xref: /freebsd/contrib/blocklist/bin/blacklistd.8 (revision 6fa42b91ca3f481912af98c4d49c44507eb1b8e1)
1.\" $NetBSD: blacklistd.8,v 1.23 2020/04/21 13:57:12 christos Exp $
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6.\" This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
7.\" by Christos Zoulas.
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30.Dd April 21, 2020
31.Dt BLACKLISTD 8
32.Os
33.Sh NAME
34.Nm blacklistd
35.Nd block and release ports on demand to avoid DoS abuse
36.Sh SYNOPSIS
37.Nm
38.Op Fl dfrv
39.Op Fl C Ar controlprog
40.Op Fl c Ar configfile
41.Op Fl D Ar dbfile
42.Op Fl P Ar sockpathsfile
43.Op Fl R Ar rulename
44.Op Fl s Ar sockpath
45.Op Fl t Ar timeout
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47.Nm
48is a daemon similar to
49.Xr syslogd 8
50that listens to sockets at paths specified in the
51.Ar sockpathsfile
52for notifications from other daemons about successful or failed connection
53attempts.
54If no such file is specified, then it only listens to the socket path
55specified by
56.Ar sockspath
57or if that is not specified to
58.Pa /var/run/blacklistd.sock .
59Each notification contains an (action, port, protocol, address, owner) tuple
60that identifies the remote connection and the action.
61This tuple is consulted against entries in
62.Ar configfile
63with syntax specified in
64.Xr blacklistd.conf 5 .
65If an entry is matched, a state entry is created for that tuple.
66Each entry contains a number of tries limit and a duration.
67.Pp
68The way
69.Nm
70does configuration entry matching is by having the client side pass the
71file descriptor associated with the connection the client wants to blacklist
72as well as passing socket credentials.
73.Pp
74The file descriptor is used to retrieve information (address and port)
75about the remote side with
76.Xr getpeername 2
77and the local side with
78.Xr getsockname 2 .
79.Pp
80By examining the port of the local side,
81.Nm
82can determine if the client program
83.Dq owns
84the port.
85By examining the optional address portion on the local side, it can match
86interfaces.
87By examining the remote address, it can match specific allow or deny rules.
88.Pp
89Finally
90.Nm
91can examine the socket credentials to match the user in the configuration file.
92.Pp
93While this works well for TCP sockets, it cannot be relied on for unbound
94UDP sockets.
95It is also less meaningful when it comes to connections using non-privileged
96ports.
97On the other hand, if we receive a request that has a local endpoint indicating
98a UDP privileged port, we can presume that the client was privileged to be
99able to acquire that port.
100.Pp
101Once an entry is matched
102.Nm
103can perform various actions.
104If the action is
105.Dq add
106and the number of tries limit is reached, then a
107control script
108.Ar controlprog
109is invoked with arguments:
110.Bd -literal -offset indent
111control add <rulename> <proto> <address> <mask> <port>
112.Ed
113.Pp
114and should invoke a packet filter command to block the connection
115specified by the arguments.
116The
117.Ar rulename
118argument can be set from the command line (default
119.Dv blacklistd ) .
120The script could print a numerical id to stdout as a handle for
121the rule that can be used later to remove that connection, but
122that is not required as all information to remove the rule is
123kept.
124.Pp
125If the action is
126.Dq rem
127Then the same control script is invoked as:
128.Bd -literal -offset indent
129control rem <rulename> <proto> <address> <mask> <port> <id>
130.Ed
131.Pp
132where
133.Ar id
134is the number returned from the
135.Dq add
136action.
137.Pp
138.Nm
139maintains a database of known connections in
140.Ar dbfile .
141On startup it reads entries from that file, and updates its internal state.
142.Pp
143.Nm
144checks the list of active entries every
145.Ar timeout
146seconds (default
147.Dv 15 )
148and removes entries and block rules using the control program as necessary.
