GRE and IPIP Tunnels Tom Eastep 2005-09-30 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 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. GRE and IPIP Tunnels are insecure when used over the internet; use them at your own risk GRE and IPIP tunneling with Shorewall can be used to bridge two masqueraded networks. The simple scripts described in the Linux Advanced Routing and Shaping HOWTO work fine with Shorewall. Shorewall also includes a tunnel script for automating tunnel configuration. If you have installed the RPM, the tunnel script may be found in the Shorewall documentation directory (usually /usr/share/doc/shorewall-<version>/).
Bridging two Masqueraded Networks Suppose that we have the following situation: We want systems in the 192.168.1.0/24 subnetwork to be able to communicate with the systems in the 10.0.0.0/8 network. This is accomplished through use of the /etc/shorewall/tunnels file, the /etc/shorewall/policy file and the /etc/shorewall/tunnel script that is included with Shorewall. The tunnel script is not installed in /etc/shorewall by default -- If you install using the tarball, the script is included in the tarball; if you install using the RPM, the file is in your Shorewall documentation directory (normally /usr/share/doc/shorewall-<version>). In the /etc/shorewall/tunnel script, set the tunnel_type parameter to the type of tunnel that you want to create. /etc/shorewall/tunnel tunnel_type=gre If you use the PPTP connection tracking modules from Netfilter Patch-O-Matic (ip_conntrack_proto_gre ip_conntrack_pptp, ip_nat_proto_gre and ip_nat_pptp) then you cannot use GRE tunnels. On each firewall, you will need to declare a zone to represent the remote subnet. We'll assume that this zone is called vpn and declare it in /etc/shorewall/zones on both systems as follows. #ZONE TYPE OPTIONS vpn ipv4 On system A, the 10.0.0.0/8 will comprise the vpn zone. In /etc/shorewall/interfaces: #ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST OPTIONS vpn tosysb 10.255.255.255 In /etc/shorewall/tunnels on system A, we need the following: #TYPE ZONE GATEWAY GATEWAY ZONE ipip net 134.28.54.2 This entry in /etc/shorewall/tunnels, opens the firewall so that the IP encapsulation protocol (4) will be accepted to/from the remote gateway. In the tunnel script on system A: tunnel script on system A tunnel=tosysb myrealip=206.161.148.9 (for GRE tunnel only) myip=192.168.1.1 hisip=10.0.0.1 gateway=134.28.54.2 subnet=10.0.0.0/8 Similarly, On system B the 192.168.1.0/24 subnet will comprise the vpn zone. In /etc/shorewall/interfaces: #ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST vpn tosysa 192.168.1.255 In /etc/shorewall/tunnels on system B, we have: #TYPE ZONE GATEWAY GATEWAY ZONE ipip net 206.191.148.9 And in the tunnel script on system B: tunnel script on system B tunnel=tosysa myrealip=134.28.54.2 (for GRE tunnel only) myip=10.0.0.1 hisip=192.168.1.1 gateway=206.191.148.9 subnet=192.168.1.0/24 You can rename the modified tunnel scripts if you like; be sure that they are secured so that root can execute them. You will need to allow traffic between the vpn zone and the loc zone on both systems -- if you simply want to admit all traffic in both directions, you can use the policy file: #SOURCE DEST POLICY LOG LEVEL loc vpn ACCEPT vpn loc ACCEPT On both systems, restart Shorewall and run the modified tunnel script with the start argument on each system. The systems in the two masqueraded subnetworks can now talk to each other