xref: /freebsd/sbin/ipfw/ipfw.8 (revision a743df5c964d81a7c920cf257e87cb42ab993d58)
1.\"
2.\" $FreeBSD$
3.\"
4.Dd May 24, 2006
5.Dt IPFW 8
6.Os
7.Sh NAME
8.Nm ipfw
9.Nd IP firewall and traffic shaper control program
10.Sh SYNOPSIS
11.Nm
12.Op Fl cq
13.Cm add
14.Ar rule
15.Nm
16.Op Fl acdefnNStT
17.Brq Cm list | show
18.Op Ar rule | first-last ...
19.Nm
20.Op Fl f | q
21.Cm flush
22.Nm
23.Op Fl q
24.Brq Cm delete | zero | resetlog
25.Op Cm set
26.Op Ar number ...
27.Nm
28.Cm enable
29.Brq Cm firewall | altq | one_pass | debug | verbose | dyn_keepalive
30.Nm
31.Cm disable
32.Brq Cm firewall | altq | one_pass | debug | verbose | dyn_keepalive
33.Pp
34.Nm
35.Cm set Oo Cm disable Ar number ... Oc Op Cm enable Ar number ...
36.Nm
37.Cm set move
38.Op Cm rule
39.Ar number Cm to Ar number
40.Nm
41.Cm set swap Ar number number
42.Nm
43.Cm set show
44.Pp
45.Nm
46.Cm table Ar number Cm add Ar addr Ns Oo / Ns Ar masklen Oc Op Ar value
47.Nm
48.Cm table Ar number Cm delete Ar addr Ns Op / Ns Ar masklen
49.Nm
50.Cm table Ar number Cm flush
51.Nm
52.Cm table Ar number Cm list
53.Pp
54.Nm
55.Brq Cm pipe | queue
56.Ar number
57.Cm config
58.Ar config-options
59.Nm
60.Op Fl s Op Ar field
61.Brq Cm pipe | queue
62.Brq Cm delete | list | show
63.Op Ar number ...
64.Pp
65.Nm
66.Op Fl cfnNqS
67.Oo
68.Fl p Ar preproc
69.Oo
70.Ar preproc-flags
71.Oc
72.Oc
73.Ar pathname
74.Sh DESCRIPTION
75The
76.Nm
77utility is the user interface for controlling the
78.Xr ipfw 4
79firewall and the
80.Xr dummynet 4
81traffic shaper in
82.Fx .
83.Pp
84An
85.Nm
86configuration, or
87.Em ruleset ,
88is made of a list of
89.Em rules
90numbered from 1 to 65535.
91Packets are passed to
92.Nm
93from a number of different places in the protocol stack
94(depending on the source and destination of the packet,
95it is possible that
96.Nm
97is invoked multiple times on the same packet).
98The packet passed to the firewall is compared
99against each of the rules in the firewall
100.Em ruleset .
101When a match is found, the action corresponding to the
102matching rule is performed.
103.Pp
104Depending on the action and certain system settings, packets
105can be reinjected into the firewall at some rule after the
106matching one for further processing.
107.Pp
108An
109.Nm
110ruleset always includes a
111.Em default
112rule (numbered 65535) which cannot be modified or deleted,
113and matches all packets.
114The action associated with the
115.Em default
116rule can be either
117.Cm deny
118or
119.Cm allow
120depending on how the kernel is configured.
121.Pp
122If the ruleset includes one or more rules with the
123.Cm keep-state
124or
125.Cm limit
126option, then
127.Nm
128assumes a
129.Em stateful
130behaviour, i.e., upon a match it will create dynamic rules matching
131the exact parameters (addresses and ports) of the matching packet.
132.Pp
133These dynamic rules, which have a limited lifetime, are checked
134at the first occurrence of a
135.Cm check-state ,
136.Cm keep-state
137or
138.Cm limit
139rule, and are typically used to open the firewall on-demand to
140legitimate traffic only.
141See the
142.Sx STATEFUL FIREWALL
143and
144.Sx EXAMPLES
145Sections below for more information on the stateful behaviour of
146.Nm .
147.Pp
148All rules (including dynamic ones) have a few associated counters:
149a packet count, a byte count, a log count and a timestamp
150indicating the time of the last match.
151Counters can be displayed or reset with
152.Nm
153commands.
154.Pp
155Rules can be added with the
156.Cm add
157command; deleted individually or in groups with the
158.Cm delete
159command, and globally (except those in set 31) with the
160.Cm flush
161command; displayed, optionally with the content of the
162counters, using the
163.Cm show
164and
165.Cm list
166commands.
167Finally, counters can be reset with the
168.Cm zero
169and
170.Cm resetlog
171commands.
172.Pp
173Also, each rule belongs to one of 32 different
174.Em sets
175, and there are
176.Nm
177commands to atomically manipulate sets, such as enable,
178disable, swap sets, move all rules in a set to another
179one, delete all rules in a set.
180These can be useful to
181install temporary configurations, or to test them.
182See Section
183.Sx SETS OF RULES
184for more information on
185.Em sets .
186.Pp
187The following options are available:
188.Bl -tag -width indent
189.It Fl a
190While listing, show counter values.
191The
192.Cm show
193command just implies this option.
194.It Fl b
195Only show the action and the comment, not the body of a rule.
196Implies
197.Fl c .
198.It Fl c
199When entering or showing rules, print them in compact form,
200i.e., without the optional "ip from any to any" string
201when this does not carry any additional information.
202.It Fl d
203While listing, show dynamic rules in addition to static ones.
204.It Fl e
205While listing, if the
206.Fl d
207option was specified, also show expired dynamic rules.
208.It Fl f
209Do not ask for confirmation for commands that can cause problems
210if misused,
211.No i.e. Cm flush .
212If there is no tty associated with the process, this is implied.
213.It Fl n
214Only check syntax of the command strings, without actually passing
215them to the kernel.
216.It Fl N
217Try to resolve addresses and service names in output.
218.It Fl q
219While
220.Cm add Ns ing ,
221.Cm zero Ns ing ,
222.Cm resetlog Ns ging
223or
224.Cm flush Ns ing ,
225be quiet about actions
226(implies
227.Fl f ) .
228This is useful for adjusting rules by executing multiple
229.Nm
230commands in a script
231(e.g.,
232.Ql sh\ /etc/rc.firewall ) ,
233or by processing a file of many
234.Nm
235rules across a remote login session. It also stops a table add or delete
236from failing if the entry already exists or is not present.
237If a
238.Cm flush
239is performed in normal (verbose) mode (with the default kernel
240configuration), it prints a message.
241Because all rules are flushed, the message might not be delivered
242to the login session, causing the remote login session to be closed
243and the remainder of the ruleset to not be processed.
244Access to the console would then be required to recover.
245.It Fl S
246While listing rules, show the
247.Em set
248each rule belongs to.
249If this flag is not specified, disabled rules will not be
250listed.
251.It Fl s Op Ar field
252While listing pipes, sort according to one of the four
253counters (total or current packets or bytes).
254.It Fl t
255While listing, show last match timestamp (converted with ctime()).
256.It Fl T
257While listing, show last match timestamp (as seconds from the epoch).
258This form can be more convenient for postprocessing by scripts.
259.El
260.Pp
261To ease configuration, rules can be put into a file which is
262processed using
263.Nm
264as shown in the last synopsis line.
265An absolute
266.Ar pathname
267must be used.
268The file will be read line by line and applied as arguments to the
269.Nm
270utility.
271.Pp
272Optionally, a preprocessor can be specified using
273.Fl p Ar preproc
274where
275.Ar pathname
276is to be piped through.
277Useful preprocessors include
278.Xr cpp 1
279and
280.Xr m4 1 .
281If
282.Ar preproc
283does not start with a slash
284.Pq Ql /
285as its first character, the usual
286.Ev PATH
287name search is performed.
288Care should be taken with this in environments where not all
289file systems are mounted (yet) by the time
290.Nm
291is being run (e.g.\& when they are mounted over NFS).
292Once
293.Fl p
294has been specified, any additional arguments as passed on to the preprocessor
295for interpretation.
296This allows for flexible configuration files (like conditionalizing
297them on the local hostname) and the use of macros to centralize
298frequently required arguments like IP addresses.
299.Pp
300The
301.Nm
302.Cm pipe
303and
304.Cm queue
305commands are used to configure the traffic shaper, as shown in the
306.Sx TRAFFIC SHAPER (DUMMYNET) CONFIGURATION
307Section below.
308.Pp
309If the world and the kernel get out of sync the
310.Nm
311ABI may break, preventing you from being able to add any rules.
312This can
313adversely effect the booting process.
314You can use
315.Nm
316.Cm disable
317.Cm firewall
318to temporarily disable the firewall to regain access to the network,
319allowing you to fix the problem.
320.Sh PACKET FLOW
321A packet is checked against the active ruleset in multiple places
322in the protocol stack, under control of several sysctl variables.
323These places and variables are shown below, and it is important to
324have this picture in mind in order to design a correct ruleset.
325.Bd -literal -offset indent
326       ^    to upper layers    V
327       |                       |
328       +----------->-----------+
329       ^                       V
330 [ip(6)_input]           [ip(6)_output]     net.inet(6).ip(6).fw.enable=1
331       |                       |
332       ^                       V
333 [ether_demux]        [ether_output_frame]  net.link.ether.ipfw=1
334       |                       |
335       +-->--[bdg_forward]-->--+            net.link.bridge.ipfw=1
336       ^                       V
337       |      to devices       |
338.Ed
339.Pp
340As can be noted from the above picture, the number of
341times the same packet goes through the firewall can
342vary between 0 and 4 depending on packet source and
343destination, and system configuration.
344.Pp
345Note that as packets flow through the stack, headers can be
346stripped or added to it, and so they may or may not be available
347for inspection.
348E.g., incoming packets will include the MAC header when
349.Nm
350is invoked from
351.Cm ether_demux() ,
352but the same packets will have the MAC header stripped off when
353.Nm
354is invoked from
355.Cm ip_input()
356or
357.Cm ip6_input() .
358.Pp
359Also note that each packet is always checked against the complete ruleset,
360irrespective of the place where the check occurs, or the source of the packet.
361If a rule contains some match patterns or actions which are not valid
362for the place of invocation (e.g.\& trying to match a MAC header within
363.Cm ip_input
364or
365.Cm ip6_input ),
366the match pattern will not match, but a
367.Cm not
368operator in front of such patterns
369.Em will
370cause the pattern to
371.Em always
372match on those packets.
373It is thus the responsibility of
374the programmer, if necessary, to write a suitable ruleset to
375differentiate among the possible places.
