15. Client Classification

15.1. Client Classification Overview

In certain cases it is useful to differentiate among different types of clients and treat them accordingly. Common reasons include:

  • The clients represent different pieces of topology, e.g. a cable modem is not the same as the clients behind that modem.
  • The clients have different behavior, e.g. a smartphone behaves differently from a laptop.
  • The clients require different values for some options, e.g. a docsis3.0 cable modem requires different settings from a docsis2.0 cable modem.

To make management easier, different clients can be grouped into a client class to receive common options.

An incoming packet can be associated with a client class in several ways:

  • Implicitly, using a vendor class option or another built-in condition.
  • Using an expression which evaluates to true.
  • Using static host reservations, a shared network, a subnet, etc.
  • Using a hook.

Client classification can be used to change the behavior of almost any part of the DHCP message processing. There are currently six mechanisms that take advantage of client classification: dropping queries, subnet selection, pool selection, definition of DHCPv4 private (codes 224-254) and code 43 options, assignment of different options, and, for DHCPv4 cable modems, the setting of specific options for use with the TFTP server address and the boot file field.

The classification process is conducted in several steps:

  1. The ALL class is associated with the incoming packet.
  2. Vendor class options are processed.
  3. Classes with matching expressions and not marked for later evaluation (“on request” or depending on the KNOWN/UNKNOWN built-in classes) are processed in the order they are defined in the configuration; the boolean expression is evaluated and, if it returns true (a match), the incoming packet is associated with the class.
  4. If a private or code 43 DHCPv4 option is received, it is decoded following its client-class or global (or, for option 43, last-resort) definition.
  5. When the incoming packet belongs to the special class DROP, it is dropped and an informational message is logged with the packet information.
  6. When the early-global-reservations-lookup global parameter is configured to true global reservations are looked for and the 8, 9 and 10 steps are partially performed: the lookup is limited to global reservations, if one is found the KNOWN class is set but if none is found the UNKNOWN class is not set.
  7. A subnet is chosen, possibly based on the class information when some subnets are reserved. More precisely: when choosing a subnet, the server iterates over all of the subnets that are feasible given the information found in the packet (client address, relay address, etc.). It uses the first subnet it finds that either has no class associated with it, or has a class which matches one of the packet’s classes.
  8. The server looks for host reservations. If an identifier from the incoming packet matches a host reservation in the subnet or shared network, the packet is associated with the KNOWN class and all classes of the host reservation. If a reservation is not found, the packet is assigned to the UNKNOWN class.
  9. Classes with matching expressions - directly, or indirectly using the KNOWN/UNKNOWN built-in classes and not marked for later evaluation (“on request”) - are processed in the order they are defined in the configuration; the boolean expression is evaluated and, if it returns true (a match), the incoming packet is associated with the class. After a subnet is selected, the server determines whether there is a reservation for a given client. Therefore, it is not possible to use the UNKNOWN class to select a shared network or a subnet. For the KNOWN class only global reservations only global reservations are used and the early-global-reservations-lookup parameter must be configured to true
  10. When the incoming packet belongs to the special class DROP, it is dropped and an informational message is logged with the packet information. Since Kea version 1.9.8, it is permissible to make the DROP class dependent on the KNOWN/UNKNOWN classes.
  11. If needed, addresses and prefixes from pools are assigned, possibly based on the class information when some pools are reserved for class members.
  12. Classes marked as “required” are evaluated in the order in which they are listed: first the shared network, then the subnet, and finally the pools that assigned resources belong to.
  13. Options are assigned, again possibly based on the class information in the order that classes were associated with the incoming packet. For DHCPv4 private and code 43 options, this includes option definitions specified within classes.

Note

Client classes in Kea follow the order in which they are specified in the configuration (vs. alphabetical order). Required classes follow the order in which they are required.

When determining which options to include in the response, the server examines the union of options from all of the assigned classes. If two or more classes include the same option, the value from the first class examined is used; classes are examined in the order they were associated, so ALL is always the first class and matching required classes are last.

