1f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\"- 2e83aaae3SBrian Somers.\" Copyright (c) 2001 Charles Mott <cm@linktel.net> 3f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" All rights reserved. 4f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" 5f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" are met: 8f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" 14f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 15f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 16f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 17f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 18f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 19f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 20f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 21f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 22f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 23f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 24f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 25f987e1bdSBrian Somers.\" 267f3dea24SPeter Wemm.\" $FreeBSD$ 2774804d58SMike Pritchard.\" 28a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dd April 13, 2000 2974804d58SMike Pritchard.Dt LIBALIAS 3 30a307d598SRuslan Ermilov.Os 313efa11bbSBrian Somers.Sh NAME 3274804d58SMike Pritchard.Nm libalias 33a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Nd packet aliasing library for masquerading and network address translation 343efa11bbSBrian Somers.Sh SYNOPSIS 3532eef9aeSRuslan Ermilov.In sys/types.h 3632eef9aeSRuslan Ermilov.In netinet/in.h 3732eef9aeSRuslan Ermilov.In alias.h 38a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 39a2900666SRuslan ErmilovFunction prototypes are given in the main body of the text. 4074804d58SMike Pritchard.Sh DESCRIPTION 4174804d58SMike PritchardThe 4274804d58SMike Pritchard.Nm 43a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlibrary is a collection of functions for aliasing and de-aliasing of IP 44a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpackets, intended for masquerading and network address translation (NAT). 45a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh INTRODUCTION 46a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis library is a moderately portable set of functions designed to assist 47a2900666SRuslan Ermilovin the process of IP masquerading and network address translation. 48a2900666SRuslan ErmilovOutgoing packets from a local network with unregistered IP addresses can 49a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbe aliased to appear as if they came from an accessible IP address. 50a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIncoming packets are then de-aliased so that they are sent to the correct 51a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmachine on the local network. 52a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 53a2900666SRuslan ErmilovA certain amount of flexibility is built into the packet aliasing engine. 54a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn the simplest mode of operation, a many-to-one address mapping takes 55a2900666SRuslan Ermilovplace between local network and the packet aliasing host. 56a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis is known as IP masquerading. 57a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn addition, one-to-one mappings between local and public addresses can 58a2900666SRuslan Ermilovalso be implemented, which is known as static NAT. 59a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn between these extremes, different groups of private addresses can be 60a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlinked to different public addresses, comprising several distinct 61a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmany-to-one mappings. 62a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAlso, a given public address and port can be statically redirected to a 63a2900666SRuslan Ermilovprivate address/port. 64a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 65a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe packet aliasing engine was designed to operate in user space outside 66a2900666SRuslan Ermilovof the kernel, without any access to private kernel data structure, but 67a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe source code can also be ported to a kernel environment. 68a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh INITIALIZATION AND CONTROL 69a2900666SRuslan ErmilovTwo special functions, 70a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInit 71a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand 72a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress , 73a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmust always be called before any packet handling may be performed. 74a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn addition, the operating mode of the packet aliasing engine can be 75a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcustomized by calling 76a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetMode . 77a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 783efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft void 79a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInit void 80a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 81a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function has no arguments or return value and is used to initialize 82a2900666SRuslan Ermilovinternal data structures. 83a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe following mode bits are always set after calling 84a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInit . 85a2900666SRuslan ErmilovSee the description of 86a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetMode 87a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbelow for the meaning of these mode bits. 88a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 89a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bl -item -offset indent -compact 90a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It 91a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_SAME_PORTS 92a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It 93a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_USE_SOCKETS 94a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It 95a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 96a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.El 97a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 98a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function will always return the packet aliasing engine to the same 99a2900666SRuslan Ermilovinitial state. 100a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 101a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmust be called afterwards, and any desired changes from the default mode 1023efa11bbSBrian Somersbits listed above require a call to 103a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetMode . 104a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 105a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIt is mandatory that this function be called at the beginning of a program 106a2900666SRuslan Ermilovprior to any packet handling. 107a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 108a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 1098ddc51bcSEivind Eklund.Ft void 110a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasUninit void 111a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 112a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function has no arguments or return value and is used to clear any 113a2900666SRuslan Ermilovresources attached to internal data structures. 114a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 115a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis functions should be called when a program stops using the aliasing 116a2900666SRuslan Ermilovengine; it does, amongst other things, clear out any firewall holes. 117a2900666SRuslan ErmilovTo provide backwards compatibility and extra security, it is added to 118a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe 119a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr atexit 3 120a2900666SRuslan Ermilovchain by 121a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInit . 122a2900666SRuslan ErmilovCalling it multiple times is harmless. 123a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 124a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 1253efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft void 1263efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress "struct in_addr addr" 127a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 128a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function sets the source address to which outgoing packets from the 129a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlocal area network are aliased. 