Name

conntrack — shorewall conntrack file

Synopsis

/etc/shorewall[6]/conntrack

Description

The original intent of the notrack file was to exempt certain traffic from Netfilter connection tracking. Traffic matching entries in the file were not to be tracked.

The role of the file was expanded in Shorewall 4.4.27 to include all rules that can be added in the Netfilter raw table. In 4.5.7, the file's name was changed to conntrack.

The file supports three different column layouts: FORMAT 1, FORMAT 2, and FORMAT 3 with FORMAT 1 being the default. The three differ as follows:

  • in FORMAT 2 and 3, there is an additional leading ACTION column.

  • in FORMAT 3, the SOURCE column accepts no zone name; rather the ACTION column allows a SUFFIX that determines the chain(s) that the generated rule will be added to.

When an entry in the following form is encountered, the format of the following entries are assumed to be of the specified format.

?FORMAT format

where format is either 1,2 or 3.

Format 3 was introduced in Shorewall 4.5.10.

Comments may be attached to Netfilter rules generated from entries in this file through the use of ?COMMENT lines. These lines begin with ?COMMENT; the remainder of the line is treated as a comment which is attached to subsequent rules until another ?COMMENT line is found or until the end of the file is reached. To stop adding comments to rules, use a line containing only ?COMMENT.

The columns in the file are as follows (where the column name is followed by a different name in parentheses, the different name is used in the alternate specification syntax).

ACTION - {NOTRACK|CT:helper:name[(arg=val[,...])|CT:ctevents:event[,...]|CT:expevents:new|CT:notrack|DROP|LOG|ULOG(ulog-parameters):NFLOG(nflog-parameters)|IP[6]TABLES(target)}[log-level[:log-tag]][:chain-designator]

This column is only present when FORMAT >= 2. Values other than NOTRACK or DROP require CT Target support in your iptables and kernel.

  • NOTRACK or CT:notrack

    Disables connection tracking for this packet. If a log-level is specified, the packet will also be logged at that level.

  • CT:helper:name

    Attach the helper identified by the name to this connection. This is more flexible than loading the conntrack helper with preset ports. If a log-level is specified, the packet will also be logged at that level. Beginning with Shorewall 4.6.10, the helper name is optional

    At this writing, the available helpers are:

    amanda

    Requires that the amanda netfilter helper is present.

    ftp

    Requires that the FTP netfilter helper is present.

    irc

    Requires that the IRC netfilter helper is present.

    netbios-ns

    Requires that the netbios_ns (sic) helper is present.

    RAS and Q.931

    These require that the H323 netfilter helper is present.

    pptp

    Requires that the pptp netfilter helper is present.

    sane

    Requires that the SANE netfilter helper is present.

    sip

    Requires that the SIP netfilter helper is present.

    snmp

    Requires that the SNMP netfilter helper is present.

    tftp

    Requires that the TFTP netfilter helper is present.

    May be followed by an option list of arg=val pairs in parentheses:

    • ctevents=event[,...]

      Only generate the specified conntrack events for this connection. Possible event types are: new, related, destroy, reply, assured, protoinfo, helper, mark (this is connection mark, not packet mark), natseqinfo, and secmark. If more than one event is listed, the event list must be enclosed in parentheses (e.g., ctevents=(new,related)).

    • expevents=new

      Only generate a new expectation events for this connection.

  • ctevents:event[,...]

    Added in Shorewall 4.6.10. Only generate the specified conntrack events for this connection. Possible event types are: new, related, destroy, reply, assured, protoinfo, helper, mark (this is connection mark, not packet mark), natseqinfo, and secmark.

  • expevents=new

    Added in Shorewall 4.6.10. Only generate new expectation events for this connection.

  • DROP

    Added in Shorewall 4.5.10. Silently discard the packet. If a log-level is specified, the packet will also be logged at that level.

  • IP6TABLES(target)

    IPv6 only.