As an example, imagine that an incoming packet matches two classes. Class foo defines values for an NTP server (option 42 in DHCPv4) and an SMTP server (option 69 in DHCPv4), while class bar defines values for an NTP server and a POP3 server (option 70 in DHCPv4). The server examines the three options - NTP, SMTP, and POP3 - and returns any that the client requested. As the NTP server was defined twice, the server chooses only one of the values for the reply; the class from which the value is obtained is determined as explained in the previous paragraph.

Note

Care should be taken with client classification, as it is easy for clients that do not meet any class criteria to be denied service altogether.

15.2. Built-in Client Classes

Some classes are built-in, so they do not need to be defined. Vendor class information is the primary example: the server checks whether an incoming DHCPv4 packet includes the vendor class identifier option (60) or an incoming DHCPv6 packet includes the vendor class option (16). If it does, the content of that option is prepended with VENDOR_CLASS_ and the result is interpreted as a class. For example, modern cable modems send this option with value docsis3.0, so the packet belongs to class VENDOR_CLASS_docsis3.0.

The HA_ prefix is used by the High Availability hook library to designate certain servers to process DHCP packets as a result of load balancing. The class name is constructed by prepending the HA_ prefix to the name of the server which should process the DHCP packet. This server uses an appropriate pool or subnet to allocate IP addresses (and/or prefixes), based on the assigned client classes. The details can be found in ha: High Availability.

The BOOTP class is used by the BOOTP hook library to classify and respond to inbound BOOTP queries.

Other examples are the ALL class, to which all incoming packets belong, and the KNOWN class, assigned when host reservations exist for a particular client. By convention, the names of built-in classes begin with all capital letters.

Currently recognized built-in class names are ALL, KNOWN and UNKNOWN, and the prefixes VENDOR_CLASS_, HA_, AFTER_, and EXTERNAL_. Although the AFTER_ prefix is a provision for an as-yet-unwritten hook, the EXTERNAL_ prefix can be freely used; built-in classes are implicitly defined so they never raise warnings if they do not appear in the configuration.

15.3. Using Expressions in Classification

The expression portion of a classification definition contains operators and values. All values are currently strings; operators take a string or strings and return another string. When all the operations have completed, the result should be a value of true or false. The packet belongs to the class (and the class name is added to the list of classes) if the result is true. Expressions are written in standard format and can be nested.

Expressions are pre-processed during the parsing of the configuration file and converted to an internal representation. This allows certain types of errors to be caught and logged during parsing. Examples of these errors include an incorrect number or type of argument to an operator. The evaluation code also checks for this class of error and generally throws an exception, though this should not occur in a normally functioning system.

Other issues, such as the starting position of a substring being outside of the substring or an option not existing in the packet, result in the operator returning an empty string.

Dependencies between classes are also checked. For instance, forward dependencies are rejected when the configuration is parsed; an expression can only depend on already-defined classes (including built-in classes) which are evaluated in a previous or the same evaluation phase. This does not apply to the KNOWN or UNKNOWN classes.