130a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAll outgoing packets are re-mapped to this address unless overridden by a 131a2900666SRuslan Ermilovstatic address mapping established by 132a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 133a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 134a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the 135a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 136a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmode bit is set (the default mode of operation), then the internal aliasing 137a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlink tables will be reset any time the aliasing address changes. 138a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis is useful for interfaces such as 139a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr ppp 8 , 140a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwhere the IP 141a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaddress may or may not change on successive dial-up attempts. 142a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 143a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the 144a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 145a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmode bit is set to zero, this function can also be used to dynamically change 146a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe aliasing address on a packet to packet basis (it is a low overhead call). 147a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 148a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIt is mandatory that this function be called prior to any packet handling. 149a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 150a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 151442a25bdSBruce Evans.Ft unsigned int 152a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetMode "unsigned int flags" "unsigned int mask" 153a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 1543efa11bbSBrian SomersThis function sets or clears mode bits 1553efa11bbSBrian Somersaccording to the value of 156a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa flags . 1573efa11bbSBrian SomersOnly bits marked in 158a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa mask 159a2900666SRuslan Ermilovare affected. 160a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe following mode bits are defined in 161a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Aq Pa alias.h : 162a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bl -tag -width indent 163a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_LOG 164a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEnables logging into 165a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pa /var/log/alias.log . 166a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEach time an aliasing link is created or deleted, the log file is appended 167a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwith the current number of ICMP, TCP and UDP links. 168a2900666SRuslan ErmilovMainly useful for debugging when the log file is viewed continuously with 169a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr tail 1 . 170a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_DENY_INCOMING 171a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this mode bit is set, all incoming packets associated with new TCP 172a2900666SRuslan Ermilovconnections or new UDP transactions will be marked for being ignored 173c4d9468eSRuslan Ermilov.Fn ( PacketAliasIn 174a2900666SRuslan Ermilovreturns 175a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 176c4d9468eSRuslan Ermilovcode) 177a2900666SRuslan Ermilovby the calling program. 178a2900666SRuslan ErmilovResponse packets to connections or transactions initiated from the packet 179a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaliasing host or local network will be unaffected. 180a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis mode bit is useful for implementing a one-way firewall. 181a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_SAME_PORTS 182a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this mode bit is set, the packet aliasing engine will attempt to leave 183a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe alias port numbers unchanged from the actual local port numbers. 184a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis can be done as long as the quintuple (proto, alias addr, alias port, 185a2900666SRuslan Ermilovremote addr, remote port) is unique. 186a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf a conflict exists, a new aliasing port number is chosen even if this 187a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmode bit is set. 188a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_USE_SOCKETS 189a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis bit should be set when the packet aliasing host originates network 190a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtraffic as well as forwards it. 191a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWhen the packet aliasing host is waiting for a connection from an unknown 192a2900666SRuslan Ermilovhost address or unknown port number (e.g. an FTP data connection), this 193a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmode bit specifies that a socket be allocated as a place holder to prevent 194a2900666SRuslan Ermilovport conflicts. 195a2900666SRuslan ErmilovOnce a connection is established, usually within a minute or so, the socket 196a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis closed. 197a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNREGISTERED_ONLY 198a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this mode bit is set, traffic on the local network which does not 199a2900666SRuslan Ermilovoriginate from unregistered address spaces will be ignored. 200a2900666SRuslan ErmilovStandard Class A, B and C unregistered addresses are: 2013efa11bbSBrian Somers.Bd -literal -offset indent 2023efa11bbSBrian Somers10.0.0.0 -> 10.255.255.255 (Class A subnet) 2033efa11bbSBrian Somers172.16.0.0 -> 172.31.255.255 (Class B subnets) 2043efa11bbSBrian Somers192.168.0.0 -> 192.168.255.255 (Class C subnets) 2053efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ed 206a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 207a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis option is useful in the case that packet aliasing host has both 208a2900666SRuslan Ermilovregistered and unregistered subnets on different interfaces. 209a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe registered subnet is fully accessible to the outside world, so traffic 210a2900666SRuslan Ermilovfrom it does not need to be passed through the packet aliasing engine. 211a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 2123efa11bbSBrian SomersWhen this mode bit is set and 213a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 214a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis called to change the aliasing address, the internal link table of the 215a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpacket aliasing engine will be cleared. 216a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis operating mode is useful for 217a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr ppp 8 218a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlinks where the interface address can sometimes change or remain the same 219a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbetween dial-up attempts. 220a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this mode bit is not set, the link table will never be reset in the event 221a2900666SRuslan Ermilovof an address change. 222a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_PUNCH_FW 223a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis option makes 224a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Nm 225a2900666SRuslan Ermilov`punch holes' in an 226a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr ipfirewall 4 227a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbased firewall for FTP/IRC DCC connections. 228a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe holes punched are bound by from/to IP address and port; it will not be 229a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpossible to use a hole for another connection. 230a2900666SRuslan ErmilovA hole is removed when the connection that uses it dies. 231a2900666SRuslan ErmilovTo cater to unexpected death of a program using 232a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Nm 233a2900666SRuslan Ermilov(e.g. kill -9), 234a2900666SRuslan Ermilovchanging the state of the flag will clear the entire firewall range 235a2900666SRuslan Ermilovallocated for holes. 2368ddc51bcSEivind EklundThis will also happen on the initial call to 237a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetFWBase . 