Configuration Files

Warning: If you copy or edit your configuration files on a system running Microsoft Windows, you must run them through dos2unix before you use them with Shorewall.

Files

Shorewall's configuration files are in the directory /etc/shorewall.

Comments

You may place comments in configuration files by making the first non-whitespace character a pound sign ("#"). You may also place comments at the end of any line, again by delimiting the comment from the rest of the line with a pound sign.

Examples:

# This is a comment
ACCEPT	net	fw	tcp	www	#This is an end-of-line comment

Line Continuation

You may continue lines in the configuration files using the usual backslash ("\") followed immediately by a new line character.

Example:

ACCEPT	net	fw	tcp \
smtp,www,pop3,imap #Services running on the firewall

Using DNS Names

WARNING: I personally recommend strongly against using DNS names in Shorewall configuration files. If you use DNS names and you are called out of bed at 2:00AM because Shorewall won't start as a result of DNS problems then don't say that you were not forewarned.

    -Tom

Beginning with Shorwall 1.3.9, Host addresses in Shorewall configuration files may be specified as either IP addresses or DNS Names.

DNS names in iptables rules aren't nearly as useful as they first appear. When a DNS name appears in a rule, the iptables utility resolves the name to one or more IP addresses and inserts those addresses into the rule. So changes in the DNS->IP address relationship that occur after the firewall has started have absolutely no effect on the firewall's ruleset.

If your firewall rules include DNS names then:

Each DNS name much be fully qualified and include a minumum of two periods (although one may be trailing). This restriction is imposed by Shorewall to insure backward compatibility with existing configuration files.

Examples of valid DNS names:

Examples of invalid DNS names:
DNS names may not be used as:
These restrictions are not imposed by Shorewall simply for your inconvenience but are rather limitations of iptables.

Complementing an Address or Subnet

Where specifying an IP address, a subnet or an interface, you can precede the item with "!" to specify the complement of the item. For example, !192.168.1.4 means "any host but 192.168.1.4". There must be no white space following the "!".

Comma-separated Lists

Comma-separated lists are allowed in a number of contexts within the configuration files. A comma separated list:

Port Numbers/Service Names

Unless otherwise specified, when giving a port number you can use either an integer or a service name from /etc/services.

Port Ranges

If you need to specify a range of ports, the proper syntax is <low port number>:<high port number>. For example, if you want to forward the range of tcp ports 4000 through 4100 to local host 192.168.1.3, the entry in /etc/shorewall/rules is:

     DNAT	net	loc:192.168.1.3	tcp	4000:4100
If you omit the low port number, a value of zero is assumed; if you omit the high port number, a value of 65535 is assumed.

Using Shell Variables

You may use the /etc/shorewall/params file to set shell variables that you can then use in some of the other configuration files.

It is suggested that variable names begin with an upper case letter to distinguish them from variables used internally within the Shorewall programs

Example:

NET_IF=eth0
NET_BCAST=130.252.100.255
NET_OPTIONS=noping,norfc1918


Example (/etc/shorewall/interfaces record):

net $NET_IF $NET_BCAST $NET_OPTIONS

The result will be the same as if the record had been written

net eth0 130.252.100.255 noping,norfc1918

Variables may be used anywhere in the other configuration files.

Using MAC Addresses

Media Access Control (MAC) addresses can be used to specify packet source in several of the configuration files. To use this feature, your kernel must have MAC Address Match support (CONFIG_IP_NF_MATCH_MAC) included.

MAC addresses are 48 bits wide and each Ethernet Controller has a unique MAC address.

In GNU/Linux, MAC addresses are usually written as a series of 6 hex numbers separated by colons. Example:

     [root@gateway root]# ifconfig eth0
     eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 02:00:08:E3:FA:55
     inet addr:206.124.146.176 Bcast:206.124.146.255 Mask:255.255.255.0
     UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
     RX packets:2398102 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
     TX packets:3044698 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
     collisions:30394 txqueuelen:100
     RX bytes:419871805 (400.4 Mb) TX bytes:1659782221 (1582.8 Mb)
     Interrupt:11 Base address:0x1800

Because Shorewall uses colons as a separator for address fields, Shorewall requires MAC addresses to be written in another way. In Shorewall, MAC addresses begin with a tilde ("~") and consist of 6 hex numbers separated by hyphens. In Shorewall, the MAC address in the example above would be written "~02-00-08-E3-FA-55".

Note: It is not necessary to use the special Shorewall notation in the /etc/shorewall/maclist file.

Shorewall Configurations

Shorewall allows you to have configuration directories other than /etc/shorewall. The shorewall start and restart commands allow you to specify an alternate configuration directory and Shorewall will use the files in the alternate directory rather than the corresponding files in /etc/shorewall. The alternate directory need not contain a complete configuration; those files not in the alternate directory will be read from /etc/shorewall.

This facility permits you to easily create a test or temporary configuration by:

  1. copying the files that need modification from /etc/shorewall to a separate directory;
  2. modify those files in the separate directory; and
  3. specifying the separate directory in a shorewall start or shorewall restart command (e.g., shorewall -c /etc/testconfig restart ).

Updated 2/7/2003 - Tom Eastep

Copyright © 2001, 2002, 2003 Thomas M. Eastep.