List of classification values
Name Example expression Example value
String literal ‘example’ ‘example’
Hexadecimal string literal 0x5a7d ‘Z}’
IP address literal 10.0.0.1 0x0a000001
Integer literal 123 ‘123’
Binary content of the option option[123].hex ‘(content of the option)’
Option existence option[123].exists ‘true’
Binary content of the sub-option option[12].option[34].hex ‘(content of the sub-option)’
Sub-Option existence option[12].option[34].exists ‘true’
Client class membership member(‘foobar’) ‘true’
Known client known member(‘KNOWN’)
Unknown client unknown not member(‘KNOWN’)
DHCPv4 relay agent sub-option relay4[123].hex ‘(content of the RAI sub-option)’
DHCPv6 Relay Options relay6[nest].option[code].hex (value of the option)
DHCPv6 Relay Peer Address relay6[nest].peeraddr 2001:DB8::1
DHCPv6 Relay Link Address relay6[nest].linkaddr 2001:DB8::1
Interface name of packet pkt.iface eth0
Source address of packet pkt.src 10.1.2.3
Destination address of packet pkt.dst 10.1.2.3
Length of packet pkt.len 513
Hardware address in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.mac 0x010203040506
Hardware length in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.hlen 6
Hardware type in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.htype 6
ciaddr field in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.ciaddr 192.0.2.1
giaddr field in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.giaddr 192.0.2.1
yiaddr field in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.yiaddr 192.0.2.1
siaddr field in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.siaddr 192.0.2.1
Message type in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.msgtype 1
Transaction ID (xid) in DHCPv4 packet pkt4.transid 12345
Message type in DHCPv6 packet pkt6.msgtype 1
Transaction ID in DHCPv6 packet pkt6.transid 12345
Vendor option existence (any vendor) vendor[*].exists true
Vendor option existence (specific vendor) vendor[4491].exists true
Enterprise-id from vendor option vendor.enterprise 4491
Vendor sub-option existence vendor[4491].option[1].exists true
Vendor sub-option content vendor[4491].option[1].hex docsis3.0
Vendor class option existence (any vendor) vendor-class[*].exist s true
Vendor class option existence (specific vendor) vendor-class[4491].exists true
Enterprise-id from vendor class option vendor-class.enterprise 4491
First data chunk from vendor class option vendor-class[4491].data docsis3.0
Specific data chunk from vendor class option vendor-class[4491].data[3] docsis3.0

Notes:

  • Hexadecimal strings are converted into a string as expected. The starting “0X” or “0x” is removed, and if the string is an odd number of characters a “0” is prepended to it.

  • IP addresses are converted into strings of length 4 or 16. IPv4, IPv6, and IPv4-embedded IPv6 (e.g. IPv4-mapped IPv6) addresses are supported.

  • Integers in an expression are converted to 32-bit unsigned integers and are represented as four-byte strings; for example, 123 is represented as 0x0000007b. All expressions that return numeric values use 32-bit unsigned integers, even if the field in the packet is smaller. In general, it is easier to use decimal notation to represent integers, but it is also possible to use hexadecimal notation. When writing an integer in hexadecimal, care should be taken to make sure the value is represented as 32 bits, e.g. use 0x00000001 instead of 0x1 or 0x01. Also, make sure the value is specified in network order, e.g. 1 is represented as 0x00000001.

  • option[code].hex extracts the value of the option with the code code from the incoming packet. If the packet does not contain the option, it returns an empty string. The string is presented as a byte string of the option payload, without the type code or length fields.

  • option[code].exists checks whether an option with the code code is present in the incoming packet. It can be used with empty options.

  • member('foobar') checks whether the packet belongs to the client class foobar. To avoid dependency loops, the configuration file parser verifies whether client classes were already defined or are built-in, i.e., beginning with VENDOR_CLASS_, AFTER_ (for the to-come “after” hook) and EXTERNAL_ or equal to ALL, KNOWN, UNKNOWN, etc.

    known and unknown are shorthand for member('KNOWN') and not member('KNOWN'). Note that the evaluation of any expression using the KNOWN class (directly or indirectly) is deferred after the host reservation lookup (i.e. when the KNOWN or UNKNOWN partition is determined).

  • relay4[code].hex attempts to extract the value of the sub-option code from the option inserted as the DHCPv4 Relay Agent Information (82) option. If the packet does not contain a RAI option, or the RAI option does not contain the requested sub-option, the expression returns an empty string. The string is presented as a byte string of the option payload without the type code or length fields. This expression is allowed in DHCPv4 only.

  • relay4 shares the same representation types as option; for instance, relay4[code].exists is supported.

  • relay6[nest] allows access to the encapsulations used by any DHCPv6 relays that forwarded the packet. The nest level specifies the relay from which to extract the information, with a value of 0 indicating the relay closest to the DHCPv6 server. Negative values allow relays to be specified counting from the DHCPv6 client, with -1 indicating the relay closest to the client. If the requested encapsulation does not exist, an empty string "" is returned. This expression is allowed in DHCPv6 only.

  • relay6[nest].option[code] shares the same representation types as option; for instance, relay6[nest].option[code].exists is supported.

  • Expressions starting with pkt4 can be used only in DHCPv4. They allow access to DHCPv4 message fields.