238a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis call must happen prior to setting this flag. 239a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_REVERSE 240a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis option makes 241a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Nm 242a2900666SRuslan Ermilovreverse the way it handles incoming and outgoing packets, allowing it 243a2900666SRuslan Ermilovto be fed with data that passes through the internal interface rather 244a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthan the external one. 245a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_PROXY_ONLY 246a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis option tells 247a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Nm 248a2900666SRuslan Ermilovto obey transparent proxy rules only. 249a2900666SRuslan ErmilovNormal packet aliasing is not performed. 25021b9df57SBrian SomersSee 25121b9df57SBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 25221b9df57SBrian Somersbelow for details. 2533efa11bbSBrian Somers.El 254a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 255a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 2568ddc51bcSEivind Eklund.Ft void 2578ddc51bcSEivind Eklund.Fn PacketAliasSetFWBase "unsigned int base" "unsigned int num" 258a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 259a2900666SRuslan ErmilovSet firewall range allocated for punching firewall holes (with the 260a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_PUNCH_FW 261a2900666SRuslan Ermilovflag). 262a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe range will be cleared for all rules on initialization. 263a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 264a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh PACKET HANDLING 265a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe packet handling functions are used to modify incoming (remote to local) 266a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand outgoing (local to remote) packets. 267a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe calling program is responsible for receiving and sending packets via 268a2900666SRuslan Ermilovnetwork interfaces. 269a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 270a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAlong with 271a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInit 272a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand 273a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress , 274a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe two packet handling functions, 275a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasIn 276a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand 277a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasOut , 278a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcomprise minimal set of functions needed for a basic IP masquerading 279a2900666SRuslan Ermilovimplementation. 280a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 2813efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft int 2823efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasIn "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 283a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 284a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAn incoming packet coming from a remote machine to the local network is 285a2900666SRuslan Ermilovde-aliased by this function. 2863efa11bbSBrian SomersThe IP packet is pointed to by 287a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa buffer , 2883efa11bbSBrian Somersand 289a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa maxpacketsize 290a2900666SRuslan Ermilovindicates the size of the data structure containing the packet and should 291a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbe at least as large as the actual packet size. 292a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 2933efa11bbSBrian SomersReturn codes: 294a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bl -tag -width indent 295a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 2963efa11bbSBrian SomersThe packet aliasing process was successful. 297a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 2983efa11bbSBrian SomersThe packet was ignored and not de-aliased. 299a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis can happen if the protocol is unrecognized, possibly an ICMP message 300a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtype is not handled or if incoming packets for new connections are being 301a2900666SRuslan Ermilovignored (if 302a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_DENY_INCOMING 303a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmode bit was set by 304a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetMode ) . 305a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNRESOLVED_FRAGMENT 306a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis is returned when a fragment cannot be resolved because the header 307a2900666SRuslan Ermilovfragment has not been sent yet. 308a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn this situation, fragments must be saved with 309a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment 3103efa11bbSBrian Somersuntil a header fragment is found. 311a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_FOUND_HEADER_FRAGMENT 312a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe packet aliasing process was successful, and a header fragment was found. 313a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis is a signal to retrieve any unresolved fragments with 314a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment 315a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand de-alias them with 316a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn . 317a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 318a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAn internal error within the packet aliasing engine occurred. 3193efa11bbSBrian Somers.El 320a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 321a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 3223efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft int 323b2052ac8SJohn Polstra.Fn PacketAliasOut "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 324a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 325a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAn outgoing packet coming from the local network to a remote machine is 326a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaliased by this function. 3273efa11bbSBrian SomersThe IP packet is pointed to by 328a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa buffer , 3293efa11bbSBrian Somersand 330a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa maxpacketsize 331a2900666SRuslan Ermilovindicates the maximum packet size permissible should the packet length be 332a2900666SRuslan Ermilovchanged. 333a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIP encoding protocols place address and port information in the encapsulated 334a2900666SRuslan Ermilovdata stream which has to be modified and can account for changes in packet 335a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlength. 336a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWell known examples of such protocols are FTP and IRC DCC. 337a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 3383efa11bbSBrian SomersReturn codes: 339a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bl -tag -width indent 340a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 3413efa11bbSBrian SomersThe packet aliasing process was successful. 342a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 343a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe packet was ignored and not aliased. 344a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis can happen if the protocol is unrecognized, or possibly an ICMP message 345a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtype is not handled. 346a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 347a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAn internal error within the packet aliasing engine occurred. 3483efa11bbSBrian Somers.El 349a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 350a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh PORT AND ADDRESS REDIRECTION 351a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe functions described in this section allow machines on the local network 352a2900666SRuslan Ermilovto be accessible in some degree to new incoming connections from the external 353a2900666SRuslan Ermilovnetwork. 354a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIndividual ports can be re-mapped or static network address translations can 355a2900666SRuslan Ermilovbe designated. 