xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/stf.4 (revision 681ce946f33e75c590e97c53076e86dff1fe8f4a)
1.\"     $KAME: stf.4,v 1.35 2001/05/02 06:24:49 itojun Exp $
2.\"
3.\" Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, and 1998 WIDE Project.
4.\" All rights reserved.
5.\"
6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8.\" are met:
9.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
12.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
13.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
14.\" 3. Neither the name of the project nor the names of its contributors
15.\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
16.\"    without specific prior written permission.
17.\"
18.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE PROJECT AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
19.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
20.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
21.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE PROJECT OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
22.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
23.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
24.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
25.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
26.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
27.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
28.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
29.\"
30.\" $FreeBSD$
31.\"
32.Dd November 16, 2021
33.Dt STF 4
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm stf
37.Nd
38.Tn 6to4
39tunnel interface
40.Sh SYNOPSIS
41.Cd "device stf"
42.Sh DESCRIPTION
43The
44.Nm
45interface supports
46.Dq 6to4
47and
48.Dq 6rd
49IPv6 in IPv4 encapsulation.
50It can tunnel IPv6 traffic over IPv4, as specified in
51.Li RFC3056
52or
53.Li RFC5969 .
54.Pp
55For ordinary nodes in a 6to4 or 6RD site, you do not need
56.Nm
57interface.
58The
59.Nm
60interface is necessary for site border routers
61(called
62.Dq 6to4 routers
63or
64.Dq 6rd Customer Edge (CE)
65in the specification).
66.Pp
67Each
68.Nm
69interface is created at runtime using interface cloning.
70This is
71most easily done with the
72.Xr ifconfig 8
73.Cm create
74command or using the
75.Va cloned_interfaces
76variable in
77.Xr rc.conf 5 .
78.Sh 6to4
79.Pp
80Due to the way 6to4 protocol is specified,
81.Nm
82interface requires certain configuration to work properly.
83Single
84(no more than 1)
85valid 6to4 address needs to be configured to the interface.
86.Dq A valid 6to4 address
87is an address which has the following properties.
88If any of the following properties are not satisfied,
89.Nm
90raises runtime error on packet transmission.
91Read the specification for more details.
92.Bl -bullet
93.It
94matches
95.Li 2002:xxyy:zzuu::/48
96where
97.Li xxyy:zzuu
98is a hexadecimal notation of an IPv4 address for the node.
99IPv4 address can be taken from any of interfaces your node has.
100Since the specification forbids the use of IPv4 private address,
101the address needs to be a global IPv4 address.
102.It
103Subnet identifier portion
104(48th to 63rd bit)
105and interface identifier portion
106(lower 64 bits)
107are properly filled to avoid address collisions.
108.El
109.Pp
110If you would like the node to behave as a relay router,
111the prefix length for the IPv6 interface address needs to be 16 so that
112the node would consider any 6to4 destination as
113.Dq on-link .
114If you would like to restrict 6to4 peers to be inside certain IPv4 prefix,
115you may want to configure IPv6 prefix length as
116.Dq 16 + IPv4 prefix length .
117.Nm
118interface will check the IPv4 source address on packets,
119if the IPv6 prefix length is larger than 16.
120.Pp
121.Nm
122can be configured to be ECN friendly.
123This can be configured by
124.Dv IFF_LINK1 .
125See
126.Xr gif 4
127for details.
128.Pp
129Please note that 6to4 specification is written as
130.Dq accept tunnelled packet from everyone
131tunnelling device.
132By enabling
133.Nm
134device, you are making it much easier for malicious parties to inject
135fabricated IPv6 packet to your node.
136Also, malicious party can inject an IPv6 packet with fabricated source address
137to make your node generate improper tunnelled packet.
138Administrators must take caution when enabling the interface.
139To prevent possible attacks,
140.Nm
141interface filters out the following packets.
142Note that the checks are no way complete:
143.Bl -bullet
144.It
145Packets with IPv4 unspecified address as outer IPv4 source/destination
146.Pq Li 0.0.0.0/8
147.It
148Packets with loopback address as outer IPv4 source/destination
149.Pq Li 127.0.0.0/8
150.It
151Packets with IPv4 multicast address as outer IPv4 source/destination
152.Pq Li 224.0.0.0/4
153.It
154Packets with limited broadcast address as outer IPv4 source/destination
155.Pq Li 255.0.0.0/8
156.It
157Packets with private address as outer IPv4 source/destination
158.Pq Li 10.0.0.0/8 , 172.16.0.0/12 , 192.168.0.0/16
159.It
160Packets with subnet broadcast address as outer IPv4 source/destination.
161The check is made against subnet broadcast addresses for
162all of the directly connected subnets.
163.It
164Packets that does not pass ingress filtering.
165Outer IPv4 source address must meet the IPv4 topology on the routing table.
166Ingress filter can be turned off by
167.Dv IFF_LINK2
168bit.
169.It
170The same set of rules are applied against the IPv4 address embedded into
171inner IPv6 address, if the IPv6 address matches 6to4 prefix.
172.El
173.Pp
174It is recommended to filter/audit
175incoming IPv4 packet with IP protocol number 41, as necessary.
176It is also recommended to filter/audit encapsulated IPv6 packets as well.
177You may also want to run normal ingress filter against inner IPv6 address
178to avoid spoofing.
179.Pp
180By setting the
181.Dv IFF_LINK0
182flag on the
183.Nm
184interface, it is possible to disable the input path,
185making the direct attacks from the outside impossible.
