1.\"- 2.\" Copyright (c) 2001 Charles Mott <cm@linktel.net> 3.\" All rights reserved. 4.\" 5.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 6.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 7.\" are met: 8.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 9.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 10.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 11.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 12.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13.\" 14.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 15.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 16.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 17.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 18.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 19.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 20.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 21.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 22.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 23.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 24.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 25.\" 26.\" $FreeBSD$ 27.\" 28.Dd April 13, 2000 29.Dt LIBALIAS 3 30.Os 31.Sh NAME 32.Nm libalias 33.Nd packet aliasing library for masquerading and network address translation 34.Sh SYNOPSIS 35.In sys/types.h 36.In netinet/in.h 37.In alias.h 38.Pp 39Function prototypes are given in the main body of the text. 40.Sh DESCRIPTION 41The 42.Nm 43library is a collection of functions for aliasing and de-aliasing of IP 44packets, intended for masquerading and network address translation (NAT). 45.Sh INTRODUCTION 46This library is a moderately portable set of functions designed to assist 47in the process of IP masquerading and network address translation. 48Outgoing packets from a local network with unregistered IP addresses can 49be aliased to appear as if they came from an accessible IP address. 50Incoming packets are then de-aliased so that they are sent to the correct 51machine on the local network. 52.Pp 53A certain amount of flexibility is built into the packet aliasing engine. 54In the simplest mode of operation, a many-to-one address mapping takes 55place between local network and the packet aliasing host. 56This is known as IP masquerading. 57In addition, one-to-one mappings between local and public addresses can 58also be implemented, which is known as static NAT. 59In between these extremes, different groups of private addresses can be 60linked to different public addresses, comprising several distinct 61many-to-one mappings. 62Also, a given public address and port can be statically redirected to a 63private address/port. 64.Pp 65The packet aliasing engine was designed to operate in user space outside 66of the kernel, without any access to private kernel data structure, but 67the source code can also be ported to a kernel environment. 68.Sh INITIALIZATION AND CONTROL 69Two special functions, 70.Fn PacketAliasInit 71and 72.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress , 73must always be called before any packet handling may be performed. 74In addition, the operating mode of the packet aliasing engine can be 75customized by calling 76.Fn PacketAliasSetMode . 77.Pp 78.Ft void 79.Fn PacketAliasInit void 80.Bd -ragged -offset indent 81This function has no arguments or return value and is used to initialize 82internal data structures. 83The following mode bits are always set after calling 84.Fn PacketAliasInit . 85See the description of 86.Fn PacketAliasSetMode 87below for the meaning of these mode bits. 88.Pp 89.Bl -item -offset indent -compact 90.It 91.Dv PKT_ALIAS_SAME_PORTS 92.It 93.Dv PKT_ALIAS_USE_SOCKETS 94.It 95.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 96.El 97.Pp 98This function will always return the packet aliasing engine to the same 99initial state. 100.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 101must be called afterwards, and any desired changes from the default mode 102bits listed above require a call to 103.Fn PacketAliasSetMode . 104.Pp 105It is mandatory that this function be called at the beginning of a program 106prior to any packet handling. 107.Ed 108.Pp 109.Ft void 110.Fn PacketAliasUninit void 111.Bd -ragged -offset indent 112This function has no arguments or return value and is used to clear any 113resources attached to internal data structures. 114.Pp 115This functions should be called when a program stops using the aliasing 116engine; it does, amongst other things, clear out any firewall holes. 117To provide backwards compatibility and extra security, it is added to 118the 119.Xr atexit 3 120chain by 121.Fn PacketAliasInit . 