#!/bin/bash # Create iptables (v4 and v6) rules. Unless one of [-f] or [-c] is # given, or if the ruleset is unchanged, a confirmation is asked after # loading the new rulesets; if the user answers No or doesn't answer, # the old ruleset is restored. If the user answer Yes (or if the flag # [-f] is given), the new ruleset is made persistent (requires a pre-up # hook) by moving it to /etc/iptables/rules.v[46]. # # The [-c] flag switch to dry-run (check) mode. The rulesets are not # applied, but merely checked against the existing ones. The return # value is 0 iff. they do not differ. # # This firewall is only targeted towards end-servers, not gateways. In # particular, there is no NAT'ing at the moment. # # Dependencies: netmask(1) # # Copyright © 2013 Guilhem Moulin # # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program. If not, see . set -ue PATH=/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin timeout=10 force=0 check=0 verbose=0 addrfam= secproto=esp # must match /etc/ipsec.conf; ESP is the default (vs AH/IPComp) if [ -x /usr/sbin/ipsec ] && /usr/sbin/ipsec status >/dev/null; then ipsec=y else ipsec=n fi fail2ban_re='^(\[[0-9]+:[0-9]+\]\s+)?-A fail2ban-\S' IPsec_re=" -m policy --dir (in|out) --pol ipsec --reqid [0-9]+ --proto $secproto -j ACCEPT$" declare -A rss=() tables=() usage() { cat >&2 <<- EOF Usage: $0 [OPTIONS] Options: -f force: no confirmation asked -c check: check (dry-run) mode -v verbose: see the difference between old and new ruleset -4 IPv4 only -6 IPv6 only EOF exit 1 } log() { /usr/bin/logger -st firewall -p user.info -- "$@" } fatal() { /usr/bin/logger -st firewall -p user.err -- "$@" exit 1 } iptables() { # Fake iptables/ip6tables(8); use the more efficient # iptables-restore(8) instead. echo "$@" >> "$new"; } commit() { # End a table echo COMMIT >> "$new" } inet46() { case "$1" in 4) echo "$2";; 6) echo "$3";; esac } ipt-chains() { # Define new (tables and) chains. while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do case "$1" in ?*:*) echo ":${1%:*} ${1##*:} [0:0]";; ?*) echo "*$1";; esac shift done >> "$new" } ipt-trim() { # Remove dynamic chain/rules from the input stream, as they are # automatically included by third-party servers (such as strongSwan # or fail2ban). The output is ready to be made persistent. grep -Ev -e '^:fail2ban-\S' \ -e "$IPsec_re" \ -e '-j fail2ban-\S+$' \ -e "$fail2ban_re" } ipt-diff() { # Get the difference between two rulesets. if [ $verbose -eq 1 ]; then /usr/bin/diff -u -I '^#' "$1" "$2" else /usr/bin/diff -q -I '^#' "$1" "$2" >/dev/null fi } ipt-persist() { # Make the current ruleset persistent. (Requires a pre-up hook # script to load the rules before the network is configured.) log "Making ruleset persistent... " [ -d /etc/iptables ] || mkdir /etc/iptables local f rs table for f in "${!tables[@]}"; do ipts=/sbin/$(inet46 $f iptables ip6tables)-save rs=/etc/iptables/rules.v$f for table in ${tables[$f]}; do /bin/ip netns exec $netns $ipts -t $table done | ipt-trim > "$rs" chmod 0600 "$rs" done } ipt-revert() { [ $check -eq 0 ] || return log "Reverting to old ruleset... " local rs for f in "${!rss[@]}"; do /sbin/$(inet46 $f iptables ip6tables)-restore -c < "${rss[$f]}" rm -f "${rss[$f]}" done exit 1 } run() { # Build and apply the firewall for IPv4/6. local f="$1" local ipt=/sbin/$(inet46 $f iptables ip6tables) tables[$f]=filter # The default interface associated with this address. local if=$( /bin/ip -$f -o route show to default scope global \ | sed -nr '/^default via \S+ dev (\S+).