356a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 3573efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft struct alias_link * 3583efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fo PacketAliasRedirectPort 3593efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 3603efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "u_short local_port" 3613efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "struct in_addr remote_addr" 3623efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "u_short remote_port" 3633efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 3643efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "u_short alias_port" 3653efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "u_char proto" 3663efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fc 367a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 368a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function specifies that traffic from a given remote address/port to 369a2900666SRuslan Ermilovan alias address/port be redirected to a specified local address/port. 3709c727d2cSJoseph KoshyThe parameter 371a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa proto 372a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcan be either 373a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv IPPROTO_TCP 3743efa11bbSBrian Somersor 375a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv IPPROTO_UDP , 376a2900666SRuslan Ermilovas defined in 377a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Aq Pa netinet/in.h . 378a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 3793efa11bbSBrian SomersIf 380a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 381a2900666SRuslan Ermilovor 382a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa alias_addr 383a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established 384a2900666SRuslan Ermilovby 385a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 386a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis to be used. 387a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEven if 388483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 389a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis called to change the address after 390483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 391a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis called, a zero reference will track this change. 392a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 3936d20a774SRuslan ErmilovIf the link is further set up to operate for a load sharing, then 3946d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 3956d20a774SRuslan Ermilovand 3966d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_port 3976d20a774SRuslan Ermilovare ignored, and are selected dynamically from the server pool, as described in 3986d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 3996d20a774SRuslan Ermilovbelow. 4006d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 401a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 402a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa remote_addr 403a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates to redirect packets from any remote address. 404a2900666SRuslan ErmilovLikewise, if 405a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa remote_port 406a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates to redirect packets originating from any remote 407a2900666SRuslan Ermilovport number. 408a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAlmost always, the remote port specification will be zero, but non-zero 409a2900666SRuslan Ermilovremote addresses can sometimes be useful for firewalling. 410a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf two calls to 411a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 412a2900666SRuslan Ermilovoverlap in their address/port specifications, then the most recent call 413a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwill have precedence. 414a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 415a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 416a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 417a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 418a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv NULL 419a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 420a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 421a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAll port numbers should be in network address byte order, so it is necessary 422a2900666SRuslan Ermilovto use 423a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr htons 3 424a2900666SRuslan Ermilovto convert these parameters from internally readable numbers to network byte 425a2900666SRuslan Ermilovorder. 426a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAddresses are also in network byte order, which is implicit in the use of the 427a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa struct in_addr 4283efa11bbSBrian Somersdata type. 429a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 430a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 4313efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft struct alias_link * 432442a25bdSBruce Evans.Fo PacketAliasRedirectAddr 4333efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 4343efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 4353efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fc 436a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 437a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function designates that all incoming traffic to 438a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa alias_addr 4393efa11bbSBrian Somersbe redirected to 440a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr . 4413efa11bbSBrian SomersSimilarly, all outgoing traffic from 442a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 4433efa11bbSBrian Somersis aliased to 444a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa alias_addr . 445a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 4463efa11bbSBrian SomersIf 447a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 4483efa11bbSBrian Somersor 449a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa alias_addr 450a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established by 451a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 452a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis to be used. 453a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEven if 454a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 455a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis called to change the address after 456a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr 4573efa11bbSBrian Somersis called, a zero reference will track this change. 458a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 4596d20a774SRuslan ErmilovIf the link is further set up to operate for a load sharing, then 4606d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 4616d20a774SRuslan Ermilovis ignored, and is selected dynamically from the server pool, as described in 4626d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 4636d20a774SRuslan Ermilovbelow. 4646d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 465a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf subsequent calls to 466a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr 467a2900666SRuslan Ermilovuse the same aliasing address, all new incoming traffic to this aliasing 468a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaddress will be redirected to the local address made in the last function 469a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcall. 470a2900666SRuslan ErmilovNew traffic generated by any of the local machines, designated in the 471a2900666SRuslan Ermilovseveral function calls, will be aliased to the same address. 472a2900666SRuslan ErmilovConsider the following example: 473a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -literal -offset indent 4743efa11bbSBrian SomersPacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.2"), 4753efa11bbSBrian Somers inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 4763efa11bbSBrian SomersPacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.3"), 4773efa11bbSBrian Somers inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 4783efa11bbSBrian SomersPacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.4"), 4793efa11bbSBrian Somers inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 4803efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ed 481a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 482a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAny outgoing connections such as 483a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr telnet 1 484a2900666SRuslan Ermilovor 485a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr ftp 1 486a2900666SRuslan Ermilovfrom 192.168.0.2, 192.168.0.3 and 192.168.0.4 will appear to come from 487a2900666SRuslan Ermilov141.221.254.101. 488a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAny incoming connections to 141.221.254.101 will be directed to 192.168.0.4. 