1.\" $OpenBSD: pfctl.8,v 1.138 2008/06/10 20:55:02 mcbride Exp $ 2.\" 3.\" Copyright (c) 2001 Kjell Wooding. All rights reserved. 4.\" 5.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7.\" are met: 8.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13.\" 3. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products 14.\" derived from this software without specific prior written permission. 15.\" 16.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR 17.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES 18.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. 19.\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, 20.\" INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT 21.\" NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, 22.\" DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY 23.\" THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT 24.\" (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF 25.\" THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 26.\" 27.Dd February 22, 2021 28.Dt PFCTL 8 29.Os 30.Sh NAME 31.Nm pfctl 32.Nd control the packet filter (PF) device 33.Sh SYNOPSIS 34.Nm pfctl 35.Bk -words 36.Op Fl AdeghMmNnOPqRrvz 37.Op Fl a Ar anchor 38.Oo Fl D Ar macro Ns = 39.Ar value Oc 40.Op Fl F Ar modifier 41.Op Fl f Ar file 42.Op Fl i Ar interface 43.Op Fl K Ar host | network 44.Xo 45.Oo Fl k 46.Ar host | network | label | id | gateway 47.Oc Xc 48.Op Fl o Ar level 49.Op Fl p Ar device 50.Op Fl s Ar modifier 51.Xo 52.Oo Fl t Ar table 53.Fl T Ar command 54.Op Ar address ... 55.Oc Xc 56.Op Fl x Ar level 57.Ek 58.Sh DESCRIPTION 59The 60.Nm 61utility communicates with the packet filter device using the 62ioctl interface described in 63.Xr pf 4 . 64It allows ruleset and parameter configuration and retrieval of status 65information from the packet filter. 66.Pp 67Packet filtering restricts the types of packets that pass through 68network interfaces entering or leaving the host based on filter 69rules as described in 70.Xr pf.conf 5 . 71The packet filter can also replace addresses and ports of packets. 72Replacing source addresses and ports of outgoing packets is called 73NAT (Network Address Translation) and is used to connect an internal 74network (usually reserved address space) to an external one (the 75Internet) by making all connections to external hosts appear to 76come from the gateway. 77Replacing destination addresses and ports of incoming packets 78is used to redirect connections to different hosts and/or ports. 79A combination of both translations, bidirectional NAT, is also 80supported. 81Translation rules are described in 82.Xr pf.conf 5 . 83.Pp 84When the variable 85.Va pf 86is set to 87.Dv YES 88in 89.Xr rc.conf 5 , 90the rule file specified with the variable 91.Va pf_rules 92is loaded automatically by the 93.Xr rc 8 94scripts and the packet filter is enabled. 95.Pp 96The packet filter does not itself forward packets between interfaces. 97Forwarding can be enabled by setting the 98.Xr sysctl 8 99variables 100.Em net.inet.ip.forwarding 101and/or 102.Em net.inet6.ip6.forwarding 103to 1. 104Set them permanently in 105.Xr sysctl.conf 5 . 106.Pp 107The 108.Nm 109utility provides several commands. 110The options are as follows: 111.Bl -tag -width Ds 112.It Fl A 113Load only the queue rules present in the rule file. 114Other rules and options are ignored. 115.It Fl a Ar anchor 116Apply flags 117.Fl f , 118.Fl F , 119and 120.Fl s 121only to the rules in the specified 122.Ar anchor . 123In addition to the main ruleset, 124.Nm 125can load and manipulate additional rulesets by name, 126called anchors. 127The main ruleset is the default anchor. 128.Pp 129Anchors are referenced by name and may be nested, 130with the various components of the anchor path separated by 131.Sq / 132characters, similar to how file system hierarchies are laid out. 133The last component of the anchor path is where ruleset operations are 134performed. 135.Pp 136Evaluation of 137.Ar anchor 138rules from the main ruleset is described in 139.Xr pf.conf 5 . 