Basic Two-Interface FirewallTomEastep2005-08-312002-2005Thomas 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 3.0 and
later. If you are running a version of Shorewall earlier than Shorewall
3.0.0 then please see the documentation for that
release.IntroductionSetting up a Linux system as a firewall for a small network is a
fairly straight-forward task if you understand the basics and follow the
documentation.This guide doesn't attempt to acquaint you with all of the features
of Shorewall. It rather focuses on what is required to configure Shorewall
in its most common configuration:Linux system used as a firewall/router for a small local
network.Single public IP address. If
you have more than one public IP address, this is not the guide you
want -- see the Shorewall Setup
Guide instead.Internet connection through cable modem, DSL, ISDN, Frame Relay,
dial-up ...Here is a schematic of a typical installation: Shorewall and Mandrake 9.0+If you are running Shorewall under
Mandrake 9.0 or later, you can easily configure
the above setup using the MandrakeInternet Connection Sharing applet. From the
Mandrake Control Center,
select Network &
Internet then
Connection Sharing.Note however, that the Shorewall configuration produced by
Mandrake Internet Connection Sharing is strange
and is apt to confuse you if you use the rest of this documentation
(it has two local zones; loc and
masq where loc is empty; this
conflicts with this documentation which assumes a single local zone
loc). We therefore recommend that once you have set
up this sharing that you uninstall the Mandrake
Shorewall RPM and install the one from the download page then follow the instructions
in this Guide.The above Shorewall Issue is corrected in
Mandrake 10.0 and later.If you edit your configuration files on a
Windows system, you must save them as
Unix files if your editor supports that option
or you must run them through dos2unix before trying
to use them. Similarly, if you copy a configuration file from your
Windows hard drive to a floppy disk, you must
run dos2unix against the copy before using it with
Shorewall. Windows
Version of dos2unixLinux
Version of dos2unixSystem RequirementsShorewall requires that you have the
iproute/iproute2 package installed
(on RedHat, the package is called
iproute). You can tell if this package is installed
by the presence of an ip program on your firewall
system. As root, you can use
the which command to check for this program:
[root@gateway root]# which ip
/sbin/ip
[root@gateway root]# I recommend that you first read through
the guide to familiarize yourself with what's involved then go back
through it again making your configuration changes.ConventionsPoints at which configuration changes are recommended are flagged
with .Configuration notes that are unique to LEAF/Bering are marked with
.PPTP/ADSLIf you have an ADSL Modem and you use
PPTP to communicate with a server in that modem, you
must make the changes recommended here in addition to those detailed below.
ADSL with PPTP is most commonly
found in Europe, notably in Austria.Shorewall ConceptsThe configuration files for Shorewall are contained in the directory
/etc/shorewall -- for simple
setups, you will only need to deal with a few of these as described in
this guide.Note to Debian UsersIf you install using the .deb, you will find that your /etc/shorewall directory is empty. This
is intentional. The released configuration file skeletons may be found
on your system in the directory /usr/share/doc/shorewall/default-config.
Simply copy the files you need from that directory to /etc/shorewall and modify the
copies.Note that you must copy /usr/share/doc/shorewall/default-config/shorewall.conf
and /usr/share/doc/shorewall/default-config/modules to /etc/shorewall even if you do not modify
those files.After you have installed
Shorewall, download the two-interface
sample, un-tar it (tar
two-interfaces.tgz) and and copy the
files to /etc/shorewall(these files will replace files with the same
name). As each file is introduced, I suggest that you look through
the actual file on your system -- each file contains detailed
configuration instructions and default entries.Shorewall views the network where it is running as being composed of
a set of zones. In the two-interface sample configuration, the following
zone names are used: #ZONE IPSEC OPTIONS IN OUT
# ONLY OPTIONS OPTIONS
net
loc Zones are defined in the /etc/shorewall/zones
file.Shorewall also recognizes the firewall system as its own zone - by
default, the firewall itself is known as fw.Rules about what traffic to allow and what traffic to deny are
expressed in terms of zones. You express your default policy for connections from one zone
to another zone in the /etc/shorewall/policy
file.You define exceptions to those default policies in the /etc/shorewall/rules
file. For each connection request entering the firewall, the
request is first checked against the /etc/shorewall/rules
