shorewall-routestopped
5
routestopped
The Shorewall file that governs what traffic flows through the
firewall while it is in the 'stopped' state.
/etc/shorewall/routestopped
Description
This file is deprecated in favor of the shorewall-stoppedrules(5)
file.
This file is used to define the hosts that are accessible when the
firewall is stopped or is being stopped.
Changes to this file do not take effect until after the next
shorewall start or shorewall
restart command.
The columns in the file are as follows (where the column name is
followed by a different name in parentheses, the different name is used in
the alternate specification syntax).
INTERFACE -
interface
Interface through which host(s) communicate with the
firewall
HOST(S) (hosts) - [-|address[,address]...]
Optional. Comma-separated list of IP/subnet addresses. If your
kernel and iptables include iprange match support, IP address ranges
are also allowed.
If left empty or supplied as "-", 0.0.0.0/0 is assumed.
OPTIONS - [-|option[,option]...]
Optional. A comma-separated list of options. The order of the
options is not important but the list can contain no embedded
white-space. The currently-supported options are:
routeback
Set up a rule to ACCEPT traffic from these hosts back to
themselves. Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.9, this option is
automatically set if routeback is specified in shorewall-interfaces
(5) or if the rules compiler detects that the interface is a
bridge.
source
Allow traffic from these hosts to ANY destination.
Without this option or the dest option, only traffic from this
host to other listed hosts (and the firewall) is allowed. If
source is specified then
routeback is
redundant.
dest
Allow traffic to these hosts from ANY source. Without
this option or the source
option, only traffic from this host to other listed hosts (and
the firewall) is allowed. If dest is specified then routeback is redundant.
notrack
The traffic will be exempted from connection
tracking.
PROTO (Optional) ‒
protocol-name-or-number
Protocol.
DEST PORT(S) (dport) ‒
service-name/port-number-list
Optional. A comma-separated list of port numbers and/or
service names from /etc/services. May also
include port ranges of the form
low-port:high-port
if your kernel and iptables include port range support.
SOURCE PORT(S) (sport) ‒
service-name/port-number-list
Optional. A comma-separated list of port numbers and/or
service names from /etc/services. May also
include port ranges of the form
low-port:high-port
if your kernel and iptables include port range support.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.15, you may place '=' in this
column, provided that the DEST PORT(S) column is non-empty. This
causes the rule to match when either the source port or the
destination port in a packet matches one of the ports specified in
DEST PORTS(S). Use of '=' requires multi-port match in your iptables
and kernel.
The source and dest options work best when used in conjunction
with ADMINISABSENTMINDED=Yes in shorewall.conf(5).
Example
Example 1:
#INTERFACE HOST(S) OPTIONS PROTO DEST SOURCE
# PORT(S) PORT(S)
eth2 192.168.1.0/24
eth0 192.0.2.44
br0 - routeback
eth3 - source
eth4 - notrack 41
FILES
/etc/shorewall/routestopped
See ALSO
http://shorewall.net/starting_and_stopping_shorewall.htm
http://shorewall.net/configuration_file_basics.htm#Pairs
shorewall(8), shorewall-accounting(5), shorewall-actions(5),
shorewall-blacklist(5), shorewall-hosts(5), shorewall_interfaces(5),
shorewall-ipsets(5), shorewall-maclist(5), shorewall-masq(5),
shorewall-nat(5), shorewall-netmap(5), shorewall-params(5),
shorewall-policy(5), shorewall-providers(5), shorewall-proxyarp(5),
shorewall-rtrules(5), shorewall-rules(5), shorewall.conf(5),
shorewall-secmarks(5), shorewall-tcclasses(5), shorewall-tcdevices(5),
shorewall-tcrules(5), shorewall-tos(5), shorewall-tunnels(5),
shorewall-zones(5)