Shorewall and a Simple Bridge
Tom
Eastep
2004
2005
2006
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
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License
.
Background
Systems where Shorewall runs normally function as
routers. In the context of the Open System
Interconnect (OSI) reference model, a router operates at layer 3.
Shorewall may also be deployed on a GNU Linux System that acts as a
bridge. Bridges are layer-2 devices in the OSI
model (think of a bridge as an Ethernet switch).
Some differences between routers and bridges are:
Routers determine packet destination based on the destination IP
address while bridges route traffic based on the destination MAC
address in the Ethernet frame.
As a consequence of the first difference, routers can be
connected to more than one IP network while a bridge may be part of
only a single network.
A router cannot forward broadcast packets while a bridge
can.
Application
There are cases where you want to create a bridge to join two or
more LAN segments and you don't need to restrict the traffic between those
segments. This is the environment that is described in this
article.
If you do need to restrict traffic through the bridge, please refer
to the Shorewall Bridge/Firewall
documentation. Also please refer to that documentation for
information about how to create a bridge.
The following diagram shows a firewall for two bridged LAN
segments.
This is fundamentally the Two-interface Firewall described in the
Two-interface Quickstart Guide. The
bridge-specific changes are restricted to the
/etc/shorewall/interfaces file.
Older configurations that specify an interface name in the SOURCE
column of /etc/shorewall/masq will also need to
change that file.
This example illustrates the bridging of two Ethernet devices but
the types of the devices really isn't important. What is shown here would
apply equally to bridging an Ethernet device to an OpenVPN tap device (e.g.,
tap0) or to a wireless device
(ath0 or wlan0).
/etc/shorewall/interfaces:
?FORMAT 2
#ZONE INTERFACE OPTIONS
net eth0 ...
loc br0 routeback,bridge,...
So the key points here are:
The loc interface is br0.
Neither eth1 nor
eth2 have IP addresses and
neither are mentioned in the Shorewall configuration.
The routeback and bridge options is specified for br0.
The default gateway for hosts in the local segments will be
10.0.1.254 — the IP address of the bridge itself.
Your entry in /etc/shorewall/masq should be
unchanged:
#INTERFACE SOURCE ADDRESS
eth0 10.0.1.0/24 ... # 10.0.1.0/24 is the local network on LAN A and LAN B