file. If no rule in that file matches the connection request then the
first policy in /etc/shorewall/policy
that matches the request is applied. If there is a comon action defined for the
policy in /etc/shorewall/actions or
/usr/share/shorewall/actions.std then that action is
peformed before the action is applied.The /etc/shorewall/policy
file included with the two-interface sample has the following policies:
#SOURCE DEST POLICY LOG LEVEL LIMIT:BURST
loc net ACCEPT
net all DROP info
all all REJECT info In the two-interface
sample, the line below is included but commented out. If you want your
firewall system to have full access to servers on the internet, uncomment
that line. #SOURCE DEST POLICY LOG LEVEL LIMIT:BURST
fw net ACCEPT The above policy will:
Allow all connection requests from your local network to the
internetDrop (ignore) all connection requests from the internet to
your firewall or local networkOptionally accept all connection requests from the firewall to
the internet (if you uncomment the additional policy)reject all other connection requests.At this point, edit your /etc/shorewall/policy
and make any changes that you wish.Network InterfacesThe firewall has two network interfaces. Where Internet connectivity
is through a cable or DSL Modem, the
External Interface will be the ethernet adapter that
is connected to that Modem (e.g., eth0) unless you connect via
Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet
(PPPoE) or Point-to-Point Tunneling
Protocol (PPTP) in which case the External
Interface will be a ppp interface (e.g., ppp0). If you connect via a regular modem,
your External Interface will also be ppp0. If you connect via
ISDN, your external interface will be ippp0.If your external interface is ppp0 or ippp0 then you will want to set
CLAMPMSS=yes in /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf.Your Internal Interface will be an ethernet
adapter (eth1 or eth0) and will be connected to a hub or
switch. Your other computers will be connected to the same hub/switch
(note: If you have only a single internal system, you can connect the
firewall directly to the computer using a cross-over cable). Do not connect the internal and external
interface to the same hub or switch except for testing.You
can test using this kind of configuration if you specify the
arp_filter option in /etc/shorewall/interfaces
for all interfaces connected to the common hub/switch. Using such a setup with a production firewall is strongly
recommended against.The Shorewall two-interface sample configuration assumes that the
external interface is eth0 and the
internal interface is eth1. If
your configuration is different, you will have to modify the sample
/etc/shorewall/interfaces
file accordingly. While you are there, you may wish to review the list of
options that are specified for the interfaces. Some hints: If your external interface is ppp0 or ippp0, you can replace the
detect in the second column with a -
(minus the quotes).If your external interface is ppp0 or ippp0 or if you have a static
IP address, you can remove dhcp
from the option list.If your internal interface is a bridge create using the
brctl utility then you must add the
routeback option to the option list.IP AddressesBefore going further, we should say a few words about Internet
Protocol (IP) addresses. Normally, your
ISP will assign you a single Public IP address. This
address may be assigned via the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
(DHCP) or as part of establishing your connection when
you dial in (standard modem) or establish your PPP
connection. In rare cases, your ISP may assign you a
static IP address; that means that you configure your
firewall's external interface to use that address permanently. However
your external address is assigned, it will be shared by all of your
systems when you access the Internet. You will have to assign your own
addresses in your internal network (the Internal Interface on your
firewall plus your other computers). RFC
1918 reserves several Private
IP address ranges for this purpose: 10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255
172.16.0.0 - 172.31.255.255
192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255Before starting Shorewall, you should look at
the IP address of your external interface and if it is one of the above
ranges, you should remove the 'norfc1918' option from the external
interface's entry in /etc/shorewall/interfaces.You will want to assign your addresses from the same sub-network
(subnet). For our purposes, we can consider a subnet to consists of a
range of addresses x.y.z.0 - x.y.z.255. Such a subnet
will have a Subnet Mask of 255.255.255.0. The address
x.y.z.0 is reserved as the Subnet
Address and x.y.z.255 is reserved as the
Subnet Broadcast Address. In Shorewall, a subnet is
described using Classless
InterDomain Routing (CIDR) notation with consists of the subnet
