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Router Configuration
====================
.. toctree::
..
Example network and sample configuration
----------------------------------------
Assume that three routers in the same network, but at three different sites
(``memphis.edu``, ``arizona.edu``, and ``colostate.edu``), are connected to each other to
construct the following topology:
::
+-------------------------------------+
| /ndn/edu/memphis/%C1.Router/router1 |
+-------------------------------------+
/ 11 12\
/ \
route-cost = 25 / \ route-cost = 30
/ \
17 / \ 13
+-----------------------------------+ 7 10 +-------------------------------------+
|/ndn/edu/arizona/%C1.Router/router3|-------------------|/ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2|
+-----------------------------------+ route-cost = 28 +-------------------------------------+
Figure: Network Topology
The number represents the connecting face id. For example,
``/ndn/edu/memphis/%C1.Router/router1`` is connected to
``/ndn/edu/arizona/%C1.Router/router3`` via face 11 and the route cost is 25. To reach
``/ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2`` via face 12, the route cost is 30.
We will walk through setting up the faces and creating the configuration file for
``/ndn/edu/memphis/%C1.Router/router1``.
Step 1. Ensuring nfd is running
-------------------------------
Type the following in the terminal:
::
nfd-status
If you see ``error while connecting to the forwarder (No such file or directory)``,
``nfd`` is not running. Follow the instructions in `Getting started with NFD
<http://named-data.net/doc/NFD/current/INSTALL.html>`_ to run nfd.
Step 2. Determining FaceUri
---------------------------
Assume that ``/ndn/edu/arizona/%C1.Router/router3`` has hostname ``router3.arizona.edu`` and
``/ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2`` has IP address ``79.123.10.145``.
``/ndn/edu/memphis/%C1.Router/router1`` will consider FaceUri
``udp4://router3.arizona.edu`` for router ``/ndn/edu/arizona/%C1.Router/router3`` and
FaceUri ``udp4://79.123.10.145`` for router ``/ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2``.
Step 3: Creating configuration file
-----------------------------------
Now, assume that ``/ndn/memphis.edu/router1`` wants to advertise three name prefixes
(``/ndn/memphis/sports/basketball/grizzlies``, ``/ndn/memphis/entertainment/blues``,
``/ndn/news/memphis/politics/lutherking``). The configuration file with the necessary
configuration commands follows:
::
; nlsr.conf starts here
; the general section contains all the general settings for router
general
{
; mandatory configuration command section network, site and router
network /ndn/ ; name of the network the router belongs to in ndn URI format
site /edu/memphis/ ; name of the site the router belongs to in ndn URI format
router /%C1.Router/router1 ; name of the network the router belongs to in ndn URI format
; lsa-refresh-time is the time in seconds, after which router will refresh its LSAs
lsa-refresh-time 1800 ; default value 1800. Valid values 240-7200
; InterestLifetime (in seconds) for LSA fetching
lsa-interest-lifetime 4 ; default value 4. Valid values 1-60
; log-level is to set the levels of log for NLSR
log-level INFO ; default value INFO, valid value DEBUG, INFO
log-dir /var/log/nlsr/
seq-dir /var/lib/nlsr/
; log4cxx-conf /path/to/log4cxx-conf
}
; the neighbors section contains the configuration for router's neighbors and hello's behavior
neighbors
{
; in case hello interest timed out, router will try 'hello-retries' times at 'hello-time-out'
; seconds interval before giving up for any neighbors (deciding link is down)
hello-retries 3 ; interest retries number in integer. Default value 3
; valid values 1-10
hello-timeout 1 ; interest time out value in integer. Default value 1
; Valid values 1-15
hello-interval 60 ; interest sending interval in seconds. Default value 60
; valid values 30-90
; adj-lsa-build-interval is the time to wait in seconds after an Adjacency LSA
; build is scheduled before actually building the Adjacency LSA
adj-lsa-build-interval 5 ; default value 5. Valid values 0-5. It is recommended that
; adj-lsa-build-interval have a lower value than
; routing-calc-interval
; first-hello-interval is the time to wait in seconds before sending the first Hello Interest
first-hello-interval 10 ; Default value 10. Valid values 0-10
; neighbor command is used to configure router's neighbor. Each neighbor will need
; one block of neighbor command
neighbor
{
name /ndn/edu/arizona/%C1.Router/router3 ; name prefix of the neighbor router consists
; of network, site-name and router-name
face-uri udp4://router3.arizona.edu ; face uri of the face connected to the neighbor
link-cost 25 ; cost of the connecting link to neighbor
}
neighbor
{
name /ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2 ; name prefix of the neighbor router consists
; of network, site-name and router-name
face-uri udp4://79.123.10.145 ; face uri of the face connected to the neighbor
link-cost 30 ; cost of the connecting link to neighbor
}
}
; the hyperbolic section contains the configuration settings of enabling
a router to calculate ; routing table using `hyperbolic routing table
calculation`_ method
hyperbolic
{
; commands in this section follows a strict order
; the switch is used to set hyperbolic routing calculation in NLSR
state off ; default value 'off', set value 'on' to enable hyperbolic routing table
; calculation which turns link state routing 'off'. set value to 'dry-run'
; to test hyperbolic routing and compare with link state routing.
