BRIDGE(8) Linux BRIDGE(8)
bridge - show / manipulate bridge addresses and devices
SYNOPSIS top
bridge [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND | help }
OBJECT := { link | fdb | mdb | vlan | monitor }
OPTIONS := { -V[ersion] | -s[tatistics] | -n[etns] name | -b[atch]
filename | -j[son] }
bridge link set dev DEV [ cost COST ] [ priority PRIO ] [ state
STATE] [ guard { on | off } ] [ hairpin { on | off } ] [
fastleave { on | off } ] [ root_block { on | off } ] [
learning { on | off } ] [ learning_sync { on | off } ] [
flood { on | off } ] [ hwmode { vepa | veb } ] [ mcast_flood
{ on | off } ] [ self ] [ master ]
bridge link [ show ] [ dev DEV ]
bridge fdb { add | append | del | replace } LLADDR dev DEV { local |
static | dynamic } [ self ] [ master ] [ router ] [ use ] [
dst IPADDR ] [ vni VNI ] [ port PORT ] [ via DEVICE ]
bridge fdb [ show ] [ dev DEV ] [ br BRDEV ] [ brport DEV ] [ vlan
VID ] [ state STATE ]
bridge mdb { add | del } dev DEV port PORT grp GROUP [ permanent |
temp ] [ vid VID ]
bridge mdb show [ dev DEV ]
bridge vlan { add | del } dev DEV vid VID [ pvid ] [ untagged ] [
self ] [ master ]
bridge vlan [ show ] [ dev DEV ]
bridge monitor [ all | neigh | link | mdb ]
OPTIONS top
-V, -Version
print the version of the bridge utility and exit.
-s, -stats, -statistics
output more information. If this option is given multiple
times, the amount of information increases. As a rule, the
information is statistics or some time values.
-d, -details
print detailed information about MDB router ports.
-n, -net, -netns <NETNS>
switches bridge to the specified network namespace NETNS.
Actually it just simplifies executing of:
ip netns exec NETNS bridge [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND | help
}
to
bridge -n[etns] NETNS [ OPTIONS ] OBJECT { COMMAND | help }
-b, -batch <FILENAME>
Read commands from provided file or standard input and invoke
them. First failure will cause termination of bridge command.
-force Don't terminate bridge command on errors in batch mode. If
there were any errors during execution of the commands, the
application return code will be non zero.
-json Display results in JSON format. Currently available for vlan
and fdb.
BRIDGE - COMMAND SYNTAX top
OBJECT
link - Bridge port.
fdb - Forwarding Database entry.
mdb - Multicast group database entry.
vlan - VLAN filter list.
COMMAND
Specifies the action to perform on the object. The set of possible
actions depends on the object type. As a rule, it is possible to
add, delete and show (or list ) objects, but some objects do not
allow all of these operations or have some additional commands. The
help command is available for all objects. It prints out a list of
available commands and argument syntax conventions.
If no command is given, some default command is assumed. Usually it
is list or, if the objects of this class cannot be listed, help.
bridge link - bridge port top
link objects correspond to the port devices of the bridge.
The corresponding commands set and display port status and bridge
specific attributes.
bridge link set - set bridge specific attributes on a port
dev NAME
interface name of the bridge port
cost COST
the STP path cost of the specified port.
priority PRIO
the STP port priority. The priority value is an unsigned 8-bit
quantity (number between 0 and 255). This metric is used in
the designated port an droot port selectio algorithms.
state STATE
the operation state of the port. This is primarily used by
user space STP/RSTP implementation. One may enter a lowercased
port state name, or one of the numbers below. Negative inputs
are ignored, and unrecognized names return an error.
0 - port is DISABLED. Make this port completely inactive.
1 - STP LISTENING state. Only valid if STP is enabled on the
bridge. In this state the port listens for STP BPDUs and drops
all other traffic frames.
2 - STP LEARNING state. Only valid if STP is enabled on the
bridge. In this state the port will accept traffic only for
the purpose of updating MAC address tables.
