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Container Network Interface Specification

Version

This is CNI spec version 0.4.0-dev. This spec contains unreleased changes.

Note that this is independent from the version of the CNI library and plugins in this repository (e.g. the versions of releases).

Released versions

Released versions of the spec are available as Git tags.

tag spec permalink major changes
spec-v0.3.1 spec at v0.3.1 none (typo fix only)
spec-v0.3.0 spec at v0.3.0 rich result type, plugin chaining
spec-v0.2.0 spec at v0.2.0 VERSION command
spec-v0.1.0 spec at v0.1.0 initial version

Do not rely on these tags being stable. In the future, we may change our mind about which particular commit is the right marker for a given historical spec version.

Overview

This document proposes a generic plugin-based networking solution for application containers on Linux, the Container Networking Interface, or CNI. It is derived from the rkt Networking Proposal, which aimed to satisfy many of the design considerations for networking in rkt.

For the purposes of this proposal, we define two terms very specifically:

  • container can be considered synonymous with a Linux network namespace. What unit this corresponds to depends on a particular container runtime implementation: for example, in implementations of the App Container Spec like rkt, each pod runs in a unique network namespace. In Docker, on the other hand, network namespaces generally exist for each separate Docker container.
  • network refers to a group of entities that are uniquely addressable that can communicate amongst each other. This could be either an individual container (as specified above), a machine, or some other network device (e.g. a router). Containers can be conceptually added to or removed from one or more networks.

This document aims to specify the interface between "runtimes" and "plugins". Whilst there are certain well known fields, runtimes may wish to pass additional information to plugins. These extensions are not part of this specification but are documented as conventions. The key words "must", "must not", "required", "shall", "shall not", "should", "should not", "recommended", "may" and "optional" are used as specified in RFC 2119.

General considerations

  • The container runtime must create a new network namespace for the container before invoking any plugins.
  • The runtime must then determine which networks this container should belong to, and for each network, which plugins must be executed.
  • The network configuration is in JSON format and can easily be stored in a file. The network configuration includes mandatory fields such as "name" and "type" as well as plugin (type) specific ones. The network configuration allows for fields to change values between invocations. For this purpose there is an optional field "args" which must contain the varying information.
  • The container runtime must add the container to each network by executing the corresponding plugins for each network sequentially.
  • Upon completion of the container lifecycle, the runtime must execute the plugins in reverse order (relative to the order in which they were executed to add the container) to disconnect the container from the networks.
  • The container runtime must not invoke parallel operations for the same container, but is allowed to invoke parallel operations for different containers.
  • The container runtime must order ADD and DEL operations for a container, such that ADD is always eventually followed by a corresponding DEL. DEL may be followed by additional DELs but plugins should handle multiple DELs permissively (i.e. plugin DEL should be idempotent).
  • A container must be uniquely identified by a ContainerID. Plugins that store state should do so using a primary key of (network name, CNI_CONTAINERID, CNI_IFNAME).
  • A runtime must not call ADD twice (without a corresponding DEL) for the same (network name, container id, name of the interface inside the container). This implies that a given container ID may be added to a specific network more than once only if each addition is done with a different interface name.
  • Fields in CNI structures (like Network Configuration and CNI Plugin Result) are required unless specifically marked optional.

CNI Plugin

Overview

Each CNI plugin must be implemented as an executable that is invoked by the container management system (e.g. rkt or Kubernetes).

A CNI plugin is responsible for inserting a network interface into the container network namespace (e.g. one end of a veth pair) and making any necessary changes on the host (e.g. attaching the other end of the veth into a bridge). It should then assign the IP to the interface and setup the routes consistent with the IP Address Management section by invoking appropriate IPAM plugin.

