<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd" [
<!ENTITY mdash  "&#x2014;" >
]>

<chapter id="classify">
  <title>Client Classification</title>

  <section>
    <title>Client Classification Overview</title>
      <para>
      In certain cases it is useful to differentiate between different
      types of clients and treat them accordingly. Common reasons include:
      <itemizedlist>
      <listitem><para>
      The clients represent different pieces of topology, e.g. a cable
      modem is different to the clients behind that modem.
      </para></listitem>
      <listitem><para>
      The clients have different behavior, e.g. a smart phone behaves
      differently to a laptop.
      </para></listitem>
      <listitem><para>
      The clients require different values for some options, e.g. a docsis3.0
      cable modem requires different settings to docsis2.0 cable modem.
      </para></listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
      </para>

      <para>
      It is envisaged that client classification will be used for changing the
      behavior of almost any part of the DHCP message processing, including the assignment of
      leases from different pools, the assignment of different options (or different values of
      the same options) etc. In the current release of the software however, there are
      only three mechanisms that take
      advantage of client classification: subnet selection, 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.
      </para>

      <para>
      The process of doing classification is conducted in three steps:
      <orderedlist>
      <listitem><para>
      Assess an incoming packet and assign it to zero or more classes.
      </para></listitem>
      <listitem><para>
      Choose a subnet, possibly based on the class information.
      </para></listitem>
      <listitem><para>
      Assign options, again possibly based on the class information.
      </para></listitem>
      </orderedlist>
      </para>

      <para>
      When determining which options to include in the response the server will examine
      the union of options from all of the assigned classes. In the case two or more
      classes include the same option, the value from the first class examined will
      be used.  When choosing a subnet, the server will iterate over all of the
      subnets that are feasible given the information found in the packet (client address,
      relay address etc). It will use the first subnet it finds that either doesn't
      have a class associated with it or that has a class which matches one of
      the packet's classes. In the future the processing order of the
      various classes may be specified but for now it is being left unspecified and
      may change in future releases.
      </para>

      <para>
      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 will examine the three options NTP, SMTP and POP3 and return any
      of them that the client requested.  As the NTP server was defined twice the
      server will choose only one of the values for the reply: the class from which the
      value is obtained is unspecified.
      </para>

      <para>
      There are two methods of doing classification. The first is automatic and relies
      on examining the values in the vendor class options. Information from these
      options is extracted and a class name is constructed from it and added to
      the class list for the packet. The second allows you to specify an expression
      that is evaluated for each packet. If the result is true, the packet is
      a member of the class.
      </para>

      <note>
      <para>
        Care should be taken with client classification as it is easy for
        clients that do not meet class criteria to be denied any service altogether.
      </para>
      </note>
  </section>

  <section id="classification-using-host-reservations">
    <title>Using Static Host Reservations In Classification</title>
    <para>Classes can be statically assigned to the clients using techniques described
    in <xref linkend="reservation4-client-classes"/> and
    <xref linkend="reservation6-client-classes"/>.
    </para>
  </section>

  <section id="classification-using-vendor">
    <title>Using Vendor Class Information In Classification</title>
      <para>
      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 &quot;VENDOR_CLASS_&quot; and the result is interpreted
      as a class. For example, modern cable modems will send this option with
      value &quot;docsis3.0&quot; and so the packet will belong to
      class &quot;VENDOR_CLASS_docsis3.0&quot;.
      </para>
  </section>

  <section id="classification-using-expressions">
    <title>Using Expressions In Classification</title>
      <para>
      The expression portion of classification contains operators and values.
      All values are currently strings and operators take a string or strings and
      return another string. When all the operations have completed
      the result should be a value of &quot;true&quot; or &quot;false&quot;.
      The packet belongs to
      the class (and the class name is added to the list of classes) if the result
      is &quot;true&quot;. Expressions are written in standard format and can be nested.
      </para>

      <para>
      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 types of arguments to an operator.  The
      evaluation code will also check for this class of error and generally
      throw an exception, though this should not occur in a normally functioning
      system.
      </para>

      <para>
      Other issues, for example 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.
      </para>

      <para>
      Expressions are a work in progress and the supported operators and
      values are limited. The expectation is that additional operators and values
      will be added over time, however the basic mechanisms will
      remain the same.
      </para>

