xref: /freebsd/sys/netinet/ip_fw.h (revision aa0a1e58f0189b0fde359a8bda032887e72057fa)
1 /*-
2  * Copyright (c) 2002-2009 Luigi Rizzo, Universita` di Pisa
3  *
4  * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5  * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6  * are met:
7  * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9  * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10  *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11  *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12  *
13  * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
14  * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
15  * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
16  * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
17  * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
18  * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
19  * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
20  * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
21  * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
22  * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
23  * SUCH DAMAGE.
24  *
25  * $FreeBSD$
26  */
27 
28 #ifndef _IPFW2_H
29 #define _IPFW2_H
30 
31 /*
32  * The default rule number.  By the design of ip_fw, the default rule
33  * is the last one, so its number can also serve as the highest number
34  * allowed for a rule.  The ip_fw code relies on both meanings of this
35  * constant.
36  */
37 #define	IPFW_DEFAULT_RULE	65535
38 
39 /*
40  * The number of ipfw tables.  The maximum allowed table number is the
41  * (IPFW_TABLES_MAX - 1).
42  */
43 #define	IPFW_TABLES_MAX		128
44 
45 /*
46  * Most commands (queue, pipe, tag, untag, limit...) can have a 16-bit
47  * argument between 1 and 65534. The value 0 is unused, the value
48  * 65535 (IP_FW_TABLEARG) is used to represent 'tablearg', i.e. the
49  * can be 1..65534, or 65535 to indicate the use of a 'tablearg'
50  * result of the most recent table() lookup.
51  * Note that 16bit is only a historical limit, resulting from
52  * the use of a 16-bit fields for that value. In reality, we can have
53  * 2^32 pipes, queues, tag values and so on, and use 0 as a tablearg.
54  */
55 #define	IPFW_ARG_MIN		1
56 #define	IPFW_ARG_MAX		65534
57 #define IP_FW_TABLEARG		65535	/* XXX should use 0 */
58 
59 /*
60  * The kernel representation of ipfw rules is made of a list of
61  * 'instructions' (for all practical purposes equivalent to BPF
62  * instructions), which specify which fields of the packet
63  * (or its metadata) should be analysed.
64  *
65  * Each instruction is stored in a structure which begins with
66  * "ipfw_insn", and can contain extra fields depending on the
67  * instruction type (listed below).
68  * Note that the code is written so that individual instructions
69  * have a size which is a multiple of 32 bits. This means that, if
70  * such structures contain pointers or other 64-bit entities,
71  * (there is just one instance now) they may end up unaligned on
72  * 64-bit architectures, so the must be handled with care.
73  *
74  * "enum ipfw_opcodes" are the opcodes supported. We can have up
75  * to 256 different opcodes. When adding new opcodes, they should
76  * be appended to the end of the opcode list before O_LAST_OPCODE,
77  * this will prevent the ABI from being broken, otherwise users
78  * will have to recompile ipfw(8) when they update the kernel.