122Calling it multiple times is harmless. 123.Ed 124.Pp 125.Ft void 126.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress "struct in_addr addr" 127.Bd -ragged -offset indent 128This function sets the source address to which outgoing packets from the 129local area network are aliased. 130All outgoing packets are re-mapped to this address unless overridden by a 131static address mapping established by 132.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 133.Pp 134If the 135.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 136mode bit is set (the default mode of operation), then the internal aliasing 137link tables will be reset any time the aliasing address changes. 138This is useful for interfaces such as 139.Xr ppp 8 , 140where the IP 141address may or may not change on successive dial-up attempts. 142.Pp 143If the 144.Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 145mode bit is set to zero, this function can also be used to dynamically change 146the aliasing address on a packet to packet basis (it is a low overhead call). 147.Pp 148It is mandatory that this function be called prior to any packet handling. 149.Ed 150.Pp 151.Ft unsigned int 152.Fn PacketAliasSetMode "unsigned int flags" "unsigned int mask" 153.Bd -ragged -offset indent 154This function sets or clears mode bits 155according to the value of 156.Fa flags . 157Only bits marked in 158.Fa mask 159are affected. 160The following mode bits are defined in 161.Aq Pa alias.h : 162.Bl -tag -width indent 163.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_LOG 164Enables logging into 165.Pa /var/log/alias.log . 166Each time an aliasing link is created or deleted, the log file is appended 167with the current number of ICMP, TCP and UDP links. 168Mainly useful for debugging when the log file is viewed continuously with 169.Xr tail 1 . 170.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_DENY_INCOMING 171If this mode bit is set, all incoming packets associated with new TCP 172connections or new UDP transactions will be marked for being ignored 173.Fn ( PacketAliasIn 174returns 175.Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 176code) 177by the calling program. 178Response packets to connections or transactions initiated from the packet 179aliasing host or local network will be unaffected. 180This mode bit is useful for implementing a one-way firewall. 181.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_SAME_PORTS 182If this mode bit is set, the packet aliasing engine will attempt to leave 183the alias port numbers unchanged from the actual local port numbers. 184This can be done as long as the quintuple (proto, alias addr, alias port, 185remote addr, remote port) is unique. 186If a conflict exists, a new aliasing port number is chosen even if this 187mode bit is set. 188.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_USE_SOCKETS 189This bit should be set when the packet aliasing host originates network 190traffic as well as forwards it. 191When the packet aliasing host is waiting for a connection from an unknown 192host address or unknown port number (e.g. an FTP data connection), this 193mode bit specifies that a socket be allocated as a place holder to prevent 194port conflicts. 195Once a connection is established, usually within a minute or so, the socket 196is closed. 197.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNREGISTERED_ONLY 198If this mode bit is set, traffic on the local network which does not 199originate from unregistered address spaces will be ignored. 200Standard Class A, B and C unregistered addresses are: 201.Bd -literal -offset indent 20210.0.0.0 -> 10.255.255.255 (Class A subnet) 203172.16.0.0 -> 172.31.255.255 (Class B subnets) 204192.168.0.0 -> 192.168.255.255 (Class C subnets) 205.Ed 206.Pp 207This option is useful in the case that packet aliasing host has both 208registered and unregistered subnets on different interfaces. 209The registered subnet is fully accessible to the outside world, so traffic 210from it does not need to be passed through the packet aliasing engine. 211.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_RESET_ON_ADDR_CHANGE 212When this mode bit is set and 213.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 214is called to change the aliasing address, the internal link table of the 215packet aliasing engine will be cleared. 216This operating mode is useful for 217.Xr ppp 8 218links where the interface address can sometimes change or remain the same 219between dial-up attempts. 220If this mode bit is not set, the link table will never be reset in the event 221of an address change. 222.