Shorewall Events
Tom
Eastep
2013
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 4.5.19 and later and supersedes
this article.
Overview
Shorewall events were introduced in Shorewall 4.5.19 and provide a
high-level interface to the Netfilter recent match
capability. An event is actually a list of (IP address, timestamp) pairs,
and can be tested in a number of different ways:
Has event E ever occurred for IP address A (is the IP address in
the list)?
Has event E occurred M or more times for IP address A?
Has Event E occurred in the last N seconds for IP Address A (is
there an entry for the address with a timestamp falling within the
last N seconds)?
Has Event E occurred M or more times in the last N seconds for
IP address A (are there M or more entries for the address with
timestamps falling within the last N seconds)?
The event interface is implemented as three parameterized Shorewall
Actions:
SetEvent
This action initializes an event list for either the source or
destination IP address in the current packets. The list will contain
a single entry for the address that will have the current
timestamp.
ResetEvent
This action removes all entries for either the source or
destination IP address from an event list.
IfEvent
This action tests an event in one of the ways listed above,
and performs an action based on the result.
Events are based on the Netfilter 'recent match' capability which is
required for their use.
The recent-match kernel component is xt_recent which has two options
that are of interest to Shorewall users:
ip_list_tot
The number of addresses remembered per event. Default is
100.
ip_pkt_list_tot
The number of packets (event occurrences) remembered per
address. Default is 20.
These may be changed with the xt_recent module is loaded or on the
kernel bootloader runline.
Details
Because these are parameterized actions, optional parameters may be
omitted. Trailing omitted parameters may be omitted entirely while
embedded omitted parameters are represented by a hyphen ("-").
Each event is given a name. Event names:
Must begin with a letter.
May be composed of letters, digits, hyphens ('-') or underscores
('_').
May be at most 29 characters in length.
SetEvent
SetEvent(
event, [ action ],
[ src-dst ], [
disposition ] )
event
Name of the event.
action
An action to perform after the event is initialized. May be
any action that may appear in the ACTION column of shorewall-rules (5).
If no action is to be performed, use COUNT.
src-dst
Specifies whether the source IP address (src) or destination IP address (dst) is to be added to the event. The
default is src.
disposition
If the action involves logging,
then this parameter specifies the disposition that will appear in
the log entry prefix. If no disposition
is given, the log prefix is determines normally. The default is
ACCEPT.
ResetEvent
ResetEvent(
event, [ action ],
[ src-dst ], [
disposition ] )
event
Name of the event.
action
An action to perform after the event is reset. May be any
action that may appear in the ACTION column of shorewall-rules (5).
If no action is to be performed, use COUNT. The default is
ACCEPT.
src-dst
Specifies whether the source IP address (src) or destination IP address (dst) is to be removed from the event. The
default is src.
disposition
If the action involves logging,
then this parameter specifies the disposition that will appear in
the log entry prefix. If no disposition
is given, the log prefix is determines normally.
IfEvent
IfEvent(
event, [ action ],
[ duration ], [
hitcount ], [
src-dst], [
command[:option]...,
[ disposition ] )
event
Name of the event.
action
An action to perform if the test succeeds. May be any action
that may appear in the ACTION column of shorewall-rules (5).
The default is ACCEPT.
duration
Number of seconds over which the event is to be tested. If
not specified, the test is not constrained by time.
hitcount
Specifies the minimum number of packets required for the
test to succeed. If not specified, 1 packet is assumed.
src-dst
Specifies whether the source IP address (src) or destination IP address (dst) is to be tested. The default is
src.
command
May be one of the following:
check
Simply test if the
duration/hitcount
test is satisfied. If so, the
action is performed.
reset
Like check. If the
test succeeds, the event will be
reset before the action is taken.
Requires the Mark in filter table
capability in your kernel and iptables.
update
Like check.
Regardless of whether the test succeeds, an entry with the
current time and for the src-dst
iP address will be added to the
event.
The default is check.
option may be one of:
reap
Regardless of whether the test succeeds, entries for
the src-dst IP address that are
older than duration seconds will
be deleted from the event.
ttl
Constrains the test to require that the packet TTL
match the ttl in the original packet that created the
entry.
disposition
If the action involves logging,
then this parameter specifies the disposition that will appear in
the log entry prefix. If no disposition
is given, the log prefix is determines normally.
