DHCP
Tom
Eastep
2001
2002
2004
2005
2010
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
.
For most operations, DHCP software interfaces to the Linux IP stack
at a level below Netfilter. Hence, Netfilter (and therefore Shorewall)
cannot be used effectively to police DHCP. The dhcp
interface option described in this article allows for Netfilter to stay
out of DHCP's way for those operations that can be controlled by Netfilter
and prevents unwanted logging of DHCP-related traffic by
Shorewall-generated Netfilter logging rules.
If you want to Run a DHCP Server on your firewall
Specify the dhcp
option on each interface to be
served by your server in the /etc/shorewall/interfaces
file. This will generate rules that will allow DHCP to and from your
firewall system.
When starting dhcpd
, you need to list those
interfaces on the run line. On a RedHat system, this is done by
modifying /etc/sysconfig/dhcpd.
If you set 'ping-check' true in your
/etc/shorewall/dhcpd.conf file then you will want
to accept 'ping' from your firewall to
the zone(s) served by the firewall's DHCP server.
If a Firewall Interface gets its IP Address via DHCP
Specify the dhcp
option for this interface in the
/etc/shorewall/interfaces
file. This will generate rules that will allow DHCP to and from your
firewall system.
If you know that the dynamic address is always going to be in
the same subnet, you can specify the subnet address in the interface's
entry in the /etc/shorewall/interfaces
file.
If you don't know the subnet address in advance, you should
specify detect
for the interface's subnet address in
the /etc/shorewall/interfaces
file and start Shorewall after the interface has started.
In the event that the subnet address might change while
Shorewall is started, you need to arrange for a shorewall
refresh
command to be executed when a new dynamic IP address
gets assigned to the interface. Check your DHCP client's
documentation.
It is a good idea to accept
'ping' on any interface that gets its IP address via DHCP.
That way, if the DHCP server is configured with 'ping-check' true, you
won't be blocking its 'ping' requests.
If you wish to pass DHCP requests and responses through a
bridge
Specify the dhcp
option for the bridge interface
in the /etc/shorewall/interfaces
file. This will generate rules that will allow DHCP to and from your
firewall system as well as through the bridge.
Running dhcrelay on the firewall
Specify the "dhcp" option (in /etc/shorewall/interfaces)
on the interface facing the DHCP server and on the interfaces to be
relayed.
Allow UDP ports 67 and 68 ("67:68") between the client zone and
the server zone:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
ACCEPT ZONEA ZONEB udp 67:68
ACCEPT ZONEB ZONEA udp 67:68
Alternatively, use the DHCPfwd macro:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
DHCPfwd(ACCEPT) ZONEA ZONEB
If the server is configured with 'ping-check' true, then you
must allow 'ping' from the server's
zone to the zone(s) served by dhcrelay.