From owner-freebsd-ipfw@freebsd.org Sat Nov 21 02:06:05 2015 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-ipfw@mailman.ysv.freebsd.org Received: from mx1.freebsd.org (mx1.freebsd.org [IPv6:2001:1900:2254:206a::19:1]) by mailman.ysv.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 7159EA32A17 for ; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 02:06:05 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from nathan@reddog.com.au) Received: from mail.7sq.com.au (mail.7sq.com.au [119.148.74.199]) (using TLSv1.2 with cipher ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 (256/256 bits)) (Client did not present a certificate) by mx1.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTPS id E260B1606; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 02:06:04 +0000 (UTC) (envelope-from nathan@reddog.com.au) Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by mail.7sq.com.au (Postfix) with ESMTP id 2DCCF2C3306; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:02:02 +1000 (AEST) Received: from mail.7sq.com.au ([127.0.0.1]) by localhost (mail.7sq.com.au [127.0.0.1]) (amavisd-new, port 10032) with ESMTP id PGnIceYe0nKO; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:02:01 +1000 (AEST) Received: from localhost (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by mail.7sq.com.au (Postfix) with ESMTP id DEE922C32F7; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:02:01 +1000 (AEST) X-Virus-Scanned: amavisd-new at mail.7sq.com.au Received: from mail.7sq.com.au ([127.0.0.1]) by localhost (mail.7sq.com.au [127.0.0.1]) (amavisd-new, port 10026) with ESMTP id DQZV5QxVrZ6v; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:02:01 +1000 (AEST) Received: from [172.20.10.3] (unknown [1.132.78.127]) by mail.7sq.com.au (Postfix) with ESMTPSA id 12BFC2C3308; Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:02:01 +1000 (AEST) Mime-Version: 1.0 (Mac OS X Mail 8.2 \(2104\)) Subject: Re: Kernel NAT issues From: Nathan Aherne In-Reply-To: <9D81BDD4-200C-40AB-AB24-B1112881E43A@reddog.com.au> Date: Sat, 21 Nov 2015 12:06:01 +1000 Cc: Julian Elischer , freebsd-ipfw@freebsd.org Message-Id: <3BF360A8-35E6-4043-8AFF-87D983F29C66@reddog.com.au> References: <94B91F98-DE01-4A10-8AB5-4193FE11AF3F@reddog.com.au> <20151013142301.B67283@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <20151014232026.S15983@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <9908EC22-344F-4D0B-8930-7D2C70B084A1@reddog.com.au> <32DEEFB3-E41F-40CD-8E1A-520FB261C572@reddog.com.au> <564C8879.8070307@freebsd.org> <20151119032200.T27669@sola.nimnet.asn.au> <9D81BDD4-200C-40AB-AB24-B1112881E43A@reddog.com.au> To: Ian Smith X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.2104) Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-Content-Filtered-By: Mailman/MimeDel 2.1.20 X-BeenThere: freebsd-ipfw@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.20 Precedence: list List-Id: IPFW Technical Discussions List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Sat, 21 Nov 2015 02:06:05 -0000 I had a bit of a think about how to describe what I am trying to = achieve. I am treating each jail likes its own little "virtual machine=E2=80=9D. = The jail provides certain services, using things like nginx or nodejs, = php-fpm, mysql or postgresql. The jails can control connections to = themselves by configuring the firewall ports that are opened on the IP = their IP (10.0.0.0/16 or a public IP). I know the jails have no = firewall of their own, the firewall is configured from the host. I want each jail or =E2=80=9Cvirtual machine=E2=80=9D to be able to = communicate with one another and the wider internet. When a jail does a = DNS query for another App jail, it may get a public IP on its own Host = (or it may get another host) and it has no issues being able to = communicate with another jail on the same host. At the moment all of the above is working perfectly except for jail to = jail communication on the same host (when the communication is not = directly between 10.0.0.0/16 IP addresses). Regards, Nathan > On 21 Nov 2015, at 9:12 am, Nathan Aherne = wrote: >=20 > I am not exactly sure how to draw the setup so it doesn=E2=80=99t = confuse the situation. The setup is extremely simple (I am not running = vimage), jails running on the 10.0.0.0/16 (cloned lo1 interface) network = or with public IPs. The jails with private IPs are the HTTP app jails. = The Host runs a HTTP Proxy (nginx) and forwards traffic to each HTTP App = jail based on the URL it receives. The jails with public IPs are things = like database jails which cannot be proxied by the Host. >=20 > I can happily communicate with any jail from my laptop (externally) = but when I want one jail to communicate with another jail (for example = an App Jail communicating with the database jail) the traffic shows as = backwards (destination:port -> source:port) in the IPFW logs (tshark = shows the traffic correctly source:port -> destination:port). The jail = to jail traffic tries to go over the lo1 interface (backwards) and is = blocked. Below is some IPFW logs of an App jail (10.0.0.25) = communicating with the database jail (aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd) >=20 > IPFW logs. The lines labelled UNKNOWN is the check-state rule = (everything is labelled UNKNOWN even if it is KNOWN traffic) >=20 > Nov 21 08:49:07 host5 kernel: ipfw: 101 UNKNOWN TCP = eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:07 host5 kernel: ipfw: 65501 Deny TCP eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 = 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:10 host5 kernel: ipfw: 101 UNKNOWN TCP = eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:10 host5 kernel: ipfw: 65501 Deny TCP eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 = 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:13 host5 kernel: ipfw: 101 UNKNOWN TCP = eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:13 host5 kernel: ipfw: 65501 Deny TCP eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 = 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:16 host5 kernel: ipfw: 101 UNKNOWN TCP = eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 > Nov 21 08:49:16 host5 kernel: ipfw: 65501 Deny TCP eee.fff.gg.hhh:5432 = 10.0.0.25:42957 out via lo1 >=20 > tshark output (loopback and wan interface capture for port 5432) >=20 > Capturing on 'Loopback' and 'bce0' > 1 0.000000 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 42957=E2=86=925432 = [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 = TSval=3D142885525 TSecr=3D0 > 2 3.013905 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142888539 TSecr=3D0 > 3 6.241658 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142891767 TSecr=3D0 > 4 9.451516 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142894976 TSecr=3D0 > 5 12.654656 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142898180 TSecr=3D0 > 6 15.863900 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142901389 TSecr=3D0 > 7 22.076655 10.0.0.25 -> eee.fff.gg.hhh TCP 64 [TCP = Retransmission] 42957=E2=86=925432 [SYN] Seq=3D0 Win=3D65535 Len=3D0 = MSS=3D16344 WS=3D64 SACK_PERM=3D1 TSval=3D142907602 TSecr=3D0 >=20 >=20 >> If so, what sort of routing is setup on both host and jails? >=20 > Routing is what would be added by default (whatever the host system = adds when adding an IP), there is no custom routing. I have wondered if = I need to modify the routing table to get this to work.=20 >=20 > Below is the output of netstat -rn >=20 > www.xxx.yy .zzz is the gateway address > eee.fff.gg.hhh is the database jail public IP > aaa.bbb.cc.ddd is the public IP for NAT > lll.mmm.nn.ooo is the Hosts public IP >=20 >=20 > Routing tables >=20 > Internet: > Destination Gateway Flags Netif Expire > default www.xxx.yy .zzz UGS = bce0 > 10.0.0.1 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.2 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.3 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.4 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.5 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.6 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.7 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.8 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.9 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.10 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.11 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.12 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.13 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.14 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.15 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.16 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.17 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.18 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.19 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.20 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.21 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.22 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.23 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.24 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.25 link#6 UH lo1 > 10.0.0.26 link#6 UH lo1 > www.xxx.yy.zzz/25 link#1 U = bce0 > eee.fff.gg.hhh link#1 UHS lo0 > eee.fff.gg.hhh/32 link#1 U bce0 > aaa.bbb.cc .ddd link#1 UHS = lo0 > aaa.bbb.cc.ddd/32 link#1 U bce0 > lll.mmm.nn.ooo link#1 UHS lo0 > 127.0.0.1 link#5 UH lo0 >=20 > Internet6: > Destination Gateway Flags = Netif Expire > ::/96 ::1 UGRS = lo0 > ::1 link#5 UH = lo0 > ::ffff:0.0.0.0/96 ::1 UGRS = lo0 > fe80::/10 ::1 UGRS = lo0 > fe80::%lo0/64 link#5 U = lo0 > fe80::1%lo0 link#5 UHS = lo0 > ff01::%lo0/32 ::1 U = lo0 > ff02::/16 ::1 UGRS = lo0 > ff02::%lo0/32 ::1 U = lo0 >=20 >> Anything like ? >> = http://kb.juniper.net/InfoCenter/index?page=3Dcontent&id=3DKB24639&actp=3D= search = > Yes just like that. >=20 > Regards, >=20 > Nathan >=20 >> On 19 Nov 2015, at 2:46 am, Ian Smith > wrote: >>=20 >> On Wed, 18 Nov 2015 22:17:29 +0800, Julian Elischer wrote: >>> On 11/18/15 8:40 AM, Nathan Aherne wrote: >>>> For some reason hairpin (loopback nat or nat reflection) does not = seem to >>>> be working, which is why I chose IPFW in the first place. >>=20 >>> it would be good to see a diagram of what this actually means. >>=20 >> Anything like ? >> = http://kb.juniper.net/InfoCenter/index?page=3Dcontent&id=3DKB24639&actp=3D= search = >>=20 >> Was this so one jail can only access service/s provided by other = jail/s,=20 >> both/all with internal NAT'd addresses, by using only the public = address=20 >> and port of the 'router', which IIRC this is a single system with = jails? >>=20 >> If so, what sort of routing is setup on both host and jails? >>=20 >> (blindfolded, no idea where I've pinned the donkey's tail :) >>=20 >> cheers, Ian >=20