38. RIB Library
The Routing Information Base (RIB) library provides a data store for routing information. This library is intended for use in control or management plane applications. There are more suitable libraries for use in data plane applications such as LPM Library or FIB Library.
38.1. Implementation details
RIB implements a key-value store for routing information.
Routing information is represented by a prefix (key) and a next hop ID (value).
The prefix type depends on the address family. IPv4 addresses are represented by
uint32_t
values. IPv6 addresses are represented as uint8_t[16]
values.
Next hop IDs are represented by uint64_t
values.
Note
The API and implementation are very similar for IPv4 rte_rib
API and IPv6 rte_rib6
API, therefore only the rte_rib
API will be discussed here.
Everything within this document except for the size of the prefixes is applicable to the
rte_rib6
API.
Internally RIB is represented as a binary tree as shown in Fig. 38.2:
The binary tree consists of two types of nodes:
- Actual Routes.
- Intermediate Nodes which are used internally to preserve the binary tree structure.
38.2. RIB API Overview
RIB has two configuration parameters:
- The maximum number of nodes.
- The size of the extension block within each node. This space is used to store additional user defined data.
The main methods within the rte_rib
API are:
rte_rib_insert()
: Add new routes.rte_rib_remove()
: Delete an existing route.rte_rib_lookup()
: Lookup an IP in the structure using longest match.rte_rib_lookup_exact()
: Lookup an IP in the structure using exact match.rte_rib_lookup_parent()
: Find a parent prefix within the structure.rte_rib_get_nxt()
: Traverse a subtree within the structure.
Given a RIB structure with the routes depicted in Fig. 38.2, here are several usage examples:
- The best route for
10.0.0.1
can be found by calling:
struct rte_rib_node *route = rte_rib_lookup(rib, RTE_IPV4(10,0,0,1));
This returns an rte_rib_node
pointing to the 10.0.0.0/29
prefix.
- To find an exact match route:
struct rte_rib_node *route = rte_rib_lookup_exact(rib, RTE_IPV4(10,0,0,128), 25);
This returns an rte_rib_node
pointing to the 10.0.0.128/25
prefix.
struct rte_rib_node *route = rte_rib_lookup_exact(rib, RTE_IPV4(10,0,0,0), 24);
This returns NULL
as no exact match can be found.
- To retrieve a group of routes under the common prefix
10.0.0.0/24
(yellow triangle in Fig. 38.2):
struct rte_rib_node *route = NULL;
do {
route = rte_rib_get_nxt(rib, RTE_IPV4(10,0,0,0), 24, route, RTE_RIB_GET_NXT_ALL);
} while (route != NULL)
This returns 3 rte_rib_node
nodes pointing to 10.0.0.0/29
, 10.0.0.160/27
and 10.0.0.128/25
.
38.3. Extensions usage example
Extensions can be used for a wide range of tasks.
By default, an rte_rib_node
node contains only crucial information such as the prefix and
next hop ID, but it doesn’t contain protocol specific information such as
metrics, administrative distance and other routing protocol information.
These examples are application specific data and the user can decide what to keep
and how it is stored within the extension memory region in each rte_rib_node
.
It is possible to implement a prefix independent convergence using the RIB extension feature. If the routing daemon can provide a feasible next hop ID along with a best (active) next hop ID, it is possible to react to a neighbour failing relatively fast. Consider a RIB with a number of routes with different next hops (A and B) as shown in Fig. 38.3. Every route can have a feasible next hop provided by the routing daemon.
In case of a next hop failure, we need to replace an active failed next hop with a
feasible next hop for every corresponding route without waiting for the routing daemon
recalculation process to complete.
To achieve this we can link all existing routes with the same active next hop in a linked list,
saving the feasible next hop ID and a pointer inside the extension space of each rte_rib_node
.
struct my_route_ext {
struct rte_rib_node *next;
uint64_t feasible_nh;
};
struct rte_rib_conf conf;
conf.ext_sz = sizeof(struct my_route_ext);
rib = rte_rib_create("test", 0, &conf);
...
/* routing daemon task */
struct rte_rib_node *route = rte_rib_insert(rib, RTE_IPV4(192,0,2,0), 24);
rte_rib_set_nh(route, active_nh_from_rd);
struct my_route_ext *ext = rte_rib_get_ext(route);
ext->feasible_nh = feasible_nh_from_rd;
list_insert(nh_table[active_nh_from_rd].list_head, route);
...
/* dataplane monitoring thread */
/* nexthop id fail_nh fails */
route = NULL;
do {
route = get_next(nh_table[fail_nh].list_head, route);
uint32_t ip;
uint8_t depth;
rte_rib_get_ip(route, &ip);
rte_rib_get_depth(route, &depth);
ext = rte_rib_get_ext(route);
uint64_t new_nh = ext->feasible_nh;
/* do update to the dataplane, for example to the fib */
rte_fib_add(fib, ip, depth, new_nh);
/* update nexthop if necessary */
rte_rib_set_nh(route, new_nh);
} while (route != NULL);