'show event' and 'show events' Commands
The CLI programs (/sbin/shorewall,
/sbin/shorewall-lite, etc.) support show
event and show events commands.
The show event command shows the contents of
the events listed in the command while show
events lists the contents of all events.
root@gateway:~# shorewall show events
Shorewall 4.5.19-Beta2 events at gateway - Sat Jul 13 07:17:59 PDT 2013
SSH
src=75.101.251.91 : 2225.808, 2225.592
src=218.87.16.135 : 2078.490
SSH_COUNTER
src=65.182.111.112 : 5755.790
src=113.162.155.243 : 4678.249
sticky001
src=172.20.1.146 : 5.733, 5.728, 5.623, 5.611, 5.606, 5.606, 5.589, 5.588, 5.565, 5.551, 5.543, 5.521, 5.377, 5.347, 5.347, 5.345, 5.258, 5.148, 5.048, 4.949
src=172.20.1.151 : 41.805, 41.800
sticky002
src=172.20.1.213 : 98.122, 98.105, 98.105, 98.105, 98.088, 98.088, 98.088, 98.088, 98.058, 98.058, 80.885, 53.528, 53.526, 53.526, 53.510, 53.383, 53.194, 53.138, 53.072, 3.119
src=172.20.1.146 : 4.914, 4.914, 4.898, 4.897, 4.897, 4.896, 4.896, 4.896, 4.882, 4.881, 4.875, 4.875, 4.875, 4.875, 4.875, 4.875, 4.875, 4.874, 4.874, 4.874
root@gateway:~#
The SSH and SSH_COUNTER events are created using the following
Automatic Blacklisting example. The sticky001 and sticky002 events are
created by the SAME rule action.
Each line represents one event. The list of numbers following the
':' represent the number of seconds ago that a matching packet triggered
the event. The numbers are in chronological sequence, so In this event,
there were 20 packets from 172.20.1.146 that arrived between 5.733 and
4.949 seconds ago:
sticky001
src=172.20.1.146 : 5.733, 5.728, 5.623, 5.611, 5.606, 5.606, 5.589, 5.588, 5.565, 5.551, 5.543, 5.521, 5.377, 5.347, 5.347, 5.345, 5.258, 5.148, 5.048, 4.949
Note that there may have been earlier packets that also matched,
but the system where this example was captured used the default value of
the ip_pkt_list_tot xt_recent option
(20).
The output of these commands is produced by processing the
contents of /proc/net/xt_recent/*. You can access
those files directly to see the raw data. The raw times are the uptime
in milliseconds. The %CURRENTTIME entry is created by the show
event[s] commands to obtain the current uptime.
Examples
Automatic Blacklisting
This example is taken from this
article which explains the nice benefits of this approach. This
example is for ssh, but it can be adapted for any application.
The name SSH has been changed to SSHLIMIT so as not to override
the Shorewall macro of the same name.
/etc/shorewall/actions:
#ACTION OPTION DESCRIPTION
SSHLIMIT #Automatically blacklist hosts who exceed SSH connection limits
SSH_BLACKLIST #Helper for SSHLIMIT
/etc/shorewall/action.SSH_BLACKLIST:
#
# Shorewall version 4 - SSH_BLACKLIST Action
#
?format 2
###############################################################################
#TARGET SOURCE DEST PROTO DPORT SPORT
#
# Log the Reject
#
LOG:warn:REJECT
#
# And set the SSH_COUNTER event for the SOURCE IP address
#
SetEvent(SSH_COUNTER,REJECT,src)
/etc/shorewall/action.SSHLIMIT:
#
# Shorewall version 4 - SSHLIMIT Action
#
?format 2
###############################################################################
#TARGET SOURCE DEST PROTO DPORT SPORT
#
# Silently reject the client if blacklisted
#
IfEvent(SSH_COUNTER,REJECT,300,1)
#
# Blacklist if 5 attempts in the last minute
#
IfEvent(SSH,SSH_BLACKLIST,60,5,src,check:reap)
#
# Log and reject if the client has tried to connect
# in the last two seconds
#
IfEvent(SSH,REJECT:warn:,2,1,-,update,Added)
#
# Un-blacklist the client
#
ResetEvent(SSH_COUNTER,LOG:warn,-,Removed)
#
# Set the 'SSH' EVENT and accept the connection
#
SetEvent(SSH,ACCEPT,src)
etc/shorewall/rules:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
SSHLIMIT net $FW tcp 22
The technique demonstrated in this example is not self-cleaning.