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_PUNCH_FW 223This option makes 224.Nm 225`punch holes' in an 226.Xr ipfirewall 4 227based firewall for FTP/IRC DCC connections. 228The holes punched are bound by from/to IP address and port; it will not be 229possible to use a hole for another connection. 230A hole is removed when the connection that uses it dies. 231To cater to unexpected death of a program using 232.Nm 233(e.g. kill -9), 234changing the state of the flag will clear the entire firewall range 235allocated for holes. 236This will also happen on the initial call to 237.Fn PacketAliasSetFWBase . 238This call must happen prior to setting this flag. 239.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_REVERSE 240This option makes 241.Nm 242reverse the way it handles incoming and outgoing packets, allowing it 243to be fed with data that passes through the internal interface rather 244than the external one. 245.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_PROXY_ONLY 246This option tells 247.Nm 248to obey transparent proxy rules only. 249Normal packet aliasing is not performed. 250See 251.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 252below for details. 253.El 254.Ed 255.Pp 256.Ft void 257.Fn PacketAliasSetFWBase "unsigned int base" "unsigned int num" 258.Bd -ragged -offset indent 259Set firewall range allocated for punching firewall holes (with the 260.Dv PKT_ALIAS_PUNCH_FW 261flag). 262The range will be cleared for all rules on initialization. 263.Ed 264.Sh PACKET HANDLING 265The packet handling functions are used to modify incoming (remote to local) 266and outgoing (local to remote) packets. 267The calling program is responsible for receiving and sending packets via 268network interfaces. 269.Pp 270Along with 271.Fn PacketAliasInit 272and 273.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress , 274the two packet handling functions, 275.Fn PacketAliasIn 276and 277.Fn PacketAliasOut , 278comprise minimal set of functions needed for a basic IP masquerading 279implementation. 280.Pp 281.Ft int 282.Fn PacketAliasIn "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 283.Bd -ragged -offset indent 284An incoming packet coming from a remote machine to the local network is 285de-aliased by this function. 286The IP packet is pointed to by 287.Fa buffer , 288and 289.Fa maxpacketsize 290indicates the size of the data structure containing the packet and should 291be at least as large as the actual packet size. 292.Pp 293Return codes: 294.Bl -tag -width indent 295.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 296The packet aliasing process was successful. 297.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 298The packet was ignored and not de-aliased. 299This can happen if the protocol is unrecognized, possibly an ICMP message 300type is not handled or if incoming packets for new connections are being 301ignored (if 302.Dv PKT_ALIAS_DENY_INCOMING 303mode bit was set by 304.Fn PacketAliasSetMode ) . 305.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNRESOLVED_FRAGMENT 306This is returned when a fragment cannot be resolved because the header 307fragment has not been sent yet. 308In this situation, fragments must be saved with 309.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment 310until a header fragment is found. 311.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_FOUND_HEADER_FRAGMENT 312The packet aliasing process was successful, and a header fragment was found. 313This is a signal to retrieve any unresolved fragments with 314.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment 315and de-alias them with 316.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn . 317.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 318An internal error within the packet aliasing engine occurred. 319.El 320.Ed 321.Pp 322.Ft int 323.Fn PacketAliasOut "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 324.Bd -ragged -offset indent 325An outgoing packet coming from the local network to a remote machine is 326aliased by this function. 327The IP packet is pointed to by 328.Fa buffer , 329and 330.Fa maxpacketsize 331indicates the maximum packet size permissible should the packet length be 332changed. 333IP encoding protocols place address and port information in the encapsulated 334data stream which has to be modified and can account for changes in packet 335length. 336Well known examples of such protocols are FTP and IRC DCC. 337.Pp 338Return codes: 339.Bl -tag -width indent 340.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 341The packet aliasing process was successful. 342.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_IGNORED 343The packet was ignored and not aliased. 