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Creating a redundant array of inexpensive links
RAID for the Network
Fault Tolerant
Source code for the Fault Tolerant Router project [4] and some fairly extensive documentation [1] can be downloaded from GitHub. Typing
gem install fault_tolerant_router
lets you install the software, which was programmed in Ruby (Figure 1). After launching, a daemon monitors your links and switches over when needed. When called with the generate_config
option
sudo fault_tolerant_router generate config
the program generates the /etc/fault_tolerant_router.conf
configuration file (Listing 2). You need to modify this to suit your requirements. The file uses a YAML format [5] and contains the configuration groups uplinks
, downlinks
, tests
, log
and email
.
Listing 2
Excerpt of Config File
uplinks: - interface: eth2 ip: 10.1.1.1 gateway: 10.1.1.254 description: Example Provider 1 weight: 1 default_route: true # Other Interfaces [...] downlinks: lan: eth1 tests: ips: - 192.168.254.254 required_successful: 1 ping_retries: 1 interval: 60 log: file: "/var/log/fault_tolerant_router.log" max_size: 1024000 old_files: 10 [...]
An uplinks
definition typically comprises of the name of the interface, the matching IP address, the IP address of the gateway for the interface, a description, a flag, and a weighting. The flag determines whether the interface belongs to the default routes. The higher the weighting, the more often this link is used for new connections. You would use weighting if your links run at different speeds (Figure 2).
In the downlinks
section, you need to define an internal interface – if so desired, a DMZ interface. The content below tests
shows a list of IP addresses that the route is allowed to ping regularly in random order in the scope of functional tests. The addresses should be accessible on the Internet. You will also need to define the number of tests a link needs to pass before it is deemed functional and how often the router sends pings. You also specify a timeout parameter and a retry parameter.
The log
section of the configuration file defines the maximum size and number of logfiles. If its status changes, the daemon can dispatch email. The parameters required for this are also stored in the configuration file. The last parameters act as start counters for routing tables, firewall markers, and priorities, which you want the router to assign automatically.
The script also defines the required mangle and NAT rules on the basis of the configuration. The installation guide recommends merging these with an existing configuration. Because the router typically also assumes the role of the firewall in the infrastructure, this definitely makes sense. The command:
fault_tolerant_router generate_iptables
generates the rules in iptables-save
format.
To avoid any downstream routers requiring a configuration that takes the FT Router into consideration, you would NAT all outgoing sessions on all interfaces to match the IP address of the interface. Then, launch the monitoring process with the fault_tolerant_router monitor
command. If you additionally set the --debug
option, you can follow in detail on the console which routes the FT Router enables and how the various functional tests work out.
Three-Track
The ADMIN test lab was set up with an FT router with three uplinks in a KVM environment. The VMs are connected using Open vSwitch, which was also used to restrict the bandwidth on the router's uplinks. In other words, it emulated typical bandwidth patterns in a consumer environment. Figure 3 shows a sketch of the network. I then ran wget
to download data from a web server.
On the interface between the client and FT router, iptraf-ng
detected the traffic, revealing that wget
commands started sequentially actually did run one after another with the assigned bandwidth as a result of session balancing. Starting multiple downloads at the same time activated all the links. On the route between the client and FT router, the traffic detector revealed that the load was occupying the full bandwidth.
The next step was to block one of the links. The download running on it then stalled. Until the daemon started the next ping test, new connections that would normally have used this link were not established.
Only when the daemon removed the link from the pool did all the connection establishments work again. Again, I enabled the connection again, and after another ping cycle, I was able to use the link in the normal way.
Conclusions
If a system administrator were tasked with creating a link that users would never notice failing because the technology compensated within milliseconds, FT router would be the wrong choice. However, for administrators who can accept a short wait to avoid a triple-figure monthly fee, FT router offers a solution that is easy to set up.
Beyond this, FT router uses all links if there are no failures. If your links run at different speeds, a download can take considerably longer if it happens to be running on the slowest link. Although you can try to prevent this outcome with weighting, you have no way to rule out this behavior fully.
Infos
- Project website: https://github.com/drsound/fault_tolerant_router
- RAID: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID
- Policy Routing: http://www.policyrouting.org
- FT Router download: https://github.com/drsound/fault_tolerant_router/releases
- YAML: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML
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