376.Cm skipto
377rules can be useful here, as an example:
378.Bd -literal -offset indent
379# packets from ether_demux or bdg_forward
380ipfw add 10 skipto 1000 all from any to any layer2 in
381# packets from ip_input
382ipfw add 10 skipto 2000 all from any to any not layer2 in
383# packets from ip_output
384ipfw add 10 skipto 3000 all from any to any not layer2 out
385# packets from ether_output_frame
386ipfw add 10 skipto 4000 all from any to any layer2 out
387.Ed
388.Pp
389(yes, at the moment there is no way to differentiate between
390ether_demux and bdg_forward).
391.Sh SYNTAX
392In general, each keyword or argument must be provided as
393a separate command line argument, with no leading or trailing
394spaces.
395Keywords are case-sensitive, whereas arguments may
396or may not be case-sensitive depending on their nature
397(e.g.\& uid's are, hostnames are not).
398.Pp
399In
400.Nm ipfw2
401you can introduce spaces after commas ',' to make
402the line more readable.
403You can also put the entire
404command (including flags) into a single argument.
405E.g., the following forms are equivalent:
406.Bd -literal -offset indent
407ipfw -q add deny src-ip 10.0.0.0/24,127.0.0.1/8
408ipfw -q add deny src-ip 10.0.0.0/24, 127.0.0.1/8
409ipfw "-q add deny src-ip 10.0.0.0/24, 127.0.0.1/8"
410.Ed
411.Sh RULE FORMAT
412The format of
413.Nm
414rules is the following:
415.Bd -ragged -offset indent
416.Bk -words
417.Op Ar rule_number
418.Op Cm set Ar set_number
419.Op Cm prob Ar match_probability
420.Ar action
421.Op Cm log Op Cm logamount Ar number
422.Op Cm altq Ar queue
423.Oo
424.Bro Cm tag | untag
425.Brc Ar number
426.Oc
427.Ar body
428.Ek
429.Ed
430.Pp
431where the body of the rule specifies which information is used
432for filtering packets, among the following:
433.Pp
434.Bl -tag -width "Source and dest. addresses and ports" -offset XXX -compact
435.It Layer-2 header fields
436When available
437.It IPv4 and IPv6 Protocol
438TCP, UDP, ICMP, etc.
439.It Source and dest. addresses and ports
440.It Direction
441See Section
442.Sx PACKET FLOW
443.It Transmit and receive interface
444By name or address
445.It Misc. IP header fields
446Version, type of service, datagram length, identification,
447fragment flag (non-zero IP offset),
448Time To Live
449.It IP options
450.It IPv6 Extension headers
451Fragmentation, Hop-by-Hop options,
452source routing, IPSec options.
453.It IPv6 Flow-ID
454.It Misc. TCP header fields
455TCP flags (SYN, FIN, ACK, RST, etc.),
456sequence number, acknowledgment number,
457window
458.It TCP options
459.It ICMP types
460for ICMP packets
461.It ICMP6 types
462for ICMP6 packets
463.It User/group ID
464When the packet can be associated with a local socket.
465.It Divert status
466Whether a packet came from a divert socket (e.g.,
467.Xr natd 8 ) .
468.El
469.Pp
470Note that some of the above information, e.g.\& source MAC or IP addresses and
471TCP/UDP ports, could easily be spoofed, so filtering on those fields
472alone might not guarantee the desired results.
473.Bl -tag -width indent
474.It Ar rule_number
475Each rule is associated with a
476.Ar rule_number
477in the range 1..65535, with the latter reserved for the
478.Em default
479rule.
480Rules are checked sequentially by rule number.
481Multiple rules can have the same number, in which case they are
482checked (and listed) according to the order in which they have
483been added.
484If a rule is entered without specifying a number, the kernel will
485assign one in such a way that the rule becomes the last one
486before the
487.Em default
488rule.
489Automatic rule numbers are assigned by incrementing the last
490non-default rule number by the value of the sysctl variable
491.Ar net.inet.ip.fw.autoinc_step
492which defaults to 100.
493If this is not possible (e.g.\& because we would go beyond the
494maximum allowed rule number), the number of the last
495non-default value is used instead.
496.It Cm set Ar set_number
497Each rule is associated with a
498.Ar set_number
499in the range 0..31.
500Sets can be individually disabled and enabled, so this parameter
501is of fundamental importance for atomic ruleset manipulation.
502It can be also used to simplify deletion of groups of rules.
503If a rule is entered without specifying a set number,
504set 0 will be used.
505.br
506Set 31 is special in that it cannot be disabled,
507and rules in set 31 are not deleted by the
508.Nm ipfw flush
509command (but you can delete them with the
510.Nm ipfw delete set 31
511command).
512Set 31 is also used for the
513.Em default
514rule.
515.It Cm prob Ar match_probability
516A match is only declared with the specified probability
517(floating point number between 0 and 1).
518This can be useful for a number of applications such as
519random packet drop or
520(in conjunction with
521.Xr dummynet 4 )
522to simulate the effect of multiple paths leading to out-of-order
523packet delivery.
524.Pp
525Note: this condition is checked before any other condition, including
526ones such as keep-state or check-state which might have side effects.
527.It Cm log Op Cm logamount Ar number
528When a packet matches a rule with the
529.Cm log
530keyword, a message will be
531logged to
532.Xr syslogd 8
533with a
534.Dv LOG_SECURITY
535facility.
536The logging only occurs if the sysctl variable
537.Em net.inet.ip.fw.verbose
538is set to 1
539(which is the default when the kernel is compiled with
540.Dv IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE )
541and the number of packets logged so far for that
542particular rule does not exceed the
543.Cm logamount
544parameter.
545If no
546.Cm logamount
547is specified, the limit is taken from the sysctl variable
548.Em net.inet.ip.fw.verbose_limit .
549In both cases, a value of 0 removes the logging limit.
550.Pp
551Once the limit is reached, logging can be re-enabled by
552clearing the logging counter or the packet counter for that entry, see the
553.Cm resetlog
554command.
555.Pp
556Note: logging is done after all other packet matching conditions
557have been successfully verified, and before performing the final
558action (accept, deny, etc.) on the packet.
559.It Cm tag Ar number
560When a packet matches a rule with the
561.Cm tag
562keyword, the numeric tag for the given
563.Ar number
564in the range 0..65535 will be attached to the packet.
565The tag acts as an internal marker (it is not sent out over
566the wire) that can be used to identify these packets later on.
567This can be used, for example, to provide trust between interfaces
568and to start doing policy-based filtering.
569A packet can have mutiple tags at the same time.
570Tags are "sticky", meaning once a tag is applied to a packet by a
571matching rule it exists until explicit removal.
572Tags are kept with the packet everywhere within the kernel, but are
573lost when packet leaves the kernel, for example, on transmitting
574packet out to the network or sending packet to a
575.Xr divert 4
576socket.
577.Pp
578To check for previously applied tags, use the
579.Cm tagged
580rule option. To delete previously applied tag, use the
581.Cm untag
582keyword.
583.Pp
584Note: since tags are kept with the packet everywhere in kernelspace,
585they can be set and unset anywhere in kernel network subsystem
586(using
587.Xr mbuf_tags 9
588facility), not only by means of
589.Xr ipfw 4
590.Cm tag
591and
592.Cm untag
593keywords.
594For example, there can be a specialized
595.Xr netgraph 4
596node doing traffic analyzing and tagging for later inspecting
597in firewall.
598.It Cm untag Ar number
599When a packet matches a rule with the
600.Cm untag
601keyword, the tag with the number
602.Ar number
603is searched among the tags attached to this packet and,
604if found, removed from it.
605Other tags bound to packet, if present, are left untouched.
606.It Cm altq Ar queue
607When a packet matches a rule with the
608.Cm altq
609keyword, the ALTQ identifier for the given
610.Ar queue
611(see
612.Xr altq 4 )
613will be attached.
614Note that this ALTQ tag is only meaningful for packets going "out" of IPFW,
615and not being rejected or going to divert sockets.
616Note that if there is insufficient memory at the time the packet is
617processed, it will not be tagged, so it is wise to make your ALTQ
618"default" queue policy account for this.
619If multiple
620.Cm altq
621rules match a single packet, only the first one adds the ALTQ classification
622tag.
623In doing so, traffic may be shaped by using
624.Cm count Cm altq Ar queue
625rules for classification early in the ruleset, then later applying
626the filtering decision.
627For example,
628.Cm check-state
629and
630.Cm keep-state
631rules may come later and provide the actual filtering decisions in
632addition to the fallback ALTQ tag.
633.Pp
634You must run
635.Xr pfctl 8
636to set up the queues before IPFW will be able to look them up by name,
637and if the ALTQ disciplines are rearranged, the rules in containing the
638queue identifiers in the kernel will likely have gone stale and need
639to be reloaded.
640Stale queue identifiers will probably result in misclassification.
641.Pp
642All system ALTQ processing can be turned on or off via
643.Nm
644.Cm enable Ar altq
645and
646.Nm
647.Cm disable Ar altq .
648The usage of
649.Em net.inet.ip.fw.one_pass
650is irrelevant to ALTQ traffic shaping, as the actual rule action is followed
651always after adding an ALTQ tag.
652.El
653.Ss RULE ACTIONS
654A rule can be associated with one of the following actions, which
655will be executed when the packet matches the body of the rule.
656.Bl -tag -width indent
657.It Cm allow | accept | pass | permit
658Allow packets that match rule.
659The search terminates.
660.It Cm check-state
661Checks the packet against the dynamic ruleset.
662If a match is found, execute the action associated with
663the rule which generated this dynamic rule, otherwise
664move to the next rule.
665.br
666.Cm Check-state
667rules do not have a body.
668If no
669.Cm check-state
670rule is found, the dynamic ruleset is checked at the first
671.Cm keep-state
672or
673.Cm limit
674rule.
675.It Cm count
676Update counters for all packets that match rule.
677The search continues with the next rule.
678.It Cm deny | drop
679Discard packets that match this rule.
680The search terminates.
681.It Cm divert Ar port
682Divert packets that match this rule to the
683.Xr divert 4
684socket bound to port
685.Ar port .
686The search terminates.
687.It Cm fwd | forward Ar ipaddr Ns Op , Ns Ar port
688Change the next-hop on matching packets to
689.Ar ipaddr ,
690which can be an IP address or a host name.
691The search terminates if this rule matches.
692.Pp
693If
694.Ar ipaddr
695is a local address, then matching packets will be forwarded to
696.Ar port
697(or the port number in the packet if one is not specified in the rule)
698on the local machine.
