Manual:Metarouter: Difference between revisions

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     <td><var><b>state</b></var> <code>(<em>running|rebooting|shutting-down</em>;)</code></td>
     <td><var><b>state</b></var> <code>(<em>booting|running|rebooting|shutting-down|disabled</em>;)</code></td>
     <td>current state of virtual machine</td>
     <td>current state of virtual machine</td>
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Revision as of 12:56, 26 May 2009

Overview

MetaRouter is a new feature in RouterOS 4.0 beta 1 and RouterOS v3.21

Currently MetaRouter can be used for the RB400 series boards to create virtual machines, but more hardware platforms will be added in future.

Requirements

Each Metarouter instance uses just as much resources as a stand-alone RouterOS installation. This means you need a minimum of 16Mb of RAM for each machine, plus some for the main Router that hosts it. 16Mb is the absolute minimum - it is suggested to have more memory available per each Metarouter.

Currently you can create up to 8 metarouter virtual machines, this number will be increased to 16 in future versions.

In the main machine, you can create up to 8 virtual interfaces that will be connected to the metarouters. Currently the only way to add more, is to use VLAN. Currently it is not possible to use external storage devices (Store) in the metarouter virtual devices.

Uses

The MetaRouter function is useful for allowing clients or lower-privilege users access to their own 'router' and config to configure as they like, without the need for a complete second router, or giving them access to the main router configuration.

For example; a WISP can create a virtual router for the clients ethernet port allowing them to define their own firewall settings, while leaving the WISP's wireless settings untouched.

Creating a Metarouter

 [admin@RB_Meta] /metarouter> add name=mr0 memory-size=32 disk-size=32000  disabled=no
 [admin@RB_Meta] /metarouter> print
 Flags: X - disabled 
 #   NAME                 MEMORY-SIZE DISK-SIZE     USED-DISK     STATE        
 0   mr0                  16MiB       0kiB          377kiB        running      

As you can see, creating virtual router is quite easy, you just have to specify name of the router, how many RAM will be allocated for it and disk size that will be used by virtual router. Explanations of all other properties are available in reference manual.

Note: * be careful when using dynamic HDD size for metarouters, a proxy could fill up all your hosts storage!

Example with no settings

If you will add a new metarouter without specifying any parameters, it will be added with Dynamic HDD size, and 16MiB of RAM:

[admin@RB_Meta] /metarouter> add name=mr1
[admin@RB_Meta] /metarouter> print
Flags: X - disabled
 #   NAME                 MEMORY-SIZE DISK-SIZE     USED-DISK     STATE
 1   mr1                  16MiB       0kiB          3kiB          running

OpenWRT as virtual machine

Starting from v3.24 and v4.0beta3 MetaROUTER has the ability to import custom built images. As an example we will show how to patch and use OpenWRT as the virtual machine.

Importing image

If you don't have any specific needs, you can import our prebuilt OpenWRT image, which is downloadable here. Upload openwrt image to the router and import it by import-image command:

[admin@MikroTik] /metarouter> import-image file-name=openwrt.tgz
 imported: 100%
[admin@MikroTik] /metarouter> print
Flags: X - disabled
#   NAME      MEMORY-SIZE DISK-SIZE     USED-DISK     STATE
0   mr1       16MiB       unlimited     7383kiB       running

As you can see OpenWRT is running, now you can start configuration process, which is explained in sections below.

Building your own OpenWRT image

If you are not satisfied with our prebuilt version of OpenWRT, then you can build and use your own image.

First step is to install svn and get the latest source code from openwrt.org

svn co svn://svn.openwrt.org/openwrt/trunk

Now you have to path downloaded source with our patch

cd trunk/
wget http://www.mikrotik.com/download/openwrt-metarouter.patch 
patch -p0 <openwrt-metarouter.patch

When source is patched, you have to set up configuration options

make menuconfig

Go to Target System menu and choose Mikrotik MetaROUTER from the list

Other options depends on what is your requirements (include for example IPv6 and ppp support or not), you can also stick with defaults.


If you see any error messages while trying to launch menuconfig, like

Build dependency: Please install ncurses. (Missing libncurses.so or ncurses.h)

It means that required libraries are not installed, check the output and install all required libraries.

