Tip
This is the documentation for the 24.06 version. Looking for the documentation of the latest version? Have a look here.
Networking Namespaces¶
The host OS and TNSR use separate network namespaces to isolate their networking
functions, as covered in TNSR Architecture. These are the dataplane
namespace and the host
namespace. The dataplane
namespace is for the
networking environment managed by TNSR, and the host
namespace is for the
networking environment managed by the host operating system. These two
namespaces are isolated from one another and cannot communicate directly without
manually creating a link or routing between them.
TNSR Service Namespaces¶
Services on TNSR can run in the host
namespace, the dataplane
namespace,
or both, depending on the nature of the service.
Network-related services such as dynamic routing daemons (BGP, OSPF, OSPF6,
RIP), Unbound, DHCP Server, and IPsec run only in the dataplane
namespace.
Management-oriented services such as SSH, the RESTCONF API, and SNMP run in the
host
namespace by default, but these services are capable of running in both
namespaces at the same time using separate instances.
The NTP daemon can run in either namespace, but cannot be active in both at once.
See also
See Service Control for information on controlling services in multiple namespaces, and Default Namespaces for a full list of default namespaces used by TNSR services.
Namespaces in TNSR CLI Commands¶
TNSR commands which can operate in multiple namespaces will support a namespace
parameter (Either host
or dataplane
) prefixed before the command. To see
a list of these commands, enter the namespace name followed by ?
from basic
mode:
tnsr# host ?
ping Send ICMP echo
shell Invoke shell or run a command
traceroute Determine path to destination
tnsr# dataplane ?
ping Send ICMP echo
shell Invoke shell or run a command
traceroute Determine path to destination
The remainder of the command parameters are the same.
Note
The ping
and traceroute
commands default to the dataplane
namespace if the parameter is omitted.
Configuration commands for items which support multiple namespaces are called out throughout the documentation where appropriate. Typically these will have either a namespace parameter or command, depending on the service and mode.
Namespaces in Shell Commands¶
When operating in a shell on the TNSR device, commands can be run in the current
namespace or another namespace. Outside of TNSR, the shell defaults to
the host
namespace.
From the TNSR CLI, a shell must be started in a specific namespace as mentioned
previously in Namespaces in TNSR CLI Commands. For example, using dataplane shell
starts a shell where all commands are executed in the dataplane
namespace,
and host shell
uses the host
namespace.
When using a host
namespace shell, specific commands may be executed in the
dataplane
namespace in two ways.
sudo ip netns exec dataplane <command>
:This method requires elevated privileges using
sudo
or to be run from a shell asroot
.dp-exec <command>
:TNSR includes a convenience launcher program,
dp-exec
, which may be run by any user and executes the given command in the dataplane namespace as the current user.
When using a dataplane
namespace shell, commands may be executed in the
host
namespace by using sudo nsenter -t 1 -n -- <command>
. This requires
elevated privileges using sudo
or to be run from a shell as root
.