699.br
700If
701.Ar ipaddr
702is not a local address, then the port number
703(if specified) is ignored, and the packet will be
704forwarded to the remote address, using the route as found in
705the local routing table for that IP.
706.br
707A
708.Ar fwd
709rule will not match layer-2 packets (those received
710on ether_input, ether_output, or bridged).
711.br
712The
713.Cm fwd
714action does not change the contents of the packet at all.
715In particular, the destination address remains unmodified, so
716packets forwarded to another system will usually be rejected by that system
717unless there is a matching rule on that system to capture them.
718For packets forwarded locally,
719the local address of the socket will be
720set to the original destination address of the packet.
721This makes the
722.Xr netstat 1
723entry look rather weird but is intended for
724use with transparent proxy servers.
725.Pp
726To enable
727.Cm fwd
728a custom kernel needs to be compiled with the option
729.Cd "options IPFIREWALL_FORWARD" .
730With the additional option
731.Cd "options IPFIREWALL_FORWARD_EXTENDED"
732all safeguards are removed and it also makes it possible to redirect
733packets destined to locally configured IP addresses.
734Please note that such rules apply to locally generated packets as
735well and great care is required to ensure proper behaviour for
736automatically generated packets like ICMP message size exceeded
737and others.
738.It Cm pipe Ar pipe_nr
739Pass packet to a
740.Xr dummynet 4
741.Dq pipe
742(for bandwidth limitation, delay, etc.).
743See the
744.Sx TRAFFIC SHAPER (DUMMYNET) CONFIGURATION
745Section for further information.
746The search terminates; however, on exit from the pipe and if
747the
748.Xr sysctl 8
749variable
750.Em net.inet.ip.fw.one_pass
751is not set, the packet is passed again to the firewall code
752starting from the next rule.
753.It Cm queue Ar queue_nr
754Pass packet to a
755.Xr dummynet 4
756.Dq queue
757(for bandwidth limitation using WF2Q+).
758.It Cm reject
759(Deprecated).
760Synonym for
761.Cm unreach host .
762.It Cm reset
763Discard packets that match this rule, and if the
764packet is a TCP packet, try to send a TCP reset (RST) notice.
765The search terminates.
766.It Cm reset6
767Discard packets that match this rule, and if the
768packet is a TCP packet, try to send a TCP reset (RST) notice.
769The search terminates.
770.It Cm skipto Ar number
771Skip all subsequent rules numbered less than
772.Ar number .
773The search continues with the first rule numbered
774.Ar number
775or higher.
776.It Cm tee Ar port
777Send a copy of packets matching this rule to the
778.Xr divert 4
779socket bound to port
780.Ar port .
781The search continues with the next rule.
782.It Cm unreach Ar code
783Discard packets that match this rule, and try to send an ICMP
784unreachable notice with code
785.Ar code ,
786where
787.Ar code
788is a number from 0 to 255, or one of these aliases:
789.Cm net , host , protocol , port ,
790.Cm needfrag , srcfail , net-unknown , host-unknown ,
791.Cm isolated , net-prohib , host-prohib , tosnet ,
792.Cm toshost , filter-prohib , host-precedence
793or
794.Cm precedence-cutoff .
795The search terminates.
796.It Cm unreach6 Ar code
797Discard packets that match this rule, and try to send an ICMPv6
798unreachable notice with code
799.Ar code ,
800where
801.Ar code
802is a number from 0, 1, 3 or 4, or one of these aliases:
803.Cm no-route, admin-prohib, address
804or
805.Cm port .
806The search terminates.
807.It Cm netgraph Ar cookie
808Divert packet into netgraph with given
809.Ar cookie .
810The search terminates.
811If packet is later returned from netgraph it is either
812accepted or continues with the next rule, depending on
813.Em net.inet.ip.fw.one_pass
814sysctl variable.
815.It Cm ngtee Ar cookie
816A copy of packet is diverted into netgraph, original
817packet is either accepted or continues with the next rule, depending on
818.Em net.inet.ip.fw.one_pass
819sysctl variable.
820See
821.Xr ng_ipfw 4
822for more information on
823.Cm netgraph
824and
825.Cm ngtee
826actions.
827.El
828.Ss RULE BODY
829The body of a rule contains zero or more patterns (such as
830specific source and destination addresses or ports,
831protocol options, incoming or outgoing interfaces, etc.)
832that the packet must match in order to be recognised.
833In general, the patterns are connected by (implicit)
834.Cm and
835operators -- i.e., all must match in order for the
836rule to match.
837Individual patterns can be prefixed by the
838.Cm not
839operator to reverse the result of the match, as in
840.Pp
841.Dl "ipfw add 100 allow ip from not 1.2.3.4 to any"
842.Pp
843Additionally, sets of alternative match patterns
844.Pq Em or-blocks
845can be constructed by putting the patterns in
846lists enclosed between parentheses ( ) or braces { }, and
847using the
848.Cm or
849operator as follows:
850.Pp
851.Dl "ipfw add 100 allow ip from { x or not y or z } to any"
852.Pp
853Only one level of parentheses is allowed.
854Beware that most shells have special meanings for parentheses
855or braces, so it is advisable to put a backslash \\ in front of them
856to prevent such interpretations.
857.Pp
858The body of a rule must in general include a source and destination
859address specifier.
860The keyword
861.Ar any
862can be used in various places to specify that the content of
863a required field is irrelevant.
864.Pp
865The rule body has the following format:
866.Bd -ragged -offset indent
867.Op Ar proto Cm from Ar src Cm to Ar dst
868.Op Ar options
869.Ed
870.Pp
871The first part (proto from src to dst) is for backward
872compatibility with earlier versions of
873.Fx .
874In modern
875.Fx
876any match pattern (including MAC headers, IP protocols,
877addresses and ports) can be specified in the
878.Ar options
879section.
880.Pp
881Rule fields have the following meaning:
882.Bl -tag -width indent
883.It Ar proto : protocol | Cm { Ar protocol Cm or ... }
884.It Ar protocol : Oo Cm not Oc Ar protocol-name | protocol-number
885An IP protocol specified by number or name
886(for a complete list see
887.Pa /etc/protocols ) ,
888or one of the following keywords:
889.Bl -tag -width indent
890.It Cm ip4 | ipv4
891Matches IPv4 packets.
892.It Cm ip6 | ipv6
893Matches IPv6 packets.
894.It Cm ip | all
895Matches any packet.
896.El
897.Pp
898The
899.Cm ipv6
900in
901.Cm proto
902option will be treated as inner protocol.
903And, the
904.Cm ipv4
905is not available in
906.Cm proto
907option.
908.Pp
909The
910.Cm { Ar protocol Cm or ... }
911format (an
912.Em or-block )
913is provided for convenience only but its use is deprecated.
914.It Ar src No and Ar dst : Bro Cm addr | Cm { Ar addr Cm or ... } Brc Op Oo Cm not Oc Ar ports
915An address (or a list, see below)
916optionally followed by
917.Ar ports
918specifiers.
919.Pp
920The second format
921.Em ( or-block
922with multiple addresses) is provided for convenience only and
923its use is discouraged.
924.It Ar addr : Oo Cm not Oc Bro
925.Cm any | me | me6 |
926.Cm table Ns Pq Ar number Ns Op , Ns Ar value
927.Ar | addr-list | addr-set
928.Brc
929.It Cm any
930matches any IP address.
931.It Cm me
932matches any IP address configured on an interface in the system.
933.It Cm me6
934matches any IPv6 address configured on an interface in the system.
935The address list is evaluated at the time the packet is
936analysed.
937.It Cm table Ns Pq Ar number Ns Op , Ns Ar value
938Matches any IPv4 address for which an entry exists in the lookup table
939.Ar number .
940If an optional 32-bit unsigned
941.Ar value
942is also specified, an entry will match only if it has this value.
943See the
944.Sx LOOKUP TABLES
945section below for more information on lookup tables.
946.It Ar addr-list : ip-addr Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar addr-list
947.It Ar ip-addr :
948A host or subnet address specified in one of the following ways:
949.Bl -tag -width indent
950.It Ar numeric-ip | hostname
951Matches a single IPv4 address, specified as dotted-quad or a hostname.
952Hostnames are resolved at the time the rule is added to the firewall list.
953.It Ar addr Ns / Ns Ar masklen
954Matches all addresses with base
955.Ar addr
956(specified as an IP address or a hostname)
957and mask width of
958.Cm masklen
959bits.
960As an example, 1.2.3.4/25 will match
961all IP numbers from 1.2.3.0 to 1.2.3.127 .
962.It Ar addr Ns : Ns Ar mask
963Matches all addresses with base
964.Ar addr
965(specified as an IP address or a hostname)
966and the mask of
967.Ar mask ,
968specified as a dotted quad.
969As an example, 1.2.3.4:255.0.255.0 will match
9701.*.3.*.
971This form is advised only for non-contiguous
972masks.
973It is better to resort to the
974.Ar addr Ns / Ns Ar masklen
975format for contiguous masks, which is more compact and less
976error-prone.
977.El
978.It Ar addr-set : addr Ns Oo Ns / Ns Ar masklen Oc Ns Cm { Ns Ar list Ns Cm }
979.It Ar list : Bro Ar num | num-num Brc Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar list
980Matches all addresses with base address
981.Ar addr
982(specified as an IP address or a hostname)
983and whose last byte is in the list between braces { } .
984Note that there must be no spaces between braces and
985numbers (spaces after commas are allowed).
986Elements of the list can be specified as single entries
987or ranges.
988The
989.Ar masklen
990field is used to limit the size of the set of addresses,
991and can have any value between 24 and 32.
992If not specified,
993it will be assumed as 24.
994.br
995This format is particularly useful to handle sparse address sets
996within a single rule.
997Because the matching occurs using a
998bitmask, it takes constant time and dramatically reduces
999the complexity of rulesets.
1000.br
1001As an example, an address specified as 1.2.3.4/24{128,35-55,89}
1002will match the following IP addresses:
1003.br
10041.2.3.128, 1.2.3.35 to 1.2.3.55, 1.2.3.89 .
1005.It Ar addr6-list : ip6-addr Ns Op Ns , Ns Ar addr6-list
1006.It Ar ip6-addr :
1007A host or subnet specified one of the following ways:
1008.Pp
1009.Bl -tag -width indent
1010.It Ar numeric-ip | hostname
1011Matches a single IPv6 address as allowed by
1012.Xr inet_pton 3
1013or a hostname.
1014Hostnames are resolved at the time the rule is added to the firewall
1015list.
