1.\" Copyright (c) 2001, Matthew Dillon. Terms and conditions are those of 2.\" the BSD Copyright as specified in the file "/usr/src/COPYRIGHT" in 3.\" the source tree. 4.\" 5.\" $FreeBSD$ 6.\" 7.Dd May 26, 2001 8.Dt FIREWALL 7 9.Os 10.Sh NAME 11.Nm firewall 12.Nd simple firewalls under FreeBSD 13.Sh FIREWALL BASICS 14A Firewall is most commonly used to protect an internal network 15from an outside network by preventing the outside network from 16making arbitrary connections into the internal network. Firewalls 17are also used to prevent outside entities from spoofing internal 18IP addresses and to isolate services such as NFS or SMBFS (Windows 19file sharing) within LAN segments. 20.Pp 21The 22.Fx 23firewalling system also has the capability to limit bandwidth using 24.Xr dummynet 4 . 25This feature can be useful when you need to guarantee a certain 26amount of bandwidth for a critical purpose. For example, if you 27are doing video conferencing over the Internet via your 28office T1 (1.5 MBits), you may wish to bandwidth-limit all other 29T1 traffic to 1 MBit in order to reserve at least 0.5 MBits 30for your video conferencing connections. Similarly if you are 31running a popular web or ftp site from a colocation facility 32you might want to limit bandwidth to prevent excessive band 33width charges from your provider. 34.Pp 35Finally, 36.Fx 37firewalls may be used to divert packets or change the next-hop 38address for packets to help route them to the correct destination. 39Packet diversion is most often used to support NAT (network 40address translation), which allows an internal network using 41a private IP space to make connections to the outside for browsing 42or other purposes. 43.Pp 44Constructing a firewall may appear to be trivial, but most people 45get them wrong. The most common mistake is to create an exclusive 46firewall rather then an inclusive firewall. An exclusive firewall 47allows all packets through except for those matching a set of rules. 48An inclusive firewall allows only packets matching the rulset 49through. Inclusive firewalls are much, much safer then exclusive 50firewalls but a tad more difficult to build properly. The 51second most common mistake is to blackhole everything except the 52particular port you want to let through. TCP/IP needs to be able 53to get certain types of ICMP errors to function properly - for 54example, to implement MTU discovery. Also, a number of common 55system daemons make reverse connections to the 56.Sy auth 57service in an attempt to authenticate the user making a connection. 58Auth is rather dangerous but the proper implementation is to return 59a TCP reset for the connection attempt rather then simply blackholing 60the packet. We cover these and other quirks involved with constructing 61a firewall in the sample firewall section below. 62.Sh IPFW KERNEL CONFIGURATION 63You do not need to create a customer kernel to use the IP firewalling features. 64If you enable firewalling in your 65.Em /etc/rc.conf 66(see below), the ipfw kernel module will be loaded automatically. However, 67if you are paranoid you can compile IPFW directly into the 68.Fx 69kernel by using the 70.Sy IPFIREWALL 71option set. If compiled in the kernel defaults its firewall to deny all 72packets by default, which means that if you do not load in 73a permissive ruleset via 74.Em /etc/rc.conf , 75rebooting into your new kernel will take the network offline 76and will prevent you from being able to access it if you 77are not sitting at the console. It is also quite common to 78update a kernel to a new release and reboot before updating 79the binaries. This can result in an incompatibility between 80the 81.Xr ipfw 8 82program and the kernel which prevents it from running in the 83boot sequence, also resulting in an inaccessible machine. 