3 - STP FORWARDING state. Port is fully active.
4 - STP BLOCKING state. Only valid if STP is enabled on the
bridge. This state is used during the STP election process. In
this state, port will only process STP BPDUs.
guard on or guard off
Controls whether STP BPDUs will be processed by the bridge
port. By default, the flag is turned off allowed BPDU
processing. Turning this flag on will cause the port to stop
processing STP BPDUs.
hairpin on or hairpin off
Controls whether traffic may be send back out of the port on
which it was received. By default, this flag is turned off and
the bridge will not forward traffic back out of the receiving
port.
fastleave on or fastleave off
This flag allows the bridge to immediately stop multicast
traffic on a port that receives IGMP Leave message. It is only
used with IGMP snooping is enabled on the bridge. By default
the flag is off.
root_block on or root_block off
Controls whether a given port is allowed to become root port
or not. Only used when STP is enabled on the bridge. By
default the flag is off.
learning on or learning off
Controls whether a given port will learn MAC addresses from
received traffic or not. If learning if off, the bridge will
end up flooding any traffic for which it has no FDB entry. By
default this flag is on.
learning_sync on or learning_sync off
Controls whether a given port will sync MAC addresses learned
on device port to bridge FDB.
flooding on or flooding off
Controls whether a given port will flood unicast traffic for
which there is no FDB entry. By default this flag is on.
hwmode Some network interface cards support HW bridge functionality
and they may be configured in different modes. Currently
support modes are:
vepa - Data sent between HW ports is sent on the wire to the
external switch.
veb - bridging happens in hardware.
mcast_flood on or mcast_flood off
Controls whether a given port will be flooded with multicast
traffic for which there is no MDB entry. By default this flag
is on.
self link setting is configured on specified physical device
master link setting is configured on the software bridge (default)
-t, -timestamp
display current time when using monitor option.
bridge link show - list bridge port configuration.
This command displays the current bridge port configuration and
flags.
bridge fdb - forwarding database management top
fdb objects contain known Ethernet addresses on a link.
The corresponding commands display fdb entries, add new entries,
append entries, and delete old ones.
bridge fdb add - add a new fdb entry
This command creates a new fdb entry.
LLADDR the Ethernet MAC address.
dev DEV
the interface to which this address is associated.
local - is a local permanent fdb entry
static - is a static (no arp) fdb entry
dynamic - is a dynamic reachable age-able fdb entry
self - the address is associated with the port drivers fdb.
Usually hardware.
master - the address is associated with master devices fdb.
Usually software (default).
router - the destination address is associated with a router.
Valid if the referenced device is a VXLAN type device and has
route shortcircuit enabled.
use - the address is in use. User space can use this option to
indicate to the kernel that the fdb entry is in use.
The next command line parameters apply only when the specified device
DEV is of type VXLAN.
dst IPADDR
the IP address of the destination VXLAN tunnel endpoint where
the Ethernet MAC ADDRESS resides.
vni VNI
the VXLAN VNI Network Identifier (or VXLAN Segment ID) to use
to connect to the remote VXLAN tunnel endpoint. If omitted
the value specified at vxlan device creation will be used.
port PORT
the UDP destination PORT number to use to connect to the
remote VXLAN tunnel endpoint. If omitted the default value is
used.
via DEVICE
device name of the outgoing interface for the VXLAN device
driver to reach the remote VXLAN tunnel endpoint.
bridge fdb append - append a forwarding database entry
This command adds a new fdb entry with an already known LLADDR.
Valid only for multicast link layer addresses. The command adds
support for broadcast and multicast Ethernet MAC addresses. The
Ethernet MAC address is added multiple times into the forwarding
database and the vxlan device driver sends a copy of the data packet
to each entry found.
The arguments are the same as with bridge fdb add.
bridge fdb delete - delete a forwarding database entry
This command removes an existing fdb entry.
The arguments are the same as with bridge fdb add.
bridge fdb replace - replace a forwarding database entry
If no matching entry is found, a new one will be created instead.