1016.It Ar addr Ns / Ns Ar masklen
1017Matches all IPv6 addresses with base
1018.Ar addr
1019(specified as allowed by
1020.Xr inet_pton
1021or a hostname)
1022and mask width of
1023.Cm masklen
1024bits.
1025.El
1026.Pp
1027No support for sets of IPv6 addresses is provided because IPv6 addresses
1028are typically random past the initial prefix.
1029.It Ar ports : Bro Ar port | port Ns \&- Ns Ar port Ns Brc Ns Op , Ns Ar ports
1030For protocols which support port numbers (such as TCP and UDP), optional
1031.Cm ports
1032may be specified as one or more ports or port ranges, separated
1033by commas but no spaces, and an optional
1034.Cm not
1035operator.
1036The
1037.Ql \&-
1038notation specifies a range of ports (including boundaries).
1039.Pp
1040Service names (from
1041.Pa /etc/services )
1042may be used instead of numeric port values.
1043The length of the port list is limited to 30 ports or ranges,
1044though one can specify larger ranges by using an
1045.Em or-block
1046in the
1047.Cm options
1048section of the rule.
1049.Pp
1050A backslash
1051.Pq Ql \e
1052can be used to escape the dash
1053.Pq Ql -
1054character in a service name (from a shell, the backslash must be
1055typed twice to avoid the shell itself interpreting it as an escape
1056character).
1057.Pp
1058.Dl "ipfw add count tcp from any ftp\e\e-data-ftp to any"
1059.Pp
1060Fragmented packets which have a non-zero offset (i.e., not the first
1061fragment) will never match a rule which has one or more port
1062specifications.
1063See the
1064.Cm frag
1065option for details on matching fragmented packets.
1066.El
1067.Ss RULE OPTIONS (MATCH PATTERNS)
1068Additional match patterns can be used within
1069rules.
1070Zero or more of these so-called
1071.Em options
1072can be present in a rule, optionally prefixed by the
1073.Cm not
1074operand, and possibly grouped into
1075.Em or-blocks .
1076.Pp
1077The following match patterns can be used (listed in alphabetical order):
1078.Bl -tag -width indent
1079.It Cm // this is a comment.
1080Inserts the specified text as a comment in the rule.
1081Everything following // is considered as a comment and stored in the rule.
1082You can have comment-only rules, which are listed as having a
1083.Cm count
1084action followed by the comment.
1085.It Cm bridged
1086Alias for
1087.Cm layer2 .
1088.It Cm diverted
1089Matches only packets generated by a divert socket.
1090.It Cm diverted-loopback
1091Matches only packets coming from a divert socket back into the IP stack
1092input for delivery.
1093.It Cm diverted-output
1094Matches only packets going from a divert socket back outward to the IP
1095stack output for delivery.
1096.It Cm dst-ip Ar ip-address
1097Matches IPv4 packets whose destination IP is one of the address(es)
1098specified as argument.
1099.It Bro Cm dst-ip6 | dst-ipv6 Brc Ar ip6-address
1100Matches IPv6 packets whose destination IP is one of the address(es)
1101specified as argument.
1102.It Cm dst-port Ar ports
1103Matches IP packets whose destination port is one of the port(s)
1104specified as argument.
1105.It Cm established
1106Matches TCP packets that have the RST or ACK bits set.
1107.It Cm ext6hdr Ar header
1108Matches IPv6 packets containing the extended header given by
1109.Ar header .
1110Supported headers are:
1111.Pp
1112Fragment,
1113.Pq Cm frag ,
1114Hop-to-hop options
1115.Pq Cm hopopt ,
1116Source routing
1117.Pq Cm route ,
1118Destination options
1119.Pq Cm dstopt ,
1120IPSec authentication headers
1121.Pq Cm ah ,
1122and IPSec encapsulated security payload headers
1123.Pq Cm esp .
1124.It Cm flow-id Ar labels
1125Matches IPv6 packets containing any of the flow labels given in
1126.Ar labels .
1127.Ar labels
1128is a comma seperate list of numeric flow labels.
1129.It Cm frag
1130Matches packets that are fragments and not the first
1131fragment of an IP datagram.
1132Note that these packets will not have
1133the next protocol header (e.g.\& TCP, UDP) so options that look into
1134these headers cannot match.
1135.It Cm gid Ar group
1136Matches all TCP or UDP packets sent by or received for a
1137.Ar group .
1138A
1139.Ar group
1140may be specified by name or number.
1141This option should be used only if debug.mpsafenet=0 to avoid possible
1142deadlocks due to layering violations in its implementation.
1143.It Cm jail Ar prisonID
1144Matches all TCP or UDP packets sent by or received for the
1145jail whos prison ID is
1146.Ar prisonID .
1147This option should be used only if debug.mpsafenet=0 to avoid possible
1148deadlocks due to layering violations in its implementation.
1149.It Cm icmptypes Ar types
1150Matches ICMP packets whose ICMP type is in the list
1151.Ar types .
1152The list may be specified as any combination of
1153individual types (numeric) separated by commas.
1154.Em Ranges are not allowed.
1155The supported ICMP types are:
1156.Pp
1157echo reply
1158.Pq Cm 0 ,
1159destination unreachable
1160.Pq Cm 3 ,
1161source quench
1162.Pq Cm 4 ,
1163redirect
1164.Pq Cm 5 ,
1165echo request
1166.Pq Cm 8 ,
1167router advertisement
1168.Pq Cm 9 ,
1169router solicitation
1170.Pq Cm 10 ,
1171time-to-live exceeded
1172.Pq Cm 11 ,
1173IP header bad
1174.Pq Cm 12 ,
1175timestamp request
1176.Pq Cm 13 ,
1177timestamp reply
1178.Pq Cm 14 ,
1179information request
1180.Pq Cm 15 ,
1181information reply
1182.Pq Cm 16 ,
1183address mask request
1184.Pq Cm 17
1185and address mask reply
1186.Pq Cm 18 .
1187.It Cm icmp6types Ar types
1188Matches ICMP6 packets whose ICMP6 type is in the list of
1189.Ar types .
1190The list may be specified as any combination of
1191individual types (numeric) separated by commas.
1192.Em Ranges are not allowed.
1193.It Cm in | out
1194Matches incoming or outgoing packets, respectively.
1195.Cm in
1196and
1197.Cm out
1198are mutually exclusive (in fact,
1199.Cm out
1200is implemented as
1201.Cm not in Ns No ).
1202.It Cm ipid Ar id-list
1203Matches IPv4 packets whose
1204.Cm ip_id
1205field has value included in
1206.Ar id-list ,
1207which is either a single value or a list of values or ranges
1208specified in the same way as
1209.Ar ports .
1210.It Cm iplen Ar len-list
1211Matches IP packets whose total length, including header and data, is
1212in the set
1213.Ar len-list ,
1214which is either a single value or a list of values or ranges
1215specified in the same way as
1216.Ar ports .
1217.It Cm ipoptions Ar spec
1218Matches packets whose IPv4 header contains the comma separated list of
1219options specified in
1220.Ar spec .
1221The supported IP options are:
1222.Pp
1223.Cm ssrr
1224(strict source route),
1225.Cm lsrr
1226(loose source route),
1227.Cm rr
1228(record packet route) and
1229.Cm ts
1230(timestamp).
1231The absence of a particular option may be denoted
1232with a
1233.Ql \&! .
1234.It Cm ipprecedence Ar precedence
1235Matches IPv4 packets whose precedence field is equal to
1236.Ar precedence .
1237.It Cm ipsec
1238Matches packets that have IPSEC history associated with them
1239(i.e., the packet comes encapsulated in IPSEC, the kernel
1240has IPSEC support and IPSEC_FILTERGIF option, and can correctly
1241decapsulate it).
1242.Pp
1243Note that specifying
1244.Cm ipsec
1245is different from specifying
1246.Cm proto Ar ipsec
1247as the latter will only look at the specific IP protocol field,
1248irrespective of IPSEC kernel support and the validity of the IPSEC data.
1249.Pp
1250Further note that this flag is silently ignored in kernels without
1251IPSEC support.
1252It does not affect rule processing when given and the
1253rules are handled as if with no
1254.Cm ipsec
1255flag.
1256.It Cm iptos Ar spec
1257Matches IPv4 packets whose
1258.Cm tos
1259field contains the comma separated list of
1260service types specified in
1261.Ar spec .
1262The supported IP types of service are:
1263.Pp
1264.Cm lowdelay
1265.Pq Dv IPTOS_LOWDELAY ,
1266.Cm throughput
1267.Pq Dv IPTOS_THROUGHPUT ,
1268.Cm reliability
1269.Pq Dv IPTOS_RELIABILITY ,
1270.Cm mincost
1271.Pq Dv IPTOS_MINCOST ,
1272.Cm congestion
1273.Pq Dv IPTOS_CE .
1274The absence of a particular type may be denoted
1275with a
1276.Ql \&! .
1277.It Cm ipttl Ar ttl-list
1278Matches IPv4 packets whose time to live is included in
1279.Ar ttl-list ,
1280which is either a single value or a list of values or ranges
1281specified in the same way as
1282.Ar ports .
1283.It Cm ipversion Ar ver
1284Matches IP packets whose IP version field is
1285.Ar ver .
1286.It Cm keep-state
1287Upon a match, the firewall will create a dynamic rule, whose
1288default behaviour is to match bidirectional traffic between
1289source and destination IP/port using the same protocol.
1290The rule has a limited lifetime (controlled by a set of
1291.Xr sysctl 8
1292variables), and the lifetime is refreshed every time a matching
1293packet is found.
1294.It Cm layer2
1295Matches only layer2 packets, i.e., those passed to
1296.Nm
1297from ether_demux() and ether_output_frame().
1298.It Cm limit Bro Cm src-addr | src-port | dst-addr | dst-port Brc Ar N
1299The firewall will only allow
1300.Ar N
1301connections with the same
1302set of parameters as specified in the rule.
1303One or more
1304of source and destination addresses and ports can be
1305specified.
1306Currently,
1307only IPv4 flows are supported.
1308.It Cm { MAC | mac } Ar dst-mac src-mac
1309Match packets with a given
1310.Ar dst-mac
1311and
1312.Ar src-mac
1313addresses, specified as the
1314.Cm any
1315keyword (matching any MAC address), or six groups of hex digits
1316separated by colons,
1317and optionally followed by a mask indicating the significant bits.
1318The mask may be specified using either of the following methods:
1319.Bl -enum -width indent
1320.It
1321A slash
1322.Pq /
1323followed by the number of significant bits.