address followed by /24. The 24 refers
to the number of consecutive leading 1 bits from the left
of the subnet mask. Range:10.10.10.0 -
10.10.10.255Subnet
Address:10.10.10.0Broadcast
Address:10.10.10.255CIDR
Notation:10.10.10.0/24 It is conventional to assign the internal interface
either the first usable address in the subnet (10.10.10.1 in the above example) or the
last usable address (10.10.10.254).One of the purposes of subnetting is to allow all computers in the
subnet to understand which other computers can be communicated with
directly. To communicate with systems outside of the subnetwork, systems
send packets through a gateway (router).Your local computers (computer 1 and computer 2 in the above
diagram) should be configured with their default gateway to be the
IP address of the firewall's internal interface.The foregoing short discussion barely scratches the surface
regarding subnetting and routing. If you are interested in learning more
about IP addressing and routing, I highly recommend
IP Fundamentals: What Everyone Needs to Know about Addressing &
Routing, Thomas A. Maufer, Prentice-Hall, 1999, ISBN 0-13-975483-0
(link).The remainder of this quide will assume that you have configured
your network as shown here: The default gateway for computer's 1 & 2 would be
10.10.10.254. Your ISP might assign your external interface
an RFC 1918 address. If that address
is in the 10.10.10.0/24
subnet then you will need to select a DIFFERENT
RFC 1918 subnet for your local network.IP Masquerading (SNAT)The addresses reserved by RFC 1918 are sometimes referred to as
non-routable because the Internet backbone routers don't forward packets
which have an RFC-1918 destination address. When one of your local systems
(let's assume computer 1) sends a connection request to an internet host,
the firewall must perform Network Address Translation
(NAT). The firewall rewrites the source address in the
packet to be the address of the firewall's external interface; in other
words, the firewall makes it look as if the firewall itself is initiating
the connection. This is necessary so that the destination host will be
able to route return packets back to the firewall (remember that packets
whose destination address is reserved by RFC 1918 can't be routed across
the internet so the remote host can't address its response to computer 1).
When the firewall receives a return packet, it rewrites the destination
address back to 10.10.10.1 and
forwards the packet on to computer 1.On Linux systems, the above process is often referred to as
IP Masquerading but you will also see the term
Source Network Address Translation
(SNAT) used. Shorewall follows the convention used with
Netfilter: Masquerade describes the case where you
let your firewall system automatically detect the external interface
address.SNAT refers to the
case when you explicitly specify the source address that you want
outbound packets from your local network to use. In Shorewall, both Masquerading and
SNAT are configured with entries
in the /etc/shorewall/masq
file. You will normally use Masquerading if your external
IP is dynamic and SNAT if the
IP is static.If your external firewall interface is eth0, you do not need to modify the file
provided with the sample. Otherwise, edit /etc/shorewall/masq and
change the first column to the name of your external interface and the
second column to the name of your internal interface.If your external IP is static, you can enter it
in the third column in the /etc/shorewall/masq
entry if you like although your firewall will work fine if you leave that
column empty. Entering your static IP in column 3 makes
processing outgoing packets a little more efficient.If you are using the Debian package, please
check your shorewall.conf file to ensure that the
following is set correctly; if it is not, change it
appropriately:IP_FORWARDING=OnPort Forwarding (DNAT)One of your goals may be to run one or more servers on your local
computers. Because these computers have RFC-1918 addresses, it is not
possible for clients on the internet to connect directly to them. It is
rather necessary for those clients to address their connection requests to
the firewall who rewrites the destination address to the address of your
server and forwards the packet to that server. When your server responds,
the firewall automatically performs SNAT to rewrite the
source address in the response.The above process is called Port Forwarding or
Destination Network Address Translation
(DNAT). You configure port forwarding using
DNAT rules in the /etc/shorewall/rules
file.The general form of a simple port forwarding rule in /etc/shorewall/rules is:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
DNAT net loc:<server local ip address>[:<server port>] <protocol><port>Shorewall
has macros for many popular applications. Look at
/usr/share/shorewall/macro.* to see what is available in your release.