84Because of these problems the 85.Sy IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT 86kernel option is also available which changes the default firewall 87to pass through all packets. Note, however, that using this option 88may open a small window of opportunity during booting where your 89firewall passes all packets. Still, it's a good option to use 90while getting up to speed with 91.Fx 92firewalling. Get rid of it once you understand how it all works 93to close the loophole, though. There is a third option called 94.Sy IPDIVERT 95which allows you to use the firewall to divert packets to a user program 96and is necessary if you wish to use 97.Xr natd 8 98to give private internal networks access to the outside world. 99If you want to be able to limit the bandwidth used by certain types of 100traffic, the 101.Sy DUMMYNET 102option must be used to enable 103.Em ipfw pipe 104rules. 105.Sh SAMPLE IPFW-BASED FIREWALL 106Here is an example ipfw-based firewall taken from a machine with three 107interface cards. fxp0 is connected to the 'exposed' LAN. Machines 108on this LAN are dual-homed with both internal 10. IP addresses and 109Internet-routed IP addresses. In our example, 192.100.5.x represents 110the Internet-routed IP block while 10.x.x.x represents the internal 111networks. While it isn't relevant to the example, 10.0.1.x is 112assigned as the internal address block for the LAN on fxp0, 10.0.2.x 113for the LAN on fxp1, and 10.0.3.x for the LAN on fxp2. 114.Pp 115In this example we want to isolate all three LANs from the Internet 116as well as isolate them from each other, and we want to give all 117internal addresses access to the Internet through a NAT gateway running 118on this machine. To make the NAT gateway work, the firewall machine 119is given two Internet-exposed addresses on fxp0 in addition to an 120internal 10. address on fxp0: one exposed address (not shown) 121represents the machine's official address, and the second exposed 122address (192.100.5.5 in our example) represents the NAT gateway 123rendezvous IP. We make the example more complex by giving the machines 124on the exposed LAN internal 10.0.0.x addresses as well as exposed 125addresses. The idea here is that you can bind internal services 126to internal addresses even on exposed machines and still protect 127those services from the Internet. The only services you run on 128exposed IP addresses would be the ones you wish to expose to the 129Internet. 130.Pp 131It is important to note that the 10.0.0.x network in our example 132is not protected by our firewall. You must make sure that your 133Internet router protects this network from outside spoofing. 134Also, in our example, we pretty much give the exposed hosts free 135reign on our internal network when operating services through 136internal IP addresses (10.0.0.x). This is somewhat of security 137risk... what if an exposed host is compromised? To remove the 138risk and force everything coming in via LAN0 to go through 139the firewall, remove rules 01010 and 01011. 140.Pp 141Finally, note that the use of internal addresses represents a 142big piece of our firewall protection mechanism. With proper 143spoofing safeguards in place, nothing outside can directly 144access an internal (LAN1 or LAN2) host. 145.Bd -literal 146# /etc/rc.conf 147# 148firewall_enable="YES" 149firewall_type="/etc/ipfw.conf" 150 151# temporary port binding range let 152# through the firewall. 153# 154# NOTE: heavily loaded services running through the firewall may require 155# a larger port range for local-size binding. 4000-10000 or 4000-30000 156# might be a better choice. 157ip_portrange_first=4000 158ip_portrange_last=5000 159\&... 160.Ed 161.Pp 162.Bd -literal 163# /etc/ipfw.conf 164# 165# FIREWALL: the firewall machine / nat gateway 166# LAN0 10.0.0.X and 192.100.5.X (dual homed) 167# LAN1 10.0.1.X 168# LAN2 10.0.2.X 169# sw: ethernet switch (unmanaged) 170# 171# 192.100.5.x represents IP addresses exposed to the Internet 172# (i.e. Internet routeable). 