  • pkt6 refers to information from the client request. To access any information from an intermediate relay, use relay6. pkt6.msgtype and pkt6.transid output a 4-byte binary string for the message type or transaction ID. For example, the message type SOLICIT is 0x00000001 or simply 1, as in pkt6.msgtype == 1.

  • “Vendor option” means the Vendor-Identifying Vendor-Specific Information option in DHCPv4 (code 125; see Section 4 of RFC 3925) and the Vendor-Specific Information Option in DHCPv6 (code 17, defined in Section 21.17 of RFC 8415). “Vendor class option” means the Vendor-Identifying Vendor Class Option in DHCPv4 (code 124; see Section 3 of RFC 3925) in DHCPv4 and the Class Option in DHCPv6 (code 16; see Section 21.16 of RFC 8415). Vendor options may have sub-options that are referenced by their codes. Vendor class options do not have sub-options, but rather data chunks, which are referenced by index value. Index 0 means the first data chunk, index 1 is for the second data chunk (if present), etc.

  • In the vendor and vendor-class constructs an asterisk (*) or 0 can be used to specify a wildcard enterprise-id value, i.e. it will match any enterprise-id value.

  • Vendor Class Identifier (option 60 in DHCPv4) can be accessed using the option[60] expression.

  • RFC 3925 and RFC 8415 allow for multiple instances of vendor options to appear in a single message. The client classification code currently examines the first instance if more than one appear. For the vendor.enterprise and vendor-class.enterprise expressions, the value from the first instance is returned. Please submit a feature request on the Kea GitLab site to request support for multiple instances.

List of classification expressions
Name Example Description
Equal ‘foo’ == ‘bar’ Compare the two values and return true or false
Not not (‘foo’ == ‘bar’) Logical negation
And (‘foo’ == ‘bar’) and (‘bar’ == ‘foo’) Logical and
Or (‘foo’ == ‘bar’) or (‘bar’ == ‘foo’) Logical or
Substring substring(‘foobar’,0,3) Return the requested substring
Concat concat(‘foo’,’bar’) Return the concatenation of the strings
Concat (operator +) ‘foo’ + ‘bar’ Return the concatenation of the strings
Ifelse ifelse(‘foo’ == ‘bar’,’us’,’them’) Return the branch value according to the condition
Hexstring hexstring(‘foo’, ‘-‘) Converts the value to a hexadecimal string, e.g. 0a:1b:2c:3e
Split split(‘foo.bar’, ‘.’, 2) Return the second field, splitting on dots.
List of conversion-to-text expressions
Name Example Description
AddressToText addrtotext (192.10.0.1) addrtotext (2003:db8::) Represent the 4 bytes of an IPv4 address or the 16 bytes of an IPv6 address in human readable format
Int8ToText int8totext (-1) Represents the 8-bit signed integer in text format
Int16ToText int16totext (-1) Represents the 16-bit signed integer in text format
Int32ToText int32totext (-1) Represents the 32-bit signed integer in text format
UInt8ToText uint8totext (255) Represents the 8-bit unsigned integer in text format
UInt16ToText uint16totext (65535) Represents the 16-bit unsigned integer in text format
UInt32ToText uint32totext (4294967295) Represents the 32-bit unsigned integer in text format

Notes:

The conversion operators can be used to transform data from binary to the text representation. The only requirement is that the input data type length matches an expected value.

The AddressToText token expects 4 bytes for IPv4 addresses or 16 bytes for IPv6 addresses. The Int8ToText and UInt8ToText tokens expect 1 byte, the Int16ToText and UInt16ToText tokens expect 2 bytes, and Int32ToText and UInt32ToText expect 4 bytes. For all conversion tokens, if the data length is 0, the result string is empty.

15.3.1. Logical Operators

The Not, And, and Or logical operators are the common operators. Not has the highest precedence and Or the lowest. And and Or are (left) associative. Parentheses around a logical expression can be used to enforce a specific grouping; for instance, in “A and (B or C)”. Without parentheses, “A and B or C” means “(A and B) or C”.