      <para>
        <table frame="all" id="classification-values-list">
          <title>List of Classification Values</title>
          <tgroup cols='3'>
          <colspec colname='name' />
          <colspec colname='example' />
          <colspec colname='description' />
          <thead>
            <row>
              <entry>Name</entry>
              <entry>Example expression</entry>
              <entry>Example value</entry>
              <entry>Description</entry>
            </row>
          </thead>

          <tbody>
            <row>
              <entry>String literal</entry>
              <entry>'example'</entry>
              <entry>'example'</entry>
              <entry>A string</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Hexadecimal string literal</entry>
              <entry>0x5a7d</entry>
              <entry>'Z}'</entry>
              <entry>A hexadecimal string</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>IP address literal</entry>
              <entry>10.0.0.1</entry>
              <entry>0x0a000001</entry>
              <entry>An IP address</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Integer literal</entry>
              <entry>123</entry>
              <entry>'123'</entry>
              <entry>A 32 bit unsigned integer value</entry>
            </row>
            <row></row>
            <row>
              <entry>Binary content of the option</entry>
              <entry>option[123].hex</entry>
              <entry>'(content of the option)'</entry>
              <entry>The value of the option with given code from the
              packet as hex</entry>
            </row>
<!-- Text option not fully defined yet, leave it out
            <row>
              <entry>Option Text</entry>
              <entry>option[123].text</entry>
              <entry>'foobar'</entry>
              <entry>The value of the option with given code from the
              packet as text</entry>
            </row>
-->
            <row>
              <entry>Option existence</entry>
              <entry>option[123].exists</entry>
              <entry>'true'</entry>
              <entry>If the option with given code is present in the
              packet "true" else "false"</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>DHCPv4 relay agent sub-option</entry>
              <entry>relay4[123].hex</entry>
              <entry>'(content of the RAI sub-option)'</entry>
              <entry>The value of sub-option with given code from the
              DHCPv4 Relay Agent Information option (option 82)</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>DHCPv6 Relay Options</entry>
              <entry>relay6[nest].option[code].hex</entry>
              <entry>(value of the option)</entry>
              <entry>The value of the option with code "code" from the
              relay encapsulation "nest"</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>DHCPv6 Relay Peer Address</entry>
              <entry>relay6[nest].peeraddr</entry>
              <entry>2001:DB8::1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the peer address field from the
              relay encapsulation "nest"</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>DHCPv6 Relay Link Address</entry>
              <entry>relay6[nest].linkaddr</entry>
              <entry>2001:DB8::1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the link address field from the
              relay encapsulation "nest"</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Interface name of packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt.iface</entry>
              <entry>eth0</entry>
              <entry>The name of the incoming interface of a DHCP packet.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Source address of packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt.src</entry>
              <entry>10.1.2.3</entry>
              <entry>The IP source address of a DHCP packet.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Destination address of packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt.dst</entry>
              <entry>10.1.2.3</entry>
              <entry>The IP destination address of a DHCP packet.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Length of packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt.len</entry>
              <entry>513</entry>
              <entry>The length of a DHCP packet (UDP header field), expressed
              as a 32 bit unsigned integer.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Hardware address in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.mac</entry>
              <entry>0x010203040506</entry>
              <entry>The value of the chaddr field of the DHCPv4 packet, hlen (0 to 16) bytes</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Hardware length in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.hlen</entry>
              <entry>6</entry>
              <entry>The value of the hlen field of the DHCPv4 packet padded to 4 bytes</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Hardware type in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.htype</entry>
              <entry>6</entry>
              <entry>The value of the htype field of the DHCPv4 packet padded to 4 bytes</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>ciaddr field in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.ciaddr</entry>
              <entry>192.0.2.1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the ciaddr field of the DHCPv4 packet (IPv4 address, 4 bytes)</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>giaddr field in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.giaddr</entry>
              <entry>192.0.2.1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the giaddr field of the DHCPv4 packet (IPv4 address, 4 bytes)</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>yiaddr field in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.yiaddr</entry>
              <entry>192.0.2.1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the yiaddr field of the DHCPv4 packet (IPv4 address, 4 bytes)</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>siaddr field in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.siaddr</entry>
              <entry>192.0.2.1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the siaddr field of the DHCPv4 packet (IPv4 address, 4 bytes)</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Message Type in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.msgtype</entry>
              <entry>1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the message type field in the DHCPv4
              packet (expressed as a 32 bit unsigned integer).</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Transaction ID (xid) in DHCPv4 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt4.transid</entry>
              <entry>12345</entry>
              <entry>The value of the transaction id in the DHCPv4
              packet (expressed as a 32 bit unsigned integer).</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Message Type in DHCPv6 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt6.msgtype</entry>
              <entry>1</entry>
              <entry>The value of the message type field in the DHCPv6
              packet (expressed as a 32 bit unsigned integer).</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Transaction ID in DHCPv6 packet</entry>
              <entry>pkt6.transid</entry>
              <entry>12345</entry>
              <entry>The value of the transaction id in the DHCPv6
              packet (expressed as a 32 bit unsigned integer).</entry>
            </row>