Parameters

The operations that CNI plugins must support are:

  • ADD: Add container to network

    • Parameters:
      • Container ID. A unique plaintext identifier for a container, allocated by the runtime. Must not be empty.
      • Network namespace path. This represents the path to the network namespace to be added, i.e. /proc/[pid]/ns/net or a bind-mount/link to it.
      • Network configuration. This is a JSON document describing a network to which a container can be joined. The schema is described below.
      • Extra arguments. This provides an alternative mechanism to allow simple configuration of CNI plugins on a per-container basis.
      • Name of the interface inside the container. This is the name that should be assigned to the interface created inside the container (network namespace); consequently it must comply with the standard Linux restrictions on interface names.
    • Result:
      • Interfaces list. Depending on the plugin, this can include the sandbox (eg, container or hypervisor) interface name and/or the host interface name, the hardware addresses of each interface, and details about the sandbox (if any) the interface is in.
      • IP configuration assigned to each interface. The IPv4 and/or IPv6 addresses, gateways, and routes assigned to sandbox and/or host interfaces.
      • DNS information. Dictionary that includes DNS information for nameservers, domain, search domains and options.
  • DEL: Delete container from network

    • Parameters:
      • Container ID, as defined above.
      • Network namespace path, as defined above.
      • Network configuration, as defined above.
      • Extra arguments, as defined above.
      • Name of the interface inside the container, as defined above.
    • All parameters should be the same as those passed to the corresponding add operation.
    • A delete operation should release all resources held by the supplied containerid in the configured network.
    • If there was a known previous ADD action for the container, the runtime MUST add a prevResult field to the configuration JSON of the plugin (or all plugins in a chain), which MUST be the Result of the immediately previous ADD action in JSON format (see below). The runtime may wish to use libcni's support for caching Results.
    • When CNI_NETNS and/or prevResult are not provided, the plugin should clean up as many resources as possible (e.g. releasing IPAM allocations) and return a successful response.
    • If the runtime cached the Result of a previous ADD response for a given container, it must delete that cached response on a successful DEL for that container.

Plugins should generally complete a DEL action without error even if some resources are missing. For example, an IPAM plugin should generally release an IP allocation and return success even if the container network namespace no longer exists, unless that network namespace is critical for IPAM management. While DHCP may usually send a 'release' message on the container network interface, since DHCP leases have a lifetime this release action would not be considered critical and no error should be returned. For another example, the bridge plugin should delegate the DEL action to the IPAM plugin and clean up its own resources (if present) even if the container network namespace and/or container network interface no longer exist.

  • CHECK: Check container's networking is as expected

    • Parameters:
      • Container ID, as defined for ADD.
      • Network namespace path, as defined for ADD.
      • Network configuration as defined for ADD, which must include a prevResult field containing the Result of the immediately preceding ADD for the container.
      • Extra arguments, as defined for ADD.
      • Name of the interface inside the container, as defined for ADD.
    • Result:
      • The plugin must return either nothing or an error.
    • The plugin must consult the prevResult to determine the expected interfaces and addresses.
    • The plugin must allow for a later chained plugin to have modified networking resources, e.g. routes.
    • The plugin should return an error if a resource included in the CNI Result type (interface, address or route):
      • was created by the plugin, and
      • is listed in prevResult, and
      • does not exist, or is in an invalid state.
    • The plugin should return an error if other resources not tracked in the Result type such as the following are missing or are in an invalid state:
      • Firewall rules
      • Traffic shaping controls
      • IP reservations
      • External dependencies such as a daemon required for connectivity
      • etc.
    • The plugin should return an error if it is aware of a condition where the container is generally unreachable.
    • The plugin must handle CHECK being called immediately after an ADD, and therefore should allow a reasonable convergence delay for any asynchronous resources.
    • The plugin should call CHECK on any delegated (e.g. IPAM) plugins and pass any errors on to its caller.
    • A runtime must not call CHECK for a container that has not been ADDed, or has been DELeted after its last ADD.
    • A runtime must not call CHECK if disableCheck is set to true in the configuration list.
    • A runtime must include a prevResult field in the network configuration containing the Result of the immediately preceding ADD for the container. The runtime may wish to use libcni's support for caching Results.
    • A runtime may choose to stop executing CHECK for a chain when a plugin returns an error.
    • A runtime may execute CHECK from immediately after a successful ADD, up until the container is DELeted from the network.
    • A runtime may assume that a failed CHECK means the container is permanently in a misconfigured state.
  • VERSION: Report version

    • Parameters: NONE.