79  */
80 
81 enum ipfw_opcodes {		/* arguments (4 byte each)	*/
82 	O_NOP,
83 
84 	O_IP_SRC,		/* u32 = IP			*/
85 	O_IP_SRC_MASK,		/* ip = IP/mask			*/
86 	O_IP_SRC_ME,		/* none				*/
87 	O_IP_SRC_SET,		/* u32=base, arg1=len, bitmap	*/
88 
89 	O_IP_DST,		/* u32 = IP			*/
90 	O_IP_DST_MASK,		/* ip = IP/mask			*/
91 	O_IP_DST_ME,		/* none				*/
92 	O_IP_DST_SET,		/* u32=base, arg1=len, bitmap	*/
93 
94 	O_IP_SRCPORT,		/* (n)port list:mask 4 byte ea	*/
95 	O_IP_DSTPORT,		/* (n)port list:mask 4 byte ea	*/
96 	O_PROTO,		/* arg1=protocol		*/
97 
98 	O_MACADDR2,		/* 2 mac addr:mask		*/
99 	O_MAC_TYPE,		/* same as srcport		*/
100 
101 	O_LAYER2,		/* none				*/
102 	O_IN,			/* none				*/
103 	O_FRAG,			/* none				*/
104 
105 	O_RECV,			/* none				*/
106 	O_XMIT,			/* none				*/
107 	O_VIA,			/* none				*/
108 
109 	O_IPOPT,		/* arg1 = 2*u8 bitmap		*/
110 	O_IPLEN,		/* arg1 = len			*/
111 	O_IPID,			/* arg1 = id			*/
112 
113 	O_IPTOS,		/* arg1 = id			*/
114 	O_IPPRECEDENCE,		/* arg1 = precedence << 5	*/
115 	O_IPTTL,		/* arg1 = TTL			*/
116 
117 	O_IPVER,		/* arg1 = version		*/
118 	O_UID,			/* u32 = id			*/
119 	O_GID,			/* u32 = id			*/
120 	O_ESTAB,		/* none (tcp established)	*/
121 	O_TCPFLAGS,		/* arg1 = 2*u8 bitmap		*/
122 	O_TCPWIN,		/* arg1 = desired win		*/
123 	O_TCPSEQ,		/* u32 = desired seq.		*/
124 	O_TCPACK,		/* u32 = desired seq.		*/
125 	O_ICMPTYPE,		/* u32 = icmp bitmap		*/
126 	O_TCPOPTS,		/* arg1 = 2*u8 bitmap		*/
127 
128 	O_VERREVPATH,		/* none				*/
129 	O_VERSRCREACH,		/* none				*/
130 
131 	O_PROBE_STATE,		/* none				*/
132 	O_KEEP_STATE,		/* none				*/
133 	O_LIMIT,		/* ipfw_insn_limit		*/
134 	O_LIMIT_PARENT,		/* dyn_type, not an opcode.	*/
135 
136 	/*
137 	 * These are really 'actions'.
138 	 */
139 
140 	O_LOG,			/* ipfw_insn_log		*/
141 	O_PROB,			/* u32 = match probability	*/
142 
143 	O_CHECK_STATE,		/* none				*/
144 	O_ACCEPT,		/* none				*/
145 	O_DENY,			/* none 			*/
146 	O_REJECT,		/* arg1=icmp arg (same as deny)	*/
147 	O_COUNT,		/* none				*/
148 	O_SKIPTO,		/* arg1=next rule number	*/
149 	O_PIPE,			/* arg1=pipe number		*/
150 	O_QUEUE,		/* arg1=queue number		*/
151 	O_DIVERT,		/* arg1=port number		*/
152 	O_TEE,			/* arg1=port number		*/
153 	O_FORWARD_IP,		/* fwd sockaddr			*/
154 	O_FORWARD_MAC,		/* fwd mac			*/
155 	O_NAT,                  /* nope                         */
156 	O_REASS,                /* none                         */
157 
158 	/*
159 	 * More opcodes.
160 	 */
161 	O_IPSEC,		/* has ipsec history 		*/
162 	O_IP_SRC_LOOKUP,	/* arg1=table number, u32=value	*/
163 	O_IP_DST_LOOKUP,	/* arg1=table number, u32=value	*/
164 	O_ANTISPOOF,		/* none				*/
165 	O_JAIL,			/* u32 = id			*/
166 	O_ALTQ,			/* u32 = altq classif. qid	*/
167 	O_DIVERTED,		/* arg1=bitmap (1:loop, 2:out)	*/
168 	O_TCPDATALEN,		/* arg1 = tcp data len		*/
169 	O_IP6_SRC,		/* address without mask		*/
170 	O_IP6_SRC_ME,		/* my addresses			*/
171 	O_IP6_SRC_MASK,		/* address with the mask	*/
172 	O_IP6_DST,
173 	O_IP6_DST_ME,
174 	O_IP6_DST_MASK,
175 	O_FLOW6ID,		/* for flow id tag in the ipv6 pkt */
176 	O_ICMP6TYPE,		/* icmp6 packet type filtering	*/
177 	O_EXT_HDR,		/* filtering for ipv6 extension header */
178 	O_IP6,
179 
180 	/*
181 	 * actions for ng_ipfw
182 	 */
183 	O_NETGRAPH,		/* send to ng_ipfw		*/
184 	O_NGTEE,		/* copy to ng_ipfw		*/
185 
186 	O_IP4,
187 
188 	O_UNREACH6,		/* arg1=icmpv6 code arg (deny)  */
189 
190 	O_TAG,   		/* arg1=tag number */
191 	O_TAGGED,		/* arg1=tag number */
192 
193 	O_SETFIB,		/* arg1=FIB number */
194 	O_FIB,			/* arg1=FIB desired fib number */
195 
196 	O_SOCKARG,		/* socket argument */
197 
198 	O_LAST_OPCODE		/* not an opcode!		*/
199 };
200 
201 
202 /*
203  * The extension header are filtered only for presence using a bit
204  * vector with a flag for each header.