10.x.x.x represent internal IPs 173# (not exposed) 174# 175# [LAN1] 176# ^ 177# | 178# FIREWALL -->[LAN2] 179# | 180# [LAN0] 181# | 182# +--> exposed host A 183# +--> exposed host B 184# +--> exposed host C 185# | 186# INTERNET (secondary firewall) 187# ROUTER 188# | 189# [Internet] 190# 191# NOT SHOWN: The INTERNET ROUTER must contain rules to disallow 192# all packets with source IP addresses in the 10. block in order 193# to protect the dual-homed 10.0.0.x block. Exposed hosts are 194# not otherwise protected in this example - they should only bind 195# exposed services to exposed IPs but can safely bind internal 196# services to internal IPs. 197# 198# The NAT gateway works by taking packets sent from internal 199# IP addresses to external IP addresses and routing them to natd, which 200# is listening on port 8668. This is handled by rule 00300. Data coming 201# back to natd from the outside world must also be routed to natd using 202# rule 00301. To make the example interesting, we note that we do 203# NOT have to run internal requests to exposed hosts through natd 204# (rule 00290) because those exposed hosts know about our 205# 10. network. This can reduce the load on natd. Also note that we 206# of course do not have to route internal<->internal traffic through 207# natd since those hosts know how to route our 10. internal network. 208# The natd command we run from /etc/rc.local is shown below. See 209# also the in-kernel version of natd, ipnat. 210# 211# natd -s -u -a 208.161.114.67 212# 213# 214add 00290 skipto 1000 ip from 10.0.0.0/8 to 192.100.5.0/24 215add 00300 divert 8668 ip from 10.0.0.0/8 to not 10.0.0.0/8 216add 00301 divert 8668 ip from not 10.0.0.0/8 to 192.100.5.5 217 218# Short cut the rules to avoid running high bandwidths through 219# the entire rule set. Allow established tcp connections through, 220# and shortcut all outgoing packets under the assumption that 221# we need only firewall incoming packets. 222# 223# Allowing established tcp connections through creates a small 224# hole but may be necessary to avoid overloading your firewall. 225# If you are worried, you can move the rule to after the spoof 226# checks. 227# 228add 01000 allow tcp from any to any established 229add 01001 allow all from any to any out via fxp0 230add 01001 allow all from any to any out via fxp1 231add 01001 allow all from any to any out via fxp2 232 233# Spoof protection. This depends on how well you trust your 234# internal networks. Packets received via fxp1 MUST come from 235# 10.0.1.x. Packets received via fxp2 MUST come from 10.0.2.x. 236# Packets received via fxp0 cannot come from the LAN1 or LAN2 237# blocks. We can't protect 10.0.0.x here, the Internet router 238# must do that for us. 239# 240add 01500 deny all from not 10.0.1.0/24 in via fxp1 241add 01500 deny all from not 10.0.2.0/24 in via fxp2 242add 01501 deny all from 10.0.1.0/24 in via fxp0 243add 01501 deny all from 10.0.2.0/24 in via fxp0 244 245# In this example rule set there are no restrictions between 246# internal hosts, even those on the exposed LAN (as long as 247# they use an internal IP address). This represents a 248# potential security hole (what if an exposed host is 249# compromised?). If you want full restrictions to apply 250# between the three LANs, firewalling them off from each 251# other for added security, remove these two rules. 252# 253# If you want to isolate LAN1 and LAN2, but still want 254# to give exposed hosts free reign with each other, get 255# rid of rule 01010 and keep rule 01011. 256# 257# (commented out, uncomment for less restrictive firewall) 258#add 01010 allow all from 10.0.0.0/8 to 10.0.0.0/8 259#add 01011 allow all from 192.100.5.0/24 to 192.100.5.0/24 260# 261 262# SPECIFIC SERVICES ALLOWED FROM SPECIFIC LANS 263# 264# If using a more restrictive firewall, allow specific LANs 265# access to specific services running on the firewall itself. 266# In this case we assume LAN1 needs access to filesharing running 267# on the firewall. If using a less restrictive firewall 268# (allowing rule 01010), you don't need these rules. 269# 270add 01012 allow tcp from 10.0.1.0/8 to 10.0.1.1 139 271add 01012 allow udp from 10.0.1.0/8 to 10.0.1.1 137,138 272 273# GENERAL SERVICES ALLOWED TO CROSS INTERNAL AND EXPOSED LANS 274# 275# We allow specific UDP services through: DNS lookups, ntalk, and ntp. 276# Note that internal services are protected by virtue of having 277# spoof-proof internal IP addresses (10. net), so these rules 278# really only apply to services bound to exposed IPs. We have 279# to allow UDP fragments or larger fragmented UDP packets will 280# not survive the firewall. 