2

I am developing a Python script that tests one networking application. As part of the test, it needs to move networking configuration (IP address, routes ...) from one interface (physical interface) to another interface (bridge), and after the test is done, restore the system back to its original state. What is the most elegant approach to accomplish this in Python?

Some ideas I have thought about:

  1. To not unassign the IP address from physical interface during the test, so that routes are not lost. But this would mean that the same IP address would coexist on the bridge during the test. Would this be a problem on some particular Linux Kernels? Although, it seems to work just fine on my system...
  2. Assign the IP address to bridge and unassign from physical interface. Easy to implement in python, because this requires to do simple ifconfig calls and parsing. But if the default route was through the physical interface, then it would disappear at the same time, when I unassigned the IP address from physical interface.
  3. Parse the ip route ls output and move the routes together with the IP config. This seems the only reasonable approach, but would require quite a lot of coding.

  4. Maybe there is something more elegant? Like iptables-save eth0>eth0_conf, iptables-restore eth0_conf? Any other suggestions?

This test tool must be portable, and be able to run on different Linux Kernels.

1 Answer 1

1

I would suggest the following approach:

  1. Ensure the bridge interface is down
  2. Configure the bridge interface
  3. Execute ifconfig eth0 down && ifconfig br0 up

And to restore:

  1. Execute ifconfig br0 down && ifconfig eth0 up

Now for the routes it depends on what kind of routes you have. If you defined static routes with explicit interfaces, your only choice seems to be parsing ip route ls and translating them to the new interface.

You can also toy around with the order of the up & down commands as well as multiple routing tables:

ip route add <whatever> table 2
ip rule add from br0 table 2

But this can get tricky, so my suggestion would be to stick to the simple solution, even if it includes some more coding.

Here is another example from xend's network-bridge script to achieve this:

# Usage: transfer_addrs src dst
# Copy all IP addresses (including aliases) from device $src to device $dst.
transfer_addrs () {
    local src=$1
    local dst=$2
    # Don't bother if $dst already has IP addresses.
    if ip addr show dev ${dst} | egrep -q '^ *inet ' ; then
        return
    fi
    # Address lines start with 'inet' and have the device in them.
    # Replace 'inet' with 'ip addr add' and change the device name $src
    # to 'dev $src'.
    ip addr show dev ${src} | egrep '^ *inet ' | sed -e "
s/inet/ip addr add/
s@\([0-9]\+\.[0-9]\+\.[0-9]\+\.[0-9]\+/[0-9]\+\)@\1@
s/${src}/dev ${dst}/
" | sh -e
    # Remove automatic routes on destination device
    ip route list | sed -ne "
/dev ${dst}\( \|$\)/ {
  s/^/ip route del /
  p
}" | sh -e
}

# Usage: transfer_routes src dst
# Get all IP routes to device $src, delete them, and
# add the same routes to device $dst.
# The original routes have to be deleted, otherwise adding them
# for $dst fails (duplicate routes).
transfer_routes () {
    local src=$1
    local dst=$2
    # List all routes and grep the ones with $src in.
    # Stick 'ip route del' on the front to delete.
    # Change $src to $dst and use 'ip route add' to add.
    ip route list | sed -ne "
/dev ${src}\( \|$\)/ {
  h
  s/^/ip route del /
  P
  g
  s/${src}/${dst}/
  s/^/ip route add /
  P
  d
}" | sh -e
}
8
  • I like your approach of bringing up/down the interface to restore routes. I guess that this might might work for me. Now the only problem is - How to move the routes from eth0->br0 (I believe both interfaces should be up during the test). Apr 17, 2012 at 17:09
  • @AnsisAtteka can you elaborate a bit more on your setup? What interfaces does br0 contain? Are eth0 and br0 on the same physical network? What are you trying to achieve?
    – mensi
    Apr 17, 2012 at 17:31
  • Having two physical interfaces in the same subnet can be a pain, at least in my experience. I managed to get around them by using seperate routing tables for the interfaces
    – mensi
    Apr 17, 2012 at 17:32
  • br0 is bridge (Software Defined Switch) where I virtually plug in the eth0 interface (e.g. "ovs-vsctl add-port bre0 eth0" or "brctl addif br0 eth0" commands). Apr 17, 2012 at 17:36
  • Also I see some potential problems with DHCP, if I would bring down/up the interface to restore the ip+route configuration. Although I do not expect to encounter them in real world, because I believe that in most setups the DHCP server would assign the same IP address after I bring the interface up again. Apr 17, 2012 at 17:41

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.