    Added in Shorewall 4.6.0. Allows you to specify any iptables target with target options (e.g., "IP6TABLES(AUDIT --type drop)"). If the target is not one recognized by Shorewall, the following error message will be issued:

    ERROR: Unknown target (target)

    This error message may be eliminated by adding target as a builtin action in shorewall-actions(5).

  • IPTABLES(target)

    IPv4 only.

    Added in Shorewall 4.6.0. Allows you to specify any iptables target with target options (e.g., "IPTABLES(AUDIT --type drop)"). If the target is not one recognized by Shorewall, the following error message will be issued:

    ERROR: Unknown target (target)

    This error message may be eliminated by adding target as a builtin action in shorewall-actions(5).

  • LOG

    Added in Shoreawll 4.6.0. Logs the packet using the specified log-level and log-tag (if any). If no log-level is specified, then 'info' is assumed.

  • NFLOG

    Added in Shoreawll 4.6.0. Queues the packet to a backend logging daemon using the NFLOG netfilter target with the specified nflog-parameters.

  • ULOG

    IPv4 only. Added in Shoreawll 4.6.0. Queues the packet to a backend logging daemon using the ULOG netfilter target with the specified ulog-parameters.

When FORMAT = 1, this column is not present and the rule is processed as if NOTRACK had been entered in this column.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.10, when FORMAT = 3, this column can end with a colon followed by a chain-designator. The chain-designator can be one of the following:

P

The rule is added to the raw table PREROUTING chain. This is the default if no chain-designator is present.

O

The rule is added to the raw table OUTPUT chain.

PO or OP

The rule is added to the raw table PREROUTING and OUTPUT chains.

SOURCE (formats 1 and 2) ‒ {zone[:interface][:address-list]}

where zone is the name of a zone, interface is an interface to that zone, and address-list is a comma-separated list of addresses (may contain exclusion - see shorewall-exclusion (5)).

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.7, all can be used as the zone name to mean all zones.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.10, all- can be used as the zone name to mean all off-firewall zones.

SOURCE (format 3 prior to Shorewall 5.1.0) ‒ {-|interface[:address-list]|address-list}

Where interface is an interface to that zone, and address-list is a comma-separated list of addresses (may contain exclusion - see shorewall-exclusion (5)).

SOURCE (format 3 on Shorewall 5.1.0 and later) - {-|[source-spec[,...]]}

where source-spec is one of the following:

interface

Where interface is the logical name of an interface defined in shorewall-interface(5).

address[,...][exclusion]

where address may be:

  • A host or network IP address.

  • A MAC address in Shorewall format (preceded by a tilde ("~") and using dash ("-") as a separator.

  • The name of an ipset preceded by a plus sign ("+"). See shorewall-ipsets(5).

exclusion is described in shorewall-exclusion(5).

interface:address[,...][exclusion]

This form combines the preceding two and requires that both the incoming interface and source address match.

exclusion

See shorewall-exclusion (5)

Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.0, multiple source-specs separated by commas may be specified provided that the following alternative forms are used:

(address[,...][exclusion])

interface:(address[,...][exclusion])

(exclusion)

DEST (Prior to Shorewall 5.1.0) ‒ {-|interface[:address-list]|address-list}

where address-list is a comma-separated list of addresses (may contain exclusion - see shorewall-exclusion (5)).

DEST (Shorewall 5.1.0 and later) - {-|dest-spec[,...]}

where dest-spec is one of the following:

interface

Where interface is the logical name of an interface defined in shorewall-interface(5).

address[,...][exclusion]

where address may be:

  • A host or network IP address.

  • A MAC address in Shorewall format (preceded by a tilde ("~") and using dash ("-") as a separator.

  • The name of an ipset preceded by a plus sign ("+"). See shorewall-ipsets(5).

exclusion is described in shorewall-exclusion(5).

interface:address[,...][exclusion]

This form combines the preceding two and requires that both the outgoing interface and destination address match.

exclusion

See shorewall-exclusion (5)

Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.0, multiple source-specs separated by commas may be specified provided that the following alternative forms are used:

(address[,...][exclusion])

interface:(address[,...][exclusion])

(exclusion)

PROTO ‒ protocol-name-or-number[,...]

