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1ifdef::manvolnum[]
2PVE({manvolnum})
3================
4include::attributes.txt[]
5
6NAME
7----
8
9pve-firewall - The PVE Firewall Daemon
10
11
12SYNOPSYS
13--------
14
15include::pve-firewall.8-synopsis.adoc[]
16
17
18DESCRIPTION
19-----------
20endif::manvolnum[]
21
22ifndef::manvolnum[]
23{pve} Firewall
24==============
25include::attributes.txt[]
26endif::manvolnum[]
27
28// Copied from pve wiki: Revision as of 08:45, 9 November 2015
29
30Proxmox VE Firewall provides an easy way to protect your IT
31infrastructure. You can easily setup firewall rules for all hosts
32inside a cluster, or define rules for virtual machines and
33containers. Features like firewall macros, security groups, IP sets
34and aliases help making that task easier.
35
36While all configuration is stored on the cluster file system, the
37iptables based firewall runs on each cluster node, and thus provides
38full isolation between virtual machines. The distributed nature of
39this system also provides much higher bandwidth than a central
40firewall solution.
41
42NOTE: If you enable the firewall, all traffic is blocked by default,
43except WebGUI(8006) and ssh(22) from your local network.
44
45The firewall has full support for IPv4 and IPv6. IPv6 support is fully
46transparent, and we filter traffic for both protocols by default. So
47there is no need to maintain a different set of rules for IPv6.
48
49
50Zones
51-----
52
53The Proxmox VE firewall groups the network into the following logical zones:
54
55Host::
56
57Traffic from/to a cluster node
58
59VM::
60
61Traffic from/to a specific VM
62
63For each zone, you can define firewall rules for incoming and/or
64outgoing traffic.
65
66
67Configuration Files
68-------------------
69
70All firewall related configuration is stored on the proxmox cluster
71file system. So those files are automatically distributed to all
72cluster nodes, and the 'pve-firewall' service updates the underlying
73iptables rules automatically on changes. Any configuration can be
74done using the GUI (i.e. Datacenter -> Firewall -> Options tab (tabs
75at the bottom of the page), or on a Node -> Firewall), so the
76following configuration file snippets are just for completeness.
77
78All firewall configuration files contains sections of key-value
79pairs. Lines beginning with a '#' and blank lines are considered
80comments. Sections starts with a header line containing the section
81name enclosed in '[' and ']'.
82
83Cluster Wide Setup
84~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
85
86The cluster wide firewall configuration is stored at:
87
88 /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
89
90The configuration can contain the following sections:
91
92'[OPTIONS]'::
93
94This is used to set cluster wide firewall options.
95
96NOTE: The firewall is completely disabled by default, so you need to
97set the enable option here:
98----
99[OPTIONS]
100# enable firewall (cluster wide setting, default is disabled)
101enable: 1
102----
103
104'[RULES]'::
105
106This sections contains cluster wide firewall rules for all nodes.
107
108'[IPSET <name>]'::
109
110Cluster wide IP set definitions.
111
112'[GROUP <name>]'::
113
114Cluster wide security group definitions.
115
116'[ALIASES]'::
117
118Cluster wide Alias definitions.
119
120Host specific Configuration
121~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
122
123Host related configuration is read from:
124
125 /etc/pve/nodes/<nodename>/host.fw
126
127This is useful if you want to overwrite rules from 'cluster.fw'
128config. You can also increase log verbosity, and set netfilter related
129options.
130
131
132VM/Container configuration
133~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
134
135VM firewall configuration is read from:
136
137 /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
138
139and contains the following data:
140
141* IP set definitions
142* Alias definitions
143* Firewall rules for this VM
144* VM specific options
145
146
147Enabling the Firewall for VMs and Containers
148^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
149
150You need to enable the firewall on the virtual network interface configuration
151in addition to the general 'Enable Firewall' option in the 'Options' tab.
152
153
154Firewall Rules
155--------------
156
157Firewall rules consists of a direction (`IN` or `OUT`) and an
158action (`ACCEPT`, `DENY`, `REJECT`). You can also specify a macro
159name. Macros contain predifined sets of rules and options. Rules can be disabled by prefixing them with '|'.
160
161.Firewall rules syntax
162----
163[RULES]
164
165DIRECTION ACTION [OPTIONS]
166|DIRECTION ACTION [OPTIONS] # disabled rule
167
168DIRECTION MACRO(ACTION) [OPTIONS] # use predefined macro
169----
170
171The following options can be used to refine rule matches.