1324For example, an address with 33 significant bits could be specified as:
1325.Pp
1326.Dl "MAC 10:20:30:40:50:60/33 any"
1327.Pp
1328.It
1329An ampersand
1330.Pq &
1331followed by a bitmask specified as six groups of hex digits separated
1332by colons.
1333For example, an address in which the last 16 bits are significant could
1334be specified as:
1335.Pp
1336.Dl "MAC 10:20:30:40:50:60&00:00:00:00:ff:ff any"
1337.Pp
1338Note that the ampersand character has a special meaning in many shells
1339and should generally be escaped.
1340.Pp
1341.El
1342Note that the order of MAC addresses (destination first,
1343source second) is
1344the same as on the wire, but the opposite of the one used for
1345IP addresses.
1346.It Cm mac-type Ar mac-type
1347Matches packets whose Ethernet Type field
1348corresponds to one of those specified as argument.
1349.Ar mac-type
1350is specified in the same way as
1351.Cm port numbers
1352(i.e., one or more comma-separated single values or ranges).
1353You can use symbolic names for known values such as
1354.Em vlan , ipv4, ipv6 .
1355Values can be entered as decimal or hexadecimal (if prefixed by 0x),
1356and they are always printed as hexadecimal (unless the
1357.Cm -N
1358option is used, in which case symbolic resolution will be attempted).
1359.It Cm proto Ar protocol
1360Matches packets with the corresponding IP protocol.
1361.It Cm recv | xmit | via Brq Ar ifX | Ar if Ns Cm * | Ar ipno | Ar any
1362Matches packets received, transmitted or going through,
1363respectively, the interface specified by exact name
1364.Ns No ( Ar ifX Ns No ),
1365by device name
1366.Ns No ( Ar if Ns Ar * Ns No ),
1367by IP address, or through some interface.
1368.Pp
1369The
1370.Cm via
1371keyword causes the interface to always be checked.
1372If
1373.Cm recv
1374or
1375.Cm xmit
1376is used instead of
1377.Cm via ,
1378then only the receive or transmit interface (respectively)
1379is checked.
1380By specifying both, it is possible to match packets based on
1381both receive and transmit interface, e.g.:
1382.Pp
1383.Dl "ipfw add deny ip from any to any out recv ed0 xmit ed1"
1384.Pp
1385The
1386.Cm recv
1387interface can be tested on either incoming or outgoing packets,
1388while the
1389.Cm xmit
1390interface can only be tested on outgoing packets.
1391So
1392.Cm out
1393is required (and
1394.Cm in
1395is invalid) whenever
1396.Cm xmit
1397is used.
1398.Pp
1399A packet may not have a receive or transmit interface: packets
1400originating from the local host have no receive interface,
1401while packets destined for the local host have no transmit
1402interface.
1403.It Cm setup
1404Matches TCP packets that have the SYN bit set but no ACK bit.
1405This is the short form of
1406.Dq Li tcpflags\ syn,!ack .
1407.It Cm src-ip Ar ip-address
1408Matches IPv4 packets whose source IP is one of the address(es)
1409specified as an argument.
1410.It Cm src-ip6 Ar ip6-address
1411Matches IPv6 packets whose source IP is one of the address(es)
1412specified as an argument.
1413.It Cm src-port Ar ports
1414Matches IP packets whose source port is one of the port(s)
1415specified as argument.
1416.It Cm tagged Ar tag-list
1417Matches packets whose tags are included in
1418.Ar tag-list ,
1419which is either a single value or a list of values or ranges
1420specified in the same way as
1421.Ar ports .
1422Tags can be applied to the packet using
1423.Cm tag
1424rule action parameter (see it's description for details on tags).
1425.It Cm tcpack Ar ack
1426TCP packets only.
1427Match if the TCP header acknowledgment number field is set to
1428.Ar ack .
1429.It Cm tcpdatalen Ar tcpdatalen-list
1430Matches TCP packets whose length of TCP data is
1431.Ar tcpdatalen-list ,
1432which is either a single value or a list of values or ranges
1433specified in the same way as
1434.Ar ports .
1435.It Cm tcpflags Ar spec
1436TCP packets only.
1437Match if the TCP header contains the comma separated list of
1438flags specified in
1439.Ar spec .
1440The supported TCP flags are:
1441.Pp
1442.Cm fin ,
1443.Cm syn ,
1444.Cm rst ,
1445.Cm psh ,
1446.Cm ack
1447and
1448.Cm urg .
1449The absence of a particular flag may be denoted
1450with a
1451.Ql \&! .
1452A rule which contains a
1453.Cm tcpflags
1454specification can never match a fragmented packet which has
1455a non-zero offset.
1456See the
1457.Cm frag
1458option for details on matching fragmented packets.
1459.It Cm tcpseq Ar seq
1460TCP packets only.
1461Match if the TCP header sequence number field is set to
1462.Ar seq .
1463.It Cm tcpwin Ar win
1464TCP packets only.
1465Match if the TCP header window field is set to
1466.Ar win .
1467.It Cm tcpoptions Ar spec
1468TCP packets only.
1469Match if the TCP header contains the comma separated list of
1470options specified in
1471.Ar spec .
1472The supported TCP options are:
1473.Pp
1474.Cm mss
1475(maximum segment size),
1476.Cm window
1477(tcp window advertisement),
1478.Cm sack
1479(selective ack),
1480.Cm ts
1481(rfc1323 timestamp) and
1482.Cm cc
1483(rfc1644 t/tcp connection count).
1484The absence of a particular option may be denoted
1485with a
1486.Ql \&! .
1487.It Cm uid Ar user
1488Match all TCP or UDP packets sent by or received for a
1489.Ar user .
1490A
1491.Ar user
1492may be matched by name or identification number.
1493This option should be used only if debug.mpsafenet=0 to avoid possible
1494deadlocks due to layering violations in its implementation.
1495.It Cm verrevpath
1496For incoming packets,
1497a routing table lookup is done on the packet's source address.
1498If the interface on which the packet entered the system matches the
1499outgoing interface for the route,
1500the packet matches.
1501If the interfaces do not match up,
1502the packet does not match.
1503All outgoing packets or packets with no incoming interface match.
1504.Pp
1505The name and functionality of the option is intentionally similar to
1506the Cisco IOS command:
1507.Pp
1508.Dl ip verify unicast reverse-path
1509.Pp
1510This option can be used to make anti-spoofing rules to reject all
1511packets with source addresses not from this interface.
1512See also the option
1513.Cm antispoof .
1514.It Cm versrcreach
1515For incoming packets,
1516a routing table lookup is done on the packet's source address.
1517If a route to the source address exists, but not the default route
1518or a blackhole/reject route, the packet matches.
1519Otherwise, the packet does not match.
1520All outgoing packets match.
1521.Pp
1522The name and functionality of the option is intentionally similar to
1523the Cisco IOS command:
1524.Pp
1525.Dl ip verify unicast source reachable-via any
1526.Pp
1527This option can be used to make anti-spoofing rules to reject all
1528packets whose source address is unreachable.
1529.It Cm antispoof
1530For incoming packets, the packet's source address is checked if it
1531belongs to a directly connected network.
1532If the network is directly connected, then the interface the packet
1533came on in is compared to the interface the network is connected to.
1534When incoming interface and directly connected interface are not the
1535same, the packet does not match.
1536Otherwise, the packet does match.
1537All outgoing packets match.
1538.Pp
1539This option can be used to make anti-spoofing rules to reject all
1540packets that pretend to be from a directly connected network but do
1541not come in through that interface.
1542This option is similar to but more restricted than
1543.Cm verrevpath
1544because it engages only on packets with source addresses of directly
1545connected networks instead of all source addresses.
1546.El
1547.Sh LOOKUP TABLES
1548Lookup tables are useful to handle large sparse address sets,
1549typically from a hundred to several thousands of entries.
1550There may be up to 128 different lookup tables, numbered 0 to 127.
1551.Pp
1552Each entry is represented by an
1553.Ar addr Ns Op / Ns Ar masklen
1554and will match all addresses with base
1555.Ar addr
1556(specified as an IP address or a hostname)
1557and mask width of
1558.Ar masklen
1559bits.
1560If
1561.Ar masklen
1562is not specified, it defaults to 32.
1563When looking up an IP address in a table, the most specific
1564entry will match.
1565Associated with each entry is a 32-bit unsigned
1566.Ar value ,
1567which can optionally be checked by a rule matching code.
1568When adding an entry, if
1569.Ar value
1570is not specified, it defaults to 0.
1571.Pp
1572An entry can be added to a table
1573.Pq Cm add ,
1574removed from a table
1575.Pq Cm delete ,
1576a table can be examined
1577.Pq Cm list
1578or flushed
1579.Pq Cm flush .
1580.Pp
1581Internally, each table is stored in a Radix tree, the same way as
1582the routing table (see
1583.Xr route 4 ) .
1584.Pp
1585Lookup tables currently support IPv4 addresses only.
1586.Pp
1587The
1588.Cm tablearg
1589feature provides the ability to use a value, looked up in the table, as
1590the argument for a rule action.
1591This can significantly reduce number of rules in some configurations.
1592The
1593.Cm tablearg
1594argument can be used with the following actions:
1595.Cm pipe , queue, divert, tee, netgraph, ngtee .
1596See the
1597.Sx EXAMPLES
1598Section for example usage of tables and the tablearg keyword.
1599.Sh SETS OF RULES
1600Each rule belongs to one of 32 different
1601.Em sets
1602, numbered 0 to 31.
1603Set 31 is reserved for the default rule.
1604.Pp
1605By default, rules are put in set 0, unless you use the
1606.Cm set N
1607attribute when entering a new rule.
1608Sets can be individually and atomically enabled or disabled,
1609so this mechanism permits an easy way to store multiple configurations
1610of the firewall and quickly (and atomically) switch between them.
1611The command to enable/disable sets is
1612.Bd -ragged -offset indent
1613.Nm
1614.Cm set Oo Cm disable Ar number ... Oc Op Cm enable Ar number ...
1615.Ed
1616.Pp
1617where multiple
1618.Cm enable
1619or
1620.Cm disable
1621sections can be specified.
1622Command execution is atomic on all the sets specified in the command.
1623By default, all sets are enabled.
1624.Pp
1625When you disable a set, its rules behave as if they do not exist
1626in the firewall configuration, with only one exception:
1627.Bd -ragged -offset indent
1628dynamic rules created from a rule before it had been disabled
1629will still be active until they expire.
1630In order to delete
1631dynamic rules you have to explicitly delete the parent rule
1632which generated them.