344This can happen if the protocol is unrecognized, or possibly an ICMP message 345type is not handled. 346.It Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 347An internal error within the packet aliasing engine occurred. 348.El 349.Ed 350.Sh PORT AND ADDRESS REDIRECTION 351The functions described in this section allow machines on the local network 352to be accessible in some degree to new incoming connections from the external 353network. 354Individual ports can be re-mapped or static network address translations can 355be designated. 356.Pp 357.Ft struct alias_link * 358.Fo PacketAliasRedirectPort 359.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 360.Fa "u_short local_port" 361.Fa "struct in_addr remote_addr" 362.Fa "u_short remote_port" 363.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 364.Fa "u_short alias_port" 365.Fa "u_char proto" 366.Fc 367.Bd -ragged -offset indent 368This function specifies that traffic from a given remote address/port to 369an alias address/port be redirected to a specified local address/port. 370The parameter 371.Fa proto 372can be either 373.Dv IPPROTO_TCP 374or 375.Dv IPPROTO_UDP , 376as defined in 377.Aq Pa netinet/in.h . 378.Pp 379If 380.Fa local_addr 381or 382.Fa alias_addr 383is zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established 384by 385.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 386is to be used. 387Even if 388.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 389is called to change the address after 390.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 391is called, a zero reference will track this change. 392.Pp 393If the link is further set up to operate for a load sharing, then 394.Fa local_addr 395and 396.Fa local_port 397are ignored, and are selected dynamically from the server pool, as described in 398.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 399below. 400.Pp 401If 402.Fa remote_addr 403is zero, this indicates to redirect packets from any remote address. 404Likewise, if 405.Fa remote_port 406is zero, this indicates to redirect packets originating from any remote 407port number. 408Almost always, the remote port specification will be zero, but non-zero 409remote addresses can sometimes be useful for firewalling. 410If two calls to 411.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 412overlap in their address/port specifications, then the most recent call 413will have precedence. 414.Pp 415This function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 416.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 417If 418.Dv NULL 419is returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 420.Pp 421All port numbers should be in network address byte order, so it is necessary 422to use 423.Xr htons 3 424to convert these parameters from internally readable numbers to network byte 425order. 426Addresses are also in network byte order, which is implicit in the use of the 427.Fa struct in_addr 428data type. 429.Ed 430.Pp 431.Ft struct alias_link * 432.Fo PacketAliasRedirectAddr 433.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 434.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 435.Fc 436.Bd -ragged -offset indent 437This function designates that all incoming traffic to 438.Fa alias_addr 439be redirected to 440.Fa local_addr . 441Similarly, all outgoing traffic from 442.Fa local_addr 443is aliased to 444.Fa alias_addr . 445.Pp 446If 447.Fa local_addr 448or 449.Fa alias_addr 450is zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established by 451.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 452is to be used. 453Even if 454.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 455is called to change the address after 456.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr 457is called, a zero reference will track this change. 458.Pp 459If the link is further set up to operate for a load sharing, then 460.Fa local_addr 461is ignored, and is selected dynamically from the server pool, as described in 462.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 463below. 464.Pp 465If subsequent calls to 466.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr 467use the same aliasing address, all new incoming traffic to this aliasing 468address will be redirected to the local address made in the last function 469call. 470New traffic generated by any of the local machines, designated in the 471several function calls, will be aliased to the same address. 