489a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 490a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAny calls to 491a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 492a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwill have precedence over address mappings designated by 493a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 494a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 495a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 496a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 497a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 498a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv NULL 499a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 500a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 501a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5026d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Ft int 5036d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fo PacketAliasAddServer 5046d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "struct alias_link *link" 5056d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "struct in_addr addr" 5066d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "u_short port" 5076d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fc 5086d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 5096d20a774SRuslan ErmilovThis function sets the 5106d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa link 5116d20a774SRuslan Ermilovup for Load Sharing using IP Network Address Translation (RFC 2391, LSNAT). 5126d20a774SRuslan ErmilovLSNAT operates as follows. 5136d20a774SRuslan ErmilovA client attempts to access a server by using the server virtual address. 5146d20a774SRuslan ErmilovThe LSNAT router transparently redirects the request to one of the hosts 5156d20a774SRuslan Ermilovin server pool, selected using a real-time load sharing algorithm. 5166d20a774SRuslan ErmilovMultiple sessions may be initiated from the same client, and each session 5176d20a774SRuslan Ermilovcould be directed to a different host based on load balance across server 5186d20a774SRuslan Ermilovpool hosts at the time. 5196d20a774SRuslan ErmilovIf load share is desired for just a few specific services, the configuration 5206d20a774SRuslan Ermilovon LSNAT could be defined to restrict load share for just the services 5216d20a774SRuslan Ermilovdesired. 5226d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5236d20a774SRuslan ErmilovCurrently, only the simplest selection algorithm is implemented, where a 5246d20a774SRuslan Ermilovhost is selected on a round-robin basis only, without regard to load on 5256d20a774SRuslan Ermilovthe host. 5266d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5276d20a774SRuslan ErmilovFirst, the 5286d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa link 5296d20a774SRuslan Ermilovis created by either 5306d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 5316d20a774SRuslan Ermilovor 5326d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 5336d20a774SRuslan ErmilovThen, 5346d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 5356d20a774SRuslan Ermilovis called multiple times to add entries to the 5366d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa link Ns 's 5376d20a774SRuslan Ermilovserver pool. 5386d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5396d20a774SRuslan ErmilovFor links created with 5406d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr , 5416d20a774SRuslan Ermilovthe 5426d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Fa port 5436d20a774SRuslan Ermilovargument is ignored and could have any value, e.g. htons(~0). 5446d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5456d20a774SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns 0 on success, -1 otherwise. 5466d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 5476d20a774SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 5483efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft void 549a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete "struct alias_link *link" 550a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 551a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function will delete a specific static redirect rule entered by 552a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 553a2900666SRuslan Ermilovor 554a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 555a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe parameter 556a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa link 557a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis the pointer returned by either of the redirection functions. 558a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf an invalid pointer is passed to 559a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete , 560a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthen a program crash or unpredictable operation could result, so it is 5613efa11bbSBrian Somersnecessary to be careful using this function. 562a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 563a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 564619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ft int 56542889ed1SBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule "const char *cmd" 566a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 567619d1a30SBrian SomersThe passed 568a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa cmd 569a2900666SRuslan Ermilovstring consists of one or more pairs of words. 570a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe first word in each pair is a token and the second is the value that 571a2900666SRuslan Ermilovshould be applied for that token. 572a2900666SRuslan ErmilovTokens and their argument types are as follows: 573a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bl -tag -width indent 574a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm type encode_ip_hdr | encode_tcp_stream | no_encode 575619d1a30SBrian SomersIn order to support transparent proxying, it is necessary to somehow 576619d1a30SBrian Somerspass the original address and port information into the new destination 577a2900666SRuslan Ermilovserver. 578a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 579a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Cm encode_ip_hdr 580619d1a30SBrian Somersis specified, the original address and port is passed as an extra IP 581a2900666SRuslan Ermilovoption. 582a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 583a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Cm encode_tcp_stream 584619d1a30SBrian Somersis specified, the original address and port is passed as the first 585a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpiece of data in the TCP stream in the format 586619d1a30SBrian Somers.Dq DEST Ar IP port . 587a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm port Ar portnum 588619d1a30SBrian SomersOnly packets with the destination port 589619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar portnum 590619d1a30SBrian Somersare proxied. 591a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm server Ar host Ns Xo 592a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Op : Ns Ar portnum 593a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xc 594619d1a30SBrian SomersThis specifies the 595619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar host 596619d1a30SBrian Somersand 597619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar portnum 598ac8e3334SBrian Somersthat the data is to be redirected to. 599ac8e3334SBrian Somers.Ar host 600a2900666SRuslan Ermilovmust be an IP address rather than a DNS host name. 601a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 602619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar portnum 603619d1a30SBrian Somersis not specified, the destination port number is not changed. 604619d1a30SBrian Somers.Pp 605619d1a30SBrian SomersThe 606619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar server 607619d1a30SBrian Somersspecification is mandatory unless the 608a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Cm delete 609619d1a30SBrian Somerscommand is being used. 610a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm rule Ar index 611619d1a30SBrian SomersNormally, each call to 612619d1a30SBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 613a2900666SRuslan Ermilovinserts the next rule at the start of a linear list of rules. 614a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf an 615619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar index 616619d1a30SBrian Somersis specified, the new rule will be checked after all rules with lower 617a2900666SRuslan Ermilovindices. 618a2900666SRuslan ErmilovCalls to 619619d1a30SBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 620619d1a30SBrian Somersthat do not specify a rule are assigned rule 0. 621a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm delete Ar index 622a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis token and its argument MUST NOT be used with any other tokens. 623a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWhen used, all existing rules with the given 624619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar index 625619d1a30SBrian Somersare deleted. 