Macros simplify creating DNAT rules by supplying the protocol and port(s)
as shown in the following examples.Web ServerYou run a Web Server on computer 2 and you want to forward
incoming TCP port 80 to that system:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
Web/DNAT net loc:192.168.1.5FTP ServerYou run an FTP Server on computer 1 so you
want to forward incoming TCP port 21 to that
system: #ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
FTP/DNAT net loc:10.10.10.1 For
FTP, you will also need to have
FTP connection tracking and NAT
support in your kernel. For vendor-supplied kernels, this means that
the ip_conntrack_ftp and
ip_nat_ftp modules must be
loaded. Shorewall will automatically load these modules if they are
available and located in the standard place under /lib/modules/<kernel
version>/kernel/net/ipv4/netfilter. A couple of important points to keep in mind: You must test the above rule from a client outside of your
local network (i.e., don't test from a browser running on computers
1 or 2 or on the firewall). If you want to be able to access your
web server and/or FTP server from inside your
firewall using the IP address of your external
interface, see Shorewall FAQ
#2.Many ISPs block incoming connection
requests to port 80. If you have problems connecting to your web
server, try the following rule and try connecting to port
5000.#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
DNAT net loc:10.10.10.2:80 tcp 5000At this point, modify /etc/shorewall/rules to
add any DNAT rules that you require.Domain Name Server (DNS)Normally, when you connect to your ISP, as part of getting an IP
address your firewall's Domain Name Service
(DNS) resolver will be automatically configured (e.g.,
the /etc/resolv.conf file
will be written). Alternatively, your ISP may have given you the
IP address of a pair of DNS name
servers for you to manually configure as your primary and secondary name
servers. Regardless of how DNS gets configured on your
firewall, it is your responsibility to configure the resolver in your
internal systems. You can take one of two approaches: You can configure your internal systems to use your ISP's name
servers. If your ISP gave you the addresses of their servers or if
those addresses are available on their web site, you can configure
your internal systems to use those addresses. If that information
isn't available, look in /etc/resolv.conf on your firewall system --
the name servers are given in "nameserver" records in that
file. You can configure a
Caching Name Server on your firewall.
Red Hat has an RPM for a
caching name server (the RPM also requires the
bindRPM) and for Bering users,
there is dnscache.lrp. If you take this approach,
you configure your internal systems to use the firewall itself as
their primary (and only) name server. You use the internal
IP address of the firewall (10.10.10.254 in the example above)
for the name server address. To allow your local systems to talk to
your caching name server, you must open port 53 (both
UDP and TCP) from the local
network to the firewall; you do that by adding the following rules
in /etc/shorewall/rules.
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
DNS/ACCEPT loc fwOther ConnectionsThe two-interface sample includes the following rules:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
DNS/ACCEPT fw netThis rule allows
DNS access from your firewall and may be removed if you
uncommented the line in /etc/shorewall/policy
allowing all connections from the firewall to the internet.In the rule shown above, DNS/ACCEPT is an example of
a defined action. Shorewall includes a number of
defined actions and you can add your
own. To see the list of actions included with your version of
Shorewall, look in the file
/usr/share/shorewall/actions.std. Those actions that
accept connection requests have names that begin with
Allow.You don't have to use defined macros when coding a rule in
/etc/shorewall/rules; Shorewall will start slightly
faster if you code your rules directly rather than using macros. The the
rule shown above could also have been coded as follows:#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
ACCEPT fw net udp 53
ACCEPT fw net tcp 53In cases where Shorewall doesn't include a defined action to meet
your needs, you can either define the action yourself or you can simply
code the appropriate rules directly.The sample also includes: #ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
SSH/ACCEPT loc fw That rule allows you to run an
SSH server on your firewall and connect to that server
from your local systems.If you wish to enable other connections from your firewall to other
systems, the general format using a macro is: #ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
<macro>/ACCEPT fw <destination zone>The
general format when not using defined actions is:#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
ACCEPT fw <destination zone> <protocol> <port>Web Server on FirewallYou want to run a Web Server on your firewall system:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
Web/ACCEPT net fw
Web/ACCEPT loc fw Those two rules would of course be
in addition to the rules listed above under You can configure a Caching Name Server on your
firewall. If you don't know what port and protocol a particular
application uses, look here. I don't recommend enabling telnet to/from the
internet because it uses clear text (even for login!). If you want
shell access to your firewall from the internet, use
SSH:#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
SSH/ACCEPT net fwBering users will want to add the following two rules to be
compatible with Jacques's Shorewall configuration.#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S)
ACCEPT loc fw udp 53 #Allow DNS Cache to work
ACCEPT loc fw tcp 80 #Allow Weblet to workNow edit your /etc/shorewall/rules
file to add or delete other connections as required.Some Things to Keep in MindYou cannot test your firewall from the
inside. Just because you send requests to your firewall
external IP address does not mean that the request will be associated
with the external interface or the net zone. Any
traffic that you generate from the local network will be associated
with your local interface and will be treated as loc->fw
traffic.IP addresses are properties of systems,
not of interfaces. It is a mistake to believe that your
firewall is able to forward packets just because you can ping the IP
address of all of the firewall's interfaces from the local network.