            <row>
              <entry>Vendor option existence (any vendor)</entry>
              <entry>vendor[*].exists</entry>
              <entry>true</entry>
              <entry>Returns whether a vendor option from any vendor
              is present ('true') or absent ('false').</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Vendor option existence (specific vendor)</entry>
              <entry>vendor[4491].exists</entry>
              <entry>true</entry>
              <entry>Returns whether a vendor option from specified
              vendor (determined by its enterprise-id)
              is present ('true') or absent ('false').</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Enterprise-id from vendor option</entry>
              <entry>vendor.enterprise</entry>
              <entry>4491</entry>
              <entry>If the vendor option is present, it returns the
              value of the enterprise-id field padded to 4
              bytes. Returns "" otherwise.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Vendor sub-option existence</entry>
              <entry>vendor[4491].option[1].exists</entry>
              <entry>true</entry>
              <entry>Returns 'true' if there is vendor option with
              specified enterprise-id and given sub-option is present.
              Returns 'false' otherwise.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Vendor sub-option content</entry>
              <entry>vendor[4491].option[1].hex</entry>
              <entry>docsis3.0</entry>
              <entry>Returns content of the specified sub-option of
              a vendor option with specified enterprise id. Returns
              '' if no such option or sub-option is present.
              </entry>
            </row>

            <row>
              <entry>Vendor class option existence (any vendor)</entry>
              <entry>vendor-class[*].exists</entry>
              <entry>true</entry>
              <entry>Returns whether a vendor class option from any vendor
              is present ('true') or absent ('false').</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Vendor class option existence (specific vendor)</entry>
              <entry>vendor-class[4491].exists</entry>
              <entry>true</entry>
              <entry>Returns whether a vendor class option from specified
              vendor (determined by its enterprise-id)
              is present ('true') or absent ('false').</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Enterprise-id from vendor class option</entry>
              <entry>vendor-class.enterprise</entry>
              <entry>4491</entry>
              <entry>If the vendor option is present, it returns the
              value of the enterprise-id field padded to 4
              bytes. Returns "" otherwise.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>First data chunk from vendor class option</entry>
              <entry>vendor-class[4491].data</entry>
              <entry>docsis3.0</entry>
              <entry>Returns content of the first data chunk from
              the vendor class option with specified enterprise-id.
              Returns "" if missing.</entry>
            </row>
            <row>
              <entry>Specific data chunk from vendor class option</entry>
              <entry>vendor-class[4491].data[3]</entry>
              <entry>docsis3.0</entry>
              <entry>Returns content of the specified data chunk of
              a vendor class option with specified enterprise id. Returns
              '' if no such option or data chunk is present.
              </entry>
            </row>
          </tbody>
          </tgroup>
        </table>
        Notes:
      </para>