472Consider the following example: 473.Bd -literal -offset indent 474PacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.2"), 475 inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 476PacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.3"), 477 inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 478PacketAliasRedirectAddr(inet_aton("192.168.0.4"), 479 inet_aton("141.221.254.101")); 480.Ed 481.Pp 482Any outgoing connections such as 483.Xr telnet 1 484or 485.Xr ftp 1 486from 192.168.0.2, 192.168.0.3 and 192.168.0.4 will appear to come from 487141.221.254.101. 488Any incoming connections to 141.221.254.101 will be directed to 192.168.0.4. 489.Pp 490Any calls to 491.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 492will have precedence over address mappings designated by 493.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 494.Pp 495This function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 496.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 497If 498.Dv NULL 499is returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 500.Ed 501.Pp 502.Ft int 503.Fo PacketAliasAddServer 504.Fa "struct alias_link *link" 505.Fa "struct in_addr addr" 506.Fa "u_short port" 507.Fc 508.Bd -ragged -offset indent 509This function sets the 510.Fa link 511up for Load Sharing using IP Network Address Translation (RFC 2391, LSNAT). 512LSNAT operates as follows. 513A client attempts to access a server by using the server virtual address. 514The LSNAT router transparently redirects the request to one of the hosts 515in server pool, selected using a real-time load sharing algorithm. 516Multiple sessions may be initiated from the same client, and each session 517could be directed to a different host based on load balance across server 518pool hosts at the time. 519If load share is desired for just a few specific services, the configuration 520on LSNAT could be defined to restrict load share for just the services 521desired. 522.Pp 523Currently, only the simplest selection algorithm is implemented, where a 524host is selected on a round-robin basis only, without regard to load on 525the host. 526.Pp 527First, the 528.Fa link 529is created by either 530.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 531or 532.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 533Then, 534.Fn PacketAliasAddServer 535is called multiple times to add entries to the 536.Fa link Ns 's 537server pool. 538.Pp 539For links created with 540.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr , 541the 542.Fa port 543argument is ignored and could have any value, e.g. htons(~0). 544.Pp 545This function returns 0 on success, -1 otherwise. 546.Ed 547.Pp 548.Ft void 549.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete "struct alias_link *link" 550.Bd -ragged -offset indent 551This function will delete a specific static redirect rule entered by 552.Fn PacketAliasRedirectPort 553or 554.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr . 555The parameter 556.Fa link 557is the pointer returned by either of the redirection functions. 558If an invalid pointer is passed to 559.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete , 560then a program crash or unpredictable operation could result, so it is 561necessary to be careful using this function. 562.Ed 563.Pp 564.Ft int 565.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule "const char *cmd" 566.Bd -ragged -offset indent 567The passed 568.Fa cmd 569string consists of one or more pairs of words. 570The first word in each pair is a token and the second is the value that 571should be applied for that token. 572Tokens and their argument types are as follows: 573.Bl -tag -width indent 574.It Cm type encode_ip_hdr | encode_tcp_stream | no_encode 575In order to support transparent proxying, it is necessary to somehow 576pass the original address and port information into the new destination 577server. 578If 579.Cm encode_ip_hdr 580is specified, the original address and port is passed as an extra IP 581option. 582If 583.Cm encode_tcp_stream 584is specified, the original address and port is passed as the first 585piece of data in the TCP stream in the format 586.Dq DEST Ar IP port . 587.It Cm port Ar portnum 588Only packets with the destination port 589.Ar portnum 590are proxied. 591.It Cm server Ar host Ns Xo 592.Op : Ns Ar portnum 593.Xc 594This specifies the 595.Ar host 596and 597.Ar portnum 598that the data is to be redirected to. 599.Ar host 600must be an IP address rather than a DNS host name. 601If 602.Ar portnum 603is not specified, the destination port number is not changed. 604.Pp 605The 606.Ar server 607specification is mandatory unless the 608.Cm delete 609command is being used. 610.It Cm rule Ar index 611Normally, each call to 612.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 613inserts the next rule at the start of a linear list of rules. 