186Note, however, there are other security risks exist.
187If you wish to use the configuration,
188you must not advertise your 6to4 address to others.
189.\"
190.Sh 6rd
191Like
192.Dq 6to4
193.Dq 6rd
194also requires configuration before it can be used.
195The required configuration parameters are:
196.Bl -bullet
197.It
198The IPv6 address and prefix length.
199.It
200The border router IPv4 address.
201.It
202The IPv4 WAN address.
203.It
204The prefix length of the IPv4 WAN address.
205.El
206.Pp
207These can parameters are all configured through
208.Xr ifconfig 8 .
209.Pp
210The IPv6 address and prefix length can be configured like any other IPv6 address.
211Note that the prefix length is the IPv6 prefix length excluding the embedded
212IPv4 address bits.
213The prefix length of the delegated network is the sum of the IPv6 prefix length
214and the IPv4 prefix length.
215.Pp
216The border router IPv4 address is configured with the
217.Xr ifconfig 8
218.Cm stfv4br
219command.
220.Pp
221The IPv4 WAN address and IPv4 prefix length are configured using the
222.Xr ifconfig 8
223.Cm stfv4net
224command.
225.Sh SYSCTL VARIABLES
226The following
227.Xr sysctl 8
228variables can be used to control the behavior of the
229.Nm stf .
230The default value is shown next to each variable.
231.Bl -tag -width indent
232.It Va net.link.stf.permit_rfc1918 : No 0
233The RFC3056 requires the use of globally unique 32-bit IPv4
234addresses.
235This sysctl variable controls the behaviour of this requirement.
236When it set to not 0,
237.Nm stf
238allows the use of private IPv4 addresses described in the RFC1918.
239This may be useful for an Intranet environment or when some mechanisms
240of network address translation (NAT) are used.
241.El
242.Sh EXAMPLES
243Note that
244.Li 8504:0506
245is equal to
246.Li 133.4.5.6 ,
247written in hexadecimals.
248.Bd -literal
249# ifconfig ne0 inet 133.4.5.6 netmask 0xffffff00
250# ifconfig stf0 inet6 2002:8504:0506:0000:a00:5aff:fe38:6f86 \\
251	prefixlen 16 alias
252.Ed
253.Pp
254The following configuration accepts packets from IPv4 source
255.Li 9.1.0.0/16
256only.
257It emits 6to4 packet only for IPv6 destination 2002:0901::/32
258(IPv4 destination will match
259.Li 9.1.0.0/16 ) .
260.Bd -literal
261# ifconfig ne0 inet 9.1.2.3 netmask 0xffff0000
262# ifconfig stf0 inet6 2002:0901:0203:0000:a00:5aff:fe38:6f86 \\
263	prefixlen 32 alias
264.Ed
265.Pp
266The following configuration uses the
267.Nm
268interface as an output-only device.
269You need to have alternative IPv6 connectivity
270(other than 6to4)
271to use this configuration.
272For outbound traffic, you can reach other 6to4 networks efficiently via
273.Nm stf .
274For inbound traffic, you will not receive any 6to4-tunneled packets
275(less security drawbacks).
276Be careful not to advertise your 6to4 prefix to others
277.Pq Li 2002:8504:0506::/48 ,
278and not to use your 6to4 prefix as a source.
279.Bd -literal
280# ifconfig ne0 inet 133.4.5.6 netmask 0xffffff00
281# ifconfig stf0 inet6 2002:8504:0506:0000:a00:5aff:fe38:6f86 \\
282	prefixlen 16 alias deprecated link0
283# route add -inet6 2002:: -prefixlen 16 ::1
284# route change -inet6 2002:: -prefixlen 16 ::1 -ifp stf0
285.Ed
286.Pp
287The following example configures a
288.Dq 6rd
289tunnel on a
290.Dq 6rd CE
291where the ISP's
292.Dq 6rd
293IPv6 prefix is 2001:db8::/32.
294The border router is 192.0.2.1.
295The
296.Dq 6rd CE
297has a WAN address of 192.0.2.2 and the full IPv4 address is embedded in the
298.Dq 6rd IPv6 address:
299.Bd -literal
300# ifconfig stf0 inet6 2001:db8:c000:0202:: prefixlen 32 up
301# ifconfig stf0 stfv4br 192.0.2.1
302# ifconfig stf0 stfv4net 192.0.2.2/32
303.Ed
304.\"
305.Sh SEE ALSO
306.Xr gif 4 ,
307.Xr inet 4 ,
308.Xr inet6 4
309.Rs
310.%A Brian Carpenter
311.%A Keith Moore
312.%T "Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4 Clouds"
313.%D February 2001
314.%R RFC
315.%N 3056
316.Re
317.Rs
318.%A Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino
319.%T "Possible abuse against IPv6 transition technologies"
320.%D July 2000
321.%N draft-itojun-ipv6-transition-abuse-01.txt
322.%O work in progress
323.Re
324.\"
325.Sh HISTORY
326The
327.Nm
328device first appeared in WIDE/KAME IPv6 stack.
329.\"
330.Sh BUGS
331No more than one
332.Nm
333interface is allowed for a node,
334and no more than one IPv6 interface address is allowed for an
335.Nm
336interface.
337It is to avoid source address selection conflicts
338between IPv6 layer and IPv4 layer,
339and to cope with ingress filtering rule on the other side.
340This is a feature to make
341.Nm
342work right for all occasions.
343