140.Pp 141For example, the following will show all filter rules (see the 142.Fl s 143flag below) inside the anchor 144.Dq authpf/smith(1234) , 145which would have been created for user 146.Dq smith 147by 148.Xr authpf 8 , 149PID 1234: 150.Bd -literal -offset indent 151# pfctl -a "authpf/smith(1234)" -s rules 152.Ed 153.Pp 154Private tables can also be put inside anchors, either by having table 155statements in the 156.Xr pf.conf 5 157file that is loaded in the anchor, or by using regular table commands, as in: 158.Bd -literal -offset indent 159# pfctl -a foo/bar -t mytable -T add 1.2.3.4 5.6.7.8 160.Ed 161.Pp 162When a rule referring to a table is loaded in an anchor, the rule will use the 163private table if one is defined, and then fall back to the table defined in the 164main ruleset, if there is one. 165This is similar to C rules for variable scope. 166It is possible to create distinct tables with the same name in the global 167ruleset and in an anchor, but this is often bad design and a warning will be 168issued in that case. 169.Pp 170By default, recursive inline printing of anchors applies only to unnamed 171anchors specified inline in the ruleset. 172If the anchor name is terminated with a 173.Sq * 174character, the 175.Fl s 176flag will recursively print all anchors in a brace delimited block. 177For example the following will print the 178.Dq authpf 179ruleset recursively: 180.Bd -literal -offset indent 181# pfctl -a 'authpf/*' -sr 182.Ed 183.Pp 184To print the main ruleset recursively, specify only 185.Sq * 186as the anchor name: 187.Bd -literal -offset indent 188# pfctl -a '*' -sr 189.Ed 190.It Fl D Ar macro Ns = Ns Ar value 191Define 192.Ar macro 193to be set to 194.Ar value 195on the command line. 196Overrides the definition of 197.Ar macro 198in the ruleset. 199.It Fl d 200Disable the packet filter. 201.It Fl e 202Enable the packet filter. 203.It Fl F Ar modifier 204Flush the filter parameters specified by 205.Ar modifier 206(may be abbreviated): 207.Pp 208.Bl -tag -width xxxxxxxxxxxx -compact 209.It Fl F Cm nat 210Flush the NAT rules. 211.It Fl F Cm queue 212Flush the queue rules. 213.It Fl F Cm ethernet 214Flush the Ethernet filter rules. 215.It Fl F Cm rules 216Flush the filter rules. 217.It Fl F Cm states 218Flush the state table (NAT and filter). 219.It Fl F Cm Sources 220Flush the source tracking table. 221.It Fl F Cm info 222Flush the filter information (statistics that are not bound to rules). 223.It Fl F Cm Tables 224Flush the tables. 225.It Fl F Cm osfp 226Flush the passive operating system fingerprints. 227.It Fl F Cm all 228Flush all of the above. 229.El 230.It Fl f Ar file 231Load the rules contained in 232.Ar file . 233This 234.Ar file 235may contain macros, tables, options, and normalization, queueing, 236translation, and filtering rules. 237With the exception of macros and tables, the statements must appear in that 238order. 239.It Fl g 240Include output helpful for debugging. 241.It Fl h 242Help. 243.It Fl i Ar interface 244Restrict the operation to the given 245.Ar interface . 246.It Fl K Ar host | network 247Kill all of the source tracking entries originating from the specified 248.Ar host 249or 250.Ar network . 251A second 252.Fl K Ar host 253or 254.Fl K Ar network 255option may be specified, which will kill all the source tracking 256entries from the first host/network to the second. 257.It Xo 258.Fl k 259.Ar host | network | label | id | gateway 260.Xc 261Kill all of the state entries matching the specified 262.Ar host , 263.Ar network , 264.Ar label , 265.Ar id , 266or 267.Ar gateway. 268.Pp 269For example, to kill all of the state entries originating from 270.Dq host : 271.Pp 272.Dl # pfctl -k host 273.Pp 274A second 275.Fl k Ar host 276or 277.Fl k Ar network 278option may be specified, which will kill all the state entries 279from the first host/network to the second. 280To kill all of the state entries from 281.Dq host1 282to 283.Dq host2 : 284.Pp 285.Dl # pfctl -k host1 -k host2 286.Pp 287To kill all states originating from 192.168.1.0/24 to 172.16.0.0/16: 288.Pp 289.Dl # pfctl -k 192.168.1.0/24 -k 172.16.0.0/16 290.Pp 291A network prefix length of 0 can be used as a wildcard. 292To kill all states with the target 293.Dq host2 : 294.Pp 295.Dl # pfctl -k 0.0.0.0/0 -k host2 296.Pp 297It is also possible to kill states by rule label or state ID. 298In this mode the first 299.Fl k 300argument is used to specify the type 301of the second argument. 