0.0.1 dev eth0:1 \ src 10.0.0.2 \ from 10.0.0.0/29
You're not showing table numbers or names there so it's not clear if you are using different route tables or not (which you MUST do and associate them with appropriate match rules).
Yup. See above where I discover "from a.b.c.d" isn't a valid clause to attach to the ip command. As finicky as that command is, I'm disappointed it didn't throw an error.
According to "man ip-route" on my router the "from" stanza is not valid in a "route add" (route-ethN files) and in a "route ls" is only applicable to "cloned" routes. What you wrote can not literally work, by my reading of the "ip" man pages.
Yup. I just re-read through to double check, when my manual invocation on my laptop didn't work.
You get the source matching from the "rules" not the "routes". You haven't mentioned (or acknowledged) anything about them but they are crucial (as are the use of multiple tables). What did you set up for your match rules? No match rules, then only the default and local tables are going to be used. Your "from" specifier goes in your rules, not your routes.
I hear you. I just wish I'd documented my first approach (using tables) better; I'm sure it was a silly error, and I'm getting more sure it was. I'd rather have had someone thump me over the head and point out a simple error than spend three days arguing over whether or not source-specific routing makes sense.
When I look at my route tables, I see src associated with an appropriate route. I don't see any "from" matches because they are not in the route tables they're in the rules. You also have to look at "ip rules ls". That's where your "from" is going to show up and then tell you what table it's going to use as its routing table.
My first pass at making my code platform-idomatic effectively was:
echo "default via 10.0.0.1 table CorpNet" > /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route-eth1
(the "table $table" clause in mine was at the end of the line, following the pattern I'd read in LARTC, rather than near the beginning of the line.)
Ok, so you are using the table named "CorpNet" which you must have added to /etc/iproute2/rt_tables in advance (his step 1) otherwise you can only use table numbers. The position of the "table CorpNet" should make no difference. Have you added a corresponding match rule (his step 3)? He defines "CorpNet" as table 200.
It looks like, if you did everything he describes in that article, it should work. I've done this manually and what he describes there exactly matches what I would expect to work. You really haven't given us the complete picture of what you did (or if you did, you left out a couple of steps). Obfuscate the addresses and names if you must but you need to be clearer on the contents of all the configuration files.
/etc/iproute2/rt_tables /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/route-eth0 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/rule-eth0
I'm thinking my problem must have been in the rule file. If I had to guess, I didn't add the file, but was instead counting on the rule I'd put in manually to be sufficient to pick it up. I imagine restarting the interface flushed the rule list.
I'm also not real sure how this works with additional addresses like eth0:N. Not sure if you need these in the parent device or the alias device. Looks like putting under the alias interface should be fine.
I'm not fond of the alias devices, but you might call it part of the "coding style" of this network.
Regards, Mike
Thank you for the responses. Once I get this working, I'll certainly report back. But I'm going to guess it might be at least a few weeks before I can poke it again. Things need to settle down, first.