linux/Documentation/networking/mpls-sysctl.txt
Robert Shearman 37bde79979 mpls: Per-device enabling of packet input
An MPLS network is a single trust domain where the edges must be in
control of what labels make their way into the core. The simplest way
of ensuring this is for the edge device to always impose the labels,
and not allow forward labeled traffic from untrusted neighbours. This
is achieved by allowing a per-device configuration of whether MPLS
traffic input from that interface should be processed or not.

To be secure by default, the default state is changed to MPLS being
disabled on all interfaces unless explicitly enabled and no global
option is provided to change the default. Whilst this differs from
other protocols (e.g. IPv6), network operators are used to explicitly
enabling MPLS forwarding on interfaces, and with the number of links
to the MPLS core typically fairly low this doesn't present too much of
a burden on operators.

Cc: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Signed-off-by: Robert Shearman <rshearma@brocade.com>
Reviewed-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2015-04-22 14:24:54 -04:00

30 lines
844 B
Plaintext

/proc/sys/net/mpls/* Variables:
platform_labels - INTEGER
Number of entries in the platform label table. It is not
possible to configure forwarding for label values equal to or
greater than the number of platform labels.
A dense utliziation of the entries in the platform label table
is possible and expected aas the platform labels are locally
allocated.
If the number of platform label table entries is set to 0 no
label will be recognized by the kernel and mpls forwarding
will be disabled.
Reducing this value will remove all label routing entries that
no longer fit in the table.
Possible values: 0 - 1048575
Default: 0
conf/<interface>/input - BOOL
Control whether packets can be input on this interface.
If disabled, packets will be discarded without further
processing.
0 - disabled (default)
not 0 - enabled