Shorewall and Multiple Internet Connections
Tom
Eastep
2005-12-01
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
.
Multiple Internet Connection Support
Beginning with Shorewall 2.3.2, support is included for multiple
internet connections.
Overview
Let's assume that a firewall is connected via two separate
ethernet interfaces to two different ISPs as in the following
diagram.
eth0 connects to ISP1. The IP address of eth0 is
206.124.146.176 and the ISP's gateway router has IP address
206.124.146.254.
eth1 connects to ISP 2. The IP address of eth1 is
130.252.99.27 and the ISP's gateway router has IP address
130.252.99.254.
Each of these providers is described in an
entry in the file /etc/shorewall/providers.
Entries in /etc/shorewall/providers can
specify that outgoing connections are to be load-balanced between the
two ISPs. Entries in /etc/shorewall/tcrules can be
used to direct particular outgoing connections to one ISP or the other.
Use of /etc/shorewall/tcrules is not required for
/etc/shorewall/providers to work, but you must
select a unique MARK value for each provider so Shorewall can set up the
correct marking rules for you.
When you use the track option in
/etc/shorewall/providers, connections from the
internet are automatically routed back out of the correct interface and
through the correct ISP gateway. This works whether the connection is
handled by the firewall itself or if it is routed or port-forwarded to a
system behind the firewall.
Shorewall will set up the routing and will update the
/etc/iproute2/rt_tables to include the table names
and number of the tables that it adds.
This feature uses packet
marking to control the routing. As a consequence, there are
some restrictions concerning entries in
/etc/shorewall/tcrules:
Packet marking for traffic control purposes may not be done
in the PREROUTING table for connections involving providers with
'track' specified (see below).
You may not use the SAVE or RESTORE options.
You may not use connection marking.
The /etc/shorewall/providers file can also be
used in other routing scenarios. See the Squid documentation for an
example.
/etc/shorewall/providers File
Entries in this file have the following columns. As in all
Shorewall configuration files, enter "-" in a column if you don't want
to enter any value.
NAME
The provider name. Must begin with a letter and consist of
letters and digits. The provider name becomes the name of the
generated routing table for this provider.
NUMBER
A number between 1 and 252. This becomes the routing table
number for the generated table for this provider.
MARK
A mark value used in your /etc/shorewall/tcrules file to
direct packets to this provider. Shorewall will also mark
connections that have seen input from this provider with this
value and will restore the packet mark in the PREROUTING
CHAIN.
DUPLICATE
Gives the name or number of a routing table to duplicate.
May be 'main' or the name or number of a previously declared
provider. For most applications, you want to specify 'main'
here.
INTERFACE
The name of the interface to the provider.
GATEWAY
The IP address of the provider's Gateway router.
You can enter detect here
and Shorewall will attempt to automatically determine the gateway
IP address.
Hint: "detect" is appropriate for use in cases
where the interface named in the INTERFACE column is dynamically
configured via DHCP etc.
OPTIONS
A comma-separated list from the following:
track
If specified, connections FROM this interface are to
be tracked so that responses may be routed back out this
same interface.
You want specify 'track' if internet hosts will be
connecting to local servers through this provider. Any time
that you specify 'track', you will also want to specify
'balance' (see below).
Use of this feature requires that your kernel and
iptables support CONNMARK target and connmark match support.
It does not require the ROUTE target extension.
iptables 1.3.1 is broken with respect to CONNMARK
and iptables-save/iptables-restore. This means that if you
configure multiple ISPs, shorewall
restore may fail. If it does, you may patch your
iptables using the patch at http://shorewall.net/pub/shorewall/contrib/iptables/CONNMARK.diff.
balance
The providers that have 'balance' specified will get
outbound traffic load-balanced among them. Balancing will
not be perfect, as it is route based, and routes are cached.
This means that routes to often-used sites will always be
over the same provider.
By default, each provider is given the same weight (1)
. You can change the weight of a given provider by following
balance with "=" and the desired weight
(e.g., balance=2). The weights reflect the relative
bandwidth of the providers connections and should be small
numbers since the kernel actually creates additional default
routes for each weight increment.
loose
Do not include routing rules that force traffic whose
source IP is an address of the INTERFACE to be routed to
this provider. Useful for defining providers that are to be
used only when the appropriate packet mark is
applied.