    • Result: information about the CNI spec versions supported by the plugin

      {
        "cniVersion": "0.4.0", // the version of the CNI spec in use for this output
        "supportedVersions": [ "0.1.0", "0.2.0", "0.3.0", "0.3.1", "0.4.0" ] // the list of CNI spec versions that this plugin supports
      }
      

Runtimes must use the type of network (see Network Configuration below) as the name of the executable to invoke. Runtimes should then look for this executable in a list of predefined directories (the list of directories is not prescribed by this specification). Once found, it must invoke the executable using the following environment variables for argument passing:

  • CNI_COMMAND: indicates the desired operation; ADD, DEL, CHECK, or VERSION.
  • CNI_CONTAINERID: Container ID
  • CNI_NETNS: Path to network namespace file
  • CNI_IFNAME: Interface name to set up; if the plugin is unable to use this interface name it must return an error
  • CNI_ARGS: Extra arguments passed in by the user at invocation time. Alphanumeric key-value pairs separated by semicolons; for example, "FOO=BAR;ABC=123"
  • CNI_PATH: List of paths to search for CNI plugin executables. Paths are separated by an OS-specific list separator; for example ':' on Linux and ';' on Windows

Network configuration in JSON format must be streamed to the plugin through stdin. This means it is not tied to a particular file on disk and may contain information which changes between invocations.

Result

Note that IPAM plugins should return an abbreviated Result structure as described in IP Allocation.

Plugins must indicate success with a return code of zero and the following JSON printed to stdout in the case of the ADD command. The ips and dns items should be the same output as was returned by the IPAM plugin (see IP Allocation for details) except that the plugin should fill in the interface indexes appropriately, which are missing from IPAM plugin output since IPAM plugins should be unaware of interfaces.

{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "interfaces": [                                            (this key omitted by IPAM plugins)
      {
          "name": "<name>",
          "mac": "<MAC address>",                            (required if L2 addresses are meaningful)
          "sandbox": "<netns path or hypervisor identifier>" (required for container/hypervisor interfaces, empty/omitted for host interfaces)
      }
  ],
  "ips": [
      {
          "version": "<4-or-6>",
          "address": "<ip-and-prefix-in-CIDR>",
          "gateway": "<ip-address-of-the-gateway>",          (optional)
          "interface": <numeric index into 'interfaces' list>
      },
      ...
  ],
  "routes": [                                                (optional)
      {
          "dst": "<ip-and-prefix-in-cidr>",
          "gw": "<ip-of-next-hop>"                           (optional)
      },
      ...
  ]
  "dns": {                                                   (optional)
    "nameservers": <list-of-nameservers>                     (optional)
    "domain": <name-of-local-domain>                         (optional)
    "search": <list-of-additional-search-domains>            (optional)
    "options": <list-of-options>                             (optional)
  }
}

cniVersion specifies a Semantic Version 2.0 of CNI specification used by the plugin. A plugin may support multiple CNI spec versions (as it reports via the VERSION command), here the cniVersion returned by the plugin in the result must be consistent with the cniVersion specified in Network Configuration. If the cniVersion in the network configuration is not supported by the plugin, the plugin should return an error code 1 (see Well-known Error Codes for details).

interfaces describes specific network interfaces the plugin created. If the CNI_IFNAME variable exists the plugin must use that name for the sandbox/hypervisor interface or return an error if it cannot.

  • mac (string): the hardware address of the interface. If L2 addresses are not meaningful for the plugin then this field is optional.
  • sandbox (string): container/namespace-based environments should return the full filesystem path to the network namespace of that sandbox. Hypervisor/VM-based plugins should return an ID unique to the virtualized sandbox the interface was created in. This item must be provided for interfaces created or moved into a sandbox like a network namespace or a hypervisor/VM.

The ips field is a list of IP configuration information. See the IP well-known structure section for more information.

The routes field is a list of route configuration information. See the Routes well-known structure section for more information.

The dns field contains a dictionary consisting of common DNS information. See the DNS well-known structure section for more information.

The specification does not declare how this information must be processed by CNI consumers. Examples include generating an /etc/resolv.conf file to be injected into the container filesystem or running a DNS forwarder on the host.

Errors must be indicated by a non-zero return code and the following JSON being printed to stdout:

{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "code": <numeric-error-code>,
  "msg": <short-error-message>,
  "details": <long-error-message> (optional)
}

cniVersion specifies a Semantic Version 2.0 of CNI specification used by the plugin. Error codes 0-99 are reserved for well-known errors (see Well-known Error Codes section). Values of 100+ can be freely used for plugin specific errors.

In addition, stderr can be used for unstructured output such as logs.