626a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm proto tcp | udp 627619d1a30SBrian SomersIf specified, only packets of the given protocol type are matched. 628a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm src Ar IP Ns Xo 629a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Op / Ns Ar bits 630a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xc 631619d1a30SBrian SomersIf specified, only packets with a source address matching the given 632619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar IP 633a2900666SRuslan Ermilovare matched. 634a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 635619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar bits 636619d1a30SBrian Somersis also specified, then the first 637619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar bits 638619d1a30SBrian Somersbits of 639619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar IP 640619d1a30SBrian Somersare taken as a network specification, and all IP addresses from that 641619d1a30SBrian Somersnetwork will be matched. 642a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.It Cm dst Ar IP Ns Xo 643a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Op / Ns Ar bits 644a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xc 645619d1a30SBrian SomersIf specified, only packets with a destination address matching the given 646619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar IP 647a2900666SRuslan Ermilovare matched. 648a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf 649619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar bits 650619d1a30SBrian Somersis also specified, then the first 651619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar bits 652619d1a30SBrian Somersbits of 653619d1a30SBrian Somers.Ar IP 654619d1a30SBrian Somersare taken as a network specification, and all IP addresses from that 655619d1a30SBrian Somersnetwork will be matched. 656619d1a30SBrian Somers.El 657a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 658619d1a30SBrian SomersThis function is usually used to redirect outgoing connections for 659619d1a30SBrian Somersinternal machines that are not permitted certain types of internet 660619d1a30SBrian Somersaccess, or to restrict access to certain external machines. 661a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 662a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 663483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Ft struct alias_link * 66480607605SRuslan Ermilov.Fo PacketAliasRedirectProto 665483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 666483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "struct in_addr remote_addr" 667483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 66880607605SRuslan Ermilov.Fa "u_char proto" 669483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fc 670483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 67180607605SRuslan ErmilovThis function specifies that any IP packet with protocol number of 67280607605SRuslan Ermilov.Fa proto 67380607605SRuslan Ermilovfrom a given remote address to an alias address be 674483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovredirected to a specified local address. 675483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 676483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovIf 677483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa local_addr 678483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovor 679483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa alias_addr 680483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established 681483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovby 682483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 683483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovis to be used. 684483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovEven if 685483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 686483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovis called to change the address after 68780607605SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectProto 688483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovis called, a zero reference will track this change. 689483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 690483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovIf 691483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fa remote_addr 69280607605SRuslan Ermilovis zero, this indicates to redirect packets from any remote address. 693483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovNon-zero remote addresses can sometimes be useful for firewalling. 694483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 695483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovIf two calls to 69680607605SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectProto 697483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovoverlap in their address specifications, then the most recent call 698483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovwill have precedence. 699483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 700483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 701483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 702483d2f22SRuslan ErmilovIf 703483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Dv NULL 704483d2f22SRuslan Ermilovis returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 705483d2f22SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 706a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh FRAGMENT HANDLING 707a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe functions in this section are used to deal with incoming fragments. 708a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 709a2900666SRuslan ErmilovOutgoing fragments are handled within 710a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasOut 711a2900666SRuslan Ermilovby changing the address according to any applicable mapping set by 7125e8fc2d2SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr , 7131855100fSAlexey Zelkinor the default aliasing address set by 714a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress . 715a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 7161855100fSAlexey ZelkinIncoming fragments are handled in one of two ways. 717a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the header of a fragmented IP packet has already been seen, then all 718a2900666SRuslan Ermilovsubsequent fragments will be re-mapped in the same manner the header 719a2900666SRuslan Ermilovfragment was. 720a2900666SRuslan ErmilovFragments which arrive before the header are saved and then retrieved 721a2900666SRuslan Ermilovonce the header fragment has been resolved. 722a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 7233efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft int 7243efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment "char *ptr" 725a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 726a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWhen 727a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasIn 728a2900666SRuslan Ermilovreturns 729a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNRESOLVED_FRAGMENT , 730a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthis function can be used to save the pointer to the unresolved fragment. 731a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 7323efa11bbSBrian SomersIt is implicitly assumed that 733a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa ptr 7343efa11bbSBrian Somerspoints to a block of memory allocated by 735a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Xr malloc 3 . 736a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the fragment is never resolved, the packet aliasing engine will 737a2900666SRuslan Ermilovautomatically free the memory after a timeout period. 738a2900666SRuslan Ermilov[Eventually this function should be modified so that a callback function 739a2900666SRuslan Ermilovfor freeing memory is passed as an argument.] 740a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 741a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns 742a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 743a2900666SRuslan Ermilovif it was successful and 744a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 745a2900666SRuslan Ermilovif there was an error. 746a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 747a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 7483efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft char * 7493efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment "char *buffer" 750a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 751a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function can be used to retrieve fragment pointers saved by 752a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment . 7533efa11bbSBrian SomersThe IP header fragment pointed to by 754a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa buffer 7553efa11bbSBrian Somersis the header fragment indicated when 756a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasIn 757a2900666SRuslan Ermilovreturns 758a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv PKT_ALIAS_FOUND_HEADER_FRAGMENT . 