The SSH_COUNTER event can become full with blackisted addresses that
never attempt to connect again. When that happens and a new entry is
added via SetEvent, the least recently seen address in the table is
deleted.
Generalized Automatic Blacklisting
The above two actions are generalized in the AutoBL and AutoBLL
actions released in Shorewall 4.5.19. Only AutoBL is invoked directly
from your rules file; AutoBL invoked AutoBLL internally.
AutoBL
AutoBL(
event, [
Interval ], [
hitcount ], [
successive ], [
blacklist-time ], [
disposition ], [
log_level ] )
event
Name of the event. The blacklisting event itself will be
event_BL (analogous to SSH_COUNTER
above).
interval
Interval, in seconds, over which hits are to be counted.
Default is 60 seconds.
hitcount
Number of matching packets that will trigger automatic
blacklisting when they arrive in
interval seconds. Default is
5.
successive
If a matching packet arrives within this many seconds of
the preceding one, it should be logged according to
log_level and handled according to
the disposition. If successive
packets are not to be considered, enter 0. Default is 2
seconds.
blacklist-time
Time, in seconds, that the source IP address is to be
blacklisted. Default is 300 (5 minutes).
disposition
The disposition of blacklisted packets. Default is
DROP.
log_level
Log level at which packets are to be logged. Default is
info.
To duplicate the SSHLIMIT entry in
/etc/shorewall/rules shown above:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
AutoBL(SSH,-,-,-,REJECT,warn)\
net $FW tcp 22
Port Knocking
This example shows a different implementation of the one shown in
the Port Knocking article.
In this example:
Attempting to connect to port 1600 enables SSH access. Access
is enabled for 60 seconds.
Attempting to connect to port 1601 disables SSH access (note
that in the article linked above, attempting to connect to port 1599
also disables access. This is an port scan defence as explained in
the article).
To implement that approach:
/etc/shorewall/actions:
#ACTION OPTION DESCRIPTION
Knock #Port Knocking
/etc/shorewall/action.Knock:
#
# Shorewall version 4 - SSH_BLACKLIST Action
#
?format 2
###############################################################################
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
IfEvent(SSH,ACCEPT:info,60,1,src,reset)\
- - tcp 22
SetEvent(SSH,ACCEPT) - - tcp 1600
ResetEvent(SSH,DROP:info)
etc/shorewall/rules:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST
# PORT(S)
Knock net $FW tcp 22,1599-1601
Stateful Port Knocking (knock with a sequence of ports)
Gerhard Wiesinger has contributed a Perl module that allows you to
define portknocking sequences. Download the
module and copy it into your site_perl directory.
Using Gerhard's module, a port-knocking rule is defined via a
'?PERL' statement. This example opens the SSH port from net->fw using
the knock sequence 52245, 15623, 19845:
?BEGIN PERL
use KnockEnhanced;
KnockEnhanced 'net', '$FW', {name => 'SSH1', log_level => 3, proto => 'tcp', target => 'ssh', knocker => [52245,15623,19845]};
?END PERL
A few notes on the parameters:
The first parameter is the rule SOURCE
The second parameter is the rule DEST
The third parameter is a Perl hash reference that defines the
remaining parameters. Each parameter is specified via
param =>
value.
proto is the protocol --
if not specified, the default is tcp
seconds is the timeout
between successive events -- default is 60 seconds.
original_dest is the rule
ORIGINAL DEST
target is the port(s)
that you are trying to open. May either be a single name or
number, or it may be a list of names and/or numbers separated by
commas and enclosed in square brackets ("[...]").
name is a name used as
the base for event and chain names. If not supplied, the first
target is used, in which case
the first target must be a port name.
log_level specifies
logging for the generated rules
Port names and numbers may be optionally followed by a colon
(":") and a protocol name or number to override the specified
protocol.
The module itself contains additional examples of its
usage.