205  */
206 #define EXT_FRAGMENT	0x1
207 #define EXT_HOPOPTS	0x2
208 #define EXT_ROUTING	0x4
209 #define EXT_AH		0x8
210 #define EXT_ESP		0x10
211 #define EXT_DSTOPTS	0x20
212 #define EXT_RTHDR0		0x40
213 #define EXT_RTHDR2		0x80
214 
215 /*
216  * Template for instructions.
217  *
218  * ipfw_insn is used for all instructions which require no operands,
219  * a single 16-bit value (arg1), or a couple of 8-bit values.
220  *
221  * For other instructions which require different/larger arguments
222  * we have derived structures, ipfw_insn_*.
223  *
224  * The size of the instruction (in 32-bit words) is in the low
225  * 6 bits of "len". The 2 remaining bits are used to implement
226  * NOT and OR on individual instructions. Given a type, you can
227  * compute the length to be put in "len" using F_INSN_SIZE(t)
228  *
229  * F_NOT	negates the match result of the instruction.
230  *
231  * F_OR		is used to build or blocks. By default, instructions
232  *		are evaluated as part of a logical AND. An "or" block
233  *		{ X or Y or Z } contains F_OR set in all but the last
234  *		instruction of the block. A match will cause the code
235  *		to skip past the last instruction of the block.
236  *
237  * NOTA BENE: in a couple of places we assume that
238  *	sizeof(ipfw_insn) == sizeof(u_int32_t)
239  * this needs to be fixed.
240  *
241  */
242 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn {	/* template for instructions */
243 	u_int8_t 	opcode;
244 	u_int8_t	len;	/* number of 32-bit words */
245 #define	F_NOT		0x80
246 #define	F_OR		0x40
247 #define	F_LEN_MASK	0x3f
248 #define	F_LEN(cmd)	((cmd)->len & F_LEN_MASK)
249 
250 	u_int16_t	arg1;
251 } ipfw_insn;
252 
253 /*
254  * The F_INSN_SIZE(type) computes the size, in 4-byte words, of
255  * a given type.
256  */
257 #define	F_INSN_SIZE(t)	((sizeof (t))/sizeof(u_int32_t))
258 
259 /*
260  * This is used to store an array of 16-bit entries (ports etc.)
261  */
262 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_u16 {
263 	ipfw_insn o;
264 	u_int16_t ports[2];	/* there may be more */
265 } ipfw_insn_u16;
266 
267 /*
268  * This is used to store an array of 32-bit entries
269  * (uid, single IPv4 addresses etc.)
270  */
271 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_u32 {
272 	ipfw_insn o;
273 	u_int32_t d[1];	/* one or more */
274 } ipfw_insn_u32;
275 
276 /*
277  * This is used to store IP addr-mask pairs.
278  */
279 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_ip {
280 	ipfw_insn o;
281 	struct in_addr	addr;
282 	struct in_addr	mask;
283 } ipfw_insn_ip;
284 
285 /*
286  * This is used to forward to a given address (ip).
287  */
288 typedef struct  _ipfw_insn_sa {
289 	ipfw_insn o;
290 	struct sockaddr_in sa;
291 } ipfw_insn_sa;
292 
293 /*
294  * This is used for MAC addr-mask pairs.