Network Configuration

The network configuration is described in JSON form. The configuration may be stored on disk or generated from other sources by the container runtime. The following fields are well-known and have the following meaning:

  • cniVersion (string): Semantic Version 2.0 of CNI specification to which this configuration conforms.
  • name (string): Network name. This should be unique across all containers on the host (or other administrative domain).
  • type (string): Refers to the filename of the CNI plugin executable.
  • args (dictionary, optional): Additional arguments provided by the container runtime. For example a dictionary of labels could be passed to CNI plugins by adding them to a labels field under args.
  • ipMasq (boolean, optional): If supported by the plugin, sets up an IP masquerade on the host for this network. This is necessary if the host will act as a gateway to subnets that are not able to route to the IP assigned to the container.
  • ipam (dictionary, optional): Dictionary with IPAM specific values:
    • type (string): Refers to the filename of the IPAM plugin executable.
  • dns (dictionary, optional): Dictionary with DNS specific values:
    • nameservers (list of strings, optional): list of a priority-ordered list of DNS nameservers that this network is aware of. Each entry in the list is a string containing either an IPv4 or an IPv6 address.
    • domain (string, optional): the local domain used for short hostname lookups.
    • search (list of strings, optional): list of priority ordered search domains for short hostname lookups. Will be preferred over domain by most resolvers.
    • options (list of strings, optional): list of options that can be passed to the resolver

Plugins may define additional fields that they accept and may generate an error if called with unknown fields. The exception to this is the args field may be used to pass arbitrary data which should be ignored by plugins if not understood.

Example configurations

{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "bridge",
  // type (plugin) specific
  "bridge": "cni0",
  "ipam": {
    "type": "host-local",
    // ipam specific
    "subnet": "10.1.0.0/16",
    "gateway": "10.1.0.1"
  },
  "dns": {
    "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
  }
}
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "pci",
  "type": "ovs",
  // type (plugin) specific
  "bridge": "ovs0",
  "vxlanID": 42,
  "ipam": {
    "type": "dhcp",
    "routes": [ { "dst": "10.3.0.0/16" }, { "dst": "10.4.0.0/16" } ]
  }
  // args may be ignored by plugins
  "args": {
    "labels" : {
        "appVersion" : "1.0"
    }
  }
}
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "wan",
  "type": "macvlan",
  // ipam specific
  "ipam": {
    "type": "dhcp",
    "routes": [ { "dst": "10.0.0.0/8", "gw": "10.0.0.1" } ]
  },
  "dns": {
    "nameservers": [ "10.0.0.1" ]
  }
}

Network Configuration Lists

Network configuration lists provide a mechanism to run multiple CNI plugins for a single container in a defined order, passing the result of each plugin to the next plugin. The list is composed of well-known fields and list of one or more standard CNI network configurations (see above).

The list is described in JSON form, and can be stored on disk or generated from other sources by the container runtime. The following fields are well-known and have the following meaning:

  • cniVersion (string): Semantic Version 2.0 of CNI specification to which this configuration list and all the individual configurations conform.
  • name (string): Network name. This should be unique across all containers on the host (or other administrative domain).
  • disableCheck (string): Either true or false. If disableCheck is true, runtimes must not call CHECK for this network configuration list. This allows an administrator to prevent CHECKing where a combination of plugins is known to return spurious errors.
  • plugins (list): A list of standard CNI network configuration dictionaries (see above).

When executing a plugin list, the runtime MUST replace the name and cniVersion fields in each individual network configuration in the list with the name and cniVersion field of the list itself. This ensures that the name and CNI version is the same for all plugin executions in the list, preventing versioning conflicts between plugins. The runtime may also pass capability-based keys as a map in the top-level runtimeConfig key of the plugin's config JSON if a plugin advertises it supports a specific capability via the capabilities key of its network configuration. The key passed in runtimeConfig MUST match the name of the specific capability from the capabilities key of the plugins network configuration. See CONVENTIONS.md for more information on capabilities and how they are sent to plugins via the runtimeConfig key.

