Firewalls
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The Linux kernel includes the Netfilter subsystem, which is used to manipulate or decide the fate of network traffic headed into or through your server. All modern Linux firewall solutions use this system for packet filtering.
The kernel’s packet filtering system would be of little use to administrators without a userspace interface to manage it. This is the purpose of the iptables
utility: when a packet reaches your server, it will be handed off to the Netfilter subsystem for acceptance, manipulation, or rejection based on the rules supplied to it from the userspace (via iptables
). Thus, iptables
is all you need to manage your firewall, if you’re familiar with it, but many frontends are available to simplify the task. We’ll take a look at the default frontend used in Ubuntu here.
ufw - Uncomplicated Firewall
The default firewall configuration tool for Ubuntu is ufw
. Developed to ease iptables
firewall configuration, ufw
provides a user-friendly way to create an IPv4 or IPv6 host-based firewall.
ufw
by default is initially disabled. From the ufw
man page:
ufw is not intended to provide complete firewall functionality via its command interface, but instead provides an easy way to add or remove simple rules. It is currently mainly used for host-based firewalls.
Enable or disable ufw
To enable ufw
, run the following command from a terminal prompt:
sudo ufw enable
To disable it, you can use the following command:
sudo ufw disable
Open or close a port
To open a port (SSH in this case):
sudo ufw allow 22
Similarly, to close an opened port:
sudo ufw deny 22
Add or remove a rule
Rules can also be added using a numbered format:
sudo ufw insert 1 allow 80
To view the numbered format:
sudo ufw status numbered
To remove a rule, use delete
followed by the rule:
sudo ufw delete deny 22
Allow access from specific hosts
It is possible to allow access from specific hosts or networks to a port. The following example allows SSH access from host 192.168.0.2
to any IP address on this host:
sudo ufw allow proto tcp from 192.168.0.2 to any port 22
Replace 192.168.0.2
with 192.168.0.0/24
to allow SSH access from the entire subnet.
The --dry-run
option
Adding the --dry-run
option to a ufw
command will output the resulting rules, but not apply them. For example, the following is what would be applied if opening the HTTP port:
sudo ufw --dry-run allow http
*filter
:ufw-user-input - [0:0]
:ufw-user-output - [0:0]
:ufw-user-forward - [0:0]
:ufw-user-limit - [0:0]
:ufw-user-limit-accept - [0:0]
### RULES ###
### tuple ### allow tcp 80 0.0.0.0/0 any 0.0.0.0/0
-A ufw-user-input -p tcp --dport 80 -j ACCEPT
### END RULES ###
-A ufw-user-input -j RETURN
-A ufw-user-output -j RETURN
-A ufw-user-forward -j RETURN
-A ufw-user-limit -m limit --limit 3/minute -j LOG --log-prefix "[UFW LIMIT]: "
-A ufw-user-limit -j REJECT
-A ufw-user-limit-accept -j ACCEPT
COMMIT
Rules updated
Check the status
To see the firewall status, enter:
sudo ufw status
And for more verbose status information use:
sudo ufw status verbose
Note:
If the port you want to open or close is defined in/etc/services
, you can use the port name instead of the number. In the above examples, replace22
withssh
.
This is a quick introduction to using ufw
. Please refer to the ufw
man page for more information.
ufw application integration
Applications that open ports can include a ufw
profile, which details the ports needed for the application to function properly. The profiles are kept in /etc/ufw/applications.d
, and can be edited if the default ports have been changed.
To view which applications have installed a profile, run the following in a terminal:
sudo ufw app list
Similar to allowing traffic to a port, using an application profile is accomplished by entering:
sudo ufw allow Samba
An extended syntax is available as well:
ufw allow from 192.168.0.0/24 to any app Samba
Replace Samba
and 192.168.0.0/24
with the application profile you are using and the IP range for your network.
Note:
There is no need to specify the protocol for the application, because that information is detailed in the profile. Also, note that theapp
name replaces theport
number.
To view details about which ports and protocols, and so on, are defined for an application, enter:
sudo ufw app info Samba
Not all applications that require opening a network port come with ufw
profiles, but if you have profiled an application and want the file to be included with the package, please file a bug against the package in Launchpad.
ubuntu-bug nameofpackage
IP masquerading
The purpose of IP masquerading is to allow machines with private, non-routable IP addresses on your network to access the Internet through the machine doing the masquerading. Traffic from your private network destined for the Internet must be manipulated for replies to be routable back to the machine that made the request.
To do this, the kernel must modify the source IP address of each packet so that replies will be routed back to it, rather than to the private IP address that made the request, which is impossible over the Internet. Linux uses Connection Tracking (conntrack
) to keep track of which connections belong to which machines and reroute each return packet accordingly. Traffic leaving your private network is thus “masqueraded” as having originated from your Ubuntu gateway machine. This process is referred to in Microsoft documentation as “Internet Connection Sharing”.
IP masquerading with ufw
IP masquerading can be achieved using custom ufw
rules. This is possible because the current back-end for ufw
is iptables-restore
with the rules files located in /etc/ufw/*.rules
. These files are a great place to add legacy iptables
rules used without ufw
, and rules that are more network gateway or bridge related.
The rules are split into two different files; rules that should be executed before ufw
command line rules, and rules that are executed after ufw
command line rules.