A protocol name from /etc/protocols or a protocol number. tcp and 6 may be optionally followed by :syn to match only the SYN packet (first packet in the three-way handshake).

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.12, this column can accept a comma-separated list of protocols and either proto or protos is accepted in the alternate input format.

Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.11, when tcp or 6 is specified and the ACTION is CT, the compiler will default to :syn. If you wish the rule to match packets with any valid combination of TCP flags, you may specify tcp:all or 6:all.

DPORT - port-number/service-name-list

A comma-separated list of port numbers and/or service names from /etc/services. May also include port ranges of the form low-port:high-port if your kernel and iptables include port range support.

This column was formerly labelled DEST PORT(S).

SPORT - port-number/service-name-list

A comma-separated list of port numbers and/or service names from /etc/services. May also include port ranges of the form low-port:high-port if your kernel and iptables include port range support.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.15, you may place '=' in this column, provided that the DPORT column is non-empty. This causes the rule to match when either the source port or the destination port in a packet matches one of the ports specified in DPORT. Use of '=' requires multi-port match in your iptables and kernel.

This column was formerly labelled SOURCE PORT(S).

USER ‒ [user][:group]

This column was formerly named USER/GROUP and may only be specified if the SOURCE zone is $FW. Specifies the effective user id and or group id of the process sending the traffic.

SWITCH - [!]switch-name[={0|1}]

Added in Shorewall 4.5.10 and allows enabling and disabling the rule without requiring shorewall restart.

The rule is enabled if the value stored in /proc/net/nf_condition/switch-name is 1. The rule is disabled if that file contains 0 (the default). If '!' is supplied, the test is inverted such that the rule is enabled if the file contains 0.

Within the switch-name, '@0' and '@{0}' are replaced by the name of the chain to which the rule is a added. The switch-name (after '...' expansion) must begin with a letter and be composed of letters, decimal digits, underscores or hyphens. Switch names must be 30 characters or less in length.

Switches are normally off. To turn a switch on:

echo 1 > /proc/net/nf_condition/switch-name

To turn it off again:

echo 0 > /proc/net/nf_condition/switch-name

Switch settings are retained over shorewall restart.

When the switch-name is followed by =0 or =1, then the switch is initialized to off or on respectively by the start command. Other commands do not affect the switch setting.

EXAMPLE

IPv4 Example 1:

#ACTION                       SOURCE            DEST               PROTO            DPORT             SPORT               USER
CT:helper:ftp(expevents=new)  fw                -                  tcp              21              

IPv4 Example 2 (Shorewall 4.5.10 or later):

Drop traffic to/from all zones to IP address 1.2.3.4

?FORMAT 2
#ACTION                       SOURCE             DEST               PROTO           DPORT             SPORT               USER
DROP                          all-:1.2.3.4       -
DROP                          all                1.2.3.4

or

?FORMAT 3
#ACTION                       SOURCE             DEST               PROTO           DPORT             SPORT               USER
DROP:P                        1.2.3.4            -
DROP:PO                       -                  1.2.3.4

IPv6 Example 1:

Use the FTP helper for TCP port 21 connections from the firewall itself.

FORMAT 2
#ACTION                       SOURCE            DEST               PROTO            DPORT             SPORT               USER
CT:helper:ftp(expevents=new)  fw                -                  tcp              21              

IPv6 Example 2 (Shorewall 4.5.10 or later):

Drop traffic to/from all zones to IP address 2001:1.2.3::4

FORMAT 2
#ACTION                       SOURCE             DEST               PROTO            DPORT             SPORT               USER
DROP                          all-:2001:1.2.3::4 -
DROP                          all                2001:1.2.3::4

or

FORMAT 3
#ACTION                       SOURCE             DEST               PROTO            DPORT             SPORT               USER
DROP:P                        2001:1.2.3::4      -
DROP:PO                       -                  2001:1.2.3::4

FILES

/etc/shorewall/conntrack

/etc/shorewall6/conntrack

Documentation


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