614If an 615.Ar index 616is specified, the new rule will be checked after all rules with lower 617indices. 618Calls to 619.Fn PacketAliasProxyRule 620that do not specify a rule are assigned rule 0. 621.It Cm delete Ar index 622This token and its argument MUST NOT be used with any other tokens. 623When used, all existing rules with the given 624.Ar index 625are deleted. 626.It Cm proto tcp | udp 627If specified, only packets of the given protocol type are matched. 628.It Cm src Ar IP Ns Xo 629.Op / Ns Ar bits 630.Xc 631If specified, only packets with a source address matching the given 632.Ar IP 633are matched. 634If 635.Ar bits 636is also specified, then the first 637.Ar bits 638bits of 639.Ar IP 640are taken as a network specification, and all IP addresses from that 641network will be matched. 642.It Cm dst Ar IP Ns Xo 643.Op / Ns Ar bits 644.Xc 645If specified, only packets with a destination address matching the given 646.Ar IP 647are matched. 648If 649.Ar bits 650is also specified, then the first 651.Ar bits 652bits of 653.Ar IP 654are taken as a network specification, and all IP addresses from that 655network will be matched. 656.El 657.Pp 658This function is usually used to redirect outgoing connections for 659internal machines that are not permitted certain types of internet 660access, or to restrict access to certain external machines. 661.Ed 662.Pp 663.Ft struct alias_link * 664.Fo PacketAliasRedirectProto 665.Fa "struct in_addr local_addr" 666.Fa "struct in_addr remote_addr" 667.Fa "struct in_addr alias_addr" 668.Fa "u_char proto" 669.Fc 670.Bd -ragged -offset indent 671This function specifies that any IP packet with protocol number of 672.Fa proto 673from a given remote address to an alias address be 674redirected to a specified local address. 675.Pp 676If 677.Fa local_addr 678or 679.Fa alias_addr 680is zero, this indicates that the packet aliasing address as established 681by 682.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 683is to be used. 684Even if 685.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress 686is called to change the address after 687.Fn PacketAliasRedirectProto 688is called, a zero reference will track this change. 689.Pp 690If 691.Fa remote_addr 692is zero, this indicates to redirect packets from any remote address. 693Non-zero remote addresses can sometimes be useful for firewalling. 694.Pp 695If two calls to 696.Fn PacketAliasRedirectProto 697overlap in their address specifications, then the most recent call 698will have precedence. 699.Pp 700This function returns a pointer which can subsequently be used by 701.Fn PacketAliasRedirectDelete . 702If 703.Dv NULL 704is returned, then the function call did not complete successfully. 705.Ed 706.Sh FRAGMENT HANDLING 707The functions in this section are used to deal with incoming fragments. 708.Pp 709Outgoing fragments are handled within 710.Fn PacketAliasOut 711by changing the address according to any applicable mapping set by 712.Fn PacketAliasRedirectAddr , 713or the default aliasing address set by 714.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress . 715.Pp 716Incoming fragments are handled in one of two ways. 717If the header of a fragmented IP packet has already been seen, then all 718subsequent fragments will be re-mapped in the same manner the header 719fragment was. 720Fragments which arrive before the header are saved and then retrieved 721once the header fragment has been resolved. 722.Pp 723.Ft int 724.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment "char *ptr" 725.Bd -ragged -offset indent 726When 727.Fn PacketAliasIn 728returns 729.Dv PKT_ALIAS_UNRESOLVED_FRAGMENT , 730this function can be used to save the pointer to the unresolved fragment. 731.Pp 732It is implicitly assumed that 733.Fa ptr 734points to a block of memory allocated by 735.Xr malloc 3 . 736If the fragment is never resolved, the packet aliasing engine will 737automatically free the memory after a timeout period. 738[Eventually this function should be modified so that a callback function 739for freeing memory is passed as an argument.] 740.Pp 741This function returns 742.Dv PKT_ALIAS_OK 743if it was successful and 744.Dv PKT_ALIAS_ERROR 745if there was an error. 746.Ed 747.Pp 748.Ft char * 749.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment "char *buffer" 750.Bd -ragged -offset indent 751This function can be used to retrieve fragment pointers saved by 752.Fn PacketAliasSaveFragment . 753The IP header fragment pointed to by 754.Fa buffer 755is the header fragment indicated when 756.Fn PacketAliasIn 757returns 758.Dv PKT_ALIAS_FOUND_HEADER_FRAGMENT . 