Enable packet forwarding
First, packet forwarding needs to be enabled in ufw
. Two configuration files will need to be adjusted, so first, in /etc/default/ufw
change the DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY
to “ACCEPT”
:
DEFAULT_FORWARD_POLICY="ACCEPT"
Then, edit /etc/ufw/sysctl.conf
and uncomment:
net/ipv4/ip_forward=1
Similarly, for IPv6 forwarding, uncomment:
net/ipv6/conf/default/forwarding=1
Add the configuration
Now add rules to the /etc/ufw/before.rules
file. The default rules only configure the filter table, and to enable masquerading the nat
table will need to be configured. Add the following to the top of the file, just after the header comments:
# nat Table rules
*nat
:POSTROUTING ACCEPT [0:0]
# Forward traffic from eth1 through eth0.
-A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE
# don't delete the 'COMMIT' line or these nat table rules won't be processed
COMMIT
The comments are not strictly necessary, but it is considered good practice to document your configuration. Also, when modifying any of the rules
files in /etc/ufw
, make sure these lines are the last line for each table modified:
# don't delete the 'COMMIT' line or these rules won't be processed
COMMIT
For each Table, a corresponding COMMIT
statement is required. In these examples only the nat
and filter
tables are shown, but you can also add rules for the raw
and mangle
tables.
Note:
In the above example, replaceeth0
,eth1
, and192.168.0.0/24
with the appropriate interfaces and IP range for your network.
Restart ufw
Finally, disable and re-enable ufw
to apply the changes:
sudo ufw disable && sudo ufw enable
IP masquerading should now be enabled. You can also add any additional FORWARD
rules to the /etc/ufw/before.rules
. It is recommended that these additional rules be added to the ufw-before-forward
chain.
IP masquerading with iptables
iptables
can also be used to enable masquerading.
Similarly to ufw
, the first step is to enable IPv4 packet forwarding by editing /etc/sysctl.conf
and uncomment the following line:
net.ipv4.ip_forward=1
If you wish to enable IPv6 forwarding also uncomment:
net.ipv6.conf.default.forwarding=1
Next, run the sysctl
command to enable the new settings in the configuration file:
sudo sysctl -p
IP masquerading can now be accomplished with a single iptables
rule, which may differ slightly based on your network configuration:
sudo iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/16 -o ppp0 -j MASQUERADE
The above command assumes that your private address space is 192.168.0.0/16
and that your Internet-facing device is ppp0
. The syntax is broken down as follows:
-
-t nat
– the rule is to go into the NAT table -
-A POSTROUTING
– the rule is to be appended (-A
) to thePOSTROUTING
chain -
-s 192.168.0.0/16
– the rule applies to traffic originating from the specified address space -
-o ppp0
– the rule applies to traffic scheduled to be routed through the specified network device -
-j MASQUERADE
– traffic matching this rule is to “jump” (-j
) to theMASQUERADE
target to be manipulated as described above
Also, each chain in the filter table (the default table, and where most – or all – packet filtering occurs) has a default policy of ACCEPT
, but if you are creating a firewall in addition to a gateway device, you may have set the policies to DROP
or REJECT
, in which case your masqueraded traffic needs to be allowed through the FORWARD
chain for the above rule to work:
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -s 192.168.0.0/16 -o ppp0 -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A FORWARD -d 192.168.0.0/16 -m state \
--state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -i ppp0 -j ACCEPT
The above commands will allow all connections from your local network to the Internet and all traffic related to those connections to return to the machine that initiated them.
If you want masquerading to be enabled on reboot, which you probably do, edit /etc/rc.local
and add any commands used above. For example add the first command with no filtering:
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/16 -o ppp0 -j MASQUERADE
Logs
Firewall logs are essential for recognising attacks, troubleshooting your firewall rules, and noticing unusual activity on your network. You must include logging rules in your firewall for them to be generated, though, and logging rules must come before any applicable terminating rule (a rule with a target that decides the fate of the packet, such as ACCEPT
, DROP
, or REJECT
).
If you are using ufw
, you can turn on logging by entering the following in a terminal:
sudo ufw logging on
To turn logging off in ufw
, replace on
with off
in the above command:
If you are using iptables
instead of ufw
, run:
sudo iptables -A INPUT -m state --state NEW -p tcp --dport 80 \
-j LOG --log-prefix "NEW_HTTP_CONN: "
A request on port 80
from the local machine, then, would generate a log in dmesg
that looks like this (single line split into 3 to fit this document):
[4304885.870000] NEW_HTTP_CONN: IN=lo OUT= MAC=00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:00:08:00
SRC=127.0.0.1 DST=127.0.0.1 LEN=60 TOS=0x00 PREC=0x00 TTL=64 ID=58288 DF PROTO=TCP
SPT=53981 DPT=80 WINDOW=32767 RES=0x00 SYN URGP=0
The above log will also appear in /var/log/messages
, /var/log/syslog
, and /var/log/kern.log
. This behavior can be modified by editing /etc/syslog.conf
appropriately or by installing and configuring ulogd
and using the ULOG
target instead of LOG
. The ulogd
daemon is a userspace server that listens for logging instructions from the kernel – specifically for firewalls – and can log to any file you like, or even to a PostgreSQL or MySQL database. Making sense of your firewall logs can be simplified by using a log analysing tool such as logwatch
, fwanalog
, fwlogwatch
, or lire
.
Other tools
There are many tools available to help you construct a complete firewall without intimate knowledge of iptables
. A command-line tool with plain-text configuration files, for example, is Shorewall; a powerful solution to help you configure an advanced firewall for any network.
Further reading
-
The Ubuntu Firewall wiki page contains information on the development of ufw
-
Also, the
ufw
manual page contains some very useful information:man ufw
-
See the packet-filtering-HOWTO for more information on using
iptables
-
The nat-HOWTO contains further details on masquerading
-
The IPTables HowTo in the Ubuntu wiki is a great resource