For the ADD action, the runtime MUST also add a prevResult field to the configuration JSON of any plugin after the first one, which MUST be the Result of the previous plugin (if any) in JSON format (see below). For the CHECK and DEL actions, the runtime MUST (except that it may be omitted for DEL if not available) add a prevResult field to the configuration JSON of each plugin, which MUST be the Result of the immediately previous ADD action in JSON format (see below). For the ADD action, plugins SHOULD echo the contents of the prevResult field to their stdout to allow subsequent plugins (and the runtime) to receive the result, unless they wish to modify or suppress a previous result. Plugins are allowed to modify or suppress all or part of a prevResult. However, plugins that support a version of the CNI specification that includes the prevResult field MUST handle prevResult by either passing it through, modifying it, or suppressing it explicitly. It is a violation of this specification to be unaware of the prevResult field.

The runtime MUST also execute each plugin in the list with the same environment.

For the DEL action, the runtime MUST execute the plugins in reverse-order.

Network Configuration List Error Handling

When an error occurs while executing an action on a plugin list (eg, either ADD or DEL) the runtime MUST stop execution of the list.

If an ADD action fails, when the runtime decides to handle the failure it should execute the DEL action (in reverse order from the ADD as specified above) for all plugins in the list, even if some were not called during the ADD action.

Example network configuration lists

{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "plugins": [
    {
      "type": "bridge",
      // type (plugin) specific
      "bridge": "cni0",
      // args may be ignored by plugins
      "args": {
        "labels" : {
            "appVersion" : "1.0"
        }
      },
      "ipam": {
        "type": "host-local",
        // ipam specific
        "subnet": "10.1.0.0/16",
        "gateway": "10.1.0.1"
      },
      "dns": {
        "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "tuning",
      "sysctl": {
        "net.core.somaxconn": "500"
      }
    }
  ]
}

Network configuration list runtime examples

Given the network configuration list JSON shown above the container runtime would perform the following steps for the ADD action. Note that the runtime adds the cniVersion and name fields from configuration list to the configuration JSON passed to each plugin, to ensure consistent versioning and names for all plugins in the list.

  1. first call the bridge plugin with the following JSON:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "bridge",
  "bridge": "cni0",
  "args": {
    "labels" : {
        "appVersion" : "1.0"
    }
  },
  "ipam": {
    "type": "host-local",
    // ipam specific
    "subnet": "10.1.0.0/16",
    "gateway": "10.1.0.1"
  },
  "dns": {
    "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
  }
}
  1. next call the tuning plugin with the following JSON, including the prevResult field containing the JSON response from the bridge plugin:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "tuning",
  "sysctl": {
    "net.core.somaxconn": "500"
  },
  "prevResult": {
    "ips": [
        {
          "version": "4",
          "address": "10.0.0.5/32",
          "interface": 2
        }
    ],
    "interfaces": [
        {
            "name": "cni0",
            "mac": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
        },
        {
            "name": "veth3243",
            "mac": "55:44:33:22:11:11",
        },
        {
            "name": "eth0",
            "mac": "99:88:77:66:55:44",
            "sandbox": "/var/run/netns/blue",
        }
    ],
    "dns": {
      "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
    }
  }
}

Given the same network configuration JSON list, the container runtime would perform the following steps for the CHECK action.

  1. first call the bridge plugin with the following JSON, including the prevResult field containing the JSON response from the ADD operation:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "bridge",
  "bridge": "cni0",
  "args": {
    "labels" : {
        "appVersion" : "1.0"
    }
  },
  "ipam": {
    "type": "host-local",
    // ipam specific
    "subnet": "10.1.0.0/16",
    "gateway": "10.1.0.1"
  },
  "dns": {
    "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
  }
  "prevResult": {
    "ips": [
        {
          "version": "4",
          "address": "10.0.0.5/32",
          "interface": 2
        }
    ],
    "interfaces": [
        {
            "name": "cni0",
            "mac": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
        },
        {
            "name": "veth3243",
            "mac": "55:44:33:22:11:11",
        },
        {
            "name": "eth0",
            "mac": "99:88:77:66:55:44",
            "sandbox": "/var/run/netns/blue",
        }
    ],
    "dns": {
      "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
    }
  }
}
  1. next call the tuning plugin with the following JSON, including the prevResult field containing the JSON response from the ADD operation:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "tuning",
  "sysctl": {
    "net.core.somaxconn": "500"
  },
  "prevResult": {
    "ips": [
        {
          "version": "4",
          "address": "10.0.0.5/32",
          "interface": 2
        }
    ],
    "interfaces": [
        {
            "name": "cni0",
            "mac": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
        },
        {
            "name": "veth3243",
            "mac": "55:44:33:22:11:11",
        },
        {
            "name": "eth0",
            "mac": "99:88:77:66:55:44",
            "sandbox": "/var/run/netns/blue",
        }
    ],
    "dns": {
      "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
    }
  }
}

Given the same network configuration JSON list, the container runtime would perform the following steps for the DEL action. Note that plugins are executed in reverse order from the ADD and CHECK actions.