1633.Ed
1634.Pp
1635The set number of rules can be changed with the command
1636.Bd -ragged -offset indent
1637.Nm
1638.Cm set move
1639.Brq Cm rule Ar rule-number | old-set
1640.Cm to Ar new-set
1641.Ed
1642.Pp
1643Also, you can atomically swap two rulesets with the command
1644.Bd -ragged -offset indent
1645.Nm
1646.Cm set swap Ar first-set second-set
1647.Ed
1648.Pp
1649See the
1650.Sx EXAMPLES
1651Section on some possible uses of sets of rules.
1652.Sh STATEFUL FIREWALL
1653Stateful operation is a way for the firewall to dynamically
1654create rules for specific flows when packets that
1655match a given pattern are detected.
1656Support for stateful
1657operation comes through the
1658.Cm check-state , keep-state
1659and
1660.Cm limit
1661options of
1662.Nm rules .
1663.Pp
1664Dynamic rules are created when a packet matches a
1665.Cm keep-state
1666or
1667.Cm limit
1668rule, causing the creation of a
1669.Em dynamic
1670rule which will match all and only packets with
1671a given
1672.Em protocol
1673between a
1674.Em src-ip/src-port dst-ip/dst-port
1675pair of addresses
1676.Em ( src
1677and
1678.Em dst
1679are used here only to denote the initial match addresses, but they
1680are completely equivalent afterwards).
1681Dynamic rules will be checked at the first
1682.Cm check-state, keep-state
1683or
1684.Cm limit
1685occurrence, and the action performed upon a match will be the same
1686as in the parent rule.
1687.Pp
1688Note that no additional attributes other than protocol and IP addresses
1689and ports are checked on dynamic rules.
1690.Pp
1691The typical use of dynamic rules is to keep a closed firewall configuration,
1692but let the first TCP SYN packet from the inside network install a
1693dynamic rule for the flow so that packets belonging to that session
1694will be allowed through the firewall:
1695.Pp
1696.Dl "ipfw add check-state"
1697.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from my-subnet to any setup keep-state"
1698.Dl "ipfw add deny tcp from any to any"
1699.Pp
1700A similar approach can be used for UDP, where an UDP packet coming
1701from the inside will install a dynamic rule to let the response through
1702the firewall:
1703.Pp
1704.Dl "ipfw add check-state"
1705.Dl "ipfw add allow udp from my-subnet to any keep-state"
1706.Dl "ipfw add deny udp from any to any"
1707.Pp
1708Dynamic rules expire after some time, which depends on the status
1709of the flow and the setting of some
1710.Cm sysctl
1711variables.
1712See Section
1713.Sx SYSCTL VARIABLES
1714for more details.
1715For TCP sessions, dynamic rules can be instructed to periodically
1716send keepalive packets to refresh the state of the rule when it is
1717about to expire.
1718.Pp
1719See Section
1720.Sx EXAMPLES
1721for more examples on how to use dynamic rules.
1722.Sh TRAFFIC SHAPER (DUMMYNET) CONFIGURATION
1723.Nm
1724is also the user interface for the
1725.Xr dummynet 4
1726traffic shaper.
1727.Pp
1728.Nm dummynet
1729operates by first using the firewall to classify packets and divide them into
1730.Em flows ,
1731using any match pattern that can be used in
1732.Nm
1733rules.
1734Depending on local policies, a flow can contain packets for a single
1735TCP connection, or from/to a given host, or entire subnet, or a
1736protocol type, etc.
1737.Pp
1738Packets belonging to the same flow are then passed to either of two
1739different objects, which implement the traffic regulation:
1740.Bl -hang -offset XXXX
1741.It Em pipe
1742A pipe emulates a link with given bandwidth, propagation delay,
1743queue size and packet loss rate.
1744Packets are queued in front of the pipe as they come out from the classifier,
1745and then transferred to the pipe according to the pipe's parameters.
1746.Pp
1747.It Em queue
1748A queue
1749is an abstraction used to implement the WF2Q+
1750(Worst-case Fair Weighted Fair Queueing) policy, which is
1751an efficient variant of the WFQ policy.
1752.br
1753The queue associates a
1754.Em weight
1755and a reference pipe to each flow, and then all backlogged (i.e.,
1756with packets queued) flows linked to the same pipe share the pipe's
1757bandwidth proportionally to their weights.
1758Note that weights are not priorities; a flow with a lower weight
1759is still guaranteed to get its fraction of the bandwidth even if a
1760flow with a higher weight is permanently backlogged.
1761.Pp
1762.El
1763In practice,
1764.Em pipes
1765can be used to set hard limits to the bandwidth that a flow can use, whereas
1766.Em queues
1767can be used to determine how different flow share the available bandwidth.
1768.Pp
1769The
1770.Em pipe
1771and
1772.Em queue
1773configuration commands are the following:
1774.Bd -ragged -offset indent
1775.Cm pipe Ar number Cm config Ar pipe-configuration
1776.Pp
1777.Cm queue Ar number Cm config Ar queue-configuration
1778.Ed
1779.Pp
1780The following parameters can be configured for a pipe:
1781.Pp
1782.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
1783.It Cm bw Ar bandwidth | device
1784Bandwidth, measured in
1785.Sm off
1786.Op Cm K | M
1787.Brq Cm bit/s | Byte/s .
1788.Sm on
1789.Pp
1790A value of 0 (default) means unlimited bandwidth.
1791The unit must immediately follow the number, as in
1792.Pp
1793.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw 300Kbit/s"
1794.Pp
1795If a device name is specified instead of a numeric value, as in
1796.Pp
1797.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw tun0"
1798.Pp
1799then the transmit clock is supplied by the specified device.
1800At the moment only the
1801.Xr tun 4
1802device supports this
1803functionality, for use in conjunction with
1804.Xr ppp 8 .
1805.Pp
1806.It Cm delay Ar ms-delay
1807Propagation delay, measured in milliseconds.
1808The value is rounded to the next multiple of the clock tick
1809(typically 10ms, but it is a good practice to run kernels
1810with
1811.Dq "options HZ=1000"
1812to reduce
1813the granularity to 1ms or less).
1814Default value is 0, meaning no delay.
1815.El
1816.Pp
1817The following parameters can be configured for a queue:
1818.Pp
1819.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
1820.It Cm pipe Ar pipe_nr
1821Connects a queue to the specified pipe.
1822Multiple queues (with the same or different weights) can be connected to
1823the same pipe, which specifies the aggregate rate for the set of queues.
1824.Pp
1825.It Cm weight Ar weight
1826Specifies the weight to be used for flows matching this queue.
1827The weight must be in the range 1..100, and defaults to 1.
1828.El
1829.Pp
1830Finally, the following parameters can be configured for both
1831pipes and queues:
1832.Pp
1833.Bl -tag -width XXXX -compact
1834.Pp
1835.It Cm buckets Ar hash-table-size
1836Specifies the size of the hash table used for storing the
1837various queues.
1838Default value is 64 controlled by the
1839.Xr sysctl 8
1840variable
1841.Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.hash_size ,
1842allowed range is 16 to 65536.
1843.Pp
1844.It Cm mask Ar mask-specifier
1845Packets sent to a given pipe or queue by an
1846.Nm
1847rule can be further classified into multiple flows, each of which is then
1848sent to a different
1849.Em dynamic
1850pipe or queue.
1851A flow identifier is constructed by masking the IP addresses,
1852ports and protocol types as specified with the
1853.Cm mask
1854options in the configuration of the pipe or queue.
1855For each different flow identifier, a new pipe or queue is created
1856with the same parameters as the original object, and matching packets
1857are sent to it.
1858.Pp
1859Thus, when
1860.Em dynamic pipes
1861are used, each flow will get the same bandwidth as defined by the pipe,
1862whereas when
1863.Em dynamic queues
1864are used, each flow will share the parent's pipe bandwidth evenly
1865with other flows generated by the same queue (note that other queues
1866with different weights might be connected to the same pipe).
1867.br
1868Available mask specifiers are a combination of one or more of the following:
1869.Pp
1870.Cm dst-ip Ar mask ,
1871.Cm dst-ip6 Ar mask ,
1872.Cm src-ip Ar mask ,
1873.Cm src-ip6 Ar mask ,
1874.Cm dst-port Ar mask ,
1875.Cm src-port Ar mask ,
1876.Cm flow-id Ar mask ,
1877.Cm proto Ar mask
1878or
1879.Cm all ,
1880.Pp
1881where the latter means all bits in all fields are significant.
1882.Pp
1883.It Cm noerror
1884When a packet is dropped by a dummynet queue or pipe, the error
1885is normally reported to the caller routine in the kernel, in the
1886same way as it happens when a device queue fills up.
1887Setting this
1888option reports the packet as successfully delivered, which can be
1889needed for some experimental setups where you want to simulate
1890loss or congestion at a remote router.
1891.Pp
1892.It Cm plr Ar packet-loss-rate
1893Packet loss rate.
1894Argument
1895.Ar packet-loss-rate
1896is a floating-point number between 0 and 1, with 0 meaning no
1897loss, 1 meaning 100% loss.
1898The loss rate is internally represented on 31 bits.
1899.Pp
1900.It Cm queue Brq Ar slots | size Ns Cm Kbytes
1901Queue size, in
1902.Ar slots
1903or
1904.Cm KBytes .
1905Default value is 50 slots, which
1906is the typical queue size for Ethernet devices.
1907Note that for slow speed links you should keep the queue
1908size short or your traffic might be affected by a significant
1909queueing delay.
1910E.g., 50 max-sized ethernet packets (1500 bytes) mean 600Kbit
1911or 20s of queue on a 30Kbit/s pipe.
1912Even worse effects can result if you get packets from an
1913interface with a much larger MTU, e.g.\& the loopback interface
1914with its 16KB packets.
1915.Pp
1916.It Cm red | gred Ar w_q Ns / Ns Ar min_th Ns / Ns Ar max_th Ns / Ns Ar max_p
1917Make use of the RED (Random Early Detection) queue management algorithm.
1918.Ar w_q
1919and
1920.Ar max_p
1921are floating
1922point numbers between 0 and 1 (0 not included), while
1923.Ar min_th
1924and
1925.Ar max_th
1926are integer numbers specifying thresholds for queue management
1927(thresholds are computed in bytes if the queue has been defined
1928in bytes, in slots otherwise).
1929The
1930.Xr dummynet 4
1931also supports the gentle RED variant (gred).
1932Three
1933.Xr sysctl 8
1934variables can be used to control the RED behaviour:
1935.Bl -tag -width indent
1936.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_lookup_depth
1937specifies the accuracy in computing the average queue
1938when the link is idle (defaults to 256, must be greater than zero)
1939.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_avg_pkt_size
1940specifies the expected average packet size (defaults to 512, must be
1941greater than zero)
1942.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_max_pkt_size
1943specifies the expected maximum packet size, only used when queue
1944thresholds are in bytes (defaults to 1500, must be greater than zero).
