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Renato Westphal edited this page Aug 10, 2018 · 3 revisions

Table of Contents

Introduction

All FRR daemons have built-in support for the CLI, which can be accessed either through local telnet or via the vty socket (e.g. by using vtysh). This will not change with the introduction of the Northbound API. However, a new command-line option will be available for all FRR daemons: --tcli. When given, this option makes the daemon start with a transactional CLI and configuration commands behave a bit different. Instead of editing the running configuration, they will edit the candidate configuration. In other words, the configuration commands won't be applied immediately, that has to be done on a separate step using the new commit command.

The transactional CLI simply leverages the new capabilities provided by the Northbound API and exposes the concept of candidate configurations to CLI users too. When the transactional mode is not used, the configuration commands also edit the candidate configuration, but there's an implicit commit after each command.

In order for the transactional CLI to work, all configuration commands need to be converted to the new northbound model. Commands not converted to the new northbound model will change the running configuration directly since they bypass the FRR northbound layer. For this reason, starting a daemon with the transactional CLI is not advisable unless all of its commands have already been converted. When that's not the case, we can run into a situation like this:

ospfd(config)# router ospf
ospfd(config-router)# ospf router-id 1.1.1.1
[segfault in ospfd]

The segfault above can happen if router ospf edits the candidate configuration but ospf router-id 1.1.1.1 edits the running configuration. The second command tries to set ospf->router_id_static but, since the previous router ospf command hasn't been commited yet, the ospf global variable is set to NULL, which leads to the crash. Besides this problem, having a set of commands that edit the candidate configuration and others that edit the running configuration is confusing at best. The --tcli option should be used only by developers until the northbound retrofitting process is complete.

Configuration modes

When using the transactional CLI (--tcli), FRR supports three different forms of the configure command:

  • configure terminal: in this mode, a single candidate configuration is shared by all users. This means that one user might delete a configuration object that's being edited by another user, in which case the CLI will detect and report the problem. If one user issues the commit command, all changes done by all users are committed.
  • configure private: users have a private candidate configuration that is edited separately from the other users. The commit command commits only the changes done by the user.
  • configure exclusive: similar to configure private, but also locks the running configuration to prevent other users from changing it. The configuration lock is released when the user exits the configuration mode.

When using configure terminal or configure private, the candidate configuration being edited might become outdated if another user commits a different candidate configuration on another session. TODO: show image to illustrate the problem.

New commands

The list below contains the new CLI commands introduced by Northbound API. The commands are available when a daemon is started using the transactional CLI (--tcli). Currently vtysh doesn't support any of these new commands.

Please refer to the Demos page to see a demo of the transactional CLI in action.


commit check

Check if the candidate configuration is valid or not.

commit [force] [comment LINE...]

Commit the changes done in the candidate configuration into the running configuration.

Options:

  • force: commit even if the candidate configuration is outdated. It's usually a better option to use the update command instead.
  • comment LINE...: assign a comment to the configuration transaction. This comment is displayed when viewing the recorded transactions in the output of the show configuration transaction command.
discard

Discard the changes done in the candidate configuration.

configuration database max-transactions (1-100)

Set the maximum number of transactions to store in the rollback log.

configuration load <file [<json|xml> [translate WORD]] FILENAME|transaction (1-4294967296)> [replace]

Load a new configuration into the candidate configuration. When loading the configuration from a file, it's assumed that the configuration will be in the form of CLI commands by default. The json and xml options can be used to load configurations in the JSON and XML formats, respectively. It's also possible to load a configuration from a previous transaction by specifying the desired transaction ID ((1-4294967296)).

Options:

  • translate WORD: translate the JSON/XML configuration file using the YANG module translator.
  • replace: replace the candidate by the loaded configuration. The default is to merge the loaded configuration into the candidate configuration.
rollback configuration (1-4294967296)

Roll back the running configuration to a previous configuration identified by its transaction ID ((1-4294967296)).

show configuration candidate [<json|xml> [translate WORD]] [<with-defaults|changes>]

Show the candidate configuration.

Options:

  • json: show the configuration in the JSON format.
  • xml: show the configuration in the XML format.
  • translate WORD: translate the JSON/XML output using the YANG module translator.
  • with-defaults: show default values that are hidden by default.
  • changes: show only the changes done in the candidate configuration.
show configuration compare <candidate|running|transaction (1-4294967296)> <candidate|running|transaction (1-4294967296)> [<json|xml> [translate WORD]]

Show the difference between two different configurations.

Options:

  • json: show the configuration differences in the JSON format.
  • xml: show the configuration differences in the XML format.
  • translate WORD: translate the JSON/XML output using the YANG module translator.
show configuration running [<json|xml> [translate WORD]] [with-defaults]

Show the running configuration.

Options:

  • json: show the configuration in the JSON format.
  • xml: show the configuration in the XML format.
  • translate WORD: translate the JSON/XML output using the YANG module translator.
  • with-defaults: show default values that are hidden by default.

NOTE: show configuration running shows only the running configuration as known by the northbound layer. Configuration commands not converted to the new northbound model will not be displayed. To show the full running configuration, the legacy show running-config command must be used.

show configuration transaction [(1-4294967296) [<json|xml> [translate WORD]] [changes]]

When a transaction ID ((1-4294967296)) is given, show the configuration associated to the previously committed transaction.

When a transaction ID is not given, show all recorded transactions in the rollback log.

Options:

  • json: show the configuration in the JSON format.
  • xml: show the configuration in the XML format.
  • translate WORD: translate the JSON/XML output using the YANG module translator.
  • with-defaults: show default values that are hidden by default.
  • changes: show changes compared to the previous transaction.
show yang module [module-translator WORD] [WORD <summary|tree|yang|yin>]

When a YANG module is not given, show all loaded YANG modules. Otherwise, show detailed information about the given module.

Options:

  • module-translator WORD: change the context to modules loaded by the specified YANG module translator.
  • summary: display summary information about the module.
  • tree: display module in the tree (RFC 8340) format.
  • yang: display module in the YANG format.
  • yin: display module in the YIN format.
show yang module-translator

Show all loaded YANG module translators.

update

Rebase the candidate configuration on top of the latest running configuration. Conflicts are resolved automatically by giving preference to the changes done in the candidate configuration.

The candidate configuration might be outdated if the running configuration was updated after the candidate was created.

yang module-translator load FILENAME

Load a YANG module translator from the filesystem.

yang module-translator unload WORD

Unload a YANG module translator identified by its name.

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