Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2008 09:56:28 -0700 From: "Freddie Cash" <fjwcash@gmail.com> To: net@freebsd.org Subject: Re: "established" on { tcp or udp } rules Message-ID: <b269bc570803240956o27c08f95mb05210bf739f5fed@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <slrnfu4a3h.1b5e.vadim_nuclight@hostel.avtf.net> References: <200803191334.54510.fjwcash@gmail.com> <47E17BF9.1030403@elischer.org> <200803191355.54288.fjwcash@gmail.com> <slrnfu4a3h.1b5e.vadim_nuclight@hostel.avtf.net>
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On Thu, Mar 20, 2008 at 2:03 AM, Vadim Goncharov <vadim_nuclight@mail.ru> wrote: > This is behaviour of ipfw2 - options are independently ANDed. Thus, man page > explicitly says: > > established > Matches TCP packets that have the RST or ACK bits set. > > So, it is obvious that udp packet will not match and thus entire rule will not > match. Yeah, it's just weird that it lets you write a rule that will never match. I'll have to fire up FreeBSD 4.11 (and possibly earlier with just ipfw1) in a VM and check things there. I'm sure back in the 4.x days that ipfw would error out if you wrote a UDP rule with TCP options at the end, as that is what got me in the habit of writing separate UDP and TCP rules. Now that I found the { udp or tcp } syntax, I was rewriting some rules on a test firewall and noticed that it would accept TCP option even if udp was listed. -- Freddie Cash fjwcash@gmail.com
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