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amazonlinux/amazon-ec2-net-utils

amazon-ec2-net-utils

Background

The amazon-ec2-net-utils package provides functionality needed to configure a Linux instance for optimal performance in a VPC environment. It handles:

  • Per-interface policy routing rules to accommodate VPC source/dest restrictions
  • Configuration of secondary IPv4 addresses
  • Configuration of ENIs upon hotplug
  • Routing configuration for delegated prefixes

The version 1.x branch of the amazon-ec2-net-utils package was used in Amazon Linux 2 and earlier releases. It has a long history and is tightly coupled to ISC dhclient and initscripts network configuration. Both of these components are deprecated and will not make up the primary network configuration framework in future releases of Amazon Linux or other distributions. The 2.x branch (released from the main branch in git) represents a complete rewrite targeting a more modern network management framework. The rest of this document describes the 2.x branch.

Implementation

amazon-ec2-net-utils leverages systemd-networkd for most of the actual interface configuration, and is primarily responsible for mapping configuration information available via IMDS to systemd-networkd input configuration. It provides event-based configuration via udev rules, with timer based actions in order to detect non event based changes (e.g. secondary IP address assignment). Generated configuration is stored in the /run/ ephemeral filesystem and is not persisted across instance reboots. The generated configuration is expected to be regenerated from scratch upon reboot. Customers can override the behavior of the package by creating configuration files in the local administration network directory /etc/systemd/network as described in systemd-networkd's documentation.

By utilizing a common framework in the form of systemd, the amazon-ec2-net-utils package should be able to integrate with any systemd-based distribution. This allows us to provide customers with a common baseline behavior regardless of whether they choose Amazon Linux or a third-party distribution. Testing has been performed on Debian, Fedora, and Amazon Linux 2023.

Usage

amazon-ec2-net-utils is expected to be pre-installed on Amazon Linux 2023 and future releases. In the common case, customers should not need to be aware of its operation. Configuration of network interfaces should occur following the principle of least astonishment. That is, traffic should be routed via the ENI associated with the source address. Custom configuration should be respected. New ENI attachments should be used automatically, and associated resources should be cleaned up on detachment. Manipulation of an ENI attachment should not impact the functionality of any other ENIs.

Build and install

The recommended way to install amazon-ec2-net-utils is by building a package for your distribution. A spec file and debian subdirectory are provided and should be reasonably suitable for modern rpm or dpkg based distributions. Build dependencies are declared in debian/control and in amazon-ec2-net-utils.spec and can be installed using standard tools from the distributions (e.g. dpkg-checkbuilddeps and apt, or dnf builddep, etc)

The post installation scripts in the spec file and or .deb package will stop NetworkManager or ifupdown, if running, and initialize systemd-networkd and systemd-resolved. The expectation is that amazon-ec2-net-utils will take over and initialize a running system, without rebooting, such that it is indistinguishable from a system that booted with amazon-ec2-net-utils.

rpm build and installation

$ mkdir -p rpmbuild/BUILD
$ git -C amazon-ec2-net-utils/ archive main | (cd rpmbuild/BUILD/ && tar xvf -)
$ rpmbuild -bb rpmbuild/BUILD/amazon-ec2-net-utils.spec
$ sudo dnf install rpmbuild/RPMS/noarch/amazon-ec2-net-utils-2.0.0-1.al2022.noarch.rpm

dpkg build and installation

$ dpkg-buildpackage -uc -us -b
$ sudo apt install ../amazon-ec2-net-utils_2.0.0-1_all.deb

Installation verification

$ # inspect the state of the system to verify that networkd is running:
$ networkctl # should report all physical interfaces as "routable" and "configured"
$ networkctl status eth0 # should report "/run/systemd/network/70-eth0.network" as the network conf file
$ resolvectl # show status of systemd-resolved

Example:

[ec2-user@ip-10-0-0-114 ~]$ networkctl
IDX LINK TYPE     OPERATIONAL SETUP
 1 lo   loopback carrier     unmanaged
 2 eth0 ether    routable    configured

2 links listed.
[ec2-user@ip-10-0-0-114 ~]$ networkctl status eth0
● 2: eth0
                    Link File: /usr/lib/systemd/network/99-default.link
                 Network File: /run/systemd/network/70-eth0.network
                         Type: ether
                        State: routable (configured)
            Alternative Names: enp0s5
                               ens5
                         Path: pci-0000:00:05.0
                       Driver: ena
                       Vendor: Amazon.com, Inc.
                        Model: Elastic Network Adapter (ENA)
                   HW Address: 02:c9:76:e3:18:0b
                          MTU: 9001 (min: 128, max: 9216)
                        QDisc: mq
 IPv6 Address Generation Mode: eui64
         Queue Length (Tx/Rx): 2/2
                      Address: 10.0.0.114 (DHCP4 via 10.0.0.1)
                               fe80::c9:76ff:fee3:180b
                      Gateway: 10.0.0.1
                          DNS: 10.0.0.2
            Activation Policy: up
              DHCP4 Client ID: IAID:0xed10bdb8/DUID
            DHCP6 Client DUID: DUID-EN/Vendor:0000ab11a9aa54876c81082a0000

Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: Link UP
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: Gained carrier
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: Gained IPv6LL
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: DHCPv4 address 10.0.0.114/24 via 10.0.0.1
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: Re-configuring with /run/systemd/network/70-eth0.net>
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: DHCP lease lost
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: DHCPv6 lease lost
Sep 01 17:44:54 ip-10-0-0-114.us-west-2.compute.internal systemd-networkd[2042]: eth0: DHCPv4 address 10.0.0.114/24 via 10.0.0.1
[ec2-user@ip-10-0-0-114 ~]$ resolvectl
Global
      Protocols: LLMNR=resolve -mDNS -DNSOverTLS DNSSEC=no/unsupported
resolv.conf mode: uplink

Link 2 (eth0)
   Current Scopes: DNS
        Protocols: +DefaultRoute -LLMNR -mDNS -DNSOverTLS DNSSEC=no/unsupported
Current DNS Server: 10.0.0.2
      DNS Servers: 10.0.0.2

Getting help

If you're using amazon-ec2-net-utils as packaged by a Linux distribution, please consider using your distribution's support channels first. Your distribution may have modified the behavior of the package to facilitate better integration, and may have more specific guidance for you.

Alternatively, if you don't believe your issue is distribution specific, please feel free to open an issue on GitHub.

Contributing

We are happy to review proposed changes. If you're considering introducing any major functionality or behavior changes, you may wish to consider opening an issue where we can discuss the details before you proceed with implementation. Please refer to CONTRIBUTING.md for additional expectations.

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ec2-net-utils contains a set of utilities for managing elastic network interfaces on Amazon EC2.

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