*/ {s//\1/p;q}' ) # Store the old (current) ruleset local old=$(mktemp --tmpdir current-rules.v$f.XXXXXX) \ new=$(mktemp --tmpdir new-rules.v$f.XXXXXX) for table in ${tables[$f]}; do $ipt-save -ct $table done > "$old" rss[$f]="$old" local fail2ban=0 # XXX: As of Wheezy, fail2ban is IPv4 only. See # https://github.com/fail2ban/fail2ban/issues/39 for the current # state of the art. if [ "$f" = 4 ] && which /usr/bin/fail2ban-server >/dev/null; then fail2ban=1 fi # The usual chains in filter, along with the desired default policies. ipt-chains filter INPUT:DROP FORWARD:DROP OUTPUT:DROP if [ ! "$if" ]; then # If the interface is not configured, we stop here and DROP all # packets by default. Thanks to the pre-up hook this tight # policy will be activated whenever the interface goes up. commit mv "$new" /etc/iptables/rules.v$f return 0 fi # Fail2ban-specific chains and traps if [ $fail2ban -eq 1 ]; then echo ":fail2ban - [0:0]" # Don't remove existing rules & traps in the current rulest grep -- '^:fail2ban-\S' "$old" || true grep -E -- ' -j fail2ban-\S+$' "$old" || true grep -E -- "$fail2ban_re" "$old" || true fi >> "$new" if [ "$f" = 4 -a "$ipsec" = y ]; then # IPsec tunnels come first (IPv4 only). grep -E -- "$IPsec_re" "$old" >> "$new" || true # Allow any IPsec $secproto protocol packets to be sent and received. iptables -A INPUT -i $if -p $secproto -j ACCEPT iptables -A OUTPUT -o $if -p $secproto -j ACCEPT fi ######################################################################## # DROP all RFC1918 addresses, martian networks, multicasts, ... # Credits to http://newartisans.com/2007/09/neat-tricks-with-iptables/ # http://baldric.net/loose-iptables-firewall-for-servers/ local ip if [ "$f" = 4 -a "$ipsec" = y ]; then # Private-use networks (RFC 1918) and link local (RFC 3927) local MyIPsec="$( /bin/ip -4 -o route show table 220 dev $if | sed 's/\s.*//' )" local MyNetwork="$( /bin/ip -4 -o address show dev $if scope global \ | sed -nr "s/^[0-9]+:\s+$if\s+inet\s(\S+).*/\1/p" \ | while read ip; do for ips in $MyIPsec; do [ "$ips" = "$(/usr/bin/netmask -nc "$ip" "$ips" | sed 's/^ *//')" ] || echo "$ip" done done )" [ "$MyNetwork" ] && \ for ip in 10.0.0.0/8 172.16.0.0/12 192.168.0.0/16 169.254.0.0/16; do # Don't lock us out if we are behind a NAT ;-) for myip in $MyNetwork; do [ "$ip" = "$(/usr/bin/netmask -nc "$ip" "$myip" | sed 's/^ *//')" ] \ || iptables -A INPUT -i $if -s "$ip" -j DROP done done # Other martian packets: "This" network, multicast, broadcast (RFCs # 1122, 3171 and 919). for ip in 0.0.0.0/8 224.0.0.0/4 240.0.0.0/4 255.255.255.255/32; do iptables -A INPUT -i $if -s "$ip" -j DROP iptables -A INPUT -i $if -d "$ip" -j DROP done elif [ "$f" = 6 ]; then # Martian IPv6 packets: ULA (RFC 4193) and site local addresses # (RFC 3879). for ip in fc00::/7 fec0::/10; do iptables -A INPUT -i $if -s "$ip" -j DROP iptables -A INPUT -i $if -d "$ip" -j DROP done fi # DROP INVALID packets immediately. iptables -A INPUT -m state --state INVALID -j DROP iptables -A OUTPUT -m state --state INVALID -j DROP # DROP bogus TCP packets. iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --tcp-flags FIN,SYN FIN,SYN -j DROP iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --tcp-flags SYN,RST SYN,RST -j DROP iptables -A INPUT -p tcp \! --syn -m state --state NEW -j DROP # Allow all input/output to/from the loopback interface. local localhost=$(inet46 $f '127.0.0.1/8' '::1/128') iptables -A INPUT -i lo -s "$localhost" -d "$localhost" -j ACCEPT iptables -A OUTPUT -o lo -s "$localhost" -d "$localhost" -j ACCEPT if [ "$f" = 4 -a "$ipsec" = y ]; then # Allow local access to our virtual IP /bin/ip -4 -o route show table 220 dev $if \ | sed -nr 's/.*\ssrc\s+([[:digit:].]{7,15})(\s.*)?$/\1/p' \ | while read ips; do iptables -A INPUT -i lo -s "$ips" -d "$ips" -j ACCEPT iptables -A OUTPUT -o lo -s "$ips" -d "$ips" -j ACCEPT done fi # Prepare fail2ban. We make fail2ban insert its rules in a # dedicated chain, so that it doesn't mess up the existing rules. [ $fail2ban -eq 1 ] && iptables -A INPUT -i $if -j fail2ban if [ "$f" = 4 ]; then # Allow only ICMP of type 0, 3 and 8. The rate-limiting is done # directly by the kernel (net.ipv4.icmp_ratelimit and # net.ipv4.icmp_ratemask runtime options). See icmp(7). local t for t in 'echo-reply' 'destination-unreachable' 'echo-request'; do iptables -A INPUT -p icmp -m icmp --icmp-type $t -j ACCEPT iptables -A OUTPUT -p icmp -m icmp --icmp-type $t -j ACCEPT done elif [ $f = 6 ]; then iptables -A INPUT -p icmpv6 -j ACCEPT iptables -A OUTPUT -p icmpv6 -j ACCEPT fi ######################################################################## # ACCEPT new connections to the services we provide, or to those we want # to connect to. sed -re 's/#.