local.m4: Reinstate detailed filtering from scary networks.
[firewall] / bookends.m4
CommitLineData
775bd287 1### -*-sh-*-
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2###
3### Initialization and finishing touches for firewall scripts
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(30)m4_dnl
25###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
26### Clear existing firewall rules.
27
28## The main chains: set policy to drop, and then clear the rules. For a
29## while, incoming packets will be silently dropped, but we should have got
30## everything going before anyone actually hits a timeout.
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31##
32## We don't control some of the chains, so we should preserve them. This
33## introduces a whole bunch of problems.
34
35## Chains we're meant to preserve
36preserve_chains="filter:fail2ban filter:fail2ban-* $preserve_chains"
37
38## Take the various IP versions in turn.
39unref=nil
40for ip in ip ip6; do
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41 if [ "$FW_NOACT" ]; then break; fi
42
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43 for table in $(cat /proc/net/${ip}_tables_names); do
44
45 ## Step 1: clear out the builtin chains.
46 ${ip}tables -nL -t $table |
47 sed -n '/^Chain \([^ ]\+\) (policy .*$/ s//\1/p ' |
48 while read chain; do
49 case $table in
50 nat) policy=ACCEPT ;;
51 *) policy=DROP ;;
52 esac
53 run ${ip}tables -t $table -P $chain $policy
54 run ${ip}tables -t $table -F $chain
55 done
56
57 ## Step 2: clear out user chains. Unfortunately, we can only clear
58 ## chains which have no references to them, so work through picking off
59 ## unreferenced chains which aren't meant to be preserved until there are
60 ## none left.
61 while :; do
62 progress=nil
63 ${ip}tables -nL -t $table |
64 sed -n '/^Chain \([^ ]\+\) (0 references)$/ s//\1/p ' \
65 >/var/run/firewall-chains.tmp
66 while read chain; do
67 match=nil
68 for pat in $preserve_chains; do
69 case "$table:$chain" in $pat) match=t ;; esac
70 done
71 case $match in
72 nil)
73 run ${ip}tables -t $table -F $chain
74 run ${ip}tables -t $table -X $chain
75 progress=t
76 ;;
77 esac
78 done </var/run/firewall-chains.tmp
79 case $progress in nil) break ;; esac
80 done
81
82 ## Step 3: report on uncleared user chains. This means that there's a
83 ## serious problem.
84 ${ip}tables -nL -t $table |
85 sed -n '/^Chain \([^ ]\+\) (\([1-9][0-9]*\) references)$/ s//\1 \2/p ' \
86 >/var/run/firewall-chains.tmp
87 while read chain refs; do
88 match=nil
89 for pat in $preserve_chains; do
90 case "$table:$chain" in $pat) match=t ;; esac
91 done
92 case $match in
93 nil)
94 echo >&2 "$0: can't clear referenced $ip chain \`$table:$chain'"
95 unref=t
96 ;;
97 esac
98 done </var/run/firewall-chains.tmp
bfdc045d 99 done
bfdc045d 100done
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101rm -f /var/run/firewall-chains.tmp
102case $unref in t) exit 1 ;; esac
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103
104m4_divert(32)m4_dnl
105###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
106### Set safe IP options.
107
108## Set forwarding options. Apparently setting ip_forward clobbers other
109## settings, so put this first.
78af294c 110case $host_type_<::>FWHOST in
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111 router) forward=1 host=0 ;;
112 server) forward=0 host=0 ;;
113 client) forward=0 host=1 ;;
78af294c 114esac
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115setopt ip_forward $forward
116setdevopt forwarding $forward
64de9249 117for i in \
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118 accept_ra accept_ra_defrtr accept_ra_pinfo accept_ra_info_max_plen \
119 accept_redirects
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120do
121 setdevopt $i $host
122done
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123case $forward in
124 0) inchains="INPUT" ;;
125 1) inchains="INPUT FORWARD" ;;
126esac
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127
128## Set dynamic port allocation.
129setopt ip_local_port_range $open_port_min $open_port_max
130
131## Deploy SYN-cookies if necessary.
132setopt tcp_syncookies 1
133
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134## Allow broadcast and multicast ping, because it's a useful diagnostic tool.
135setopt icmp_echo_ignore_broadcasts 0
136
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137## Turn off iptables filtering for bridges. We'll use ebtables if we need
138## to; but right now the model is that we do filtering at the borders, and
139## are tolerant of things which are local.
5cadbadd 140if [ -x /sbin/brctl ] || [ -x /usr/sbin/brctl ]; then
6d47692a 141 modprobe bridge || :
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142fi
143if [ -d /proc/sys/net/bridge ]; then
144 for filter in arptables iptables ip6tables; do
145 run sysctl -q net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-$filter=0
146 done
6d47692a 147fi
429f4314 148
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149## Turn off the reverse-path filter. It's basically useless: the filter does
150## nothing at all for single-homed hosts; and multi-homed hosts tend to have
151## routing aysmmetries if there's any kind of cycle.