759Once a fragment pointer is retrieved, it becomes the calling program's 760responsibility to free the dynamically allocated memory for the fragment. 761.Pp 762.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment 763can be called sequentially until there are no more fragments available, 764at which time it returns 765.Dv NULL . 766.Ed 767.Pp 768.Ft void 769.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn "char *header" "char *fragment" 770.Bd -ragged -offset indent 771When a fragment is retrieved with 772.Fn PacketAliasGetFragment , 773it can then be de-aliased with a call to 774.Fn PacketAliasFragmentIn . 775The 776.Fa header 777argument is the pointer to a header fragment used as a template, and 778.Fa fragment 779is the pointer to the packet to be de-aliased. 780.Ed 781.Sh MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS 782.Ft void 783.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget "struct in_addr addr" 784.Bd -ragged -offset indent 785When an incoming packet not associated with any pre-existing aliasing link 786arrives at the host machine, it will be sent to the address indicated by a 787call to 788.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget . 789.Pp 790If this function is called with an 791.Dv INADDR_NONE 792address argument, then all new incoming packets go to the address set by 793.Fn PacketAliasSetAddress . 794.Pp 795If this function is not called, or is called with an 796.Dv INADDR_ANY 797address argument, then all new incoming packets go to the address specified 798in the packet. 799This allows external machines to talk directly to internal machines if they 800can route packets to the machine in question. 801.Ed 802.Pp 803.Ft int 804.Fn PacketAliasCheckNewLink void 805.Bd -ragged -offset indent 806This function returns a non-zero value when a new aliasing link is created. 807In circumstances where incoming traffic is being sequentially sent to 808different local servers, this function can be used to trigger when 809.Fn PacketAliasSetTarget 810is called to change the default target address. 811.Ed 812.Pp 813.Ft u_short 814.Fn PacketAliasInternetChecksum "u_short *buffer" "int nbytes" 815.Bd -ragged -offset indent 816This is a utility function that does not seem to be available elsewhere and 817is included as a convenience. 818It computes the internet checksum, which is used in both IP and 819protocol-specific headers (TCP, UDP, ICMP). 820.Pp 821The 822.Fa buffer 823argument points to the data block to be checksummed, and 824.Fa nbytes 825is the number of bytes. 826The 16-bit checksum field should be zeroed before computing the checksum. 827.Pp 828Checksums can also be verified by operating on a block of data including 829its checksum. 830If the checksum is valid, 831.Fn PacketAliasInternetChecksum 832will return zero. 833.Ed 834.Pp 835.Ft int 836.Fn PacketUnaliasOut "char *buffer" "int maxpacketsize" 837.Bd -ragged -offset indent 838An outgoing packet, which has already been aliased, 839has its private address/port information restored by this function. 840The IP packet is pointed to by 841.Fa buffer , 842and 843.Fa maxpacketsize 844is provided for error checking purposes. 845This function can be used if an already-aliased packet needs to have its 846original IP header restored for further processing (eg. logging). 847.Ed 848.Sh BUGS 849PPTP aliasing does not work when more than one internal client 850connects to the same external server at the same time, because 851PPTP requires a single TCP control connection to be established 852between any two IP addresses. 853.Sh AUTHORS 854.An Charles Mott Aq cm@linktel.net , 855versions 1.0 - 1.8, 2.0 - 2.4. 856.An Eivind Eklund Aq eivind@FreeBSD.org , 857versions 1.8b, 1.9 and 2.5. 858Added IRC DCC support as well as contributing a number of architectural 859improvements; added the firewall bypass for FTP/IRC DCC. 860.An Erik Salander Aq erik@whistle.com 861added support for PPTP and RTSP. 862.An Junichi Satoh Aq junichi@junichi.org 863added support for RTSP/PNA. 864.Sh ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 865Listed below, in approximate chronological order, are individuals who 866have provided valuable comments and/or debugging assistance. 867.Pp 868.Bd -ragged -offset indent 869.An -split 870.An Gary Roberts 871.An Tom Torrance 872.An Reto Burkhalter 873.An Martin Renters 874.An Brian Somers 875.An Paul Traina 876.An Ari Suutari 877.An Dave Remien 878.An J. Fortes 879.An Andrzej Bialecki 880.An Gordon Burditt 881.Ed 882.Sh CONCEPTUAL BACKGROUND 883This section is intended for those who are planning to modify the source 884code or want to create somewhat esoteric applications using the packet 885aliasing functions. 