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birdwatcher

birdwatcher is a small HTTP server meant to provide an API defined by Barry O'Donovan's birds-eye to the BIRD routing daemon.

Why

The INEX implementation of birdseye runs PHP, which is not always desirable (and performant) in a routeserver setting. By using Go, we are able to work with regular binaries, which means deployment and maintenance might be more convenient.

Our version also has a few more capabilities, as you will discover when looking at the modules section of the config.

Installation

You will need to have go installed to build the package. Running go get github.com/ecix/birdwatcher will give you a binary. You might need to cross-compile it for your bird-running servive (GOARCH and GOOS are your friends).

We provide a Makefile for more advanced compilation/configuration. Running make linux will create a Linux executable (by default for amd64, but that is configurable by providing the ARCH argument to the Makefile).

BIRD configuration

Birdwatcher parses the output of birdc and expects (for now) the time format to be iso long. You need to configure

timeformat base         iso long;
timeformat log          iso long;
timeformat protocol     iso long;
timeformat route        iso long;

in your /etc/bird[6].conf for birdwatcher to work.

BIRD keep filtered routes

To also see the filtered routes in BIRD you need to make sure that you have enabled the 'import keep filtered on' option for your BGP peers.

protocol bgp 'peerX' {
    ...
    import keep filtered on;
    ...
}

Now you should be able to do a 'show route filtered' in BIRD.

Do note that 'import keep filtered on' does NOT work for BIRD's pipe protocol which is used when you have per peer tables, often used with Route Servers. If your BIRD configuration has its import filters set on the BIRD pipe protocols themselves then you will not be able to show the filtered routes. However, you could move the import filters from the pipes to the BGP protocols directly. For example:

table master;
table table_peer_X;

protocol pipe pipe_peer_X {
    table master;
    peer table table_peer_X;
    mode transparent;
    import all;
    export where exportMagic();
}

protocol bgp 'peerX' {
    ...
    table table_peer_X;
    import where importFilter();
    import keep filtered on;
    export all;
    ...
}

BIRD tagging filtered routes

If you want to make use of the filtered route reasons in the Birdseye then you need to make sure that you are using BIRD 1.6.3 or up as you will need Large BGP Communities (http://largebgpcommunities.net/).

You need to add a Large BGP Community just before you filter a route, for example:

define yourASN = 12345
define yourFilteredNumber = 65666
define prefixTooLong = 1
define pathTooLong = 2

function importScrub() {
    ...
    if (net.len > 24) then {
        print "REJECTING: ",net.ip,"/",net.len," received from ",from,": Prefix is longer than 24: ",net.len,"!";
        bgp_large_community.add((YourASN,yourFilteredNumber,prefixTooLong));
        return false;
    }
    if (bgp_path.len > 64) then {
        print "REJECTING: ",net.ip,"/",net.len," received from ",from,": AS path length is ridiculously long: ",bgp_path.len,"!";
        bgp_large_community.add((yourASN,yourFilteredNumber,pathTooLong));
        return false;
    }
    ...
    return true;
}

function importFilter() {
    ...
    if !(importScrub()) then reject;
    ...
    accept;
}

Building an RPM

Building RPMs is supported through fpm. If you have fpm installed locally, you can run make rpm to create a RPM in the folder RPMS. If you have a remote build server with fpm installed, you can build and fetch an RPM with make remote_rpm BUILD_SERVER=<buildserver_url> (requires SSH access).

Deployment

If you want to deploy birdwatcher on a system that uses RPMs, you should be able to install it after following the instructions on building an RPM.

We do not currently support other deployment methods.

Configuration

An example config with sane defaults is provided in etc/ecix/birdwatcher.conf. You should be able to use it out of the box. If you need to change it, it is well-commented and hopefully intuitive. If you do not know how to configure it, please consider opening an issue.

How

In the background birdwatcher runs the birdc client, sends commands and parses the result. It also leverages simple caching techniques to help reduce the load on the bird service.

Who

Initially developed by Daniel and MC from Netnod in two days at the RIPE 73 IXP Tools Hackathon in Madrid, Spain.

Running bird and parsing the results was added by Veit Heller on behalf of ecix.