  1. first call the tuning plugin with the following JSON, including the prevResult field containing the JSON response from the ADD action:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "tuning",
  "sysctl": {
    "net.core.somaxconn": "500"
  },
  "prevResult": {
    "ips": [
        {
          "version": "4",
          "address": "10.0.0.5/32",
          "interface": 2
        }
    ],
    "interfaces": [
        {
            "name": "cni0",
            "mac": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
        },
        {
            "name": "veth3243",
            "mac": "55:44:33:22:11:11",
        },
        {
            "name": "eth0",
            "mac": "99:88:77:66:55:44",
            "sandbox": "/var/run/netns/blue",
        }
    ],
    "dns": {
      "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
    }
  }
}
  1. next call the bridge plugin with the following JSON, including the prevResult field containing the JSON response from the ADD action:
{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "name": "dbnet",
  "type": "bridge",
  "bridge": "cni0",
  "args": {
    "labels" : {
        "appVersion" : "1.0"
    }
  },
  "ipam": {
    "type": "host-local",
    // ipam specific
    "subnet": "10.1.0.0/16",
    "gateway": "10.1.0.1"
  },
  "dns": {
    "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
  },
  "prevResult": {
    "ips": [
        {
          "version": "4",
          "address": "10.0.0.5/32",
          "interface": 2
        }
    ],
    "interfaces": [
        {
            "name": "cni0",
            "mac": "00:11:22:33:44:55",
        },
        {
            "name": "veth3243",
            "mac": "55:44:33:22:11:11",
        },
        {
            "name": "eth0",
            "mac": "99:88:77:66:55:44",
            "sandbox": "/var/run/netns/blue",
        }
    ],
    "dns": {
      "nameservers": [ "10.1.0.1" ]
    }
  }
}

IP Allocation

As part of its operation, a CNI plugin is expected to assign (and maintain) an IP address to the interface and install any necessary routes relevant for that interface. This gives the CNI plugin great flexibility but also places a large burden on it. Many CNI plugins would need to have the same code to support several IP management schemes that users may desire (e.g. dhcp, host-local).

To lessen the burden and make IP management strategy be orthogonal to the type of CNI plugin, we define a second type of plugin -- IP Address Management Plugin (IPAM plugin). It is however the responsibility of the CNI plugin to invoke the IPAM plugin at the proper moment in its execution. The IPAM plugin must determine the interface IP/subnet, Gateway and Routes and return this information to the "main" plugin to apply. The IPAM plugin may obtain the information via a protocol (e.g. dhcp), data stored on a local filesystem, the "ipam" section of the Network Configuration file or a combination of the above.

IP Address Management (IPAM) Interface

Like CNI plugins, the IPAM plugins are invoked by running an executable. The executable is searched for in a predefined list of paths, indicated to the CNI plugin via CNI_PATH. The IPAM Plugin must receive all the same environment variables that were passed in to the CNI plugin. Just like the CNI plugin, IPAM plugins receive the network configuration via stdin.

Success must be indicated by a zero return code and the following JSON being printed to stdout (in the case of the ADD command):

{
  "cniVersion": "0.4.0",
  "ips": [
      {
          "version": "<4-or-6>",
          "address": "<ip-and-prefix-in-CIDR>",
          "gateway": "<ip-address-of-the-gateway>"  (optional)
      },
      ...
  ],
  "routes": [                                       (optional)
      {
          "dst": "<ip-and-prefix-in-cidr>",
          "gw": "<ip-of-next-hop>"                  (optional)
      },
      ...
  ]
  "dns": {                                          (optional)
    "nameservers": <list-of-nameservers>            (optional)
    "domain": <name-of-local-domain>                (optional)
    "search": <list-of-search-domains>              (optional)
    "options": <list-of-options>                    (optional)
  }
}

Note that unlike regular CNI plugins, IPAM plugins should return an abbreviated Result structure that does not include the interfaces key, since IPAM plugins should be unaware of interfaces configured by their parent plugin except those specifically required for IPAM (eg, like the dhcp IPAM plugin).

cniVersion specifies a Semantic Version 2.0 of CNI specification used by the IPAM plugin. An IPAM plugin may support multiple CNI spec versions (as it reports via the VERSION command), here the cniVersion returned by the IPAM plugin in the result must be consistent with the cniVersion specified in Network Configuration. If the cniVersion in the network configuration is not supported by the IPAM plugin, the plugin should return an error code 1 (see Well-known Error Codes for details).