The arguments are the same as with bridge fdb add.
bridge fdb show - list forwarding entries.
This command displays the current forwarding table.
With the -statistics option, the command becomes verbose. It prints
out the last updated and last used time for each entry.
bridge mdb - multicast group database management top
mdb objects contain known IP multicast group addresses on a link.
The corresponding commands display mdb entries, add new entries, and
delete old ones.
bridge mdb add - add a new multicast group database entry
This command creates a new mdb entry.
dev DEV
the interface where this group address is associated.
port PORT
the port whose link is known to have members of this multicast
group.
grp GROUP
the IP multicast group address whose members reside on the
link connected to the port.
permanent - the mdb entry is permanent
temp - the mdb entry is temporary (default)
vid VID
the VLAN ID which is known to have members of this multicast
group.
bridge mdb delete - delete a multicast group database entry
This command removes an existing mdb entry.
The arguments are the same as with bridge mdb add.
bridge mdb show - list multicast group database entries
This command displays the current multicast group membership table.
The table is populated by IGMP and MLD snooping in the bridge driver
automatically. It can be altered by bridge mdb add and bridge mdb del
commands manually too.
dev DEV
the interface only whose entries should be listed. Default is
to list all bridge interfaces.
With the -details option, the command becomes verbose. It prints out
the ports known to have a connected router.
With the -statistics option, the command displays timer values for
mdb and router port entries.
bridge vlan - VLAN filter list top
vlan objects contain known VLAN IDs for a link.
The corresponding commands display vlan filter entries, add new
entries, and delete old ones.
bridge vlan add - add a new vlan filter entry
This command creates a new vlan filter entry.
dev NAME
the interface with which this vlan is associated.
vid VID
the VLAN ID that identifies the vlan.
pvid the vlan specified is to be considered a PVID at ingress. Any
untagged frames will be assigned to this VLAN.
untagged
the vlan specified is to be treated as untagged on egress.
self the vlan is configured on the specified physical device.
Required if the device is the bridge device.
master the vlan is configured on the software bridge (default).
bridge vlan delete - delete a vlan filter entry
This command removes an existing vlan filter entry.
The arguments are the same as with bridge vlan add. The pvid and
untagged flags are ignored.
bridge vlan show - list vlan configuration.
This command displays the current VLAN filter table.
With the -statistics option, the command displays per-vlan traffic
statistics.
bridge monitor - state monitoring top
The bridge utility can monitor the state of devices and addresses
continuously. This option has a slightly different format. Namely,
the monitor command is the first in the command line and then the
object list follows:
bridge monitor [ all | OBJECT-LIST ]
OBJECT-LIST is the list of object types that we want to monitor. It
may contain link, fdb, and mdb. If no file argument is given, bridge
opens RTNETLINK, listens on it and dumps state changes in the format
described in previous sections.
If a file name is given, it does not listen on RTNETLINK, but opens
the file containing RTNETLINK messages saved in binary format and
dumps them.
This command uses facilities added in Linux 3.0.
Although the forwarding table is maintained on a per-bridge device
basis the bridge device is not part of the syntax. This is a
limitation of the underlying netlink neighbour message protocol. When
displaying the forwarding table, entries for all bridges are
displayed. Add/delete/modify commands determine the underlying
bridge device based on the bridge to which the corresponding ethernet
device is attached.
SEE ALSO top
ip(8)
Please direct bugreports and patches to: <netdev@vger.kernel.org>
AUTHOR top
Original Manpage by Stephen Hemminger
COLOPHON top
This page is part of the iproute2 (utilities for controlling TCP/IP
networking and traffic) project. Information about the project can
be found at
⟨http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/networking/iproute2⟩.
If you have a bug report for this manual page, send it to
netdev@vger.kernel.org, shemminger@osdl.org. This page was obtained
from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/shemminger/iproute2.git⟩
on 2017-07-05. If you discover any rendering problems in this HTML
version of the page, or you believe there is a better or more up-to-
date source for the page, or you have corrections or improvements to
the information in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original
manual page), send a mail to man-pages@man7.org