172
173include::pve-firewall-rules-opts.adoc[]
174
175Here are some examples:
176
177----
178[RULES]
179IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0
180IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 # a comment
181IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 192.168.2.192 # only allow SSH from 192.168.2.192
182IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 10.0.0.1-10.0.0.10 # accept SSH for ip range
183IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 10.0.0.1,10.0.0.2,10.0.0.3 #accept ssh for ip list
184IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source +mynetgroup # accept ssh for ipset mynetgroup
185IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source myserveralias #accept ssh for alias myserveralias
186
187|IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 # disabled rule
188
189IN DROP # drop all incoming packages
190OUT ACCEPT # accept all outgoing packages
191----
192
193Security Groups
194---------------
195
196A security group is a collection of rules, defined at cluster level, which
197can be used in all VMs' rules. For example you can define a group named
198`webserver` with rules to open the http and https ports.
199
200----
201# /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
202
203[group webserver]
204IN ACCEPT -p tcp -dport 80
205IN ACCEPT -p tcp -dport 443
206----
207
208Then, you can add this group to a VM's firewall
209
210----
211# /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
212
213[RULES]
214GROUP webserver
215----
216
217
218IP Aliases
219----------
220
221IP Aliases allow you to associate IP addresses of networks with a
222name. You can then refer to those names:
223
224* inside IP set definitions
225* in `source` and `dest` properties of firewall rules
226
227Standard IP alias `local_network`
228~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
229
230This alias is automatically defined. Please use the following command
231to see assigned values:
232
233----
234# pve-firewall localnet
235local hostname: example
236local IP address: 192.168.2.100
237network auto detect: 192.168.0.0/20
238using detected local_network: 192.168.0.0/20
239----
240
241The firewall automatically sets up rules to allow everything needed
242for cluster communication (corosync, API, SSH) using this alias.
243
244The user can overwrite these values in the cluster.fw alias
245section. If you use a single host on a public network, it is better to
246explicitly assign the local IP address
247
248----
249# /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
250[ALIASES]
251local_network 1.2.3.4 # use the single ip address
252----
253
254IP Sets
255-------
256
257IP sets can be used to define groups of networks and hosts. You can
258refer to them with `+name` in the firewall rules' `source` and `dest`
259properties.
260
261The following example allows HTTP traffic from the `management` IP
262set.
263
264 IN HTTP(ACCEPT) -source +management
265
266Standard IP set `management`
267~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
268
269This IP set applies only to host firewalls (not VM firewalls). Those
270ips are allowed to do normal management tasks (PVE GUI, VNC, SPICE,
271SSH).
272
273The local cluster network is automatically added to this IP set (alias
274`cluster_network`), to enable inter-host cluster
275communication. (multicast,ssh,...)
276
277----
278# /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
279
280[IPSET management]
281192.168.2.10
282192.168.2.10/24
283----
284
285Standard IP set 'blacklist'
286~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
287
288Traffic from these ips is dropped by every host's and VM's firewall.
289
290----
291# /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
292
293[IPSET blacklist]
29477.240.159.182
295213.87.123.0/24
296----
297
298[[ipfilter-section]]
299Standard IP set 'ipfilter-net*'
300~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
301
302These filters belong to a VM's network interface and are mainly used to prevent
303IP spoofing. If such a set exists for an interface then any outgoing traffic
304with a source IP not matching its interface's corresponding ipfilter set will
305be dropped.
306
307For containers with configured IP addresses these sets, if they exist (or are
308activated via the general `IP Filter` option in the VM's firewall's 'options'
309tab), implicitly contain the associated IP addresses.
310
311For both virtual machines and containers they also implicitly contain the
312standard MAC-derived IPv6 link-local address in order to allow the neighbor
313discovery protocol to work.
314
315----
316/etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
317
318[IPSET ipfilter-net0] # only allow specified IPs on net0
319192.168.2.10
320----
321
322
323Services and Commands
324---------------------
325
326The firewall runs two service daemons on each node:
327
328* pvefw-logger: NFLOG daemon (ulogd replacement).
329* pve-firewall: updates iptables rules
330
331There is also a CLI command named 'pve-firewall', which can be used to
332start and stop the firewall service:
333
334 # pve-firewall start
335 # pve-firewall stop
336
337To get the status use:
338
339 # pve-firewall status
340
341The above command reads and compiles all firewall rules, so you will
342see warnings if your firewall configuration contains any errors.
