Compiled Firewall Programs and Shorewall LiteTomEastep2006-2007Thomas M. EastepPermission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version
1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with
no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
GNU Free Documentation
License.This article applies to Shorewall 4.3 and
later. If you are running a version of Shorewall earlier than Shorewall
4.3.5 then please see the documentation appropriate for your
version.OverviewShorewall has the capability to compile a Shorewall configuration
and produce a runnable firewall program script. The script is a complete
program which can be placed on a system with Shorewall
Lite installed and can serve as the firewall creation script
for that system.RestrictionsWhile compiled Shorewall programs are useful in many cases, there
are some important restrictions that you should be aware of before
attempting to use them.All extension scripts used are copied into the program (with
the exception of those
executed at compile-time by the compiler). The ramifications
of this are:If you update an extension script, the compiled program
will not use the updated script.The params file is only processed at
compile time if you set EXPORTPARAMS=No in
shorewall.conf. For run-time setting of
shell variables, use the init extension
script. Although the default setting is EXPORTPARAMS=Yes for
compatibility, the recommended setting is
EXPORTPARAMS=No.If the params file needs to set shell
variables based on the configuration of the firewall system, you
can use this trick:EXT_IP=$(ssh root@firewall "/sbin/shorewall-lite call find_first_interface_address eth0")The shorewall-lite call command allows
you to to call interactively any Shorewall function that you can
call in an extension script.You must install Shorewall Lite on the system where you want
to run the script. You then install the compiled program in
/usr/share/shorewall-lite/firewall and use the /sbin/shorewall-lite
program included with Shorewall Lite to control the firewall just as
if the full Shorewall distribution was installed.The "shorewall compile" commandA compiled script is produced using the compile
command:
-eIndicates that the program is to be "exported" to another
system. When this flag is set, neither the "detectnets" interface
option nor DYNAMIC_ZONES=Yes in shorewall.conf are allowed. The
created program may be run on a system that has only Shorewall
Lite installedWhen this flag is given, Shorewall does not probe the
current system to determine the kernel/iptables features that it
supports. It rather reads those capabilities from
/etc/shorewall/capabilities. See below for
details.<directory name>specifies a directory to be searched for configuration files
before those directories listed in the CONFIG_PATH variable in
shorewall.conf.When -e <directory-name> is included, only the
SHOREWALL_SHELL and VERBOSITY settings from
/etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf are used and
these apply only to the compiler itself. The settings used by the
compiled firewall script are determined by the contents of
<directory name>/shorewall.conf.<path name>specifies the name of the script to be created. If not
given, ${VARDIR}/firewall is assumed (by default, ${VARDIR} is
/var/lib/shorewall/)
Shorewall LiteShorewall Lite is a companion product to Shorewall and is designed
to allow you to maintain all Shorewall configuration information on a
single system within your network.You install the full Shorewall release on one system within your
network. You need not configure Shorewall there and you may totally
disable startup of Shorewall in your init scripts. For ease of
reference, we call this system the 'administrative system'.The administrative system may be a Windows system running Cygwin or an Apple MacIntosh running OS X.
Install from a shell prompt using the
install.sh script (Mac supported was added in Shorewall
4.4.9).On each system where you wish to run a Shorewall-generated
firewall, you install Shorewall Lite. For ease of reference, we will
call these systems the 'firewall systems'.The firewall systems do NOT
need to have the full Shorewall product installed but rather only
the Shorewall Lite product. Shorewall and Shorewall Lite may be
installed on the same system but that isn't encouraged.On the administrative system you create a separate 'export
directory' for each firewall system. You copy the contents of
/usr/share/shorewall/configfiles into
each export directory.The /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf file is
used to determine the VERBOSITY setting which determines how much
output the compiler generates. All other settings are taken from the
shorewall.conf file in the remote systems export
directory.If you want to be able to allow non-root users to manage
remote firewall systems, then the files
/etc/shorewall/params and
/etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf must be readable
by all users on the administrative system. Not all packages secure
the files that way and you may have to change the file permissions
yourself.On each firewall system, If you are running Debian or one of its
derivatives like Ubuntu then edit
/etc/default/shorewall-lite and set
startup=1.On the administrative system, for each firewall system you do
the following (this may be done by a non-root user who has root ssh
access to the firewall system):modify the files in the corresponding export directory
appropriately. It's a good idea to include the IP address of the
administrative system in the routestopped