The only conclusion you can draw from such pinging success is that the
link between the local system and the firewall works and that you
probably have the local system's default gateway set correctly.All IP addresses configured on firewall
interfaces are in the $FW (fw) zone. If 192.168.1.254 is
the IP address of your internal interface then you can write
$FW:192.168.1.254 in a
rule but you may not write loc:192.168.1.254. Similarly, it is
nonsensical to add 192.168.1.254 to the loc zone using an entry in
/etc/shorewall/hosts.Reply packets do NOT automatically follow
the reverse path of the one taken by the original request.
All packets are routed according to the routing table of the host at
each step of the way. This issue commonly comes up when people install
a Shorewall firewall parallel to an existing gateway and try to use
DNAT through Shorewall without changing the default gateway of the
system receiving the forwarded requests. Requests come in through the
Shorewall firewall where the destination IP address gets rewritten but
replies go out unmodified through the old gateway.Shorewall itself has no notion of inside
or outside. These concepts are embodied in how Shorewall is
configured.Starting and Stopping Your FirewallThe installation procedure
configures your system to start Shorewall at system boot but startup is
disabled so that your system won't try to start Shorewall before
configuration is complete. Once you have completed configuration of your
firewall, you must edit /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf and set
STARTUP_ENABLED=Yes.Users of the .deb package must edit /etc/default/shorewall
and set startup=1. The firewall is started using the shorewall
start command and stopped using
shorewall stop. When the firewall is
stopped, routing is enabled on those hosts that have an entry in /etc/shorewall/routestopped. A
running firewall may be restarted using the shorewall
restart command. If you want to totally remove any trace
of Shorewall from your Netfilter configuration, use
shorewall clear.The two-interface sample assumes that you want to enable routing
to/from eth1 (the local network)
when Shorewall is stopped. If your local network isn't connected to
eth1 or if you wish to enable
access to/from other hosts, change /etc/shorewall/routestopped
accordingly. If you are connected to your firewall from the internet, do not
issue a shorewall stop command
unless you have added an entry for the IP address
that you are connected from to /etc/shorewall/routestopped.
Also, I don't recommend using shorewall
restart; it is better to create an alternate
configuration and test it using the shorewall
try command.Additional Recommended ReadingI highly recommend that you review the Common Configuration File Features
page -- it contains helpful tips about Shorewall features than
make administering your firewall easier.Adding a Wireless Segment to your Two-Interface FirewallOnce you have the two-interface setup working, the next logical step
is to add a Wireless Network. The first step involves adding an additional
network card to your firewall, either a Wireless card or an ethernet card
that is connected to a Wireless Access Point.When you add a network card, it won't necessarily be detected as
the next highest ethernet interface. For example, if you have two
ethernet cards in your system (eth0 and eth1) and you add a third card that uses
the same driver as one of the other two, that third card won't
necessarily be detected as eth2; it could rather be detected as
eth0 or eth1! You can either live with that or
you can shuffle the cards around in the slots until the new card is
detected as eth2.Your new network will look similar to what is shown in the following
figure.The first thing to note is that the computers in your wireless
network will be in a different subnet from those on your wired local LAN.
In the above example, we have chosen to use the network 10.10.11.0/24.
Computers 3 and 4 would be configured with a default gateway IP address of
10.10.11.254.Second, we have chosen to include the wireless network as part of
the local zone. Since Shorewall allows intra-zone traffic by default,
traffic may flow freely between the local wired network and the wireless
network.There are only two changes that need to be made to the Shorewall
configuration:An entry needs to be added to
/etc/shorewall/interfaces for the wireless
network interface. If the wireless interface is wlan0, the entry might look like:#ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST OPTIONS
loc wlan0 detect maclistAs shown in the above entry, I recommend using the maclist option for the wireless
segment. By adding entries for computers 3 and 4 in
/etc/shorewall/maclist, you help ensure that your
neighbors aren't getting a free ride on your internet connection.
Start by omitting that option; when you have everything working, then
add the option and configure your
/etc/shorewall/maclist file.You need to add an entry to the
/etc/shorewall/masq file to masquerade traffic
from the wireless network to the internet. If your internet interface
is eth0 and your wireless
interface is wlan0, the entry
would be:#INTERFACE SUBNET ADDRESS
eth0 wlan0One other thing to note. To get Microsoft
networking working between the wireless and wired networks, you will need
either a WINS server or a PDC. I personally use Samba configured as a WINS
server running on my firewall. Running a WINS server on your firewall
requires the rules listed in the Shorewall/Samba
documentation.