12.4. Ether tunnelling

Ether tunnelling provides a mechanism to tunnel layer 2 ethernet traffic between two devices, using the protocol defined in RFC3378.

An ETUN tunnel provides a link layer 2 connection between two specific physical ports on different FireBricks. Consider two FireBricks A and B which are able to communicate with each other using IP (eg over the internet). An otherwise unused port on each FireBrick can be configured as an ETUN port. Every ethernet packet arriving at FireBrick A's ETUN port is encapsulated and transmitted to FireBrick B (over IP). FireBrick B decapsulates the packet and transmits it on its configured ETUN port. Ethernet packets received on FireBrick B's ETUN port are likewise transported to FireBrick A and transmitted from its ETUN port. This mechanism can be used to extend a LAN over a large physical distance. A typical application would be to enable a single LAN to bridge two data centres which do not have a direct layer 2 link connection (or to provide alternative backup in the case that a layer 2 link becomes unavailable).

The two ETUN'ed ports will behave as if they were two ports on a single link layer 2 hub or switch, apart from the extra latency introduced by the carrier network traversal. It is important to note that *all* ethernet packets are transported. This includes ethernet broadcast packets, ARP packets and also any non-IP traffic (eg IPX, old NetBIOS/NetBEUI etc) so care should be taken to ensure that such traffic does not overload the carrier network. In addition the extra latency may cause problems with devices expecting LAN-speed responses - for example switches running LACP.

Configuring an ETUN connection is very simple. Select "Add: New: Ether tunnel (RFC3378)" on the tunnel configuration page, and enter the IP of the remote Firebrick and the local port to be used for ETUN. The local IP can be optionally set, and the usual log, profile and table options are also available. The local ETUN port is specified by selecting a port group. The selected group must have only one physical port, and must not be used for any other purpose, so must not be used in any other configuration entries.

Note

The status for an ETUN shows counts of packets sent to and received from the connected physical port. E.g. a packet that has traversed the tunnel and is transmitted by that port will be seen as an increment of the TX count.