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ipvlan plugin

plugins/main/ipvlan/README.md

Overview

ipvlan is a new addition to the Linux kernel. Like its cousin macvlan, it virtualizes the host interface. However unlike macvlan which generates a new MAC address for each interface, ipvlan devices all share the same MAC. The kernel driver inspects the IP address of each packet when making a decision about which virtual interface should process the packet.

Because all ipvlan interfaces share the MAC address with the host interface, DHCP can only be used in conjunction with ClientID (currently not supported by DHCP plugin).

Example configuration

{
	"name": "mynet",
	"type": "ipvlan",
	"master": "eth0",
	"ipam": {
		"type": "host-local",
		"subnet": "10.1.2.0/24"
	}
}

Network configuration reference

  • name (string, required): the name of the network.
  • type (string, required): “ipvlan”.
  • master (string, optional): name of the host interface to enslave. Defaults to default route interface.
  • mode (string, optional): one of “l2”, “l3”, “l3s”. Defaults to “l2”.
  • mtu (integer, optional): explicitly set MTU to the specified value. Defaults to the value chosen by the kernel.
  • ipam (dictionary, required unless chained): IPAM configuration to be used for this network.

Notes

  • ipvlan does not allow virtual interfaces to communicate with the master interface. Therefore the container will not be able to reach the host via ipvlan interface. Be sure to also have container join a network that provides connectivity to the host (e.g. ptp).
  • A single master interface can not be enslaved by both macvlan and ipvlan.
  • For IP allocation schemes that cannot be interface agnostic, the ipvlan plugin can be chained with an earlier plugin that handles this logic. If master is omitted, then the previous Result must contain a single interface name for the ipvlan plugin to enslave. If ipam is omitted, then the previous Result is used to configure the ipvlan interface.