      <itemizedlist>

      <listitem><para>
      Hexadecimal strings are converted into a string as expected.  The starting &quot;0X&quot; or
      &quot;0x&quot; is removed and if the string is an odd number of characters a
      &quot;0&quot; is prepended to it.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      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.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      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 hex notation. When using hex notation to represent an
      integer 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.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "option[code].hex" extracts the value of the option with the code "code"
      from the incoming packet. If the packet doesn't contain the option, it
      returns the empty string. The string is presented as a byte string of
      the option payload without the type code or length fields.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "option[code].exists" checks if an option with the code "code" is present
      in the incoming packet. It can be used with empty options.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "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 doesn't contain a RAI option, or the RAI
      option doesn't 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.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "relay4" shares the same representation types as "option", for
      instance "relay4[code].exists" is supported.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "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 to
      specify relays counted from the DHCPv6 client, -1 indicating the
      relay closest to the client. In general negative "nest" level is
      the same as the number of relays + "nest" level.
      If the requested encapsulation doesn't exist an empty string ""
      is returned.  This expression is allowed in DHCPv6 only.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "relay6[nest].option[code]" shares the same representation types as
      "option", for instance "relay6[nest].option[code].exists" is supported.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
       Expressions starting with "pkt4" can be used only in DHCPv4.
       They allows access to DHCPv4 message fields.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      "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 will be
      "0x00000001" or simply 1 as in "pkt6.msgtype == 1".
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      Vendor option means Vendor-Identifying Vendor-specific Information
      option in DHCPv4 (code 125, see
      <ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3925#section-4">Section 4 of RFC 3925</ulink>) and
      Vendor-specific Information Option in DHCPv6 (code 17, defined in
      <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3315#section-22.17">Section 22.17 of
      RFC 3315</ulink>). Vendor class option means Vendor-Identifying Vendor
      Class Option in DHCPv4 (code 124, see
      <ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3925#section-3">Section 3 of RFC 3925</ulink>) in DHCPv4 and
      Class Option in DHCPv6 (code 16, see
      <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3315#section-22.16">Section 22.16 of RFC 3315</ulink>).
      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.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      In the vendor and vendor-class constructs Asterisk (*) or 0 can be
      used to specify a wildcard enterprise-id value, i.e. it will match any
      enterprise-id value.
      </para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>Vendor Class Identifier (option 60 in DHCPv4) can be
      accessed using option[60] expression.</para></listitem>

      <listitem><para>
      <ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3925">RFC3925</ulink> and
      <ulink url="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3315">RFC3315</ulink>
      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 vendor.enterprise
      and vendor-class.enterprise expressions, the value from the first instance
      is returned. Please submit a feature request on Kea website if you need
      support for multiple instances.
      </para></listitem>

      </itemizedlist>

      <para>
        <table frame="all" id="classification-expressions-list">
          <title>List of Classification Expressions</title>
          <tgroup cols='3'>
          <colspec colname='name' />
          <colspec colname='example' />
          <colspec colname='description' />
          <thead>
            <row>
              <entry>Name</entry>
              <entry>Example</entry>
              <entry>Description</entry>
            </row>
          </thead>
          <tbody>
<row><entry>Equal</entry> <entry>'foo' == 'bar'</entry><entry>Compare the two values and return "true" or "false"</entry></row>
<row><entry>Not</entry> <entry>not ('foo' == 'bar')</entry><entry>Logical negation</entry></row>
<row><entry>And</entry> <entry>('foo' == 'bar') and ('bar' == 'foo')</entry><entry>Logical and</entry></row>
<row><entry>Or</entry> <entry>('foo' == 'bar') or ('bar' == 'foo')</entry><entry>Logical or</entry></row>
<row><entry>Substring</entry><entry>substring('foobar',0,3)</entry><entry>Return the requested substring</entry></row>
<row><entry>Concat</entry><entry>concat('foo','bar')</entry><entry>Return the
concatenation of the strings</entry></row>
          </tbody>
          </tgroup>
        </table>
      </para>

      <section>
        <title>Logical operators</title>
        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").
      </section>

      <section>
        <title>Substring</title>
        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 doesn't 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 length is longer than the remaining portion of the string then
        the entire remaining portion is returned.  Some examples may be helpful:

          <screen>
        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) == ''
          </screen>
      </section>
      <section>
        <title>Concat</title>
        The concat function "concat(string1, string2)" returns the
        concatenation of its two arguments. For instance:
          <screen>
        concat('foo', 'bar') == 'foobar'
          </screen>
       </section>
    </section>

  <note>
  <para>
    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. If you need
    complex or time consuming expressions you should write a <link
    linkend='hooks-libraries'>hook</link> to perform the necessary work.
  </para> </note>

  <section id="classification-configuring">
    <title>Configuring Classes</title>
      <para>
      A class contains three items: a name, a test expression and option data.
      The name must exist and must be unique amongst all classes. The test
      expression and option data are optional.
      </para>

      <para>
      The test expression is a string containing the logical expression used to
      determine membership in the class.  The entire expression is in double
      quotes.
      </para>

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

      <para>
      In the following example the class named &quot;Client_foo&quot; is defined.
      It is comprised of all clients whose client ids (option 61) start with the
      string &quot;foo&quot;. Members of this class will be given 192.0.2.1 and
      192.0.2.2 as their domain name servers.

