Some applications, especially legacy applications or applications which monitor
network traffic, expect to be directly connected to the physical network. In
this type of situation, you can use the macvlan
network driver to assign a MAC
address to each container's virtual network interface, making it appear to be
a physical network interface directly connected to the physical network. In this
case, you need to designate a physical interface on your Docker host to use for
the Macvlan, as well as the subnet and gateway of the network. You can even
isolate your Macvlan networks using different physical network interfaces.
Keep the following things in mind:
-
You may unintentionally degrade your network due to IP address exhaustion or to "VLAN spread", a situation that occurs when you have an inappropriately large number of unique MAC addresses in your network.
-
Your networking equipment needs to be able to handle "promiscuous mode", where one physical interface can be assigned multiple MAC addresses.
-
If your application can work using a bridge (on a single Docker host) or overlay (to communicate across multiple Docker hosts), these solutions may be better in the long term.
Options#
The following table describes the driver-specific options that you can pass to
--option
when creating a network using the macvlan
driver.
Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
macvlan_mode |
bridge |
Sets the Macvlan mode. Can be one of: bridge , vepa , passthru , private |
parent |
Specifies the parent interface to use. |
Create a Macvlan network#
When you create a Macvlan network, it can either be in bridge mode or 802.1Q trunk bridge mode.
-
In bridge mode, Macvlan traffic goes through a physical device on the host.
-
In 802.1Q trunk bridge mode, traffic goes through an 802.1Q sub-interface which Docker creates on the fly. This allows you to control routing and filtering at a more granular level.
Bridge mode#
To create a macvlan
network which bridges with a given physical network
interface, use --driver macvlan
with the docker network create
command. You
also need to specify the parent
, which is the interface the traffic will
physically go through on the Docker host.
$ docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=172.16.86.0/24 \
--gateway=172.16.86.1 \
-o parent=eth0 pub_net
If you need to exclude IP addresses from being used in the macvlan
network, such
as when a given IP address is already in use, use --aux-addresses
:
$ docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.32.0/24 \
--ip-range=192.168.32.128/25 \
--gateway=192.168.32.254 \
--aux-address="my-router=192.168.32.129" \
-o parent=eth0 macnet32
802.1Q trunk bridge mode#
If you specify a parent
interface name with a dot included, such as eth0.50
,
Docker interprets that as a sub-interface of eth0
and creates the sub-interface
automatically.
$ docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.50.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.50.1 \
-o parent=eth0.50 macvlan50
Use an IPvlan instead of Macvlan#
In the above example, you are still using a L3 bridge. You can use ipvlan
instead, and get an L2 bridge. Specify -o ipvlan_mode=l2
.
$ docker network create -d ipvlan \
--subnet=192.168.210.0/24 \
--subnet=192.168.212.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.210.254 \
--gateway=192.168.212.254 \
-o ipvlan_mode=l2 -o parent=eth0 ipvlan210
Use IPv6#
If you have configured the Docker daemon to allow IPv6,
you can use dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 macvlan
networks.
$ docker network create -d macvlan \
--subnet=192.168.216.0/24 --subnet=192.168.218.0/24 \
--gateway=192.168.216.1 --gateway=192.168.218.1 \
--subnet=2001:db8:abc8::/64 --gateway=2001:db8:abc8::10 \
-o parent=eth0.218 \
-o macvlan_mode=bridge macvlan216
Next steps#
Learn how to use the Macvlan driver in the Macvlan networking tutorial.