295  */
296 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_mac {
297 	ipfw_insn o;
298 	u_char addr[12];	/* dst[6] + src[6] */
299 	u_char mask[12];	/* dst[6] + src[6] */
300 } ipfw_insn_mac;
301 
302 /*
303  * This is used for interface match rules (recv xx, xmit xx).
304  */
305 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_if {
306 	ipfw_insn o;
307 	union {
308 		struct in_addr ip;
309 		int glob;
310 	} p;
311 	char name[IFNAMSIZ];
312 } ipfw_insn_if;
313 
314 /*
315  * This is used for storing an altq queue id number.
316  */
317 typedef struct _ipfw_insn_altq {
318 	ipfw_insn	o;
319 	u_int32_t	qid;
320 } ipfw_insn_altq;
321 
322 /*
323  * This is used for limit rules.
324  */
325 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_limit {
326 	ipfw_insn o;
327 	u_int8_t _pad;
328 	u_int8_t limit_mask;	/* combination of DYN_* below	*/
329 #define	DYN_SRC_ADDR	0x1
330 #define	DYN_SRC_PORT	0x2
331 #define	DYN_DST_ADDR	0x4
332 #define	DYN_DST_PORT	0x8
333 
334 	u_int16_t conn_limit;
335 } ipfw_insn_limit;
336 
337 /*
338  * This is used for log instructions.
339  */
340 typedef struct  _ipfw_insn_log {
341         ipfw_insn o;
342 	u_int32_t max_log;	/* how many do we log -- 0 = all */
343 	u_int32_t log_left;	/* how many left to log 	*/
344 } ipfw_insn_log;
345 
346 /*
347  * Data structures required by both ipfw(8) and ipfw(4) but not part of the
348  * management API are protected by IPFW_INTERNAL.
349  */
350 #ifdef IPFW_INTERNAL
351 /* Server pool support (LSNAT). */
352 struct cfg_spool {
353 	LIST_ENTRY(cfg_spool)   _next;          /* chain of spool instances */
354 	struct in_addr          addr;
355 	u_short                 port;
356 };
357 #endif
358 
359 /* Redirect modes id. */
360 #define REDIR_ADDR      0x01
361 #define REDIR_PORT      0x02
362 #define REDIR_PROTO     0x04
363 
364 #ifdef IPFW_INTERNAL
365 /* Nat redirect configuration. */
366 struct cfg_redir {
367 	LIST_ENTRY(cfg_redir)   _next;          /* chain of redir instances */
368 	u_int16_t               mode;           /* type of redirect mode */
369 	struct in_addr	        laddr;          /* local ip address */
370 	struct in_addr	        paddr;          /* public ip address */
371 	struct in_addr	        raddr;          /* remote ip address */
372 	u_short                 lport;          /* local port */
373 	u_short                 pport;          /* public port */
374 	u_short                 rport;          /* remote port  */
375 	u_short                 pport_cnt;      /* number of public ports */
376 	u_short                 rport_cnt;      /* number of remote ports */
377 	int                     proto;          /* protocol: tcp/udp */
378 	struct alias_link       **alink;
379 	/* num of entry in spool chain */
380 	u_int16_t               spool_cnt;
381 	/* chain of spool instances */
382 	LIST_HEAD(spool_chain, cfg_spool) spool_chain;
383 };
384 #endif
385 
386 #define NAT_BUF_LEN     1024
387 
388 #ifdef IPFW_INTERNAL
389 /* Nat configuration data struct. */
390 struct cfg_nat {
391 	/* chain of nat instances */
392 	LIST_ENTRY(cfg_nat)     _next;
393 	int                     id;                     /* nat id */
394 	struct in_addr          ip;                     /* nat ip address */
395 	char                    if_name[IF_NAMESIZE];   /* interface name */
396 	int                     mode;                   /* aliasing mode */
397 	struct libalias	        *lib;                   /* libalias instance */
398 	/* number of entry in spool chain */
399 	int                     redir_cnt;
400 	/* chain of redir instances */
401 	LIST_HEAD(redir_chain, cfg_redir) redir_chain;
402 };
403 #endif
404 
405 #define SOF_NAT         sizeof(struct cfg_nat)