COPY
When you specify an existing table in the DUPLICATE column,
Shorewall copies all routes through the interface specified in the
INTERFACE column plus the interfaces listed in this column. At a
minumum, you should list all interfaces on your firewall in this
column except those internet interfaces specified in the INTERFACE
column of entries in this file.
What an entry in the Providers File Does
Adding another entry in the providers file simply creates an
alternate routing table for you. In addition:
Unless loose is specified, an
ip rule is generated for each IP address on the INTERFACE that
routes traffic from that address through the associated routing
table.
If you specify track, then
connections which have had at least one packet arrive on the
interface listed in the INTERFACE column have their connection mark
set to the value in the MARK column. In the PREROUTING chain,
packets with a connection mark have their packet mark set to the
value of the associated connection mark; packets marked in this way
bypass any prerouting rules that you create in
/etc/shorewall/tcrules. This ensures that
packets associated with connections from outside are always routed
out of the correct interface.
If you specify balance, then
Shorewall will replace the 'default' route with weight 100 in the
'main' routing table with a load-balancing route among those
gateways where balance was
specified. So if you configure default routes, be sure that their
weight is less than 100 or the route added by Shorewall will not be
used.
That's all that these entries do.
You still have to follow the principle stated in the Shorewall Routing
documentation:
Routing determines where packets are to be sent.
Once routing determines where the packet is to go, the
firewall (Shorewall) determines if the packet is allowed to go
there.
The bottom line is that if you want traffic to go out through a
particular provider then you must mark that traffic
with the provider's MARK value in
/etc/shorewall/tcrules and you must do that marking
in the PREROUTING chain.
Entries in /etc/shorewall/providers
permanently alter your firewall/gateway's routing; that is, the effect
of these changes is not reversed by shorewall stop
or shorewall clear. To restore routing to its
original state, you will have to restart your network. This can
usually be done by /etc/init.d/network restart or
/etc/init.d/networking restart. Check your
distribution's networking documentation.
You can mitigate the effect of the Shorewall-generated changes
to your routing table by specifying a metric for
each default route that you configure. Shorewall will generate a
load-balancing default route (assuming that balance has been specified for some of the
providers) that does not include a metric and that will therefore not
replace any existing route that has a non-zero metric.
What an entry in the Providers File Does NOT Do
Given that Shorewall is simply a tool to configure Netfilter and
does not run continuously in your system, entries in the providers file
do not provide any automatic failover in the event
of failure of one of your Internet connections.
Example
The configuration in the figure at the top of this section would
be specified in /etc/shorewall/providers as
follows.
#NAME NUMBER MARK DUPLICATE INTERFACE GATEWAY OPTIONS COPY
ISP1 1 1 main eth0 206.124.146.254 track,balance eth2
ISP2 2 2 main eth1 130.252.99.254 track,balance eth2
Other configuration files go something like this:
/etc/shorewall/interfaces:
#ZONE INTERFACE BROADCAST OPTIONS
net eth0 detect …
net eth1 detect …
/etc/shorewall/policy:
#SOURCE DESTINATION POLICY LIMIT:BURST
net net DROP
If you have masqueraded hosts, be sure to update
/etc/shorewall/masq to masquerade to both ISPs. For
example, if you masquerade all hosts connected to eth2 then:
#INTERFACE SUBNET ADDRESS
eth0 eth2 206.124.146.176
eth1 eth2 130.252.99.27
Entries in /etc/shorewall/masq have no
effect on which ISP a particular connection will be sent through. That
is rather the purpuse of entries in
/etc/shorewall/tcrules.
Now suppose that you want to route all outgoing SMTP traffic from
your local network through ISP 2. You would make this entry in /etc/shorewall/tcrules (and if you are
running a version of Shorewall earlier than 3.0.0, you would set
TC_ENABLED=Yes in /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf).
#MARK SOURCE DEST PROTO PORT(S) CLIENT USER TEST
# PORT(S)
2:P <local network> 0.0.0.0/0 tcp 25