Shorewall and Aliased Interfaces

Tom Eastep

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled GNU Free Documentation License.

2010/01/24



Table of Contents

Background
Adding Addresses to Interfaces
So how do I handle more than one address on an interface?
Separate Rules
DNAT
SNAT
One-to-one NAT
MULTIPLE SUBNETS

Caution

This article applies to Shorewall 4.3 and later. If you are running a version of Shorewall earlier than Shorewall 4.3.5 then please see the documentation for that release.

Background

The traditional net-tools contain a program called ifconfig which is used to configure network devices. ifconfig introduced the concept of aliased or virtual interfaces. These virtual interfaces have names of the form interface:integer (e.g., eth0:0) and ifconfig treats them more or less like real interfaces.

Example 1. ifconfig

[root@gateway root]# ifconfig eth0:0
eth0:0    Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 02:00:08:3:FA:55
          inet addr:206.124.146.178  Bcast:206.124.146.255  Mask:255.255.255.0
          UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
          Interrupt:11 Base address:0x2000
[root@gateway root]# 

The ifconfig utility is being gradually phased out in favor of the ip utility which is part of the iproute package. The ip utility does not use the concept of aliases or virtual interfaces but rather treats additional addresses on an interface as objects in their own right. The ip utility does provide for interaction with ifconfig in that it allows addresses to be labeled where these labels take the form of ipconfig virtual interfaces.

Example 2. ip

[root@gateway root]# ip addr show dev eth0
2: eth0: <BROADCAST,MULTICAST,UP> mtu 1500 qdisc htb qlen 100
    link/ether 02:00:08:e3:fa:55 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
    inet 206.124.146.176/24 brd 206.124.146.255 scope global eth0
    inet 206.124.146.178/24 brd 206.124.146.255 scope global secondary eth0:0
[root@gateway root]# 

Note

One cannot type ip addr show dev eth0:0 because eth0:0 is a label for a particular address rather than a device name.

[root@gateway root]# ip addr show dev eth0:0
Device "eth0:0" does not exist.
[root@gateway root]#

The iptables program doesn't support virtual interfaces in either its -i or -o command options; as a consequence, Shorewall does not allow them to be used in the /etc/shorewall/interfaces file or anywhere else except as described in the discussion below.

Adding Addresses to Interfaces

Most distributions have a facility for adding additional addresses to interfaces. If you have already used your distribution's capability to add your required addresses, you can skip this section.

Shorewall provides facilities for automatically adding addresses to interfaces as described in the following section. It is also easy to add them yourself using the ip utility. The above alias was added using:

ip addr add 206.124.146.178/24 brd 206.124.146.255 dev eth0 label eth0:0

You probably want to arrange to add these addresses when the device is started rather than placing commands like the above in one of the Shorewall extension scripts. For example, on RedHat systems, you can place the commands in /sbin/ifup-local:

#!/bin/sh

case $1 in
    eth0)
        /sbin/ip addr add 206.124.146.178 dev eth0 label eth0:0
        ;;
esac

RedHat systems also allow adding such aliases from the network administration GUI (which only works well if you have a graphical environment on your firewall).

On Debian and LEAF/Bering systems, it is as simple as adding the command to the interface definition as follows:

# Internet interface
auto eth0
iface eth0 inet static
        address 206.124.146.176
        netmask 255.255.255.0
        gateway 206.124.146.254
        up ip addr add 206.124.146.178/24 brd 206.124.146.255 dev eth0 label eth0:0

So how do I handle more than one address on an interface?

The answer depends on what you are trying to do with the interfaces. In the sub-sections that follow, we'll take a look at common scenarios.

Note

The examples in the following sub-sections assume that the local network is 192.168.1.0/24.

Separate Rules

If you need to make a rule for traffic to/from the firewall itself that only applies to a particular IP address, simply qualify the $FW zone with the IP address.

Example 3. allow SSH from net to eth0:0 above

[/etc/shorewall/rules]

#ACTION   SOURCE     DEST                 PROTO      DEST PORT(S)
ACCEPT    net        $FW:206.124.146.178  tcp        22

DNAT

Suppose that I had set up eth0:0 as above and I wanted to port forward from that virtual interface to a web server running in my local zone at 192.168.1.3. That is accomplished by a single rule in the /etc/shorewall/rules file:

#ACTION   SOURCE     DEST                 PROTO      DEST PORT(S)   SOURCE    ORIGINAL
#                                                                   PORT(S)   DEST
DNAT      net        loc:192.168.1.3      tcp        80             -         206.124.146.178    

SNAT

If you wanted to use eth0:0 as the IP address for outbound connections from your local zone (eth1), then in /etc/shorewall/masq:

#INTERFACE             SUBNET          ADDRESS
eth0                   192.168.1.0/24  206.124.146.178

Shorewall can create the alias (additional address) for you if you set ADD_SNAT_ALIASES=Yes in /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf.

