local.m4: Promote the NTP server configuration to a proper variable.
[firewall] / classify.m4
CommitLineData
775bd287 1### -*-sh-*-
bfdc045d 2###
20106bbb 3### Classify packets according to source and destination networks.
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4###
5### (c) 2008 Mark Wooding
6###
7
8###----- Licensing notice ---------------------------------------------------
9###
10### This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11### it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12### the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
13### (at your option) any later version.
14###
15### This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16### but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17### MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18### GNU General Public License for more details.
19###
20### You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21### along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
22### Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
23
24m4_divert(40)m4_dnl
25###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
26### Address classification.
27###
28### The objective of address classification is to work out what kind of
29### networks a packet is travelling between, in order to make filtering
30### decisions easier.
31###
32### Address classification is done in the mangle table, by attaching
33### appropriate marks to the packet. We split the Internet into a number of
34### address classes, and make forwarding decisions based on the classes of
35### the source and destination addresses.
36###
37### The mark word is split into three fields: the FROM and TO fields simply
38### record the source and destination classes numerically; the MASK field is
39### used to determine whether forwarding should occur. There is a mask bit
40### for each address class. Source classification sets mask bits according
41### to the forwarding policy for the source address class. Destination
42### classification clears all of the mask bits except for the one
43### corresponding to the actual destination class. Therefore, forwarding is
44### permitted if and only if the mask bits are not all zero.
45###
46### The mangle chains are arranged as follows.
47###
48### The PREROUTING hook simply invokes in-classify and out-classify chains as
49### subroutines. These will tail-call appropriate classification chains.
50###
51### The in-classify chain is responsible for both source address
52### classification and verifying that the packet arrived from the correct
53### interface. It does an initial dispatch on the source interface, to
54### in-IFACE. The in-IFACE chain dispatches to mark-from-CLASS when it
55### recognizes an address belonging to the CLASS; if no matches succeed, it
56### goes to bad-source-address, which logs a message and drops the packet.
57### The default interface is special. If no explicit matches are found, it
58### dispatches to in-default which forbids a few obviously evil things and
59### finally dispatches to mark-from-untrusted.
60###
61### The out-classify is simpler because it doesn't care about the interface.
62### It simply checks each network range in turn, dispatching to mark-to-CLASS
63### on a match or mark-to-DEFAULT (probably untrusted) if there is no match.
64
65clearchain mangle:in-classify mangle:in-default mangle:out-classify
66clearchain mangle:local-source
67
68## Packets over the loopback interface are automatically trusted. All manner
69## of weird stuff happens on lo, and it's best not to second-guess it.
0291d6d5 70run ip46tables -t mangle -A in-classify -i lo -j ACCEPT
bfdc045d 71
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72## Local broadcast and link-local multicast packets sometimes have bizarre
73## addresses. Don't block them just because of this.
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74run iptables -t mangle -A in-classify -j RETURN \
75 -s 0.0.0.0 -d 255.255.255.255 \
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76 -p udp
77run iptables -t mangle -A in-classify -j RETURN \
78 -s 0.0.0.0 -d 224.0.0.0/24 \
79 -p udp
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80
81## Since packets with source and destination addresses both local will go
82## over the loopback interface, I shouldn't see a packet from me over any
83## other interface. Except that I will if I sent a broadcast or multicast.
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84## Allow the broadcasts, and remember not to trust them. There are no
85## broadcast addresses in IPv6 (only link-local multicast)m so we don't have
86## to worry about that.
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87run iptables -t mangle -A local-source -j RETURN \
88 -m addrtype --dst-type BROADCAST
89run iptables -t mangle -A local-source -j RETURN \
90 -m addrtype --dst-type MULTICAST
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91run ip6tables -t mangle -A local-source -j RETURN \
92 -d ff00::/8
93run ip46tables -t mangle -A local-source -g bad-source-address
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94run iptables -t mangle -A in-classify -j local-source \
95 -m addrtype --src-type LOCAL
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96for addr in $host_6addrs; do
97 run ip6tables -t mangle -A in-classify -j local-source \
98 -s $addr
99done
bfdc045d 100
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101## It's not valid to have a multicast address as a packet source: multicast
102## routing is done away from the source, so a multicast address would make
103## this impossible to do. So discard these packets. Also discard class-E
104## IPv4 addresses, since they aren't assigned.
105run iptables -t mangle -A in-classify -g bad-source-address \
106 -s 224.0.0.0/3
107run ip6tables -t mangle -A in-classify -g bad-source-address \
108 -s ff00::/8
109
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110m4_divert(41)m4_dnl
111## Define the important networks.
112for pass in 1 2; do
113 netclassindex=0
114m4_divert(42)m4_dnl
115done
116
117m4_divert(46)m4_dnl
118## Mark addresses reachable on non-default interfaces as not reachable on the
119## default interface.
0291d6d5 120trace "nets = $allnets $allnets6"
bfdc045d 121for net in $allnets; do
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122 defaultp=nil
123 for iface in $defaultifaces; do
124 case $net in $iface:*) defaultp=t ;; esac
125 done
126 case $defaultp in
127 nil)
128 for iface in $defaultifaces; do
129 run iptables -t mangle -A in-$iface \
bfdc045d 130 -s ${net#*:} -g bad-source-address
3a68f688 131 done
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132 ;;
133 esac
134done
0291d6d5 135for net in $allnets6; do
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136 defaultp=nil
137 for iface in $defaultifaces; do
138 case $net in $iface:*) defaultp=t ;; esac
139 done
140 case $defaultp in
141 nil)
142 for iface in $defaultifaces; do
143 run ip6tables -t mangle -A in-$iface \
0291d6d5 144 -s ${net#*:} -g bad-source-address
3a68f688 145 done
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146 ;;
147 esac
148done
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149
150## Fill in the black holes in the network.
151for addr in \
152 10.0.0.0/8 172.16.0.0/12 192.168.0.0/16 \
153 127.0.0.0/8 192.0.2.0/24
154do
155 run iptables -t mangle -A in-default -s $addr -g bad-source-address
156done
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157for addr in \
158 fc00::/7 \
159 2001:0db8::/32
160do
161 run ip6tables -t mangle -A in-default -s $addr -g bad-source-address
162done
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163
164m4_divert(92)m4_dnl
165## Put the final default decision on the in-default chain, and attach the
166## classification chains to the PREROUTING hook.
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167for iface in $defaultifaces; do
168 run ip46tables -t mangle -A in-$iface -g mark-from-$defaultclass
169done
170run ip46tables -t mangle -A out-classify -g mark-to-$defaultclass
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171run ip46tables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -j in-classify
172run ip46tables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -j out-classify
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173
174## Now it's safe to let stuff through.
175for i in PREROUTING INPUT FORWARD OUTPUT POSTROUTING; do
0291d6d5 176 run ip46tables -t mangle -P $i ACCEPT
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177done
178
179m4_divert(-1)
180###----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------