1945.El
1946.El
1947.Pp
1948When used with IPv6 data, dummynet currently has several limitations.
1949First, debug.mpsafenet=0 must be set.
1950Second, the information necessicary to route link-local packets to an
1951interface is not avalable after processing by dummynet so those packets
1952are dropped in the output path.
1953Care should be taken to insure that link-local packets are not passed to
1954dummynet.
1955.Sh CHECKLIST
1956Here are some important points to consider when designing your
1957rules:
1958.Bl -bullet
1959.It
1960Remember that you filter both packets going
1961.Cm in
1962and
1963.Cm out .
1964Most connections need packets going in both directions.
1965.It
1966Remember to test very carefully.
1967It is a good idea to be near the console when doing this.
1968If you cannot be near the console,
1969use an auto-recovery script such as the one in
1970.Pa /usr/share/examples/ipfw/change_rules.sh .
1971.It
1972Do not forget the loopback interface.
1973.El
1974.Sh FINE POINTS
1975.Bl -bullet
1976.It
1977There are circumstances where fragmented datagrams are unconditionally
1978dropped.
1979TCP packets are dropped if they do not contain at least 20 bytes of
1980TCP header, UDP packets are dropped if they do not contain a full 8
1981byte UDP header, and ICMP packets are dropped if they do not contain
19824 bytes of ICMP header, enough to specify the ICMP type, code, and
1983checksum.
1984These packets are simply logged as
1985.Dq pullup failed
1986since there may not be enough good data in the packet to produce a
1987meaningful log entry.
1988.It
1989Another type of packet is unconditionally dropped, a TCP packet with a
1990fragment offset of one.
1991This is a valid packet, but it only has one use, to try
1992to circumvent firewalls.
1993When logging is enabled, these packets are
1994reported as being dropped by rule -1.
1995.It
1996If you are logged in over a network, loading the
1997.Xr kld 4
1998version of
1999.Nm
2000is probably not as straightforward as you would think.
2001I recommend the following command line:
2002.Bd -literal -offset indent
2003kldload ipfw && \e
2004ipfw add 32000 allow ip from any to any
2005.Ed
2006.Pp
2007Along the same lines, doing an
2008.Bd -literal -offset indent
2009ipfw flush
2010.Ed
2011.Pp
2012in similar surroundings is also a bad idea.
2013.It
2014The
2015.Nm
2016filter list may not be modified if the system security level
2017is set to 3 or higher
2018(see
2019.Xr init 8
2020for information on system security levels).
2021.El
2022.Sh PACKET DIVERSION
2023A
2024.Xr divert 4
2025socket bound to the specified port will receive all packets
2026diverted to that port.
2027If no socket is bound to the destination port, or if the divert module is
2028not loaded, or if the kernel was not compiled with divert socket support,
2029the packets are dropped.
2030.Sh SYSCTL VARIABLES
2031A set of
2032.Xr sysctl 8
2033variables controls the behaviour of the firewall and
2034associated modules
2035.Pq Nm dummynet , bridge .
2036These are shown below together with their default value
2037(but always check with the
2038.Xr sysctl 8
2039command what value is actually in use) and meaning:
2040.Bl -tag -width indent
2041.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.expire : No 1
2042Lazily delete dynamic pipes/queue once they have no pending traffic.
2043You can disable this by setting the variable to 0, in which case
2044the pipes/queues will only be deleted when the threshold is reached.
2045.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.hash_size : No 64
2046Default size of the hash table used for dynamic pipes/queues.
2047This value is used when no
2048.Cm buckets
2049option is specified when configuring a pipe/queue.
2050.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.max_chain_len : No 16
2051Target value for the maximum number of pipes/queues in a hash bucket.
2052The product
2053.Cm max_chain_len*hash_size
2054is used to determine the threshold over which empty pipes/queues
2055will be expired even when
2056.Cm net.inet.ip.dummynet.expire=0 .
2057.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_lookup_depth : No 256
2058.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_avg_pkt_size : No 512
2059.It Em net.inet.ip.dummynet.red_max_pkt_size : No 1500
2060Parameters used in the computations of the drop probability
2061for the RED algorithm.
2062.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.autoinc_step : No 100
2063Delta between rule numbers when auto-generating them.
2064The value must be in the range 1..1000.
2065.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.curr_dyn_buckets : Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_buckets
2066The current number of buckets in the hash table for dynamic rules
2067(readonly).
2068.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.debug : No 1
2069Controls debugging messages produced by
2070.Nm .
2071.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_buckets : No 256
2072The number of buckets in the hash table for dynamic rules.
2073Must be a power of 2, up to 65536.
2074It only takes effect when all dynamic rules have expired, so you
2075are advised to use a
2076.Cm flush
2077command to make sure that the hash table is resized.
2078.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_count : No 3
2079Current number of dynamic rules
2080(read-only).
2081.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_keepalive : No 1
2082Enables generation of keepalive packets for
2083.Cm keep-state
2084rules on TCP sessions.
2085A keepalive is generated to both
2086sides of the connection every 5 seconds for the last 20
2087seconds of the lifetime of the rule.
2088.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_max : No 8192
2089Maximum number of dynamic rules.
2090When you hit this limit, no more dynamic rules can be
2091installed until old ones expire.
2092.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_ack_lifetime : No 300
2093.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_syn_lifetime : No 20
2094.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_fin_lifetime : No 1
2095.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_rst_lifetime : No 1
2096.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_udp_lifetime : No 5
2097.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.dyn_short_lifetime : No 30
2098These variables control the lifetime, in seconds, of dynamic
2099rules.
2100Upon the initial SYN exchange the lifetime is kept short,
2101then increased after both SYN have been seen, then decreased
2102again during the final FIN exchange or when a RST is received.
2103Both
2104.Em dyn_fin_lifetime
2105and
2106.Em dyn_rst_lifetime
2107must be strictly lower than 5 seconds, the period of
2108repetition of keepalives.
2109The firewall enforces that.
2110.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.enable : No 1
2111Enables the firewall.
2112Setting this variable to 0 lets you run your machine without
2113firewall even if compiled in.
2114.It Em net.inet6.ip6.fw.enable : No 1
2115provides the same functionality as above for the IPv6 case.
2116.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.one_pass : No 1
2117When set, the packet exiting from the
2118.Xr dummynet 4
2119pipe or from
2120.Xr ng_ipfw 4
2121node is not passed though the firewall again.
2122Otherwise, after an action, the packet is
2123reinjected into the firewall at the next rule.
2124.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.verbose : No 1
2125Enables verbose messages.
2126.It Em net.inet.ip.fw.verbose_limit : No 0
2127Limits the number of messages produced by a verbose firewall.
2128.It Em net.inet6.ip6.fw.deny_unknown_exthdrs : No 1
2129If enabled packets with unknown IPv6 Extension Headers will be denied.
2130.It Em net.link.ether.ipfw : No 0
2131Controls whether layer-2 packets are passed to
2132.Nm .
2133Default is no.
2134.It Em net.link.bridge.ipfw : No 0
2135Controls whether bridged packets are passed to
2136.Nm .
2137Default is no.
2138.El
2139.Pp
2140.Sh EXAMPLES
2141There are far too many possible uses of
2142.Nm
2143so this Section will only give a small set of examples.
2144.Pp
2145.Ss BASIC PACKET FILTERING
2146This command adds an entry which denies all tcp packets from
2147.Em cracker.evil.org
2148to the telnet port of
2149.Em wolf.tambov.su
2150from being forwarded by the host:
2151.Pp
2152.Dl "ipfw add deny tcp from cracker.evil.org to wolf.tambov.su telnet"
2153.Pp
2154This one disallows any connection from the entire cracker's
2155network to my host:
2156.Pp
2157.Dl "ipfw add deny ip from 123.45.67.0/24 to my.host.org"
2158.Pp
2159A first and efficient way to limit access (not using dynamic rules)
2160is the use of the following rules:
2161.Pp
2162.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from any to any established"
2163.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from net1 portlist1 to net2 portlist2 setup"
2164.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from net3 portlist3 to net3 portlist3 setup"
2165.Dl "..."
2166.Dl "ipfw add deny tcp from any to any"
2167.Pp
2168The first rule will be a quick match for normal TCP packets,
2169but it will not match the initial SYN packet, which will be
2170matched by the
2171.Cm setup
2172rules only for selected source/destination pairs.
2173All other SYN packets will be rejected by the final
2174.Cm deny
2175rule.
2176.Pp
2177If you administer one or more subnets, you can take advantage
2178of the address sets and or-blocks and write extremely
2179compact rulesets which selectively enable services to blocks
2180of clients, as below:
2181.Pp
2182.Dl "goodguys=\*q{ 10.1.2.0/24{20,35,66,18} or 10.2.3.0/28{6,3,11} }\*q"
2183.Dl "badguys=\*q10.1.2.0/24{8,38,60}\*q"
2184.Dl ""
2185.Dl "ipfw add allow ip from ${goodguys} to any"
2186.Dl "ipfw add deny ip from ${badguys} to any"
2187.Dl "... normal policies ..."
2188.Pp
2189The
2190.Cm verrevpath
2191option could be used to do automated anti-spoofing by adding the
2192following to the top of a ruleset:
2193.Pp
2194.Dl "ipfw add deny ip from any to any not verrevpath in"
2195.Pp
2196This rule drops all incoming packets that appear to be coming to the
2197system on the wrong interface.
2198For example, a packet with a source
2199address belonging to a host on a protected internal network would be
2200dropped if it tried to enter the system from an external interface.
2201.Pp
2202The
2203.Cm antispoof
2204option could be used to do similar but more restricted anti-spoofing
2205by adding the following to the top of a ruleset:
2206.Pp
2207.Dl "ipfw add deny ip from any to any not antispoof in"
2208.Pp
2209This rule drops all incoming packets that appear to be coming from another
2210directly connected system but on the wrong interface.
2211For example, a packet with a source address of
2212.Li 192.168.0.0/24
2213, configured on
2214.Li fxp0
2215, but coming in on
2216.Li fxp1
2217would be dropped.
2218.Ss DYNAMIC RULES
2219In order to protect a site from flood attacks involving fake
2220TCP packets, it is safer to use dynamic rules:
2221.Pp
2222.Dl "ipfw add check-state"
2223.Dl "ipfw add deny tcp from any to any established"
2224.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from my-net to any setup keep-state"
2225.Pp
2226This will let the firewall install dynamic rules only for
2227those connection which start with a regular SYN packet coming
2228from the inside of our network.