15.3.2. Substring

The substring operator substring(value, start, length) accepts both positive and negative values for the starting position and the length. For start, a value of 0 is the first byte in the string while -1 is the last byte. If the starting point is outside of the original string an empty string is returned. length is the number of bytes to extract. A negative number means to count towards the beginning of the string but does not include the byte pointed to by start. The special value all means to return all bytes from start to the end of the string. If the length is longer than the remaining portion of the string, then the entire remaining portion is returned. Some examples may be helpful:

substring('foobar', 0, 6) == 'foobar'
substring('foobar', 3, 3) == 'bar'
substring('foobar', 3, all) == 'bar'
substring('foobar', 1, 4) == 'ooba'
substring('foobar', -5, 4) == 'ooba'
substring('foobar', -1, -3) == 'oba'
substring('foobar', 4, -2) == 'ob'
substring('foobar', 10, 2) == ''

15.3.3. Concat

The concat function concat(string1, string2) returns the concatenation of its two arguments. For instance:

concat('foo', 'bar') == 'foobar'

For user convenience, Kea version 1.9.8 added an associative operator version of the concat function. For instance:

'abc' + 'def' + 'ghi' + 'jkl' + '...'

is the same as:

concat(concat(concat(concat('abc', 'def'), 'ghi'), 'jkl'), '...')

or:

concat('abc', concat('def', concat('ghi', concat('jkl', '...'))))

or:

'abcdefghijkl...'

15.3.4. Split

The Split operator split(value, delimiters, field-number) accepts a list of characters to use as delimiters and a positive field number of the desired field when the value is split into fields separated by the delimiters. Adjacent delimiters are not compressed out, rather they result in an empty string for that field number. If value is an empty string, the result will be an empty string. If the delimiters list is empty, the result will be the original value. If the field-number is less than one or larger than the number of fields, the result will be an empty string. Some examples follow:

split ('one.two..four', '.', 1) == 'one'
split ('one.two..four', '.', 2) == 'two'
split ('one.two..four', '.', 3) == ''
split ('one.two..four', '.', 4) == 'four'
split ('one.two..four', '.', 5) == ''

15.3.5. Ifelse

The ifelse function ifelse(cond, iftrue, ifelse) returns the iftrue or ifelse branch value following the boolean condition cond. For instance:

ifelse(option[230].exists, option[230].hex, 'none')

15.3.6. Hexstring

The hexstring function hexstring(binary, separator) returns the binary value as its hexadecimal string representation: pairs of hexadecimal digits separated by the separator, e.g ':', '-', '' (empty separator).

hexstring(pkt4.mac, ':')

Note

The expression for each class is executed on each packet received. If the expressions are overly complex, the time taken to execute them may impact the performance of the server. Administrators who need complex or time-consuming expressions should consider writing a hook to perform the necessary work.

15.4. Configuring Classes

A class contains five items: a name, a test expression, option data, an option definition, and an only-if-required flag. The name must exist and must be unique among all classes. The test expression, option data and definition, and only-if-required flag are optional.

The test expression is a string containing the logical expression used to determine membership in the class. The entire expression is in double quotes (“).

The option data is a list which defines any options that should be assigned to members of this class.

The option definition is for DHCPv4 option 43 (DHCPv4 Vendor-Specific Options) and DHCPv4 private options (DHCPv4 Private Options).

Usually the test expression is evaluated before subnet selection, but in some cases it is useful to evaluate it later when the subnet, shared network, or pools are known but output-option processing has not yet been done. The only-if-required flag, which is false by default, allows the evaluation of the test expression only when it is required, i.e. in a require-client-classes list of the selected subnet, shared network, or pool.

The require-client-classes list, which is valid for shared-network, subnet, and pool scope, specifies the classes which are evaluated in the second pass before output-option processing. The list is built in the reversed precedence order of option data, i.e. an option data item in a subnet takes precedence over one in a shared network, but required class in a subnet is added after one in a shared network. The mechanism is related to the only-if-required flag but it is not mandatory that the flag be set to true.