Warning

Addresses added by ADD_SNAT_ALIASES=Yes are deleted and re-added during shorewall restart. As a consequence, connections using those addresses may be severed.

Shorewall can create the label (virtual interface) so that you can see the created address using ifconfig. In addition to setting ADD_SNAT_ALIASES=Yes, you specify the virtual interface name in the INTERFACE column as follows.

/etc/shorewall/masq

#INTERFACE              SUBNET         ADDRESS
eth0:0                  192.168.1.0/24 206.124.146.178

Shorewall can also set up SNAT to round-robin over a range of IP addresses. To do that, you specify a range of IP addresses in the ADDRESS column. If you specify a label in the INTERFACE column, Shorewall will use that label for the first address of the range and will increment the label by one for each subsequent label.

/etc/shorewall/masq

#INTERFACE               SUBNET         ADDRESS
eth0:0                   192.168.1.0/24 206.124.146.178-206.124.146.180

The above would create three IP addresses:

eth0:0 = 206.124.146.178
eth0:1 = 206.124.146.179
eth0:2 = 206.124.146.180

One-to-one NAT

If you wanted to use one-to-one NAT to link eth0:0 with local address 192.168.1.3, you would have the following in /etc/shorewall/nat:

#EXTERNAL          INTERFACE         INTERNAL     ALL INTERFACES    LOCAL
206.124.146.178    eth0              192.168.1.3  no                no

Shorewall can create the alias (additional address) for you if you set ADD_IP_ALIASES=Yes in /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf.

Warning

Addresses added by ADD_IP_ALIASES=Yes are deleted and re-added during shorewall restart. As a consequence, connections using those addresses may be severed.

Shorewall can create the label (virtual interface) so that you can see the created address using ifconfig. In addition to setting ADD_IP_ALIASES=Yes, you specify the virtual interface name in the INTERFACE column as follows.

/etc/shorewall/nat

#EXTERNAL          INTERFACE         INTERNAL     ALL INTERFACES    LOCAL
206.124.146.178    eth0:0            192.168.1.3  no                no

In either case, to create rules in /etc/shorewall/rules that pertain only to this NAT pair, you simply qualify the local zone with the internal IP address.

Example 4. You want to allow SSH from the net to 206.124.146.178 a.k.a. 192.168.1.3.

#ACTION    SOURCE     DEST              PROTO     DEST PORT(S)
ACCEPT     net        loc:192.168.1.3   tcp       22

MULTIPLE SUBNETS

Sometimes multiple IP addresses are used because there are multiple subnetworks configured on a LAN segment. This technique does not provide for any security between the subnetworks if the users of the systems have administrative privileges because in that case, the users can simply manipulate their system's routing table to bypass your firewall/router. Nevertheless, there are cases where you simply want to consider the LAN segment itself as a zone and allow your firewall/router to route between the two subnetworks.

Example 5. Local interface eth1 interfaces to 192.168.1.0/24 and 192.168.20.0/24. The primary IP address of eth1 is 192.168.1.254 and eth1:0 is 192.168.20.254. You simply want your firewall to route between these two subnetworks.

In /etc/shorewall/zones:

#ZONE        TYPE          OPTIONS
loc          ipv4

In /etc/shorewall/interfaces:

#ZONE       INTERFACE  BROADCAST                      OPTIONS
loc         eth1       192.168.1.255,192.168.20.255   routeback   

In /etc/shorewall/rules, simply specify ACCEPT rules for the traffic that you want to permit.


Example 6. Local interface eth1 interfaces to 192.168.1.0/24 and 192.168.20.0/24. The primary IP address of eth1 is 192.168.1.254 and eth1:0 is 192.168.20.254. You want to make these subnetworks into separate zones and control the access between them (the users of the systems do not have administrative privileges).

In /etc/shorewall/zones:

#ZONE        TYPE                 OPTIONS
loc          ipv4
loc2         ipv4

In /etc/shorewall/interfaces:

#ZONE       INTERFACE  BROADCAST                      OPTIONS
-           eth1       192.168.1.255,192.168.20.255   

In /etc/shorewall/hosts:

#ZONE        HOSTS                    OPTIONS
loc          eth1:192.168.1.0/24
loc2         eth1:192.168.20.0/24

In /etc/shorewall/rules, simply specify ACCEPT rules for the traffic that you want to permit.

For more information on handling multiple networks through a single interface, see Routing on One Interface.