xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/lagg.4 (revision 1669d8afc64812c8d2d1d147ae1fd42ff441e1b1)
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3.\" Copyright (c) 2005, 2006 Reyk Floeter <reyk@openbsd.org>
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17.\" $FreeBSD$
18.\"
19.Dd April 17, 2007
20.Dt LAGG 4
21.Os
22.Sh NAME
23.Nm lagg
24.Nd link aggregation and link failover interface
25.Sh SYNOPSIS
26To compile this driver into the kernel,
27place the following line in your
28kernel configuration file:
29.Bd -ragged -offset indent
30.Cd "device lagg"
31.Ed
32.Pp
33Alternatively, to load the driver as a
34module at boot time, place the following line in
35.Xr loader.conf 5 :
36.Bd -literal -offset indent
37if_lagg_load="YES"
38.Ed
39.Sh DESCRIPTION
40The
41.Nm
42interface allows aggregation of multiple network interfaces as one virtual
43.Nm
44interface for the purpose of providing fault-tolerance and high-speed links.
45.Pp
46A
47.Nm
48interface can be created using the
49.Ic ifconfig lagg Ns Ar N Ic create
50command.
51It can use different link aggregation protocols specified
52using the
53.Ic laggproto Ar proto
54option.
55Child interfaces can be added using the
56.Ic laggport Ar child-iface
57option and removed using the
58.Ic -laggport Ar child-iface
59option.
60.Pp
61The driver currently supports the aggregation protocols
62.Ic failover
63(the default),
64.Ic fec ,
65.Ic lacp ,
66.Ic loadbalance ,
67.Ic roundrobin ,
68and
69.Ic none .
70The protocols determine which ports are used for outgoing traffic
71and whether a specific port accepts incoming traffic.
72The interface link state is used to validate if the port is active or
73not.
74.Bl -tag -width loadbalance
75.It Ic failover
76Sends and receives traffic only through the master port.
77If the master port becomes unavailable,
78the next active port is used.
79The first interface added is the master port;
80any interfaces added after that are used as failover devices.
81.It Ic fec
82Supports Cisco EtherChannel.
83This is a static setup and does not negotiate aggregation with the peer or
84exchange frames to monitor the link.
85.It Ic lacp
86Supports the IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) and the
87Marker Protocol.
88LACP will negotiate a set of aggregable links with the peer in to one or more
89Link Aggregated Groups.
90Each LAG is composed of ports of the same speed, set to full-duplex operation.
91The traffic will be balanced across the ports in the LAG with the greatest
92total speed, in most cases there will only be one LAG which contains all ports.
93In the event of changes in physical connectivity, Link Aggregation will quickly
94converge to a new configuration.
95.It Ic loadbalance
96Balances outgoing traffic across the active ports based on hashed
97protocol header information and accepts incoming traffic from
98any active port.
99This is a static setup and does not negotiate aggregation with the peer or
100exchange frames to monitor the link.
101The hash includes the Ethernet source and destination address, and, if
102available, the VLAN tag, and the IP source and destination address.
103.It Ic roundrobin
104Distributes outgoing traffic using a round-robin scheduler
105through all active ports and accepts incoming traffic from
106any active port.
107.It Ic none
108This protocol is intended to do nothing: it disables any traffic without
109disabling the
110.Nm
111interface itself.
112.El
113.Pp
114Each
115.Nm
116interface is created at runtime using interface cloning.
117This is
118most easily done with the
119.Xr ifconfig 8
120.Cm create
121command or using the
122.Va cloned_interfaces
123variable in
124.Xr rc.conf 5 .
125.Pp
126The MTU of the first interface to be added is used as the lagg MTU.
127All additional interfaces are required to have exactly the same value.
128.Sh EXAMPLES
129Create a 802.3ad link aggregation using LACP with two
130.Xr bge 4
131Gigabit Ethernet interfaces:
132.Bd -literal -offset indent
133# ifconfig bge0 up
134# ifconfig bge1 up
135# ifconfig lagg0 laggproto lacp laggport bge0 laggport bge1 \e
136	192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0
137.Ed
138.Pp
139The following example uses an active failover interface to set up roaming
140between wired and wireless networks using two network devices.
141Whenever the wired master interface is unplugged, the wireless failover
142device will be used:
143.Bd -literal -offset indent
144# ifconfig em0 up
145# ifconfig ath0 nwid my_net up
146# ifconfig lagg0 laggproto failover laggport em0 laggport ath0 \e
147	192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0
148.Ed
149.Sh SEE ALSO
150.Xr ng_fec 4 ,
151.Xr ng_one2many 4 ,
152.Xr ifconfig 8
153.Sh HISTORY
154The
155.Nm
156device first appeared in
157.Fx 6.3 .
158.Sh AUTHORS
159.An -nosplit
160The
161.Nm
162driver was written under the name
163.Nm trunk
164by
165.An Reyk Floeter Aq reyk@openbsd.org .
166The LACP implementation was written by
167.An YAMAMOTO Takashi
168for
169.Nx .
170.Sh BUGS
171There is no way to configure LACP administrative variables, including system
172and port priorities.
173The current implementation always performs active-mode LACP and uses 0x8000 as
174system and port priorities.
175.Pp
176WPA security does not currently work correctly with a wireless interface added
177to the lagg port.
178