When you are done with build configuration, type

make

It will take a while to build everything so you can go and have a cup of tea.

After the build process is done, upload newly built image to the router and import it as described in section above.

For more options and build instructions look in OpenWRT's documentation

Adding Interfaces

First, you need to add a new interface to your virtual router. This is done in the interface menu.

The interface command has the following options:

 [admin@MikroTik] /metarouter> interface add 
 comment    disabled        dynamic-mac-address  type            virtual-machine
 copy-from  dynamic-bridge  static-interface     vm-mac-address

Description of each option can be found in reference manual.

Let's add one interface:

[admin@MikroTik] /metarouter> interface add virtual-machine=mr1 type=dynamic

On the host physical router the interface appears as a virtual interface:

 [admin@MikroTik] > /interface print 
 Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave 
 #     NAME                                              TYPE             MTU  
 8  R  ether9                                            ether            1500 
 9  R  test                                              bridge           1500 
10 DR  vif1                                              vif              1500

Connecting to the virtual machine

To connect to your virtual machine, use the console command:

/metarouter console 0

You will see your newly added virtual interface here:

[admin@mr0] > interface print 
 Flags: D - dynamic, X - disabled, R - running, S - slave 
 #     NAME                                              TYPE             MTU  
 0  R  ether1                                            ether            1500

To disconnect from the metarouter virtual machine console, hit CTRL + A and then Q to Quit back to your Host console (if you are using minicom, hit CTRL + A twice):

[admin@MikroTik] >
[Q - quit connection]      [B - send break]
[A - send Ctrl-A prefix]   [R - autoconfigure rate]
 
 Q
 
 Welcome back!

Configuring a virtual network

Right now you saw that the virtual interface is visible in the Host Interfaces menu as vif1 and also in the metarouter interfaces menu as ether1. You can add an IP address on both interfaces, and set up networking. Creating a bridge between the virtual interface and a physical interface allows traffic to pass.

Configuration examples

Creating isolated Metarouter for client

This Example will show how to use Metarouter feature to create a isolated router on top of the WISP client site router. The setup for the example is shown on the diagram below:

1. Adding a Metarouter for client:

[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter> add name=client1 memory-size=32     
[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter> print
Flags: X - disabled 
 #   NAME                            MEMORY-SIZE DISK-SIZE     USED-DISK     STATE        
 0   client1                         32MiB       0kiB          189kiB        running      
[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter>

2. Adding Metarouter Interfaces for the new created Metarouter:

[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter interface> add virtual-machine=client1
[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter interface> add virtual-machine=client1 
[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter interface> print
Flags: X - disabled, A - active 
 #   VIRTUAL-MACHINE                                             TYPE    VM-MAC-ADDRESS   
 0 A client1                                                     dynamic 02:49:E8:55:8E:E8
 1 A client1                                                     dynamic 02:16:16:90:EF:0E
[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter interface> 

3. Creating a Bridge Interface for bridging metarouter interface together with ethernet interface where the client is physically connected:

[admin@RouterGW] /interface bridge> add         
[admin@RouterGW] /interface bridge> print
Flags: X - disabled, R - running 
 0  R name="bridge1" mtu=1500 arp=enabled mac-address=00:00:00:00:00:00 protocol-mode=none 
      priority=0x8000 auto-mac=yes admin-mac=00:00:00:00:00:00 max-message-age=20s 
      forward-delay=15s transmit-hold-count=6 ageing-time=5m 

[admin@RouterGW] /interface bridge port> add interface=ether2 bridge=bridge1 
[admin@RouterGW] /interface bridge port> add interface=vif2 bridge=bridge1 
[admin@RouterGW] /interface bridge port> print
Flags: X - disabled, I - inactive, D - dynamic 
 #    INTERFACE                    BRIDGE                   PRIORITY PATH-COST  HORIZON   
 0    ether2                       bridge1                  0x80     10         none      
 1    vif2                         bridge1                  0x80     10         none      

4. Adding IP configuration for the new Metarouter interface which will be used for connecting between Metarouter and Metarouter Host system:

[admin@RouterGW] /ip address> add address=10.0.1.1/24 interface=vif1 
[admin@RouterGW] /ip address> print
Flags: X - disabled, I - invalid, D - dynamic 
 #   ADDRESS            NETWORK         BROADCAST       INTERFACE                         
 0 D 10.5.8.68/24       10.5.8.0        10.5.8.255      ether1                            
 1   10.0.1.1/24        10.0.1.0        10.0.1.255      vif1                              
[admin@RouterGW] /ip address> 

5. Connecting to Metarouter using the Console

[admin@RouterGW] /metarouter> console client1

[Ctrl-A is the prefix key]


Starting...
Starting services...