343
344If you want to see the generated iptables rules you can use:
345
346 # iptables-save
347
348
349Tips and Tricks
350---------------
351
352How to allow FTP
353~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
354
355FTP is an old style protocol which uses port 21 and several other dynamic ports. So you
356need a rule to accept port 21. In addition, you need to load the 'ip_conntrack_ftp' module.
357So please run:
358
359 modprobe ip_conntrack_ftp
360
361and add `ip_conntrack_ftp` to '/etc/modules' (so that it works after a reboot) .
362
363
364Suricata IPS integration
365~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
366
367If you want to use the http://suricata-ids.org/[Suricata IPS]
368(Intrusion Prevention System), it's possible.
369
370Packets will be forwarded to the IPS only after the firewall ACCEPTed
371them.
372
373Rejected/Dropped firewall packets don't go to the IPS.
374
375Install suricata on proxmox host:
376
377----
378# apt-get install suricata
379# modprobe nfnetlink_queue
380----
381
382Don't forget to add `nfnetlink_queue` to '/etc/modules' for next reboot.
383
384Then, enable IPS for a specific VM with:
385
386----
387# /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
388
389[OPTIONS]
390ips: 1
391ips_queues: 0
392----
393
394`ips_queues` will bind a specific cpu queue for this VM.
395
396Available queues are defined in
397
398----
399# /etc/default/suricata
400NFQUEUE=0
401----
402
403Avoiding link-local addresses on tap and veth devices
404~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
405
406With IPv6 enabled by default every interface gets a MAC-derived link local
407address. However, most devices on a typical {pve} setup are connected to a
408bridge and so the bridge is the only interface which really needs one.
409
410To disable a link local address on an interface you can set the interface's
411`disable_ipv6` sysconf variable. Despite the name, this does not prevent IPv6
412traffic from passing through the interface when routing or bridging, so the
413only noticeable effect will be the removal of the link local address.
414
415The easiest method of achieving this setting for all newly started VMs is to
416set it for the `default` interface configuration and enabling it explicitly on
417the interfaces which need it. This is also the case for other settings such as
418`forwarding`, `accept_ra` or `autoconf`.
419
420Here's a possible setup:
421----
422# /etc/sysconf.d/90-ipv6.conf
423
424net.ipv6.conf.default.forwarding = 0
425net.ipv6.conf.default.proxy_ndp = 0
426net.ipv6.conf.default.autoconf = 0
427net.ipv6.conf.default.disable_ipv6 = 1
428net.ipv6.conf.default.accept_ra = 0
429
430net.ipv6.conf.lo.disable_ipv6 = 0
431----
432
433----
434# /etc/network/interfaces
435(...)
436iface vmbr0 inet6 static
437 address fc00::31
438 netmask 16
439 gateway fc00::1
440 accept_ra 0
441 pre-up echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/$IFACE/disable_ipv6
442(...)
443----
444
445
446Notes on IPv6
447-------------
448
449The firewall contains a few IPv6 specific options. One thing to note is that
450IPv6 does not use the ARP protocol anymore, and instead uses NDP (Neighbor
451Discovery Protocol) which works on IP level and thus needs IP addresses to
452succeed. For this purpose link-local addresses derived from the interface's MAC
453address are used. By default the 'NDP' option is enabled on both host and VM
454level to allow neighbor discovery (NDP) packets to be sent and received.
455
456Beside neighbor discovery NDP is also used for a couple of other things, like
457autoconfiguration and advertising routers.
458
459By default VMs are allowed to send out router solicitation messages (to query
460for a router), and to receive router advetisement packets. This allows them to
461use stateless auto configuration. On the other hand VMs cannot advertise
462themselves as routers unless the 'Allow Router Advertisement' (`radv: 1`) option
463is set.
464
465As for the link local addresses required for NDP, there's also an 'IP Filter'
466(`ipfilter: 1`) option which can be enabled which has the same effect as adding
467an `ipfilter-net*` ipset for each of the VM's network interfaces containing the
468corresponding link local addresses. (See the
469<<ipfilter-section,Standard IP set 'ipfilter-net*'>> section for details.)
470
471
472Ports used by Proxmox VE
473------------------------
474
475* Web interface: 8006
476* VNC Web console: 5900-5999
477* SPICE proxy: 3128
478* sshd (used for cluster actions): 22
479* rpcbind: 111
480* corosync multicast (if you run a cluster): 5404, 5405 UDP
481
482
483ifdef::manvolnum[]
484
485Macro Definitions
486-----------------
487
488include::pve-firewall-macros.adoc[]
489
490
491include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
492
493endif::manvolnum[]