281# 282# If we want to expose high-numbered temporary service ports 283# for things like DNS lookup responses we can use a port range, 284# in this example 4000-65535, and we set to /etc/rc.conf variables 285# on all exposed machines to make sure they bind temporary ports 286# to the exposed port range (see rc.conf example above) 287# 288add 02000 allow udp from any to any 4000-65535,domain,ntalk,ntp 289add 02500 allow udp from any to any frag 290 291# Allow similar services for TCP. Again, these only apply to 292# services bound to exposed addresses. NOTE: we allow 'auth' 293# through but do not actually run an identd server on any exposed 294# port. This allows the machine being authed to respond with a 295# TCP RESET. Throwing the packet away would result in delays 296# when connecting to remote services that do reverse ident lookups. 297# 298# Note that we do not allow tcp fragments through, and that we do 299# not allow fragments in general (except for UDP fragments). We 300# expect the TCP mtu discovery protocol to work properly so there 301# should be no TCP fragments. 302# 303add 03000 allow tcp from any to any http,https 304add 03000 allow tcp from any to any 4000-65535,ssh,smtp,domain,ntalk 305add 03000 allow tcp from any to any auth,pop3,ftp,ftp-data 306 307# It is important to allow certain ICMP types through, here is a list 308# of general ICMP types. Note that it is important to let ICMP type 3 309# through. 310# 311# 0 Echo Reply 312# 3 Destination Unreachable (used by TCP MTU discovery, aka 313# packet-too-big) 314# 4 Source Quench (typically not allowed) 315# 5 Redirect (typically not allowed - can be dangerous!) 316# 8 Echo 317# 11 Time Exceeded 318# 12 Parameter Problem 319# 13 Timestamp 320# 14 Timestamp Reply 321# 322# Sometimes people need to allow ICMP REDIRECT packets, which is 323# type 5, but if you allow it make sure that your Internet router 324# disallows it. 325 326add 04000 allow icmp from any to any icmptypes 0,3,8,11,12,13,14 327 328# log any remaining fragments that get through. Might be useful, 329# otherwise don't bother. Have a final deny rule as a safety to 330# guarantee that your firewall is inclusive no matter how the kernel 331# is configured. 332# 333add 05000 deny log ip from any to any frag 334add 06000 deny all from any to any 335.Ed 336.Sh PORT BINDING INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL SERVICES 337We've mentioned multi-homing hosts and binding services to internal or 338external addresses but we haven't really explained it. When you have a 339host with multiple IP addresses assigned to it, you can bind services run 340on that host to specific IPs or interfaces rather then all IPs. Take 341the firewall machine for example: With three interfaces 342and two exposed IP addresses 343on one of those interfaces, the firewall machine is known by 5 different 344IP addresses (10.0.0.1, 10.0.1.1, 10.0.2.1, 192.100.5.5, and say 345192.100.5.1). If the firewall is providing file sharing services to the 346windows LAN segment (say it is LAN1), you can use samba's 'bind interfaces' 347directive to specifically bind it to just the LAN1 IP address. That 348way the file sharing services will not be made available to other LAN 349segments. The same goes for NFS. If LAN2 has your UNIX engineering 350workstations, you can tell nfsd to bind specifically to 10.0.2.1. You 351can specify how to bind virtually every service on the machine and you 352can use a light 353.Xr jail 8 354to indirectly bind services that do not otherwise give you the option. 355.Sh SEE ALSO 356.Xr ipnat 1 , 357.Xr dummynet 4 , 358.Xr ipnat 5 , 359.Xr rc.conf 5 , 360.Xr smb.conf 5 [ /usr/ports/net/samba ] , 361.Xr samba 7 [ /usr/ports/net/samba ] , 362.Xr config 8 , 363.Xr ipfw 8 , 364.Xr jail 8 , 365.Xr natd 8 , 366.Xr nfsd 8 367.Sh ADDITIONAL READING 368.Xr ipf 5 , 369.Xr ipf 8 , 370.Xr ipfstat 8 371.Sh HISTORY 372The 373.Nm 374manual page was originally written by 375.An Matthew Dillon 376and first appeared 377in 378.Fx 4.3 , 379May 2001. 380