file.It is important to understand that with Shorewall Lite, the
firewall's export directory on the administrative system acts as
/etc/shorewall for that
firewall. So when the Shorewall documentation gives instructions
for placing entries in files in the firewall's /etc/shorewall, when using Shorewall
Lite you make those changes in the firewall's export directory on
the administrative system.The CONFIG_PATH variable is treated as follows:The value of CONFIG_PATH in
/etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf is ignored
when compiling for export (the -e option in given) and when
the load or reload
command is being executed (see below).The value of CONFIG_PATH in the
shorewall.conf file in the export
directory is used to search for configuration files during
compilation of that configuration.The value of CONFIG_PATH used when the script is run on
the firewall system is
"/etc/shorewall-lite:/usr/share/shorewall-lite".cd <export directory>/sbin/shorewall load -c firewallThe load
command compiles a firewall script from the configuration files in
the current working directory (using shorewall compile
-e), copies that file to the remote system via scp and
starts Shorewall Lite on the remote system via ssh. The -c option
causes the capabilities of the remote system to be generated and
copied to a file named capabilities in the
export directory. See below.Example (firewall's DNS name is 'gateway'):/sbin/shorewall load -c gatewayAlthough scp and ssh are used by default, you can use
other utilities by setting RSH_COMMAND and RCP_COMMAND in
/etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf.If you later need to change the firewall's configuration, change
the appropriate files in the firewall's export directory then:cd <export directory>/sbin/shorewall reload firewallThe reload
command compiles a firewall script from the configuration files in the
current working directory (using shorewall compile
-e), copies that file to the remote system via scp and
restarts Shorewall Lite on the remote system via ssh. The reload command also supports the '-c'
option.I personally place a Makefile in each
export directory as follows:
# Shorewall Packet Filtering Firewall Export Directory Makefile - V3.3
#
# This program is under GPL [http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt]
#
# (c) 2006 - Tom Eastep (teastep@shorewall.net)
#
# Shorewall documentation is available at http://www.shorewall.net
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of Version 2 of the GNU General Public License
# as published by the Free Software Foundation.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
################################################################################
# Place this file in each export directory. Modify each copy to set HOST
# to the name of the remote firewall corresponding to the directory.
#
# To make the 'firewall' script, type "make".
#
# Once the script is compiling correctly, you can install it by
# typing "make install".
#
################################################################################
# V A R I A B L E S
#
# Files in the export directory on which the firewall script does not depend
#
IGNOREFILES = firewall% Makefile% trace% %~
#
# Remote Firewall system
#
HOST = gateway
#
# Save some typing
#
LITEDIR = /var/lib/shorewall-lite
#
# Set this if the remote system has a non-standard modules directory
#
MODULESDIR=
#
# Default target is the firewall script
#
################################################################################
# T A R G E T S
#
all: firewall
#
# Only generate the capabilities file if it doesn't already exist
#
capabilities:
ssh root@$(HOST) "MODULESDIR=$(MODULESDIR) /usr/share/shorewall-lite/shorecap > $(LITEDIR)/capabilities"
scp root@$(HOST):$(LITEDIR)/capabilities .
#
# Compile the firewall script. Using the 'wildcard' function causes "*" to be expanded so that
# 'filter-out' will be presented with the list of files in this directory rather than "*"
#
firewall: $(filter-out $(IGNOREFILES) capabilities , $(wildcard *) ) capabilities
shorewall compile -e . firewall
#
# Only reload on demand.
#
install: firewall
scp firewall firewall.conf root@$(HOST):$(LITEDIR)
ssh root@$(HOST) "/sbin/shorewall-lite restart"
#
# Save running configuration
#
save:
ssh root@$(HOST) "/sbin/shorewall-lite save"
#
# Remove generated files
#
clean:
rm -f capabilities firewall firewall.conf reload
That way, after I've changed the configuration, I can simply
type make or make
install.The above Makefile is available at http://www.shorewall.net/pub/shorewall/contrib/Shorewall-lite/I omit trace% because I often trace compiler execution while
I'm debugging new versions of Shorewall.There is a shorewall-lite.conf file installed
as part of Shorewall Lite
(/etc/shorewall-lite/shorewall-lite.conf). You can
use that file on the firewall system to override some of the settings from
the shorewall.conf file in the export directory.Settings that you can override are:
You will normally not need to touch
/etc/shorewall-lite/shorewall-lite.conf unless you
run Debian or one of its derivatives (see above).The /sbin/shorewall-lite program included with
Shorewall Lite supports the same set of commands as the
/sbin/shorewall program in a full Shorewall
installation with the following exceptions:
On systems with only Shorewall Lite installed, I recommend that you
create a symbolic link /sbin/shorewall and point it
at /sbin/shorewall-lite. That way, you can use
shorewall as the command regardless of which product is
installed.