*//; /^\s*$/d' -e "s/^(in|out|inout)$f?(\s.*)/\1\2/" \ /etc/iptables/services | \ grep -Ev '^(in|out|inout)\S\s' | \ while read dir proto dport sport; do # We add two entries per config line: we need to accept the new # connection, and latter the reply. local stNew=NEW,ESTABLISHED local stEst=ESTABLISHED # In-Out means full-duplex [[ "$dir" =~ ^inout ]] && stEst="$stNew" local iptNew= iptEst= optsNew= optsEst= case "$dport" in *,*|*:*) optsNew="--match multiport --dports $dport" optsEst="--match multiport --sports $dport";; ?*) optsNew="--dport $dport" optsEst="--sport $dport";; esac case "$sport" in *,*|*:*) optsNew+=" --match multiport --sports $sport" optsEst+=" --match multiport --dports $sport";; ?*) optsNew+=" --sport $sport" optsEst+=" --dport $sport";; esac case "$dir" in in|inout) iptNew="-A INPUT -i"; iptEst="-A OUTPUT -o";; out) iptNew="-A OUTPUT -o"; iptEst="-A INPUT -i";; *) fatal "Error: Unknown direction: '$dir'." esac iptables $iptNew $if -p $proto $optsNew -m state --state $stNew -j ACCEPT iptables $iptEst $if -p $proto $optsEst -m state --state $stEst -j ACCEPT done ######################################################################## commit local rv1=0 rv2=0 persistent=/etc/iptables/rules.v$f local oldz=$(mktemp --tmpdir current-rules.v$f.XXXXXX) # Reset the counters. They are not useful for comparing and/or # storing persistent ruleset. (We don't use sed -i because we want # to restore the counters when reverting.) sed -r -e '/^:/ s/\[[0-9]+:[0-9]+\]$/[0:0]/' \ -e 's/^\[[0-9]+:[0-9]+\]\s+//' \ "$old" > "$oldz" /usr/bin/uniq "$new" | /bin/ip netns exec $netns $ipt-restore || ipt-revert for table in ${tables[$f]}; do /bin/ip netns exec $netns $ipt-save -t $table done > "$new" ipt-diff "$oldz" "$new" || rv1=$? if ! [ -f "$persistent" -a -x /etc/network/if-pre-up.d/iptables ]; then rv2=1 else ipt-trim < "$oldz" | ipt-diff - "$persistent" || rv2=$? fi local update="Please run '${0##*/}'." if [ $check -eq 0 ]; then /usr/bin/uniq "$new" | $ipt-restore || ipt-revert else if [ $rv1 -ne 0 ]; then log "WARN: The IPv$f firewall is not up to date! $update" fi if [ $rv2 -ne 0 ]; then log "WARN: The current IPv$f firewall is not persistent! $update" fi fi rm -f "$oldz" "$new" return $(( $rv1 | $rv2 )) } # Parse options while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do case "$1" in -?*) for (( k=1; k<${#1}; k++ )); do o="${1:$k:1}" case "$o" in 4|6) addrfam="$o";; c) check=1;; f) force=1;; v) verbose=1;; *) usage;; esac done ;; *) usage;; esac shift done # If we are going to apply the ruleset, we should either have a TTY, or # use -f. if ! /usr/bin/tty -s && [ $force -eq 0 -a $check -eq 0 ]; then echo "Error: Not a TTY. Try with -f (at your own risks!)" >&2 exit 1 fi # Create an alternative net namespace in which we apply the ruleset, so # we can easily get a normalized version we can compare latter. See # http://bugzilla.netfilter.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790 netns="ipt-firewall-test-$$" /bin/ip netns add $netns trap '/bin/ip netns del $netns 2>/dev/null || true; ipt-revert' SIGINT trap '/bin/ip netns del $netns; rm -f "${rss[@]}"' EXIT rv=0 for f in ${addrfam:=4 6}; do run $f || rv=$(( $rv | $? )) done if [ $force -eq 1 ]; then # At the user's own risks... ipt-persist elif [ $check -eq 1 -o $rv -eq 0 ]; then # Nothing to do, we're all set. exit $rv else echo "Try now to establish NEW connections to the machine." read -n1 -t$timeout \ -p "Are you sure you want to use the new ruleset? (y/N) " \ ret 2>&1 || { [ $? -gt 128 ] && echo -n "Timeout..."; } case "${ret:-N}" in [yY]*) echo; ipt-persist ;; *) echo; ipt-revert ;; esac fi