Shorewall Blacklisting/Whitelisting Support
Tom
Eastep
2002-2006
2010
2011
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
.
This article applies to Shorewall 4.4 and
later. If you are running a version of Shorewall earlier than Shorewall
4.3.5 then please see the documentation for that
release.
Introduction
Shorewall supports two different types of blackliisting; rule-based,
static and dynamic. The BLACKLISTNEWONLY option in
/etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf controls the degree of blacklist
filtering:
BLACKLISTNEWONLY=No -- All incoming packets are checked against
the blacklist. New blacklist entries can be used to terminate existing
connections.
BLACKLISTNEWONLY=Yes -- The blacklists are only consulted for
new connection requests. Blacklists may not be used to terminate
existing connections.
Rule-based Blacklisting
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.25, the preferred method of
blacklisting and whitelisting is to use the BLACKLIST section of the rules
file. There you have access to the DROP, ACCEPT, REJECT and WHITELIST
actions, standard and custom macros as well as standard and custom
actions. See shorewall-rules (5) for
details.
Example:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORTS(S)
SECTION BLACKLIST
WHITELIST net:70.90.191.126 all
DROP net all udp 1023:1033,1434,5948,23773
DROP all net udp 1023:1033
DROP net all tcp 57,1433,1434,2401,2745,3127,3306,3410,4899,5554,5948,6101,8081,9898,23773
DROP net:221.192.199.48 all
DROP net:61.158.162.9 all
DROP net:81.21.54.100 all tcp 25
DROP net:84.108.168.139 all
DROP net:200.55.14.18 all
If you prefer to keep your blacklist rules in a separate file,
then:
create the separate file.
copy the column headings from your rules file to the new
file.
enter your blacklist rules into the new file.
in the BLACKLIST section of your rules file, enter:
INCLUDE name-of-new-file
Legacy Blacklisting
Prior to 4.4.25, two forms of blacklisting were supported; static
and dynamic. The dynamic variety is still appropriate for
on-the-fly blacklisting; the static form is
deprecated.
By default, only the source address is
checked against the blacklists. Blacklists only stop
blacklisted hosts from connecting to you — they do not stop you or your
users from connecting to blacklisted hosts .
UPDATE
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.12, you can also blacklist by
destination address. See shorewall-blacklist
(5) and shorewall (8)
for details.
Dynamic Shorewall blacklisting is not
appropriate for blacklisting 1,000s of different addresses. Static
Blacklisting can handle large blacklists but only if you use
ipsets. Without ipsets, the blacklists will take forever to
load, and will have a very negative effect on firewall
performance.
Static Blacklisting
Shorewall static blacklisting support has the following
configuration parameters:
You specify whether you want packets from blacklisted hosts
dropped or rejected using the BLACKLIST_DISPOSITION setting in
shorewall.conf(5).
You specify whether you want packets from blacklisted hosts
logged and at what syslog level using the BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL setting
in shorewall.conf(5).
You list the IP addresses/subnets that you wish to blacklist
in shorewall-blacklist
(5). You may also specify PROTOCOL and Port numbers/Service names in
the blacklist file.
You specify the interfaces whose incoming packets you want
checked against the blacklist using the blacklist
option in shorewall-interfaces(5)
(shorewall-zones(5) in
Shorewall 4.4.12 and later).
Prior to Shorewall 4.4.20, only source-address static blacklisting
was supported.
Users with a large static black list may want to set the
DELAYBLACKLISTLOAD option in shorewall.conf (added in Shorewall version
2.2.0). When DELAYBLACKLISTLOAD=Yes, Shorewall will enable new
connections before loading the blacklist rules. While this may allow
connections from blacklisted hosts to slip by during construction of the
blacklist, it can substantially reduce the time that all new connections
are disabled during "shorewall [re]start".
Beginning with Shorewall 2.4.0, you can use ipsets to define your static blacklist. Here's
an example:
#ADDRESS/SUBNET PROTOCOL PORT
+Blacklistports[dst]
+Blacklistnets[src,dst]
+Blacklist[src,dst]
#LAST LINE -- ADD YOUR ENTRIES BEFORE THIS ONE -- DO NOT REMOVE
In this example, there is a portmap ipset
Blacklistports that blacklists all traffic with
destination ports included in the ipset. There are also
Blacklistnets (type nethash)
and Blacklist (type iphash)
ipsets that allow blacklisting networks and individual IP addresses.
Note that [src,dst] is specified so that individual entries in the sets
can be bound to other portmap ipsets to allow blacklisting
(source address, destination
port) combinations. For example:
ipset -N SMTP portmap --from 1 --to 31
ipset -A SMTP 25
ipset -A Blacklist 206.124.146.177
ipset -B Blacklist 206.124.146.177 -b SMTP
This will blacklist SMTP traffic from host 206.124.146.177.
Static Whitelisting
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.20, you can create
whitelist entries in the blacklist file.
Connections/packets matching a whitelist entry are not matched against
the entries in the blacklist file that follow. Whitelist entries are
created using the whitelist option
(OPTIONS column). See shorewall-blacklist
(5).
Dynamic Blacklisting
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.7, dynamic blacklisting is enabled by
setting DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=Yes in shorewall.conf.
Prior to that release, the feature is always enabled.
Once enabled, dynamic blacklisting doesn't use any configuration
parameters but is rather controlled using /sbin/shorewall[-lite]
commands. Note that to and from may
only be specified when running Shorewall 4.4.12 or
later.
drop [to|from] <ip address list> -
causes packets from the listed IP addresses to be silently dropped
by the firewall.
reject [to|from]<ip address list> -
causes packets from the listed IP addresses to be rejected by the
firewall.
allow [to|from] <ip address list> -
re-enables receipt of packets from hosts previously blacklisted by a
drop or reject
command.
save - save the dynamic blacklisting configuration so that it
will be automatically restored the next time that the firewall is
restarted.
Update: Beginning with
Shorewall 4.4.10, the dynamic blacklist is automatically retained
over stop/start sequences and over
restart.
show dynamic - displays the dynamic blacklisting
configuration.
logdrop [to|from] <ip address list>
- causes packets from the listed IP addresses to be dropped and
logged by the firewall. Logging will occur at the level specified by
the BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL setting at the last [re]start (logging will
be at the 'info' level if no BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL was given).
logreject [to|from}<ip address
list> - causes packets from the listed IP addresses to
be rejected and logged by the firewall. Logging will occur at the
level specified by the BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL setting at the last
[re]start (logging will be at the 'info' level if no
BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL was given).
Dynamic blacklisting is not dependent on the
blacklist
option in
/etc/shorewall/interfaces.
Ignore packets from a pair of systems
shorewall[-lite] drop 192.0.2.124 192.0.2.125
Drops packets from hosts 192.0.2.124 and 192.0.2.125
Re-enable packets from a system
shorewall[-lite] allow 192.0.2.125
Re-enables traffic from 192.0.2.125.
Displaying the Dynamic Blacklist
shorewall show dynamic
Displays the 'dynamic' chain which contains rules for the
dynamic blacklist. The source column contains
the set of blacklisted addresses.