406 #define SOF_REDIR       sizeof(struct cfg_redir)
407 #define SOF_SPOOL       sizeof(struct cfg_spool)
408 
409 /* Nat command. */
410 typedef struct	_ipfw_insn_nat {
411  	ipfw_insn	o;
412  	struct cfg_nat *nat;
413 } ipfw_insn_nat;
414 
415 /* Apply ipv6 mask on ipv6 addr */
416 #define APPLY_MASK(addr,mask)                          \
417     (addr)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[0] &= (mask)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[0]; \
418     (addr)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[1] &= (mask)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[1]; \
419     (addr)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[2] &= (mask)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[2]; \
420     (addr)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[3] &= (mask)->__u6_addr.__u6_addr32[3];
421 
422 /* Structure for ipv6 */
423 typedef struct _ipfw_insn_ip6 {
424        ipfw_insn o;
425        struct in6_addr addr6;
426        struct in6_addr mask6;
427 } ipfw_insn_ip6;
428 
429 /* Used to support icmp6 types */
430 typedef struct _ipfw_insn_icmp6 {
431        ipfw_insn o;
432        uint32_t d[7]; /* XXX This number si related to the netinet/icmp6.h
433                        *     define ICMP6_MAXTYPE
434                        *     as follows: n = ICMP6_MAXTYPE/32 + 1
435                         *     Actually is 203
436                        */
437 } ipfw_insn_icmp6;
438 
439 /*
440  * Here we have the structure representing an ipfw rule.
441  *
442  * It starts with a general area (with link fields and counters)
443  * followed by an array of one or more instructions, which the code
444  * accesses as an array of 32-bit values.
445  *
446  * Given a rule pointer  r:
447  *
448  *  r->cmd		is the start of the first instruction.
449  *  ACTION_PTR(r)	is the start of the first action (things to do
450  *			once a rule matched).
451  *
452  * When assembling instruction, remember the following:
453  *
454  *  + if a rule has a "keep-state" (or "limit") option, then the
455  *	first instruction (at r->cmd) MUST BE an O_PROBE_STATE
456  *  + if a rule has a "log" option, then the first action
457  *	(at ACTION_PTR(r)) MUST be O_LOG
458  *  + if a rule has an "altq" option, it comes after "log"
459  *  + if a rule has an O_TAG option, it comes after "log" and "altq"
460  *
461  * NOTE: we use a simple linked list of rules because we never need
462  * 	to delete a rule without scanning the list. We do not use
463  *	queue(3) macros for portability and readability.
464  */
465 
466 struct ip_fw {
467 	struct ip_fw	*x_next;	/* linked list of rules		*/
468 	struct ip_fw	*next_rule;	/* ptr to next [skipto] rule	*/
469 	/* 'next_rule' is used to pass up 'set_disable' status		*/
470 
471 	uint16_t	act_ofs;	/* offset of action in 32-bit units */
472 	uint16_t	cmd_len;	/* # of 32-bit words in cmd	*/
473 	uint16_t	rulenum;	/* rule number			*/
474 	uint8_t	set;		/* rule set (0..31)		*/
475 #define	RESVD_SET	31	/* set for default and persistent rules */
476 	uint8_t		_pad;		/* padding			*/
477 	uint32_t	id;		/* rule id */
478 
479 	/* These fields are present in all rules.			*/
480 	uint64_t	pcnt;		/* Packet counter		*/
481 	uint64_t	bcnt;		/* Byte counter			*/
482 	uint32_t	timestamp;	/* tv_sec of last match		*/
483 
484 	ipfw_insn	cmd[1];		/* storage for commands		*/
485 };
486 
487 #define ACTION_PTR(rule)				\
488 	(ipfw_insn *)( (u_int32_t *)((rule)->cmd) + ((rule)->act_ofs) )
489 
490 #define RULESIZE(rule)  (sizeof(struct ip_fw) + \
491 	((struct ip_fw *)(rule))->cmd_len * 4 - 4)
492 
493 #if 1 // should be moved to in.h
494 /*
495  * This structure is used as a flow mask and a flow id for various
496  * parts of the code.