2229Dynamic rules are checked when encountering the first
2230.Cm check-state
2231or
2232.Cm keep-state
2233rule.
2234A
2235.Cm check-state
2236rule should usually be placed near the beginning of the
2237ruleset to minimize the amount of work scanning the ruleset.
2238Your mileage may vary.
2239.Pp
2240To limit the number of connections a user can open
2241you can use the following type of rules:
2242.Pp
2243.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from my-net/24 to any setup limit src-addr 10"
2244.Dl "ipfw add allow tcp from any to me setup limit src-addr 4"
2245.Pp
2246The former (assuming it runs on a gateway) will allow each host
2247on a /24 network to open at most 10 TCP connections.
2248The latter can be placed on a server to make sure that a single
2249client does not use more than 4 simultaneous connections.
2250.Pp
2251.Em BEWARE :
2252stateful rules can be subject to denial-of-service attacks
2253by a SYN-flood which opens a huge number of dynamic rules.
2254The effects of such attacks can be partially limited by
2255acting on a set of
2256.Xr sysctl 8
2257variables which control the operation of the firewall.
2258.Pp
2259Here is a good usage of the
2260.Cm list
2261command to see accounting records and timestamp information:
2262.Pp
2263.Dl ipfw -at list
2264.Pp
2265or in short form without timestamps:
2266.Pp
2267.Dl ipfw -a list
2268.Pp
2269which is equivalent to:
2270.Pp
2271.Dl ipfw show
2272.Pp
2273Next rule diverts all incoming packets from 192.168.2.0/24
2274to divert port 5000:
2275.Pp
2276.Dl ipfw divert 5000 ip from 192.168.2.0/24 to any in
2277.Pp
2278.Ss TRAFFIC SHAPING
2279The following rules show some of the applications of
2280.Nm
2281and
2282.Xr dummynet 4
2283for simulations and the like.
2284.Pp
2285This rule drops random incoming packets with a probability
2286of 5%:
2287.Pp
2288.Dl "ipfw add prob 0.05 deny ip from any to any in"
2289.Pp
2290A similar effect can be achieved making use of dummynet pipes:
2291.Pp
2292.Dl "ipfw add pipe 10 ip from any to any"
2293.Dl "ipfw pipe 10 config plr 0.05"
2294.Pp
2295We can use pipes to artificially limit bandwidth, e.g.\& on a
2296machine acting as a router, if we want to limit traffic from
2297local clients on 192.168.2.0/24 we do:
2298.Pp
2299.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from 192.168.2.0/24 to any out"
2300.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw 300Kbit/s queue 50KBytes"
2301.Pp
2302note that we use the
2303.Cm out
2304modifier so that the rule is not used twice.
2305Remember in fact that
2306.Nm
2307rules are checked both on incoming and outgoing packets.
2308.Pp
2309Should we want to simulate a bidirectional link with bandwidth
2310limitations, the correct way is the following:
2311.Pp
2312.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from any to any out"
2313.Dl "ipfw add pipe 2 ip from any to any in"
2314.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw 64Kbit/s queue 10Kbytes"
2315.Dl "ipfw pipe 2 config bw 64Kbit/s queue 10Kbytes"
2316.Pp
2317The above can be very useful, e.g.\& if you want to see how
2318your fancy Web page will look for a residential user who
2319is connected only through a slow link.
2320You should not use only one pipe for both directions, unless
2321you want to simulate a half-duplex medium (e.g.\& AppleTalk,
2322Ethernet, IRDA).
2323It is not necessary that both pipes have the same configuration,
2324so we can also simulate asymmetric links.
2325.Pp
2326Should we want to verify network performance with the RED queue
2327management algorithm:
2328.Pp
2329.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from any to any"
2330.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw 500Kbit/s queue 100 red 0.002/30/80/0.1"
2331.Pp
2332Another typical application of the traffic shaper is to
2333introduce some delay in the communication.
2334This can significantly affect applications which do a lot of Remote
2335Procedure Calls, and where the round-trip-time of the
2336connection often becomes a limiting factor much more than
2337bandwidth:
2338.Pp
2339.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from any to any out"
2340.Dl "ipfw add pipe 2 ip from any to any in"
2341.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config delay 250ms bw 1Mbit/s"
2342.Dl "ipfw pipe 2 config delay 250ms bw 1Mbit/s"
2343.Pp
2344Per-flow queueing can be useful for a variety of purposes.
2345A very simple one is counting traffic:
2346.Pp
2347.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 tcp from any to any"
2348.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 udp from any to any"
2349.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from any to any"
2350.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config mask all"
2351.Pp
2352The above set of rules will create queues (and collect
2353statistics) for all traffic.
2354Because the pipes have no limitations, the only effect is
2355collecting statistics.
2356Note that we need 3 rules, not just the last one, because
2357when
2358.Nm
2359tries to match IP packets it will not consider ports, so we
2360would not see connections on separate ports as different
2361ones.
2362.Pp
2363A more sophisticated example is limiting the outbound traffic
2364on a net with per-host limits, rather than per-network limits:
2365.Pp
2366.Dl "ipfw add pipe 1 ip from 192.168.2.0/24 to any out"
2367.Dl "ipfw add pipe 2 ip from any to 192.168.2.0/24 in"
2368.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config mask src-ip 0x000000ff bw 200Kbit/s queue 20Kbytes"
2369.Dl "ipfw pipe 2 config mask dst-ip 0x000000ff bw 200Kbit/s queue 20Kbytes"
2370.Ss LOOKUP TABLES
2371In the following example, we need to create several traffic bandwidth
2372classes and we need different hosts/networks to fall into different classes.
2373We create one pipe for each class and configure them accordingly.
2374Then we create a single table and fill it with IP subnets and addresses.
2375For each subnet/host we set the argument equal to the number of the pipe
2376that it should use.
2377Then we classify traffic using a single rule:
2378.Pp
2379.Dl "ipfw pipe 1 config bw 1000Kbyte/s"
2380.Dl "ipfw pipe 4 config bw 4000Kbyte/s"
2381.Dl "..."
2382.Dl "ipfw table 1 add 192.168.2.0/24 1"
2383.Dl "ipfw table 1 add 192.168.0.0/27 4"
2384.Dl "ipfw table 1 add 192.168.0.2 1"
2385.Dl "..."
2386.Dl "ipfw pipe tablearg ip from table(1) to any"
2387.Ss SETS OF RULES
2388To add a set of rules atomically, e.g.\& set 18:
2389.Pp
2390.Dl "ipfw set disable 18"
2391.Dl "ipfw add NN set 18 ...         # repeat as needed"
2392.Dl "ipfw set enable 18"
2393.Pp
2394To delete a set of rules atomically the command is simply:
2395.Pp
2396.Dl "ipfw delete set 18"
2397.Pp
2398To test a ruleset and disable it and regain control if something goes wrong:
2399.Pp
2400.Dl "ipfw set disable 18"
2401.Dl "ipfw add NN set 18 ...         # repeat as needed"
2402.Dl "ipfw set enable 18; echo done; sleep 30 && ipfw set disable 18"
2403.Pp
2404Here if everything goes well, you press control-C before the "sleep"
2405terminates, and your ruleset will be left active.
2406Otherwise, e.g.\& if
2407you cannot access your box, the ruleset will be disabled after
2408the sleep terminates thus restoring the previous situation.
2409.Sh SEE ALSO
2410.Xr cpp 1 ,
2411.Xr m4 1 ,
2412.Xr altq 4 ,
2413.Xr divert 4 ,
2414.Xr dummynet 4 ,
2415.Xr if_bridge 4 ,
2416.Xr ip 4 ,
2417.Xr ipfirewall 4 ,
2418.Xr ng_ipfw 4 ,
2419.Xr protocols 5 ,
2420.Xr services 5 ,
2421.Xr init 8 ,
2422.Xr kldload 8 ,
2423.Xr reboot 8 ,
2424.Xr sysctl 8 ,
2425.Xr syslogd 8
2426.Sh HISTORY
2427The
2428.Nm
2429utility first appeared in
2430.Fx 2.0 .
2431.Xr dummynet 4
2432was introduced in
2433.Fx 2.2.8 .
2434Stateful extensions were introduced in
2435.Fx 4.0 .
2436.Nm ipfw2
2437was introduced in Summer 2002.
2438.Sh AUTHORS
2439.An Ugen J. S. Antsilevich ,
2440.An Poul-Henning Kamp ,
2441.An Alex Nash ,
2442.An Archie Cobbs ,
2443.An Luigi Rizzo .
2444.Pp
2445.An -nosplit
2446API based upon code written by
2447.An Daniel Boulet
2448for BSDI.
2449.Pp
2450Work on
2451.Xr dummynet 4
2452traffic shaper supported by Akamba Corp.
2453.Sh BUGS
2454Use of dummynet with IPv6 requires that debug.mpsafenet be set to 0.
2455.Pp
2456The syntax has grown over the years and sometimes it might be confusing.
2457Unfortunately, backward compatibility prevents cleaning up mistakes
2458made in the definition of the syntax.
2459.Pp
2460.Em !!! WARNING !!!
2461.Pp
2462Misconfiguring the firewall can put your computer in an unusable state,
2463possibly shutting down network services and requiring console access to
2464regain control of it.
2465.Pp
2466Incoming packet fragments diverted by
2467.Cm divert
2468are reassembled before delivery to the socket.
2469The action used on those packet is the one from the
2470rule which matches the first fragment of the packet.
2471.Pp
2472Packets diverted to userland, and then reinserted by a userland process
2473may lose various packet attributes.
2474The packet source interface name
2475will be preserved if it is shorter than 8 bytes and the userland process
2476saves and reuses the sockaddr_in
2477(as does
2478.Xr natd 8 ) ;
2479otherwise, it may be lost.
2480If a packet is reinserted in this manner, later rules may be incorrectly
2481applied, making the order of
2482.Cm divert
2483rules in the rule sequence very important.
2484.Pp
2485Dummynet drops all packets with IPv6 link-local addresses.
2486.Pp
2487Rules using
2488.Cm uid
2489or
2490.Cm gid
2491may not behave as expected.
2492In particular, incoming SYN packets may
2493have no uid or gid associated with them since they do not yet belong
2494to a TCP connection, and the uid/gid associated with a packet may not
2495be as expected if the associated process calls
2496.Xr setuid 2
2497or similar system calls.
2498.Pp
2499Rules which use uid, gid or jail based matching should be used only
2500if debug.mpsafenet=0 to avoid possible deadlocks due to layering
2501violations in its implementation.
2502