The ips field is a list of IP configuration information. See the IP well-known structure section for more information.

The routes field is a list of route configuration information. See the Routes well-known structure section for more information.

The dns field contains a dictionary consisting of common DNS information. See the DNS well-known structure section for more information.

Errors and logs are communicated in the same way as the CNI plugin. See CNI Plugin Result section for details.

IPAM plugin examples:

  • host-local: Select an unused (by other containers on the same host) IP within the specified range.
  • dhcp: Use DHCP protocol to acquire and maintain a lease. The DHCP requests will be sent via the created container interface; therefore, the associated network must support broadcast.

Notes

  • Routes are expected to be added with a 0 metric.
  • A default route may be specified via "0.0.0.0/0". Since another network might have already configured the default route, the CNI plugin should be prepared to skip over its default route definition.

Well-known Structures

IPs

  "ips": [
      {
          "version": "<4-or-6>",
          "address": "<ip-and-prefix-in-CIDR>",
          "gateway": "<ip-address-of-the-gateway>",      (optional)
          "interface": <numeric index into 'interfaces' list> (not required for IPAM plugins)
      },
      ...
  ]

The ips field is a list of IP configuration information determined by the plugin. Each item is a dictionary describing of IP configuration for a network interface. IP configuration for multiple network interfaces and multiple IP configurations for a single interface may be returned as separate items in the ips list. All properties known to the plugin should be provided, even if not strictly required.

  • version (string): either "4" or "6" and corresponds to the IP version of the addresses in the entry. All IP addresses and gateways provided must be valid for the given version.
  • address (string): an IP address in CIDR notation (eg "192.168.1.3/24").
  • gateway (string): the default gateway for this subnet, if one exists. It does not instruct the CNI plugin to add any routes with this gateway: routes to add are specified separately via the routes field. An example use of this value is for the CNI bridge plugin to add this IP address to the Linux bridge to make it a gateway.
  • interface (uint): the index into the interfaces list for a CNI Plugin Result indicating which interface this IP configuration should be applied to. IPAM plugins should not return this key since they have no information about network interfaces.

Routes

  "routes": [
      {
          "dst": "<ip-and-prefix-in-cidr>",
          "gw": "<ip-of-next-hop>"               (optional)
      },
      ...
  ]

Each routes entry is a dictionary with the following fields. All IP addresses in the routes entry must be the same IP version, either 4 or 6.

  • dst (string): destination subnet specified in CIDR notation.
  • gw (string): IP of the gateway. If omitted, a default gateway is assumed (as determined by the CNI plugin).

Each routes entry must be relevant for the sandbox interface specified by CNI_IFNAME.

DNS

  "dns": {
    "nameservers": <list-of-nameservers>                 (optional)
    "domain": <name-of-local-domain>                     (optional)
    "search": <list-of-additional-search-domains>        (optional)
    "options": <list-of-options>                         (optional)
  }

The dns field contains a dictionary consisting of common DNS information.

  • nameservers (list of strings): list of a priority-ordered list of DNS nameservers that this network is aware of. Each entry in the list is a string containing either an IPv4 or an IPv6 address.
  • domain (string): the local domain used for short hostname lookups.
  • search (list of strings): list of priority ordered search domains for short hostname lookups. Will be preferred over domain by most resolvers.
  • options (list of strings): list of options that can be passed to the resolver. See CNI Plugin Result section for more information.

Well-known Error Codes

Error codes 1-99 must not be used other than as specified here.

  • 1 - Incompatible CNI version
  • 2 - Unsupported field in network configuration. The error message must contain the key and value of the unsupported field.
  • 3 - Container unknown or does not exist. This error implies the runtime does not need to perform any container network cleanup (for example, calling the DEL action on the container).
  • 11 - Try again later. If the plugin detects some transient condition that should clear up, it can use this code to notify the runtime it should re-try the operation later.