Bridging between Network Segments with a Logical Router
US-2015103839-A1 · Apr 16, 2015 · US
US10511458B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10511458-B2 |
| Application number | US-201414503168-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Sep 30, 2014 |
| Priority date | Sep 30, 2014 |
| Publication date | Dec 17, 2019 |
| Grant date | Dec 17, 2019 |
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Official abstract text for this publication.
Virtualization software that includes a VDRB (virtual distributed router/bridge) module for performing L3 routing and/or bridging operations is provided. At least some of the VDRBs are configured as VDBs (virtual distributed bridge) for performing bridging operations between different network segments in a distributed manner. The bridging tasks of a network are partitioned among several VDBs of the network based on MAC addresses. MAC addresses of VMs or other types of network nodes belonging to an overlay logical network are partitioned into several shards, each shard of MAC addresses assigned to a VDB in the network. Each VDB assigned a shard of MAC addresses performs bridging when it receives a packet bearing a MAC address belonging to its assigned shard. A VDB does not perform bridging on packets that do not have MAC address that falls within the VDB's shard of MAC addresses.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A method for identifying destination tunnel endpoints for outgoing packets, the method comprising: receiving a first packet from a distributed bridging module executing at a same host machine as a source tunnel endpoint in an overlay logical network, the first packet comprising a tunnel address of the source tunnel endpoint, a source media access control (MAC) address and a destination MAC address; associating the destination MAC address with the tunnel address in a bridge identification table as a MAC address assigned to the distributed bridging module for bridging; and using the bridge identification table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when subsequently transmitting a second packet that requires bridging and that has a particular source MAC address that (i) is the same as the destination MAC address of the first packet and (ii) is associated with the destination tunnel endpoint in the bridge identification table. 2. The method of claim 1 , wherein the source tunnel endpoint is a first source tunnel endpoint, the tunnel address is a first tunnel address, the source MAC address is a first source MAC address, and the destination MAC address is a first destination MAC address, the method further comprising: receiving a third packet from a routing module executing at a same host machine as a second source tunnel endpoint in the overlay logical network, the third packet comprising a second tunnel address of the second source tunnel endpoint, a second source media access control (MAC) address and a second destination MAC address; associating the second source MAC address with the second source tunnel address in a machine-identification table as a MAC address available at the second source tunnel; and using the machine identification table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when subsequently transmitting a fourth packet that does not require bridging and that is destined to the second source MAC address. 3. The method of claim 1 , wherein the destination endpoint is operating a distributed bridge between the overlay logical network and a L2 network. 4. The method of claim 1 , wherein associating the destination MAC address of the first packet with the tunnel address in the bridge identification table occurs when a source MAC address of the first packet does not belong to the overlay logical network. 5. The method of claim 1 , wherein associating the destination MAC address of the first packet with the tunnel address in the bridge identification table occurs when the first packet comprises a flag bit indicating that the first packet has been bridged. 6. The method of claim 1 further comprising recording the source MAC address of the first packet as a MAC address that requires bridging. 7. A computer comprising: a set of processing units; and a non-transitory machine readable medium storing virtualization software for hosting a plurality of data compute nodes (DCNs) and for serving as a tunnel endpoint in an overlay logical network, wherein the virtualization software comprises sets of instruction for: receiving a first packet from a source tunnel endpoint in the overlay logical network, the packet comprising a tunnel address of the source tunnel endpoint, a source media access control (MAC) address and a destination MAC address; associating the source MAC address with the tunnel address in a machine-identification first table when the first packet is not a bridged packet; associating the destination MAC address with the tunnel address in a bridge-identification second table when the first packet is a bridged packet; and to transmit a second packet from a DCN executing on the computer, using the first table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when the second packet does not require bridging and using the second table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when the second packet (i) requires bridging and (ii) originates from a MAC address stored in the second table. 8. The computer of claim 7 , wherein the second packet requires bridging when the source MAC address of the second packet is in the overlay logical network but the destination MAC address of the second packet is not in the overlay logical network. 9. The computer of claim 7 , wherein the destination tunnel endpoint of the packet that requires bridging is operating a distributed bridge between the overlay logical network and a L2 network. 10. The computer of claim 7 , wherein the virtualization software further comprises a set of instructions for identifying the first packet as a bridged packet when a source MAC address of the first packet does not belong to the overlay logical network. 11. The computer of claim 7 , wherein the virtualization software further comprises a set of instructions for identifying the first packet as a bridged packet when the first packet comprises a flag bit indicating that the first packet has been bridged. 12. The computer of claim 7 , wherein the virtualization further comprises a set of instructions for recording the source MAC address of the first packet as a MAC address that requires bridging when the first packet is a bridged packet. 13. A non-transitory machine readable medium storing a program for execution by at least one processing unit, the program comprising sets of instructions for: receiving a first packet from a distributed bridging module executing at a same host machine as a source tunnel endpoint in an overlay logical network, the first packet comprising a tunnel address of the source tunnel endpoint, a source media access control (MAC) address and a destination MAC address; associating the destination MAC address with the tunnel address in a bridge identification table as a MAC address assigned to the distributed bridging module for bridging; and using the bridge identification table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when subsequently transmitting a second packet that requires bridging and has a particular source MAC address that (i) is the same as the destination MAC address of the first packet and (ii) is associated with the destination tunnel endpoint in the bridge identification table. 14. The non-transitory machine readable medium of claim 13 , wherein the source tunnel endpoint is a first source tunnel endpoint, the tunnel address is a first tunnel address, the source MAC address is a first source MAC address, and the destination MAC address is a first destination MAC address, the method further comprising: receiving a third packet from a routing module executing at a same host machine as a second source tunnel endpoint in the overlay logical network, the third packet comprising a second tunnel address of the second source tunnel endpoint, a second source media access control (MAC) address and a second destination MAC address; associating the second source MAC address with the second source tunnel address in a machine-identification table as a MAC address available at the second source tunnel; and using the machine identification table to identify a destination tunnel endpoint when subsequently transmitting a fourth packet that does not require bridging and that is destined to the second source MAC address. 15. The non-transitory machine readable medium of claim 13 , wherein the destination endpoint is operating a distributed bridge between the overlay logical network and a L2 network. 16. The non-transitory machine readable medium of claim 13 , wherein the set of instructions for associating the destination MAC address of the first packet with the tunnel address in the bridge identification table is executed when a source
Interconnection of networks using encapsulation techniques, e.g. tunneling · CPC title
Single bridge functionality, e.g. connection of two networks over a single bridge · CPC title
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