MikroTik 3.21
MikroTik Login: admin
Password:

[admin@MikroTik] > /sys identity set name=Client1

6. Configuring Metarouter to make it easy for client to understand the configuration:

[admin@Client1] /interface ethernet> p
Flags: X - disabled, R - running, S - slave 
 #    NAME                                              MTU   MAC-ADDRESS       ARP       
 0 R  ether1                                            1500  02:49:E8:55:8E:E8 enabled   
 1 R  ether2                                            1500  02:16:16:90:EF:0E enabled   
[admin@Client1] /interface ethernet> set 0 name=public
[admin@Client1] /interface ethernet> set 1 name=local
[admin@Client1] /interface ethernet> print
Flags: X - disabled, R - running, S - slave 
 #    NAME                                              MTU   MAC-ADDRESS       ARP       
 0 R  public                                            1500  02:49:E8:55:8E:E8 enabled   
 1 R  local                                             1500  02:16:16:90:EF:0E enabled   
[admin@Client1] /interface ethernet> 

[admin@Client1] /ip address> add address=10.0.1.2/24 interfae=public
[admin@Client1] /ip address> add address=10.0.2.1/24 interface=local 
[admin@Client1] /ip address> print
Flags: X - disabled, I - invalid, D - dynamic 
 #   ADDRESS            NETWORK         BROADCAST       INTERFACE                         
 0   10.0.1.2/24        10.0.1.0        10.0.1.255      public                            
 1   10.0.2.1/24        10.0.2.0        10.0.2.255      local

[admin@Client1] /ip route> add gateway=10.0.1.1
[admin@Client1] /ip route> print
Flags: X - disabled, A - active, D - dynamic, 
C - connect, S - static, r - rip, b - bgp, o - ospf, m - mme, 
B - blackhole, U - unreachable, P - prohibit 
 #      DST-ADDRESS        PREF-SRC        G GATEWAY                   DISTANCE INTERFACE 
 0 A S  0.0.0.0/0                          r 10.0.1.1                  1        public    
 1 ADC  10.0.1.0/24        10.0.1.2                                    0        public    
 2 ADC  10.0.2.0/24        10.0.2.1                                    0        local     
[admin@Client1] /ip route> 

[admin@Client1] /ip firewall nat> add action=masquerade out-interface=public chain=srcnat

Reference

General

Sub-menu: /metarouter

Menu specific commands:

Property Description
console (console <vm-id>) connect to specified virtual machine's console
import-image (import-image file-name=<image-file>) import custom built image (available starting from v3.24 and v4.0b3)
reboot (reboot <vm-id>) reboot specified virtual machine
shut-down (shut-down <vm-id>) shut down specified virtual machine
start (start <vm-id>) boot up specified virtual machine

Configurable properties:

Property Description
disk-size (unlimited|0..4294967295[kiB] ; Default: unlimited) Disk size that will be allocated by virtual router.
memory-size (16..256[MiB] ; Default: 16) Amount of memory that will be allocated by virtual router.
name (string ;) Name of the virtual machine.


Read only properties:

Property Description
used-disk (integer[kiB] ;) currently used disk space by virtual router.
disk-reads (integer;) number of disk reads
disk-writes (integer;) number of disk writes
state (booting|running|rebooting|shutting-down|disabled;) current state of virtual machine

Interface

Sub-menu: /metarouter interface

Configurable properties:

Property Description
dynamic-bridge (string;) name of the bridge where to assign virtual interface as a port. Useful if interface type is dynamic
dynamic-mac-address (mac;) mac address of dynamically created interface
static-interface (none|name-of-iface;) static interface that virtual interface will be bound to
type (dynamic|static;) specifies whether interface is static or dynamic
virtual-machine (string;) specifies to which virtual machine this interface will be bound
vm-mac-address (mac;) interface mac address that appears in VM