Dynamic Zones
Tom
Eastep
2009
2013
Thomas M. Eastep
Permission 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
.
Overview
There is sometimes a need to be able to define a zone whose members
are unknown at compile-time. For example, you may wish to require
authentication of internal users before allowing them access to the
internet. When a user is authenticated, the user's IP address is added to
the zone of users permitted web access.
Shorewall provides basic support for defining such zones. This
support is based on ipset. Most current
distributions have ipset, but you may need to install the xtables-addons.
Installing xtables-addons
If your distribution does not have an xtables-addons package, the
xtables-addons are fairly easy to install. You do not need to recompile
your kernel.
Debian users can find xtables-addons-common
and xtables-addons-source packages in testing. The
kernel modules can be built and installed with the help of
module-assistant. As of this writing, these packages are in the
admin group rather than in the
network group!!??
For other users, the basic steps are as follows:
Install gcc and make
Install the headers for the kernel you are running. In some
distributions, such as Debian and
Ubuntu, the packet is called kernel-headers.
For other distrubutions, such as OpenSuSE, you must install the
kernel-source package.
download the iptables source tarball
untar the source
cd to the iptables source directory
run 'make'
as root, run 'make install'
Your new iptables binary will now be installed in
/usr/local/sbin. Modify shorewall.conf to specify
IPTABLES=/usr/local/sbin/iptables
Download the latest xtables-addons source tarball
Untar the xtables-addons source
cd to the xtables-addons source directory
run './configure'
run 'make'
As root, cd to the xtables-addons directory and run 'make
install'.
Restart shorewall
'shorewall show capabilities' should now indicate Ipset Match: Available
You will have to repeat steps 10-13 each time that you receive a
kernel upgrade from your distribution vendor. You can install
xtables-addons before booting to the new kernel as follows
(new-kernel-version is the version of the
newly-installed kernel - example 2.6.28.11-generic. Look in the /lib/modules
directory to get the full version name)
cd to the xtables-addons source directory
run 'make clean'
run './configure
--with-kbuild=/lib/modules/new-kernel-version/build
--with-ksource=/lib/modules/new-kernel-version/source'
run 'make'
As root, cd to the xtables-addons source directory and run 'make
install'.
As root, run 'depmod -a
new-kernel-version'
Dynamic Zones -- Shorewall 4.5.9 and Later
Prior to Shorewall 4.5.9, when multiple records for a zone appear in
/etc/shorewall/hosts, Shorewall would create a
separate ipset for each interface. This meant that an add or delete
command was required for each of the interface, when the address involved
was reachable via multiple interfaces.
Beginning with Shoreawll 4.5.9, it is possible to have a single
ipset shared among all interfaces. This also simplifies management of
dynamic zone contents for dynamic zones associated with only a single
interface.
The earlier implementation described below is still available in
these later releases.
Defining a Dynamic Zone
A dynamic zone is defined by specifying the dynamic_shared option in the zones file and using
the dynamic keyword in the hosts
list.
/etc/shorewall/zones:#NAME TYPE OPTIONS
net ipv4
rsyncok:loc ipv4 dynamic_shared/etc/shorewall/interfaces:
#ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST OPTIONS
loc eth0 - …
loc eth1 - …
/etc/shorewall/hosts:
#ZONE HOSTS OPTIONS
rsyncok eth0:dynamic
rsyncok eth1:dynamic
When the dynamic_shared option is
specified, a single ipset is created; the ipset has the same name as the
zone.
Adding a Host to a Dynamic Zone.
Adding a host to a dynamic zone is accomplished by adding the
host's IP address to the appropriate ipset. Shorewall provldes a command
for doing that:
shorewall add zone
address ...
Example:
shorewall add rsyncok 70.90.191.124
Deleting a Host from a Dynamic Zone
Deleting a host from a dynamic zone is accomplished by removing
the host's IP address from the appropriate ipset. Shorewall provldes a
command for doing that:
shorewall delete
zone address
...
Example:
shorewall delete rsyncok 70.19.191.124
The command can only be used when the ipset involved is of type
iphash. For other ipset types, the ipset command must
be used directly.
Listing the Contents of a Dynamic Zone
The shorewall show command may be used to list the current
contents of a dynamic zone.
shorewall show dynamic
zone
Example:
shorewall show dynamic rsyncok
rsyncok:
70.90.191.122
70.90.191.124
Dynamic Zones -- Shorewall 5.4.8 and Earlier.
The method described in this section is still supported in the later
releases.
Defining a Dynamic Zone
A dynamic zone is defined by using the keyword dynamic in the zones host list.
Example:
/etc/shorewall/zones:#NAME TYPE OPTIONS
loc ipv4
webok:loc ipv4/etc/shorewall/interfaces:
#ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST OPTIONS
loc eth0 - …
/etc/shorewall/hosts:
#ZONE HOSTS OPTIONS
webok eth0:dynamic
Once the above definition is added, Shorewall will automatically
create an ipset named webok_eth0 the next time that
Shorewall is started or restarted. Shorewall will create an ipset of
type iphash. If you want to use a different type
of ipset, such as macipmap, then you will want to
manually create that ipset yourself before the next Shorewall
start/restart.
The dynamic zone capability was added to Shorewall6 in Shorewall
4.4.21.
Adding a Host to a Dynamic Zone
Adding a host to a dynamic zone is accomplished by adding the
host's IP address to the appropriate ipset. Shorewall provldes a command
for doing that:
shorewall add interface:address
... zone
Example:
shorewall add eth0:192.168.3.4 webok
The command can only be used when the ipset involved is of type
iphash. For other ipset types, the ipset command must
be used directly.
Deleting a Host from a Dynamic Zone
Deleting a host from a dynamic zone is accomplished by removing
the host's IP address from the appropriate ipset. Shorewall provldes a
command for doing that:
shorewall delete
interface:address ...
zone
Example:
shorewall delete eth0:192.168.3.4
webok
The command can only be used when the ipset involved is of type
iphash. For other ipset types, the ipse t command
must be used directly.
Listing the Contents of a Dynamic Zone
The shorewall show command may be used to list the current
contents of a dynamic zone.
shorewall show dynamic
zone
Example:
shorewall show dynamic webok
eth0:
192.168.3.4
192.168.3.9
Dynamic Zone Contents and Shorewall stop/start/restart
When SAVE_IPSETS=Yes in shorewall.conf, the contents of a dynamic
zone survive shorewall stop/shorewall start and
shorewall restart. During shorewall
stop, the contents of the ipsets are saved in the file
${VARDIR}/ipsets.save (usually
/var/lib/shorewall/ipsets.save). During
shorewall start, the contents of that file are restored
to the sets. During both shorewall start and
shorewall restart, any new ipsets required as a result
of a configuration change are added.