In the following example, the class named “Client_foo” is defined. It is comprised of all clients whose client IDs (option 61) start with the string “foo”. Members of this class will be given 192.0.2.1 and 192.0.2.2 as their domain name servers.

"Dhcp4": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_foo",
            "test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "domain-name-servers",
                    "code": 6,
                    "space": "dhcp4",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "192.0.2.1, 192.0.2.2"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    ...
}

The next example shows a client class being defined for use by the DHCPv6 server. In it the class named “Client_enterprise” is defined. It is comprised of all clients whose client identifiers start with the given hex string (which would indicate a DUID based on an enterprise ID of 0xAABBCCDD). Members of this class will be given 2001:db8:0::1 and 2001:db8:2::1 as their domain name servers.

"Dhcp6": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_enterprise",
            "test": "substring(option[1].hex,0,6) == 0x0002AABBCCDD",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "dns-servers",
                    "code": 23,
                    "space": "dhcp6",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "2001:db8:0::1, 2001:db8:2::1"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    ...
}

15.5. Using Static Host Reservations in Classification

Classes can be statically assigned to the clients using techniques described in Reserving Client Classes in DHCPv4 and Reserving Client Classes in DHCPv6.

Subnet host reservations are searched after subnet selection. Global host reservations are searched at the same time by default but the early-global-reservations-lookup allows to change this behavior into searching them before the subnet selection.

Pool selection is performed after all host reservations lookups.

15.6. Configuring Subnets With Class Information

In certain cases it is beneficial to restrict access to certain subnets only to clients that belong to a given class, using the client-class keyword when defining the subnet.

Let’s assume that the server is connected to a network segment that uses the 192.0.2.0/24 prefix. The administrator of that network has decided that addresses from the range 192.0.2.10 to 192.0.2.20 will be managed by the DHCP4 server. Only clients belonging to client class “Client_foo” are allowed to use this subnet. Such a configuration can be achieved in the following way:

"Dhcp4": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_foo",
            "test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "domain-name-servers",
                    "code": 6,
                    "space": "dhcp4",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "192.0.2.1, 192.0.2.2"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    "subnet4": [
        {
            "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24",
            "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.2.10 - 192.0.2.20" } ],
            "client-class": "Client_foo"
        },
        ...
    ],,
    ...
}

The following example shows how to restrict access to a DHCPv6 subnet. This configuration restricts use of the addresses in the range 2001:db8:1::1 to 2001:db8:1::FFFF to members of the “Client_enterprise” class.

"Dhcp6": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_enterprise",
            "test": "substring(option[1].hex,0,6) == 0x0002AABBCCDD",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "dns-servers",
                    "code": 23,
                    "space": "dhcp6",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "2001:db8:0::1, 2001:db8:2::1"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    "subnet6": [
        {
            "subnet": "2001:db8:1::/64",
            "pools": [ { "pool": "2001:db8:1::-2001:db8:1::ffff" } ],
            "client-class": "Client_enterprise"
        }
    ],
    ...
}

15.7. Configuring Pools With Class Information

Similar to subnets, in certain cases access to certain address or prefix pools must be restricted to only clients that belong to a given class, using the client-class when defining the pool.

Let’s assume that the server is connected to a network segment that uses the 192.0.2.0/24 prefix. The administrator of that network has decided that addresses from the range 192.0.2.10 to 192.0.2.20 are going to be managed by the DHCP4 server. Only clients belonging to client class “Client_foo” are allowed to use this pool. Such a configuration can be achieved in the following way:

"Dhcp4": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_foo",
            "test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "domain-name-servers",
                    "code": 6,
                    "space": "dhcp4",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "192.0.2.1, 192.0.2.2"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    "subnet4": [
        {
            "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24",
            "pools": [
                {
                    "pool": "192.0.2.10 - 192.0.2.20",
                    "client-class": "Client_foo"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],,

}

The following example shows how to restrict access to an address pool. This configuration restricts use of the addresses in the range 2001:db8:1::1 to 2001:db8:1::FFFF to members of the “Client_enterprise” class.