759a2900666SRuslan ErmilovOnce a fragment pointer is retrieved, it becomes the calling program's 760a2900666SRuslan Ermilovresponsibility to free the dynamically allocated memory for the fragment. 761a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 762a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment 763a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcan be called sequentially until there are no more fragments available, 764a2900666SRuslan Ermilovat which time it returns 765a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv NULL . 766a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 767a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 7683efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft void 7693efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn "char *header" "char *fragment" 770a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 7713efa11bbSBrian SomersWhen a fragment is retrieved with 772a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment , 773a2900666SRuslan Ermilovit can then be de-aliased with a call to 774a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn . 775a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe 776a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa header 777a2900666SRuslan Ermilovargument is the pointer to a header fragment used as a template, and 778a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa fragment 7793efa11bbSBrian Somersis the pointer to the packet to be de-aliased. 780a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 781a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS 7823efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft void 7833efa11bbSBrian Somers.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget "struct in_addr addr" 784a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 785a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWhen an incoming packet not associated with any pre-existing aliasing link 786a2900666SRuslan Ermilovarrives at the host machine, it will be sent to the address indicated by a 787a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcall to 788a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget . 789a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 790151682eaSBrian SomersIf this function is called with an 791a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv INADDR_NONE 792a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaddress argument, then all new incoming packets go to the address set by 793a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress . 794a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 795151682eaSBrian SomersIf this function is not called, or is called with an 796a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Dv INADDR_ANY 797a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaddress argument, then all new incoming packets go to the address specified 798a2900666SRuslan Ermilovin the packet. 799a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis allows external machines to talk directly to internal machines if they 800a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcan route packets to the machine in question. 801a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 802a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 8033efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft int 804a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasCheckNewLink void 805a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 806a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis function returns a non-zero value when a new aliasing link is created. 807a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn circumstances where incoming traffic is being sequentially sent to 808a2900666SRuslan Ermilovdifferent local servers, this function can be used to trigger when 809a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget 8103efa11bbSBrian Somersis called to change the default target address. 811a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 812a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 8133efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ft u_short 814442a25bdSBruce Evans.Fn PacketAliasInternetChecksum "u_short *buffer" "int nbytes" 815a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 816a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis is a utility function that does not seem to be available elsewhere and 817a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis included as a convenience. 818a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIt computes the internet checksum, which is used in both IP and 819a2900666SRuslan Ermilovprotocol-specific headers (TCP, UDP, ICMP). 820a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 821a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe 822a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa buffer 823a2900666SRuslan Ermilovargument points to the data block to be checksummed, and 824a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fa nbytes 825a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis the number of bytes. 826a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe 16-bit checksum field should be zeroed before computing the checksum. 827a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 828a2900666SRuslan ErmilovChecksums can also be verified by operating on a block of data including 829a2900666SRuslan Ermilovits checksum. 830a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the checksum is valid, 831a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Fn PacketAliasInternetChecksum 832a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwill return zero. 833a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 834642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Pp 835642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Ft int 836642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Fn PacketUnaliasOut "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 837642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Bd -ragged -offset indent 83871845bffSSheldon HearnAn outgoing packet, which has already been aliased, 83971845bffSSheldon Hearnhas its private address/port information restored by this function. 840642e43b3SArchie CobbsThe IP packet is pointed to by 841642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Fa buffer , 842642e43b3SArchie Cobbsand 843642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Fa maxpacketsize 844642e43b3SArchie Cobbsis provided for error checking purposes. 845642e43b3SArchie CobbsThis function can be used if an already-aliased packet needs to have its 846642e43b3SArchie Cobbsoriginal IP header restored for further processing (eg. logging). 847642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Ed 848642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.Sh BUGS 849642e43b3SArchie CobbsPPTP aliasing does not work when more than one internal client 850642e43b3SArchie Cobbsconnects to the same external server at the same time, because 851642e43b3SArchie CobbsPPTP requires a single TCP control connection to be established 852642e43b3SArchie Cobbsbetween any two IP addresses. 853a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh AUTHORS 854e83aaae3SBrian Somers.An Charles Mott Aq cm@linktel.net , 855a2900666SRuslan Ermilovversions 1.0 - 1.8, 2.0 - 2.4. 856a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.An Eivind Eklund Aq eivind@FreeBSD.org , 857a2900666SRuslan Ermilovversions 1.8b, 1.9 and 2.5. 858a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAdded IRC DCC support as well as contributing a number of architectural 859a2900666SRuslan Ermilovimprovements; added the firewall bypass for FTP/IRC DCC. 86055a39fc5SRuslan Ermilov.An Erik Salander Aq erik@whistle.com 861642e43b3SArchie Cobbsadded support for PPTP and RTSP. 862642e43b3SArchie Cobbs.An Junichi Satoh Aq junichi@junichi.org 863642e43b3SArchie Cobbsadded support for RTSP/PNA. 864a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 865a2900666SRuslan ErmilovListed below, in approximate chronological order, are individuals who 866a2900666SRuslan Ermilovhave provided valuable comments and/or debugging assistance. 