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+.. _hooks-limits:
+
+``limits``: Limits to Manage Lease Allocation and Packet Processing
+===================================================================
+
+This hook library enables two types of limits:
+
+1. Lease limiting: allow a maximum of ``n`` leases assigned at any one time.
+2. Rate limiting: allow a maximum of ``n`` packets per ``time_unit`` to receive a response.
+
+The Limits hook library is only available to ISC customers with a paid support contract.
+
+.. _hooks-limits-configuration:
+
+Configuration
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The following examples are for ``kea-dhcp6``, but they apply equally to
+``kea-dhcp4``. The wildcards ``"<limit-type>"`` and ``"<limit-value>"`` need to be replaced
+with the respective keys and values for each limit type described in the sections following this
+one.
+
+The library can be loaded by both ``kea-dhcp4`` and ``kea-dhcp6`` servers by adding its path in the
+``"hooks-libraries"`` element of the server's configuration.
+
+.. code-block:: json
+
+ {
+ "Dhcp6": {
+ "hooks-libraries": [
+ {
+ "library": "/usr/local/lib/libdhcp_limits.so"
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+This alone does not limit anything. The desired limits are added to the user context in the
+configuration portion of the element that identifies the clients to be limited: a client class or a
+subnet. Upon reconfiguration, if Kea picked up on the configured limits, it logs one line for
+each configured limit. The log message contains ``LIMITS_CONFIGURED`` in its identifier.
+
+This is how a lease limit is defined for a client class:
+
+.. code-block:: json
+
+ {
+ "Dhcp6": {
+ "client-classes": [
+ {
+ "name": "cable-modem-1",
+ "test": "option[123].hex == 0x000C4B1E",
+ "user-context": {
+ "limits": {
+ "<limit>": "<limit-value>"
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+This is how a lease limit is defined for a global subnet:
+
+.. code-block:: json
+
+ {
+ "Dhcp6": {
+ "subnet6": [
+ {
+ "id": 1,
+ "subnet": "2001:db8::/64",
+ "user-context": {
+ "limits": {
+ "<limit>": "<limit-value>"
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+This is how a lease limit is defined for a subnet inside a shared network:
+
+.. code-block:: json
+
+ {
+ "Dhcp6": {
+ "shared-networks": [
+ {
+ "subnet6": [
+ {
+ "id": 1,
+ "subnet": "2001:db8::/64",
+ "user-context": {
+ "limits": {
+ "<limit>": "<limit-value>"
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+ }
+
+.. note::
+
+ The Limits hook library uses the class name to identify a client class and the subnet ID to
+ identify a subnet. Changing a test expression in a client class or the network range of a
+ subnet while leaving the name or ID unchanged does not reset the lease count for the
+ respective client class or subnet. To reset the lease count, change the client class name
+ or the subnet ID.
+
+.. _hooks-limits-lease-limiting:
+
+Lease Limiting
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+It is possible to limit the number of leases that a group of clients can get from a Kea DHCP server
+or from a set of collaborating Kea DHCP servers.
+
+The value of a lease limit can be specified as an unsigned integer in 32 bits, i.e. between ``0`` and
+``4,294,967,295``. Each lease type can be limited individually. IPv4 leases and IPv6 IA_NA leases
+are limited through the ``"address-limit"`` configuration entry. IPv6 IA_PD leases are limited
+through the ``"prefix-limit"`` configuration entry. Here are some examples:
+
+* ``"address-limit": 4``
+* ``"prefix-limit": 2``
+
+For lease limiting, client classes and the associated lease counts - which are
+checked against the configured limits - are updated for each lease in the following hook callouts:
+
+* ``lease4_select``
+* ``lease4_renew``
+* ``lease6_select``
+* ``lease6_renew``
+* ``lease6_rebind``
+
+As a result, classes for which ``"only-if-required"`` is "true" cannot be lease-limited.
+Please refer to :ref:`the classification steps <classify-classification-steps>` for more information on which
+client classes can be used to limit the number of leases.
+
+.. note::
+
+ Under load, a Kea DHCP server may allocate more leases than the limit strictly allows. This only has a chance of
+ happening during high traffic surges, coming from clients belonging to the same class or the
+ same subnet, depending on what is limited. Users may be interested in following the development of
+ `atomic lease limits <https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/kea/-/issues/2449>`__ in ISC's GitLab instance.
+
+.. _hooks-limits-rate-limiting:
+
+Rate Limiting
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+It is possible to limit the frequency or rate at which inbound packets receive a response.
+
+The value of a rate limit can be specified in the format ``"<p> packets per <time-unit>"``. ``<p>``
+is any number that can be represented by an unsigned integer in 32 bits, i.e. between ``0`` and
+``4,294,967,295``. ``<time-unit>`` can be any of ``second``, ``minute``, ``hour``, ``day``,
+``week``, ``month``, or ``year``. A ``month`` is considered to be 30 days for
+simplicity; similarly, a ``year`` is 365 days for limiting purposes. This syntax
+covers a wide range of rates, from one lease per year to four billion leases per
+second. This value is assigned to the ``"rate-limit"`` configuration entry.
+Here are some examples:
+
+* ``"rate-limit": 1 packet per second``
+* ``"rate-limit": 4 packets per minute``
+* ``"rate-limit": 16 packets per hour``
+
+The configured value of ``0`` packets is a convenient way of disabling packet processing for certain
+clients entirely. As such, it means its literal value and is not a special value for disabling
+limiting altogether, as might be imagined. Disabling limiting entirely is achieved by removing
+the ``"rate-limit"`` leaf configuration entry, the ``"limits"`` map or user context
+around it, or the hook library configuration. The same applies to the value of ``0`` in lease
+limiting. However, that use case is best achieved with rate limiting; it puts less computational
+strain on Kea, since the action of dropping the request or sending a NAK is decided earlier.
+
+In terms of rate limiting, client classes are evaluated at the ``pkt4_receive`` and the
+``pkt6_receive`` callout, respectively, so that rate limits are checked as early as possible in the
+packet-processing cycle. Thus, only those classes which are assigned to the packet solely via an
+independent test expression can be used. Classes that depend on host reservations or the special
+``BOOTP`` or ``KNOWN`` classes, and classes that are marked with ``"only-if-required": true``,
+cannot be rate limited. See :ref:`the classification steps <classify-classification-steps>` for
+more details on which client classes can be used to limit the packet rate.
+
+Rate limits based on subnet are enforced only on the initially selected subnet for a given packet.
+If the selected subnet is subsequently changed, as may be the case for subnets in a
+shared network or when reselection is enabled in libraries such as the RADIUS hook, rate
+limits on the newly selected subnet are ignored. In other words, packets are gated only by
+the rate limit on the original subnet.
+
+.. note::
+
+ It may seem logical to think that assigning a rate limit of ``n`` packets per time unit results
+ in ``n`` DORA or ``n`` SARR exchanges. However, by default, all inbound packets are counted - meaning
+ that a full message exchange accounts for two packets. To achieve the effect of counting an
+ exchange only once, use client-class rate-limiting with a test expression that binds
+ ``pkt4.msgtype`` to DHCPDISCOVER messages or ``pkt6.msgtype`` to SOLICIT messages.