886.Pp 887The conceptual framework under which the packet aliasing engine operates 888is described here. 889Central to the discussion is the idea of an 890.Em aliasing link 891which describes the relationship for a given packet transaction between 892the local machine, aliased identity and remote machine. 893It is discussed how such links come into existence and are destroyed. 894.Ss ALIASING LINKS 895There is a notion of an 896.Em aliasing link , 897which is a 7-tuple describing a specific translation: 898.Bd -literal -offset indent 899(local addr, local port, alias addr, alias port, 900 remote addr, remote port, protocol) 901.Ed 902.Pp 903Outgoing packets have the local address and port number replaced with the 904alias address and port number. 905Incoming packets undergo the reverse process. 906The packet aliasing engine attempts to match packets against an internal 907table of aliasing links to determine how to modify a given IP packet. 908Both the IP header and protocol dependent headers are modified as necessary. 909Aliasing links are created and deleted as necessary according to network 910traffic. 911.Pp 912Protocols can be TCP, UDP or even ICMP in certain circumstances. 913(Some types of ICMP packets can be aliased according to sequence or ID 914number which acts as an equivalent port number for identifying how 915individual packets should be handled.) 916.Pp 917Each aliasing link must have a unique combination of the following five 918quantities: alias address/port, remote address/port and protocol. 919This ensures that several machines on a local network can share the 920same aliasing IP address. 921In cases where conflicts might arise, the aliasing port is chosen so that 922uniqueness is maintained. 923.Ss STATIC AND DYNAMIC LINKS 924Aliasing links can either be static or dynamic. 925Static links persist indefinitely and represent fixed rules for translating 926IP packets. 927Dynamic links come into existence for a specific TCP connection or UDP 928transaction or ICMP ECHO sequence. 929For the case of TCP, the connection can be monitored to see when the 930associated aliasing link should be deleted. 931Aliasing links for UDP transactions (and ICMP ECHO and TIMESTAMP requests) 932work on a simple timeout rule. 933When no activity is observed on a dynamic link for a certain amount of time 934it is automatically deleted. 935Timeout rules also apply to TCP connections which do not open or close 936properly. 937.Ss PARTIALLY SPECIFIED ALIASING LINKS 938Aliasing links can be partially specified, meaning that the remote address 939and/or remote port are unknown. 940In this case, when a packet matching the incomplete specification is found, 941a fully specified dynamic link is created. 942If the original partially specified link is dynamic, it will be deleted 943after the fully specified link is created, otherwise it will persist. 944.Pp 945For instance, a partially specified link might be 946.Bd -literal -offset indent 947(192.168.0.4, 23, 204.228.203.215, 8066, 0, 0, tcp) 948.Ed 949.Pp 950The zeros denote unspecified components for the remote address and port. 951If this link were static it would have the effect of redirecting all 952incoming traffic from port 8066 of 204.228.203.215 to port 23 (telnet) 953of machine 192.168.0.4 on the local network. 954Each individual telnet connection would initiate the creation of a distinct 955dynamic link. 956.Ss DYNAMIC LINK CREATION 957In addition to aliasing links, there are also address mappings that can be 958stored within the internal data table of the packet aliasing mechanism. 959.Bd -literal -offset indent 960(local addr, alias addr) 961.Ed 962.Pp 963Address mappings are searched when creating new dynamic links. 964.Pp 965All outgoing packets from the local network automatically create a dynamic 966link if they do not match an already existing fully specified link. 967If an address mapping exists for the outgoing packet, this determines 968the alias address to be used. 969If no mapping exists, then a default address, usually the address of the 970packet aliasing host, is used. 971If necessary, this default address can be changed as often as each individual 972packet arrives. 973.Pp 974The aliasing port number is determined such that the new dynamic link does 975not conflict with any existing links. 976In the default operating mode, the packet aliasing engine attempts to set 977the aliasing port equal to the local port number. 978If this results in a conflict, then port numbers are randomly chosen until 979a unique aliasing link can be established. 980In an alternate operating mode, the first choice of an aliasing port is also 981random and unrelated to the local port number. 982