tc-actions(8) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPERATIONS | ACTION OPTIONS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

actions in tc(8)                  Linux                 actions in tc(8)

NAME         top

       actions - independently defined actions in tc

SYNOPSIS         top

       tc [ TC_OPTIONS ] actions add | change | replace ACTSPEC

       tc [ TC_OPTIONS ] actions get | delete ACTISPEC

       tc [ TC_OPTIONS ] actions flush ACTNAMESPEC

       tc [ TC_OPTIONS ] actions ls | list ACTNAMESPEC [ ACTFILTER ]

               ACTSPEC := action ACTDETAIL [ INDEXSPEC ] [ COOKIESPEC ]
               [ FLAGS ] [ HWSTATSSPEC ] [ CONTROL ] [ SKIPSPEC ]

               ACTISPEC := ACTNAMESPEC INDEXSPEC

               ACTNAMESPEC := action ACTNAME

               INDEXSPEC := index INDEX

               ACTFILTER := since MSTIME

               COOKIESPEC := cookie COOKIE

               FLAGS := no_percpu

               HWSTATSSPEC := hw_stats { immediate | delayed | disabled
               }

               ACTDETAIL := ACTNAME ACTPARAMS

               ACTNAME may be any valid action type: gact, mirred, bpf,
               connmark, csum, police, etc.

               MSTIME Time since last update.

               CONTROL := { reclassify | pipe | drop | continue | ok }

               SKIPSPEC := { skip_sw | skip_hw }

               TC_OPTIONS These are the options that are specific to tc
               and not only the options. Refer to tc(8) for more
               information.

DESCRIPTION         top

       The actions object in tc allows a user to define actions
       independently of a classifier (filter). These actions can then be
       assigned to one or more filters, with any packets matching the
       classifier's criteria having that action performed on them.

       Each action type (mirred, police, etc.) will have its own table
       to store all created actions.

OPERATIONS         top

       add    Create a new action in that action's table.

       change
       replace
              Make modifications to an existing action.

       get    Display the action with the specified index value. When
              combined with the -s option for tc, display the statistics
              for that action.

       delete Delete the action with the specified index value. If the
              action is already associated with a classifier, it does
              not delete the classifier.

       ls
       list   List all the actions in the specified table. When combined
              with the -s option for tc, display the statistics for all
              actions in the specified table.  When combined with the
              option since allows doing a millisecond time-filter since
              the last time an action was used in the datapath.

       flush  Delete all actions stored in the specified table.

ACTION OPTIONS         top

       Note that these options are available to all action types.

       index INDEX
              Specify the table index value of an action.  INDEX is a
              32-bit value that is unique to the specific type of action
              referenced.

              For add, change, and replace operations, the index is
              optional.  When adding a new action, specifying an index
              value will assign the action to that index unless that
              index value has already been assigned. Omitting the index
              value for an add operation will cause the kernel to assign
              a value to the new action.

              For get and delete operations, the index is required to
              identify the specific action to be displayed or deleted.

       cookie COOKIE
              In addition to the specific action, mark the matching
              packet with the value specified by COOKIE.  The COOKIE is
              a 128-bit value that will not be interpreted by the kernel
              whatsoever.  As such, it can be used as a correlating
              value for maintaining user state.  The value to be stored
              is completely arbitrary and does not require a specific
              format. It is stored inside the action structure itself.

       FLAGS  Action-specific flags. Currently, the only supported flag
              is no_percpu which indicates that action is expected to
              have minimal software data-path traffic and doesn't need
              to allocate stat counters with percpu allocator.  This
              option is intended to be used by hardware-offloaded
              actions.

       hw_stats HW_STATS
              Specifies the type of HW stats of new action. If omitted,
              any stats counter type is going to be used, according to
              driver and its resources.  The HW_STATS indicates the
              type. Any of the following are valid:

              immediate
                     Means that in dump, user gets the current HW stats
                     state from the device queried at the dump time.

              delayed
                     Means that in dump, user gets HW stats that might
                     be out of date for some time, maybe couple of
                     seconds. This is the case when driver polls stats
                     updates periodically or when it gets async stats
                     update from the device.

              disabled
                     No HW stats are going to be available in dump.

       since MSTIME
              When dumping large number of actions, a millisecond time-
              filter can be specified MSTIME.  The MSTIME is a
              millisecond count since last time a packet hit the action.
              As an example specifying "since 20000" implies to dump all
              actions that have seen packets in the last 20 seconds.
              This option is useful when the kernel has a large number
              of actions and you are only interested in recently used
              actions.

       CONTROL
              The CONTROL indicates how tc should proceed after
              executing the action. Any of the following are valid:

              reclassify
                     Restart the classifiction by jumping back to the
                     first filter attached to the action's parent.

              pipe   Continue with the next action. This is the default
                     control.

              drop   Drop the packed without running any further
                     actions.

              continue
                     Continue the classification with the next filter.

              pass   Return to the calling qdisc for packet processing,
                     and end classification of this packet.

       SKIPSPEC
              The SKIPSPEC indicates how tc should proceed when
              executing the action. Any of the following are valid:

              skip_sw
                     Do not process action by software. If hardware has
                     no offload support for this action, operation will
                     fail.

              skip_hw
                     Do not process action by hardware.

SEE ALSO         top

       tc(8), tc-bpf(8), tc-connmark(8), tc-csum(8), tc-ife(8),
       tc-mirred(8), tc-nat(8), tc-pedit(8), tc-police(8), tc-simple(8),
       tc-skbedit(8), tc-skbmod(8), tc-tunnel_key(8), tc-vlan(8),
       tc-xt(8)

COLOPHON         top

       This page is part of the iproute2 (utilities for controlling
       TCP/IP networking and traffic) project.  Information about the
       project can be found at 
       ⟨http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/networking/iproute2⟩.
       If you have a bug report for this manual page, send it to
       [email protected], [email protected].  This page was
       obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
       ⟨https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/network/iproute2/iproute2.git⟩ on
       2024-06-14.  (At that time, the date of the most recent commit
       that was found in the repository was 2024-06-11.)  If you
       discover any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page,
       or you believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for
       the page, or you have corrections or improvements to the
       information in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original
       manual page), send a mail to [email protected]

iproute2                       1 Aug 2017               actions in tc(8)

Pages that refer to this page: tc-gact(8)tc-simple(8)