867a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 8681b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.Bd -ragged -offset indent 8691b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An -split 8701b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Gary Roberts 8711b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Tom Torrance 8721b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Reto Burkhalter 8731b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Martin Renters 8741b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Brian Somers 8751b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Paul Traina 8761b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Ari Suutari 8771b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Dave Remien 8781b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An J. Fortes 8791b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Andrzej Bialecki 8801b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.An Gordon Burditt 8811b7b85c4SRuslan Ermilov.Ed 882a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Sh CONCEPTUAL BACKGROUND 883a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis section is intended for those who are planning to modify the source 884a2900666SRuslan Ermilovcode or want to create somewhat esoteric applications using the packet 885a2900666SRuslan Ermilovaliasing functions. 886a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 887a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe conceptual framework under which the packet aliasing engine operates 888a2900666SRuslan Ermilovis described here. 8893efa11bbSBrian SomersCentral to the discussion is the idea of an 890a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Em aliasing link 891a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwhich describes the relationship for a given packet transaction between 892a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe local machine, aliased identity and remote machine. 893a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIt is discussed how such links come into existence and are destroyed. 894a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ss ALIASING LINKS 895a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThere is a notion of an 896a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Em aliasing link , 897a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwhich is a 7-tuple describing a specific translation: 8983efa11bbSBrian Somers.Bd -literal -offset indent 8993efa11bbSBrian Somers(local addr, local port, alias addr, alias port, 9003efa11bbSBrian Somers remote addr, remote port, protocol) 9013efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ed 902a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 903a2900666SRuslan ErmilovOutgoing packets have the local address and port number replaced with the 904a2900666SRuslan Ermilovalias address and port number. 905a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIncoming packets undergo the reverse process. 906a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe packet aliasing engine attempts to match packets against an internal 907a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtable of aliasing links to determine how to modify a given IP packet. 908a2900666SRuslan ErmilovBoth the IP header and protocol dependent headers are modified as necessary. 909a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAliasing links are created and deleted as necessary according to network 910a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtraffic. 911a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 912a2900666SRuslan ErmilovProtocols can be TCP, UDP or even ICMP in certain circumstances. 913a2900666SRuslan Ermilov(Some types of ICMP packets can be aliased according to sequence or ID 914a2900666SRuslan Ermilovnumber which acts as an equivalent port number for identifying how 915a2900666SRuslan Ermilovindividual packets should be handled.) 916a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 917a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEach aliasing link must have a unique combination of the following five 918a2900666SRuslan Ermilovquantities: alias address/port, remote address/port and protocol. 919a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThis ensures that several machines on a local network can share the 920a2900666SRuslan Ermilovsame aliasing IP address. 921a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn cases where conflicts might arise, the aliasing port is chosen so that 922a2900666SRuslan Ermilovuniqueness is maintained. 923a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ss STATIC AND DYNAMIC LINKS 9243efa11bbSBrian SomersAliasing links can either be static or dynamic. 925a2900666SRuslan ErmilovStatic links persist indefinitely and represent fixed rules for translating 926a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIP packets. 927a2900666SRuslan ErmilovDynamic links come into existence for a specific TCP connection or UDP 928a2900666SRuslan Ermilovtransaction or ICMP ECHO sequence. 929a2900666SRuslan ErmilovFor the case of TCP, the connection can be monitored to see when the 930a2900666SRuslan Ermilovassociated aliasing link should be deleted. 931a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAliasing links for UDP transactions (and ICMP ECHO and TIMESTAMP requests) 932a2900666SRuslan Ermilovwork on a simple timeout rule. 933a2900666SRuslan ErmilovWhen no activity is observed on a dynamic link for a certain amount of time 934a2900666SRuslan Ermilovit is automatically deleted. 935a2900666SRuslan ErmilovTimeout rules also apply to TCP connections which do not open or close 9363efa11bbSBrian Somersproperly. 937a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ss PARTIALLY SPECIFIED ALIASING LINKS 938a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAliasing links can be partially specified, meaning that the remote address 939a2900666SRuslan Ermilovand/or remote port are unknown. 940a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn this case, when a packet matching the incomplete specification is found, 941a2900666SRuslan Ermilova fully specified dynamic link is created. 942a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf the original partially specified link is dynamic, it will be deleted 943a2900666SRuslan Ermilovafter the fully specified link is created, otherwise it will persist. 944a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 945a2900666SRuslan ErmilovFor instance, a partially specified link might be 9463efa11bbSBrian Somers.Bd -literal -offset indent 9473efa11bbSBrian Somers(192.168.0.4, 23, 204.228.203.215, 8066, 0, 0, tcp) 9483efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ed 949a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 950a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe zeros denote unspecified components for the remote address and port. 951a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this link were static it would have the effect of redirecting all 952a2900666SRuslan Ermilovincoming traffic from port 8066 of 204.228.203.215 to port 23 (telnet) 953a2900666SRuslan Ermilovof machine 192.168.0.4 on the local network. 954a2900666SRuslan ErmilovEach individual telnet connection would initiate the creation of a distinct 955a2900666SRuslan Ermilovdynamic link. 956a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Ss DYNAMIC LINK CREATION 957a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn addition to aliasing links, there are also address mappings that can be 958a2900666SRuslan Ermilovstored within the internal data table of the packet aliasing mechanism. 9593efa11bbSBrian Somers.Bd -literal -offset indent 9603efa11bbSBrian Somers(local addr, alias addr) 9613efa11bbSBrian Somers.Ed 962a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 963a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAddress mappings are searched when creating new dynamic links. 964a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 965a2900666SRuslan ErmilovAll outgoing packets from the local network automatically create a dynamic 966a2900666SRuslan Ermilovlink if they do not match an already existing fully specified link. 967a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf an address mapping exists for the outgoing packet, this determines 968a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe alias address to be used. 969a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf no mapping exists, then a default address, usually the address of the 970a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpacket aliasing host, is used. 971a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf necessary, this default address can be changed as often as each individual 972a2900666SRuslan Ermilovpacket arrives. 973a2900666SRuslan Ermilov.Pp 974a2900666SRuslan ErmilovThe aliasing port number is determined such that the new dynamic link does 975a2900666SRuslan Ermilovnot conflict with any existing links. 976a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn the default operating mode, the packet aliasing engine attempts to set 977a2900666SRuslan Ermilovthe aliasing port equal to the local port number. 978a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIf this results in a conflict, then port numbers are randomly chosen until 979a2900666SRuslan Ermilova unique aliasing link can be established. 980a2900666SRuslan ErmilovIn an alternate operating mode, the first choice of an aliasing port is also 981a2900666SRuslan Ermilovrandom and unrelated to the local port number. 982