"Dhcp6": {
    "client-classes": [
        {
            "name": "Client_enterprise_",
            "test": "substring(option[1].hex,0,6) == 0x0002AABBCCDD",
            "option-data": [
                {
                    "name": "dns-servers",
                    "code": 23,
                    "space": "dhcp6",
                    "csv-format": true,
                    "data": "2001:db8:0::1, 2001:db8:2::1"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    "subnet6": [
        {
            "subnet": "2001:db8:1::/64",

            "pools": [
                {
                    "pool": "2001:db8:1::-2001:db8:1::ffff",
                    "client-class": "Client_foo"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],
    ...
}

15.8. Using Classes

Currently classes can be used for two functions: they can supply options to members of the class, and they can be used to choose a subnet from which an address will be assigned to a class member.

When options are defined as part of the class definition they override any global options that may be defined, and in turn will be overridden by any options defined for an individual subnet.

15.9. Classes and Hooks

Hooks may be used to classify packets. This may be useful if the expression would be complex or time-consuming to write, and could be better or more easily written as code. Once the hook has added the proper class name to the packet, the rest of the classification system will work as expected in choosing a subnet and selecting options. For a description of hooks, see Hook Libraries; for information on configuring classes, see Configuring Classes and Configuring Subnets With Class Information.

15.10. Debugging Expressions

While constructing classification expressions, administrators may find it useful to enable logging; see Logging for a more complete description of the logging facility.

To enable the debug statements in the classification system, the severity must be set to DEBUG and the debug level to at least 55. The specific loggers are kea-dhcp4.eval and kea-dhcp6.eval.

To understand the logging statements, it is essential to understand a bit about how expressions are evaluated; for a more complete description, refer to the design document at https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/kea/wikis/designs/Design-documents. In brief, there are two structures used during the evaluation of an expression: a list of tokens which represent the expressions, and a value stack which represents the values being manipulated.

The list of tokens is created when the configuration file is processed, with most expressions and values being converted to a token. The list is organized in reverse Polish notation. During execution, the list is traversed in order; as each token is executed, it is able to pop values from the top of the stack and eventually push its result on the top of the stack. Imagine the following expression:

"test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",

This will result in the following tokens:

option, number (0), number (3), substring, text ('foo'), equals

In this example, the first three tokens will simply push values onto the stack. The substring token will then remove those three values and compute a result that it places on the stack. The text option also places a value on the stack, and finally the equals token removes the two tokens on the stack and places its result on the stack.

When debug logging is enabled, each time a token is evaluated it emits a log message indicating the values of any objects that were popped off of the value stack, and any objects that were pushed onto the value stack.

The values are displayed as either text, if the command is known to use text values, or hexadecimal, if the command either uses binary values or can manipulate either text or binary values. For expressions that pop multiple values off the stack, the values are displayed in the order they were popped. For most expressions this will not matter, but for the concat expression the values are displayed in reverse order from their written order in the expression.

Let us assume that the following test has been entered into the configuration. This example skips most of the configuration to concentrate on the test.

"test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",

The logging might then resemble this:

2016-05-19 13:35:04.163 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_OPTION Pushing option 61 with value 0x666F6F626172
2016-05-19 13:35:04.164 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_STRING Pushing text string '0'
2016-05-19 13:35:04.165 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_STRING Pushing text string '3'
2016-05-19 13:35:04.166 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_SUBSTRING Popping length 3, start 0, string 0x666F6F626172 pushing result 0x666F6F
2016-05-19 13:35:04.167 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_STRING Pushing text string 'foo'
2016-05-19 13:35:04.168 DEBUG [kea.eval/44478] EVAL_DEBUG_EQUAL Popping 0x666F6F and 0x666F6F pushing result 'true'

Note

The debug logging may be quite verbose if there are multiple expressions to evaluate; it is intended as an aid in helping create and debug expressions. Administrators should plan to disable debug logging when expressions are working correctly. Users may also wish to include only one set of expressions at a time in the configuration file while debugging them, to limit the log statements. For example, when adding a new set of expressions, an administrator might find it more convenient to create a configuration file that only includes the new expressions until they are working correctly, and then add the new set to the main configuration file.