302The following command would kill all states that have been created 303from rules carrying the label 304.Dq foobar : 305.Pp 306.Dl # pfctl -k label -k foobar 307.Pp 308To kill one specific state by its unique state ID 309(as shown by pfctl -s state -vv), 310use the 311.Ar id 312modifier and as a second argument the state ID and optional creator ID. 313To kill a state with ID 4823e84500000003 use: 314.Pp 315.Dl # pfctl -k id -k 4823e84500000003 316.Pp 317To kill a state with ID 4823e84500000018 created from a backup 318firewall with hostid 00000002 use: 319.Pp 320.Dl # pfctl -k id -k 4823e84500000018/2 321.Pp 322It is also possible to kill states created from a rule with the route-to/reply-to 323parameter set to route the connection through a particular gateway. 324Note that rules routing via the default routing table (not via a route-to 325rule) will have their rt_addr set as 0.0.0.0 or ::. 326To kill all states using a gateway of 192.168.0.1 use: 327.Pp 328.Dl # pfctl -k gateway -k 192.168.0.1 329.Pp 330A network prefix length can also be specified. 331To kill all states using a gateway in 192.168.0.0/24: 332.Pp 333.Dl # pfctl -k gateway -k 192.168.0.0/24 334.Pp 335.It Fl M 336Kill matching states in the opposite direction (on other interfaces) when 337killing states. 338This applies to states killed using the -k option and also will apply to the 339flush command when flushing states. 340This is useful when an interface is specified when flushing states. 341Example: 342.Pp 343.Dl # pfctl -M -i interface -Fs 344.Pp 345.It Fl m 346Merge in explicitly given options without resetting those 347which are omitted. 348Allows single options to be modified without disturbing the others: 349.Bd -literal -offset indent 350# echo "set loginterface fxp0" | pfctl -mf - 351.Ed 352.It Fl N 353Load only the NAT rules present in the rule file. 354Other rules and options are ignored. 355.It Fl n 356Do not actually load rules, just parse them. 357.It Fl O 358Load only the options present in the rule file. 359Other rules and options are ignored. 360.It Fl o Ar level 361Control the ruleset optimizer, overriding any rule file settings. 362.Pp 363.Bl -tag -width xxxxxxxxxxxx -compact 364.It Fl o Cm none 365Disable the ruleset optimizer. 366.It Fl o Cm basic 367Enable basic ruleset optimizations. 368This is the default behaviour. 369.It Fl o Cm profile 370Enable basic ruleset optimizations with profiling. 371.El 372For further information on the ruleset optimizer, see 373.Xr pf.conf 5 . 374.It Fl P 375Do not perform service name lookup for port specific rules, 376instead display the ports numerically. 377.It Fl p Ar device 378Use the device file 379.Ar device 380instead of the default 381.Pa /dev/pf . 382.It Fl q 383Only print errors and warnings. 384.It Fl R 385Load only the filter rules present in the rule file. 386Other rules and options are ignored. 387.It Fl r 388Perform reverse DNS lookups on states when displaying them. 389.It Fl s Ar modifier 390Show the filter parameters specified by 391.Ar modifier 392(may be abbreviated): 393.Pp 394.Bl -tag -width xxxxxxxxxxxxx -compact 395.It Fl s Cm nat 396Show the currently loaded NAT rules. 397.It Fl s Cm queue 398Show the currently loaded queue rules. 399When used together with 400.Fl v , 401per-queue statistics are also shown. 402When used together with 403.Fl v v , 404.Nm 405will loop and show updated queue statistics every five seconds, including 406measured bandwidth and packets per second. 407.It Fl s Cm ether 408Show the currently loaded Ethernet rules. 409When used together with 410.Fl v , 411the per-rule statistics (number of evaluations, 412packets, and bytes) are also shown. 413.It Fl s Cm rules 414Show the currently loaded filter rules. 415When used together with 416.Fl v , 417the per-rule statistics (number of evaluations, 418packets, and bytes) are also shown. 419Note that the 420.Dq skip step 421optimization done automatically by the kernel 422will skip evaluation of rules where possible. 423Packets passed statefully are counted in the rule that created the state 424(even though the rule is not evaluated more than once for the entire 425connection). 426.It Fl s Cm Anchors 427Show the currently loaded anchors directly attached to the main ruleset. 428If 429.Fl a Ar anchor 430is specified as well, the anchors loaded directly below the given 431.Ar anchor 432are shown instead. 