        <screen>
"Dhcp4": {
    "client-classes": [<userinput>
        {
            "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"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],</userinput>
    ...
}</screen>
      </para>

      <para>
      This example shows a client class being defined for use by the DHCPv6 server.
      In it the class named &quot;Client_enterprise&quot; is defined.  It is comprised
      of all clients who's 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 an 2001:db8:0::1 and 2001:db8:2::1 as their domain name servers.
        <screen>
"Dhcp6": {
    "client-classes": [<userinput>
        {
            "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"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],</userinput>
    ...
}</screen>
      </para>
  </section>

  <section id="classification-subnets">
    <title>Configuring Subnets With Class Information</title>
      <para>
        In certain cases it 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.
      </para>

      <para>
        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 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 subnet. Such a
        configuration can be achieved in the following way:
        <screen>
"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"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ],<userinput>
    "subnet4": [
        {
            "subnet": "192.0.2.0/24",
            "pools": [ { "pool": "192.0.2.10 - 192.0.2.20" } ],
            "client-class": "Client_foo"
        },
        ...
    ],</userinput>,
    ...
}</screen>
      </para>

      <para>
        The following example shows restricting access to a DHCPv6 subnet.  This
        configuration will restrict use of the addresses 2001:db8:1::1 to
        2001:db8:1::FFFF to members of the "Client_enterprise" class.

        <screen>
"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"
                }
            ]
        },
        ...
    ], <userinput>
    "subnet6": [
        {
            "subnet": "2001:db8:1::/64",
            "pools": [ { "pool": "2001:db8:1::-2001:db8:1::ffff" } ],
            "client-class": "Client_enterprise"
        }
    ],</userinput>
    ...
}</screen>
      </para>
  </section>

  <section>
    <title>Using Classes</title>
      <para>
      Currently classes can be used for two functions.  They can supply options
      to the members of the class and they can be used to choose a subnet from which an
      address will be assigned to the class member.
      </para>

      <para>
      When supplying options, options defined as part of the class definition
      are considered &quot;class globals&quot;.  They will override any global options that
      may be defined and in turn will be overridden by any options defined for an
      individual subnet.
      </para>
  </section>

  <section>
    <title>Classes and Hooks</title>
      <para>
      You may use a hook to classify your packets. This may be useful if the
      expression would either be complex or time consuming and be easier or
      better to write as code.  Once the hook has added the proper class name
      to the packet the rest of the classification system will work as normal
      in choosing a subnet and selecting options.  For a description of
      hooks see <xref linkend="hooks-libraries"/>, for a description on
      configuring classes see <xref linkend="classification-configuring"/>
      and <xref linkend="classification-subnets"/>.
      </para>
  </section>

  <section>
   <title>Debugging Expressions</title>
     <para>
     While you are constructing your classification expressions you may
     find it useful to enable logging see <xref linkend="logging"/> for
     a more complete description of the logging facility.
     </para>

     <para>
     To enable the debug statements in the classification system you will
     need to set the severity to "DEBUG" and the debug level to at least 55.
     The specific loggers are "kea-dhcp4.eval" and "kea-dhcp6.eval".
     </para>

     <para>
     In order to understand the logging statements one must understand a
     bit about how expressions are evaluated, for a more complete description
     refer to the design document at <ulink url="http://kea.isc.org/wiki/KeaDesigns"/>.
     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.
     </para>

     <para>
     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 will be traversed
     in order.  As each token is executed it will be 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:
       <screen>
       "test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",
       </screen>
     This will result in the following tokens:
       <screen>
       option, number (0), number (3), substring, text ('foo'), equals
       </screen>
     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.
     </para>

     <para>
     When debug logging is enabled, each time a token is evaluated it will
     emit 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.
     </para>

     <para>
     The values will be 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 will be displayed in
     the order they were popped.  For most expressions this won't matter
     but for the concat expression the values are displayed in reverse
     order from how they are written in the expression.
     </para>

     <para>
     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.
       <screen>
       "test": "substring(option[61].hex,0,3) == 'foo'",
       </screen>
     The logging might then resemble this:
       <screen>
       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'
       </screen>
     </para>

     <note><para>
     The debug logging may be quite verbose if you have a number of expressions
     to evaluate.  It is intended as an aid in helping you create and debug
     your expressions.  You should plan to disable debug logging when you have your
     expressions working correctly.  You also may wish to include only one set of
     expressions at a time in the configuration file while debugging them in order
     to limit the log statements.  For example when adding a new set of expressions
     you might find it more convenient to create a configuration file that only
     includes the new expressions until you have them working correctly and then
     add the new set to the main configuration file.
     </para></note>
  </section>

</chapter>