497  * addr_type is used in userland and kernel to mark the address type.
498  * fib is used in the kernel to record the fib in use.
499  * _flags is used in the kernel to store tcp flags for dynamic rules.
500  */
501 struct ipfw_flow_id {
502 	uint32_t	dst_ip;
503 	uint32_t	src_ip;
504 	uint16_t	dst_port;
505 	uint16_t	src_port;
506 	uint8_t		fib;
507 	uint8_t		proto;
508 	uint8_t		_flags;	/* protocol-specific flags */
509 	uint8_t		addr_type; /* 4=ip4, 6=ip6, 1=ether ? */
510 	struct in6_addr dst_ip6;
511 	struct in6_addr src_ip6;
512 	uint32_t	flow_id6;
513 	uint32_t	extra; /* queue/pipe or frag_id */
514 };
515 #endif
516 
517 #define IS_IP6_FLOW_ID(id)	((id)->addr_type == 6)
518 
519 /*
520  * Dynamic ipfw rule.
521  */
522 typedef struct _ipfw_dyn_rule ipfw_dyn_rule;
523 
524 struct _ipfw_dyn_rule {
525 	ipfw_dyn_rule	*next;		/* linked list of rules.	*/
526 	struct ip_fw *rule;		/* pointer to rule		*/
527 	/* 'rule' is used to pass up the rule number (from the parent)	*/
528 
529 	ipfw_dyn_rule *parent;		/* pointer to parent rule	*/
530 	u_int64_t	pcnt;		/* packet match counter		*/
531 	u_int64_t	bcnt;		/* byte match counter		*/
532 	struct ipfw_flow_id id;		/* (masked) flow id		*/
533 	u_int32_t	expire;		/* expire time			*/
534 	u_int32_t	bucket;		/* which bucket in hash table	*/
535 	u_int32_t	state;		/* state of this rule (typically a
536 					 * combination of TCP flags)
537 					 */
538 	u_int32_t	ack_fwd;	/* most recent ACKs in forward	*/
539 	u_int32_t	ack_rev;	/* and reverse directions (used	*/
540 					/* to generate keepalives)	*/
541 	u_int16_t	dyn_type;	/* rule type			*/
542 	u_int16_t	count;		/* refcount			*/
543 };
544 
545 /*
546  * Definitions for IP option names.
547  */
548 #define	IP_FW_IPOPT_LSRR	0x01
549 #define	IP_FW_IPOPT_SSRR	0x02
550 #define	IP_FW_IPOPT_RR		0x04
551 #define	IP_FW_IPOPT_TS		0x08
552 
553 /*
554  * Definitions for TCP option names.
555  */
556 #define	IP_FW_TCPOPT_MSS	0x01
557 #define	IP_FW_TCPOPT_WINDOW	0x02
558 #define	IP_FW_TCPOPT_SACK	0x04
559 #define	IP_FW_TCPOPT_TS		0x08
560 #define	IP_FW_TCPOPT_CC		0x10
561 
562 #define	ICMP_REJECT_RST		0x100	/* fake ICMP code (send a TCP RST) */
563 #define	ICMP6_UNREACH_RST	0x100	/* fake ICMPv6 code (send a TCP RST) */
564 
565 /*
566  * These are used for lookup tables.
567  */
568 typedef struct	_ipfw_table_entry {
569 	in_addr_t	addr;		/* network address		*/
570 	u_int32_t	value;		/* value			*/
571 	u_int16_t	tbl;		/* table number			*/
572 	u_int8_t	masklen;	/* mask length			*/
573 } ipfw_table_entry;
574 
575 typedef struct	_ipfw_table {
576 	u_int32_t	size;		/* size of entries in bytes	*/
577 	u_int32_t	cnt;		/* # of entries			*/
578 	u_int16_t	tbl;		/* table number			*/
579 	ipfw_table_entry ent[0];	/* entries			*/
580 } ipfw_table;
581 
582 #endif /* _IPFW2_H */
583