radius 123.456 ; radius of the router in hyperbolic coordinate system
angle 1.45 ; angle of the router in hyperbolic coordinate system
}
; the fib section is used to configure fib entry's type to ndn FIB updated by NLSR
fib
{
; the max-faces-per-prefix is used to limit the number of faces for each name prefixes
; by NLSR in ndn FIB
max-faces-per-prefix 3 ; default value 0. Valid value 0-60. By default (value 0) NLSR adds
; all available faces for each reachable name prefixes in NDN FIB
}
; the advertising section contains the configuration settings of the
name prefixes ; hosted by this router
advertising
{
; the ndnname is used to advertised name from the router. To advertise each name prefix
; configure one block of ndnname configuration command for every name prefix.
prefix /ndn/memphis/sports/basketball/grizzlies
prefix /ndn/memphis/entertainment/blues
prefix /ndn/news/memphis/politics/lutherking
}
NLSR will have the following error if ``log-dir`` does not exist:
::
Provided log directory </var/log/nlsr/> does not exist
Error in configuration file processing! Exiting from NLSR
By default ``/var/log/nlsr/`` is set to be NLSR's log directory and ``/var/lib/nlsr/`` is set to be
NLSR's sequence file directory. They do not exist and will need to be created.
Also, since these are system directories it will require the user to run NLSR as root.
If one does not have permission to write to the specified directory,
then NLSR will produce the following error:
::
User does not have read and write permission on the directory
Error in configuration file processing! Exiting from NLSR
To avoid this, the directories can be set in a user owned directory.
The directories for log and sequence file can be same.
For example:
::
general
{
...
log-dir /home/username/nlsr/log ; path for log directory (Absolute path)
seq-dir /home/username/nlsr/log ; path for sequence directory (Absolute path)
}
...
The user will encounter errors such as the following if security is not configured:
::
Cannot read certificate from file: /home/username/NLSR/root.cert
To get rid of this and similar errors relating to security one has to configure security
as described in :doc:`SECURITY-CONFIG`. Security can be disabled for testing purposes as follows:
::
...
trust-anchor
{
type any
;file-name "root.cert"
}
...
trust-anchor
{
type any
;file-name "site.cert"
}
; cert-to-publish "root.cert"
; cert-to-publish "router.cert"
; cert-to-publish "site.cert"
; cert-to-publish "router.cert"
Or by simply replacing the whole security section with:
::
security
{
validator
{
trust-anchor
{
type any
}
}
prefix-update-validator
{
trust-anchor
{
type any
}
}
}
Step 4: Running NLSR on /ndn/memphis.edu/router1
-------------------------------------------------
Assuming the configuration file is saved as ``nlsr.conf``, type the following to run nlsr:
::
$ nlsr -f nlsr.conf
NLSR will look for nlsr.conf in the current directory. If nlsr.conf is not in the current
directory, please provide the absolute path with the file name as the value. If
``nlsr.conf`` resides in ``/home/ndnuser/configuration`` directory, type ``nlsr -f
/home/ndnuser/configuration/nlsr.conf`` to run nlsr.
The same process needs to be followed for ``/ndn/arizona.edu/router3`` and
``/ndn/colostate.edu/router2`` to run NLSR on these routers.
Expected Output
----------------
Assuming that all three routers are configured correctly and routing has converged,
``nfd-status`` in ``/ndn/edu/colostate/%C1.Router/router2`` will have the following (or similar)
entries for the name advertised by ``/ndn/edu/memphis/%C1.Router/router1``:
RIB:
::
/ndn/memphis/entertainment/blues route={faceid=17 (origin=128 cost=25 ChildInherit), faceid=7 (origin=128 cost=58 ChildInherit)}
/ndn/memphis/sports/basketball/grizzlies route={faceid=17 (origin=128 cost=25 ChildInherit), faceid=7 (origin=128 cost=58 ChildInherit)}
/ndn/news/memphis/politics/lutherking route={faceid=17 (origin=128 cost=25 ChildInherit, faceid=7 (origin=128 cost=58 ChildInherit)}
This output can be seen by typing ``nfdc route list`` in the terminal. Please refer to the
network figure for face IDs.
.. _hyperbolic routing table calculation: http://arxiv.org/abs/0805.1266