152setdevopt rp_filter 0
153setdevopt log_martians 0
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154
155## Turn off things which can mess with our routing decisions.
156setdevopt accept_source_route 0
51988d08 157setdevopt secure_redirects 1
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158
159## If we're maent to stop the firewall, then now is the time to do it.
160$exit_after_clearing
161
162m4_divert(34)m4_dnl
163###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
164### Establish error chains.
165
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166errorchain forbidden REJECT
167## Generic `not allowed' chain.
bfdc045d 168
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169errorchain tcp-fragment REJECT
170## Chain for logging fragmented TCP segements.
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171
172errorchain bad-tcp REJECT -p tcp --reject-with tcp-reset
173## Bad TCP segments (e.g., for unknown connections). Sends a TCP reset.
174
175errorchain mangle:bad-source-address DROP
0291d6d5 176errorchain bad-source-address DROP
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177## Packet arrived on wrong interface for its source address. Drops the
178## packet, since there's nowhere sensible to send an error.
179
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180errorchain dns-rate-limit DROP
181## Dropped incoming DNS query due to rate limiting. The source address is
182## suspicious, so don't produce ICMP.
183
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184errorchain bad-destination-address REJECT
185## Packet arrived on non-loopback interface with loopback destination.
f381cc0a 186
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187errorchain interesting ACCEPT
188## Not an error, just log interesting packets.
189
a4d8cae3 190m4_divert(50)m4_dnl
bfdc045d 191###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
f543dab7 192### Standard filtering.
bfdc045d 193
f381cc0a 194## Don't clobber local traffic
0291d6d5 195run ip46tables -A INPUT -i lo -j ACCEPT
bfdc045d 196
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197## We really shouldn't see packets destined for localhost on any interface
198## other than the loopback.
199run iptables -A INPUT -g bad-destination-address \
200 -d 127.0.0.0/8
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201run ip6tables -A INPUT -g bad-destination-address \
202 -d ::1
203
204## We shouldn't be asked to forward things with link-local addresses.
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205case $forward in
206 1)
207 run iptables -A FORWARD -g bad-source-address \
208 -s 169.254.0.0/16
209 run iptables -A FORWARD -g bad-destination-address \
210 -d 169.254.0.0/16
211 run ip6tables -A FORWARD -g bad-source-address \
212 -s fe80::/10
213 run ip6tables -A FORWARD -g bad-destination-address \
214 -d fe80::/10
215 ;;
216esac
f381cc0a 217
429f4314 218## Also, don't forward link-local broadcast or multicast.
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219case $forward in
220 1)
221 run iptables -A FORWARD -g bad-destination-address \
222 -d 255.255.255.255
223 run iptables -A FORWARD -g bad-destination-address \
224 -m addrtype --dst-type BROADCAST
225 run iptables -A FORWARD -g bad-destination-address \
226 -d 224.0.0.0/24
e6d64b67 227 clearchain check-fwd-multi
78af294c 228 for x in 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f; do
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229 run ip6tables -A check-fwd-multi -g bad-destination-address \
230 -d ff${x}2::/16
78af294c 231 done
fb7845a8 232 run ip6tables -A FORWARD -j check-fwd-multi -d ff00::/8
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233 ;;
234esac
429f4314 235
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236## Add a hook for fail2ban.
237clearchain fail2ban
238run ip46tables -A INPUT -j fail2ban
239
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240m4_divert(90)m4_dnl
241###--------------------------------------------------------------------------
242### Finishing touches.
243
244m4_divert(94)m4_dnl
245## Locally generated packets are all OK.
c1c877c2 246run ip46tables -P OUTPUT ACCEPT
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247
248## Other incoming things are forbidden.
249for chain in INPUT FORWARD; do
c1c877c2 250 run ip46tables -A $chain -g forbidden
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251done
252
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253## Allow stuff through unknown tables.
254for ip in ip ip6; do
255 for table in $(cat /proc/net/${ip}_tables_names); do
256 case $table in mangle | filter) continue ;; esac
257 ${ip}tables -nL -t $table |
258 sed -n '/^Chain \([^ ]\+\) (policy .*$/ s//\1/p ' |
259 while read chain; do
260 run ${ip}tables -t $table -P $chain ACCEPT
261 done
262 done
263done
264
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265## Dump the resulting configuration.
266if [ "$FW_DEBUG" ]; then
267 for ip in ip ip6; do
268 for table in mangle filter; do
269 echo "----- $ip $table -----"
270 echo
271 ${ip}tables -t $table -nvL
272 echo
273 done
274 done
275fi
276
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277m4_divert(-1)
278###----- That's all, folks --------------------------------------------------