149.Pp
150The following options are available:
151.Bl -tag -width indent
152.It Fl C Ar controlprog
153Use
154.Ar controlprog
155to communicate with the packet filter, usually
156.Pa /usr/libexec/blacklistd-helper .
157The following arguments are passed to the control program:
158.Bl -tag -width protocol
159.It action
160The action to perform:
161.Dv add ,
162.Dv rem ,
163or
164.Dv flush
165to add, remove or flush a firewall rule.
166.It name
167The rule name.
168.It protocol
169The optional protocol name (can be empty):
170.Dv tcp ,
171.Dv tcp6 ,
172.Dv udp ,
173.Dv udp6 .
174.It address
175The IPv4 or IPv6 numeric address to be blocked or released.
176.It mask
177The numeric mask to be applied to the blocked or released address
178.It port
179The optional numeric port to be blocked (can be empty).
180.It id
181For packet filters that support removal of rules by rule identifier, the
182identifier of the rule to be removed.
183The add command is expected to return the rule identifier string to stdout.
184.El
185.It Fl c Ar configuration
186The name of the configuration file to read, usually
187.Pa /etc/blacklistd.conf .
188.It Fl D Ar dbfile
189The Berkeley DB file where
190.Nm
191stores its state, usually
192.Pa /var/db/blacklistd.db .
193.It Fl d
194Normally,
195.Nm
196disassociates itself from the terminal unless the
197.Fl d
198flag is specified, in which case it stays in the foreground.
199.It Fl f
200Truncate the state database and flush all the rules named
201.Ar rulename
202are deleted by invoking the control script as:
203.Bd -literal -offset indent
204control flush <rulename>
205.Ed
206.It Fl P Ar sockspathsfile
207A file containing a list of pathnames, one per line that
208.Nm
209will create sockets to listen to.
210This is useful for chrooted environments.
211.It Fl R Ar rulename
212Specify the default rule name for the packet filter rules, usually
213.Dv blacklistd .
214.It Fl r
215Re-read the firewall rules from the internal database, then
216remove and re-add them.
217This helps for packet filters that do not retain state across reboots.
218.It Fl s Ar sockpath
219Add
220.Ar sockpath
221to the list of Unix sockets
222.Nm
223listens to.
224.It Fl t Ar timeout
225The interval in seconds
226.Nm
227polls the state file to update the rules.
228.It Fl v
229Cause
230.Nm
231to print
232diagnostic messages to
233.Dv stdout
234instead of
235.Xr syslogd 8 .
236.El
237.Sh SIGNAL HANDLING
238.Nm
239deals with the following signals:
240.Bl -tag -width "USR2"
241.It Dv HUP
242Receipt of this signal causes
243.Nm
244to re-read the configuration file.
245.It Dv INT , Dv TERM & Dv QUIT
246These signals tell
247.Nm
248to exit in an orderly fashion.
249.It Dv USR1
250This signal tells
251.Nm
252to increase the internal debugging level by 1.
253.It Dv USR2
254This signal tells
255.Nm
256to decrease the internal debugging level by 1.
257.El
258.Sh FILES
259.Bl -tag -width /usr/libexec/blacklistd-helper -compact
260.It Pa /usr/libexec/blacklistd-helper
261Shell script invoked to interface with the packet filter.
262.It Pa /etc/blacklistd.conf
263Configuration file.
264.It Pa /var/db/blacklistd.db
265Database of current connection entries.
266.It Pa /var/run/blacklistd.sock
267Socket to receive connection notifications.
268.El
269.Sh SEE ALSO
270.Xr blacklistd.conf 5 ,
271.Xr blacklistctl 8 ,
272.Xr pfctl 8 ,
273.Xr syslogd 8
274.Sh HISTORY
275.Nm
276first appeared in
277.Nx 7 .
278.Fx
279support for
280.Nm
281was implemented in
282.Fx 11 .
283.Sh AUTHORS
284.An Christos Zoulas
285