433If 434.Fl v 435is specified, all anchors attached under the target anchor will be 436displayed recursively. 437.It Fl s Cm states 438Show the contents of the state table. 439.It Fl s Cm Sources 440Show the contents of the source tracking table. 441.It Fl s Cm info 442Show filter information (statistics and counters). 443When used together with 444.Fl v , 445source tracking statistics are also shown. 446.It Fl s Cm Running 447Show the running status and provide a non-zero exit status when disabled. 448.It Fl s Cm labels 449Show per-rule statistics (label, evaluations, packets total, bytes total, 450packets in, bytes in, packets out, bytes out, state creations) of 451filter rules with labels, useful for accounting. 452.It Fl s Cm timeouts 453Show the current global timeouts. 454.It Fl s Cm memory 455Show the current pool memory hard limits. 456.It Fl s Cm Tables 457Show the list of tables. 458.It Fl s Cm osfp 459Show the list of operating system fingerprints. 460.It Fl s Cm Interfaces 461Show the list of interfaces and interface drivers available to PF. 462When used together with 463.Fl v , 464it additionally lists which interfaces have skip rules activated. 465When used together with 466.Fl vv , 467interface statistics are also shown. 468.Fl i 469can be used to select an interface or a group of interfaces. 470.It Fl s Cm all 471Show all of the above, except for the lists of interfaces and operating 472system fingerprints. 473.El 474.It Fl T Ar command Op Ar address ... 475Specify the 476.Ar command 477(may be abbreviated) to apply to the table. 478Commands include: 479.Pp 480.Bl -tag -width xxxxxxxxxxxx -compact 481.It Fl T Cm kill 482Kill a table. 483.It Fl T Cm flush 484Flush all addresses of a table. 485.It Fl T Cm add 486Add one or more addresses in a table. 487Automatically create a nonexisting table. 488.It Fl T Cm delete 489Delete one or more addresses from a table. 490.It Fl T Cm expire Ar number 491Delete addresses which had their statistics cleared more than 492.Ar number 493seconds ago. 494For entries which have never had their statistics cleared, 495.Ar number 496refers to the time they were added to the table. 497.It Fl T Cm replace 498Replace the addresses of the table. 499Automatically create a nonexisting table. 500.It Fl T Cm show 501Show the content (addresses) of a table. 502.It Fl T Cm test 503Test if the given addresses match a table. 504.It Fl T Cm zero 505Clear all the statistics of a table. 506.It Fl T Cm load 507Load only the table definitions from 508.Xr pf.conf 5 . 509This is used in conjunction with the 510.Fl f 511flag, as in: 512.Bd -literal -offset indent 513# pfctl -Tl -f pf.conf 514.Ed 515.El 516.Pp 517For the 518.Cm add , 519.Cm delete , 520.Cm replace , 521and 522.Cm test 523commands, the list of addresses can be specified either directly on the command 524line and/or in an unformatted text file, using the 525.Fl f 526flag. 527Comments starting with a 528.Sq # 529are allowed in the text file. 530With these commands, the 531.Fl v 532flag can also be used once or twice, in which case 533.Nm 534will print the 535detailed result of the operation for each individual address, prefixed by 536one of the following letters: 537.Pp 538.Bl -tag -width XXX -compact 539.It A 540The address/network has been added. 541.It C 542The address/network has been changed (negated). 543.It D 544The address/network has been deleted. 545.It M 546The address matches 547.Po 548.Cm test 549operation only 550.Pc . 551.It X 552The address/network is duplicated and therefore ignored. 553.It Y 554The address/network cannot be added/deleted due to conflicting 555.Sq \&! 556attributes. 557.It Z 558The address/network has been cleared (statistics). 559.El 560.Pp 561Each table can maintain a set of counters that can be retrieved using the 562.Fl v 563flag of 564.Nm . 565For example, the following commands define a wide open firewall which will keep 566track of packets going to or coming from the 567.Ox 568FTP server. 569The following commands configure the firewall and send 10 pings to the FTP 570server: 571.Bd -literal -offset indent 572# printf "table <test> counters { ftp.openbsd.org }\en \e 573 pass out to <test>\en" | pfctl -f- 574# ping -qc10 ftp.openbsd.org 575.Ed 576.Pp 577We can now use the table 578.Cm show 579command to output, for each address and packet direction, the number of packets 580and bytes that are being passed or blocked by rules referencing the table. 