Hi Tuna,

Thanks for your reply. It's really helpful to me!

Active the STP function on ovs bridge will prevent the storm effectively
but it will need large of CPU resource in a large amount of networks
scenario. Maybe there are other solutions to solve it easily? (Might be
adding more flow rules or else.)

Chandler


2013/12/11 Nguyen Anh Tu <t...@apache.org>

> Hi Chandler,
>
> This update will help you prevent the storm.
>
>
> http://blog.scottlowe.org/2013/11/22/an-update-on-using-gre-tunnels-with-open-vswitch/
>
> I'm taking care about GRE controller in CloudStack. Checking lastest master
> branch now.
>
> Cheers,
>
> --Tuna
>
>
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2013 at 3:16 PM, Chandler Li <lichandler...@gmail.com
> >wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am trying to learn the procedure of multi-tenancy network created by
> GRE
> > tunnel in CloudStack and trying to establish one in Xenserver 6.2
> > environment step by step.
> >
> > According to the sourcecode in ovstunnel, CloudStack need to prevent
> > broadcast storm by generating some flow rules on openvswitch. I create a
> > full mash topology using GRE tunnel, create some VMs, and set broadcast
> > storm prevent rules on each ovs.  Unfortunately, amount of ARP reply
> storm
> > packet flow between all hosts after one VM pings the other VM in another
> > Host. (https://www.dropbox.com/s/vy1opm7plho9dzs/arp%20reply%20storm.PNG
> )
> >
> > In this case, IP 10.0.0.1's VM is on IP 10.0.75.9's Host, IP 10.0.0.2's
> VM
> > is on IP 10.0.75.14's Host. The ARP request broadcast packets were
> dropped
> > successfully by the broadcast storm prevent rules excepted the real
> target
> > IP 10.0.75.14's Host, but ARP reply packets seems cannot be filtered by
> the
> > rules, so the ARP reply storm happened in this loop topology.
> >
> > Could anyone tell me how CloudStack ovs tunnel avoid ARP reply storm or
> did
> > I miss something important? Thanks!
> >
> > BRs,
> > Chandler Li
> >
>

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