ln -sf shorewall-lite /sbin/shorewall
Converting a system from Shorewall to Shorewall LiteConverting a firewall system that is currently running Shorewall
to run Shorewall Lite instead is straight-forward.On the administrative system, create an export directory for
the firewall system.Copy the contents of /etc/shorewall/ from the firewall
system to the export directory on the administrative system.On the firewall system:Be sure that the IP address of the administrative system is
included in the firewall's export directory
routestopped file.shorewall stopWe recommend that you uninstall
Shorewall at this point.Install Shorewall Lite on the firewall system.If you are running Debian or one of its derivatives like
Ubuntu then edit /etc/default/shorewall-lite
and set startup=1.On the administrative system:It's a good idea to include the IP address of the
administrative system in the firewall system's routestopped
file.Also, edit the shorewall.conf file in the
firewall's export directory and change the CONFIG_PATH setting to
remove /etc/shorewall. You
can replace it with /usr/share/shorewall/configfiles if you
like.Example:
Before editing:CONFIG_PATH=/etc/shorewall:/usr/share/shorewallAfter editing:CONFIG_PATH=/usr/share/shorewall/configfiles:/usr/share/shorewall
Changing CONFIG_PATH will ensure that subsequent compilations
using the export directory will not include any files from /etc/shorewall other than
shorewall.conf and
params.If you set variables in the params file, there are a couple of
issues:The params file is not processed at run
time if you set EXPORTPARAMS=No in
shorewall.conf. For run-time setting of shell
variables, use the init extension
script.If the params file needs to set shell
variables based on the configuration of the firewall system, you can
use this trick:EXT_IP=$(ssh root@firewall "/sbin/shorewall-lite call find_first_interface_address eth0")The shorewall-lite call command allows you
to to call interactively any Shorewall function that you can call in
an extension script.After having made the above changes to the firewall's export
directory, execute the following commands.
cd <export directory>/sbin/shorewall load -c <firewall system>Example (firewall's DNS name is 'gateway'):/sbin/shorewall load -c gateway
The load
command compiles a firewall script from the configuration files in
the current working directory (using shorewall compile
-e), copies that file to the remote system via
scp and starts Shorewall Lite on the remote
system via ssh.If you later need to change the firewall's configuration,
change the appropriate files in the firewall's export directory
then:cd <export directory>/sbin/shorewall reload firewallThe reload
command compiles a firewall script from the configuration files in
the current working directory (using shorewall compile
-e), copies that file to the remote system via
scp and restarts Shorewall Lite on the remote
system via ssh.If the kernel/iptables configuration on the firewall later
changes and you need to create a new
capabilities file, do the following on the
firewall system:/usr/share/shorewall-lite/shorecap > capabilitiesscp capabilities <admin system>:<this system's config dir>Or simply use the -c option the next time that you use the
reload command.The /etc/shorewall/capabilities file and the shorecap
programAs mentioned above, the
/etc/shorewall/capabilities file specifies that
kernel/iptables capabilities of the target system. Here is a sample
file:
As you can see, the file contains a simple list of shell variable
assignments — the variables correspond to the capabilities listed by the
shorewall show capabilities command and they appear in
the same order as the output of that command.To aid in creating this file, Shorewall Lite includes a
shorecap program. The program is installed in the
/usr/share/shorewall-lite/
directory and may be run as follows:
The IPTABLES and MODULESDIR options have their usual Shorewall default
values.The capabilities file may then be copied to a
system with Shorewall installed and used when compiling firewall programs
to run on the remote system.The capabilities file may also be creating
using /sbin/shorewall-lite:
shorewall-lite show -f capabilities >
capabilities
Note that unlike the shorecap program, the
show capabilities command shows the kernel's current
capabilities; it does not attempt to load additional kernel
modules.Running compiled programs directlyCompiled firewall programs are complete shell programs that support
the following command line forms:
The options have the same meanings as when they are passed to
/sbin/shorewall itself. The default VERBOSITY level
is the level specified in the shorewall.conf file
used when the program was compiled.