581The time at which the current accounting started is also shown with the 582.Dq Cleared 583line. 584.Bd -literal -offset indent 585# pfctl -t test -vTshow 586 129.128.5.191 587 Cleared: Thu Feb 13 18:55:18 2003 588 In/Block: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 589 In/Pass: [ Packets: 10 Bytes: 840 ] 590 Out/Block: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 591 Out/Pass: [ Packets: 10 Bytes: 840 ] 592.Ed 593.Pp 594Similarly, it is possible to view global information about the tables 595by using the 596.Fl v 597modifier twice and the 598.Fl s 599.Cm Tables 600command. 601This will display the number of addresses on each table, 602the number of rules which reference the table, and the global 603packet statistics for the whole table: 604.Bd -literal -offset indent 605# pfctl -vvsTables 606--a-r-C test 607 Addresses: 1 608 Cleared: Thu Feb 13 18:55:18 2003 609 References: [ Anchors: 0 Rules: 1 ] 610 Evaluations: [ NoMatch: 3496 Match: 1 ] 611 In/Block: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 612 In/Pass: [ Packets: 10 Bytes: 840 ] 613 In/XPass: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 614 Out/Block: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 615 Out/Pass: [ Packets: 10 Bytes: 840 ] 616 Out/XPass: [ Packets: 0 Bytes: 0 ] 617.Ed 618.Pp 619As we can see here, only one packet \- the initial ping request \- matched the 620table, but all packets passing as the result of the state are correctly 621accounted for. 622Reloading the table(s) or ruleset will not affect packet accounting in any way. 623The two 624.Dq XPass 625counters are incremented instead of the 626.Dq Pass 627counters when a 628.Dq stateful 629packet is passed but does not match the table anymore. 630This will happen in our example if someone flushes the table while the 631.Xr ping 8 632command is running. 633.Pp 634When used with a single 635.Fl v , 636.Nm 637will only display the first line containing the table flags and name. 638The flags are defined as follows: 639.Pp 640.Bl -tag -width XXX -compact 641.It c 642For constant tables, which cannot be altered outside 643.Xr pf.conf 5 . 644.It p 645For persistent tables, which do not get automatically killed when no rules 646refer to them. 647.It a 648For tables which are part of the 649.Em active 650tableset. 651Tables without this flag do not really exist, cannot contain addresses, and are 652only listed if the 653.Fl g 654flag is given. 655.It i 656For tables which are part of the 657.Em inactive 658tableset. 659This flag can only be witnessed briefly during the loading of 660.Xr pf.conf 5 . 661.It r 662For tables which are referenced (used) by rules. 663.It h 664This flag is set when a table in the main ruleset is hidden by one or more 665tables of the same name from anchors attached below it. 666.It C 667This flag is set when per-address counters are enabled on the table. 668.El 669.It Fl t Ar table 670Specify the name of the table. 671.It Fl v 672Produce more verbose output. 673A second use of 674.Fl v 675will produce even more verbose output including ruleset warnings. 676See the previous section for its effect on table commands. 677.It Fl x Ar level 678Set the debug 679.Ar level 680(may be abbreviated) to one of the following: 681.Pp 682.Bl -tag -width xxxxxxxxxxxx -compact 683.It Fl x Cm none 684Do not generate debug messages. 685.It Fl x Cm urgent 686Generate debug messages only for serious errors. 687.It Fl x Cm misc 688Generate debug messages for various errors. 689.It Fl x Cm loud 690Generate debug messages for common conditions. 691.El 692.It Fl z 693Clear per-rule statistics. 694.El 695.Sh FILES 696.Bl -tag -width "/etc/pf.conf" -compact 697.It Pa /etc/pf.conf 698Packet filter rules file. 699.It Pa /etc/pf.os 700Passive operating system fingerprint database. 701.El 702.Sh SEE ALSO 703.Xr pf 4 , 704.Xr pf.conf 5 , 705.Xr pf.os 5 , 706.Xr rc.conf 5 , 707.Xr services 5 , 708.Xr sysctl.conf 5 , 709.Xr authpf 8 , 710.Xr ftp-proxy 8 , 711.Xr rc 8 , 712.Xr sysctl 8 713.Sh HISTORY 714The 715.Nm 716program and the 717.Xr pf 4 718filter mechanism appeared in 719.Ox 3.0 . 720They first appeared in 721.Fx 5.3 722ported from the version in 723.Ox 3.5 724