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1 [[chapter_pve_firewall]]
2 ifdef::manvolnum[]
3 pve-firewall(8)
4 ===============
5 :pve-toplevel:
6
7 NAME
8 ----
9
10 pve-firewall - PVE Firewall Daemon
11
12
13 SYNOPSIS
14 --------
15
16 include::pve-firewall.8-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18
19 DESCRIPTION
20 -----------
21 endif::manvolnum[]
22 ifndef::manvolnum[]
23 {pve} Firewall
24 ==============
25 :pve-toplevel:
26 endif::manvolnum[]
27 ifdef::wiki[]
28 :title: Firewall
29 endif::wiki[]
30
31 {pve} Firewall provides an easy way to protect your IT
32 infrastructure. You can setup firewall rules for all hosts
33 inside a cluster, or define rules for virtual machines and
34 containers. Features like firewall macros, security groups, IP sets
35 and aliases help to make that task easier.
36
37 While all configuration is stored on the cluster file system, the
38 `iptables`-based firewall service runs on each cluster node, and thus provides
39 full isolation between virtual machines. The distributed nature of
40 this system also provides much higher bandwidth than a central
41 firewall solution.
42
43 The firewall has full support for IPv4 and IPv6. IPv6 support is fully
44 transparent, and we filter traffic for both protocols by default. So
45 there is no need to maintain a different set of rules for IPv6.
46
47
48 Zones
49 -----
50
51 The Proxmox VE firewall groups the network into the following logical zones:
52
53 Host::
54
55 Traffic from/to a cluster node
56
57 VM::
58
59 Traffic from/to a specific VM
60
61 For each zone, you can define firewall rules for incoming and/or
62 outgoing traffic.
63
64
65 Configuration Files
66 -------------------
67
68 All firewall related configuration is stored on the proxmox cluster
69 file system. So those files are automatically distributed to all
70 cluster nodes, and the `pve-firewall` service updates the underlying
71 `iptables` rules automatically on changes.
72
73 You can configure anything using the GUI (i.e. *Datacenter* -> *Firewall*,
74 or on a *Node* -> *Firewall*), or you can edit the configuration files
75 directly using your preferred editor.
76
77 Firewall configuration files contain sections of key-value
78 pairs. Lines beginning with a `#` and blank lines are considered
79 comments. Sections start with a header line containing the section
80 name enclosed in `[` and `]`.
81
82
83 [[pve_firewall_cluster_wide_setup]]
84 Cluster Wide Setup
85 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
86
87 The cluster wide firewall configuration is stored at:
88
89 /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
90
91 The configuration can contain the following sections:
92
93 `[OPTIONS]`::
94
95 This is used to set cluster wide firewall options.
96
97 include::pve-firewall-cluster-opts.adoc[]
98
99 `[RULES]`::
100
101 This sections contains cluster wide firewall rules for all nodes.
102
103 `[IPSET <name>]`::
104
105 Cluster wide IP set definitions.
106
107 `[GROUP <name>]`::
108
109 Cluster wide security group definitions.
110
111 `[ALIASES]`::
112
113 Cluster wide Alias definitions.
114
115
116 Enabling the Firewall
117 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
118
119 The firewall is completely disabled by default, so you need to
120 set the enable option here:
121
122 ----
123 [OPTIONS]
124 # enable firewall (cluster wide setting, default is disabled)
125 enable: 1
126 ----
127
128 IMPORTANT: If you enable the firewall, traffic to all hosts is blocked by
129 default. Only exceptions is WebGUI(8006) and ssh(22) from your local
130 network.
131
132 If you want to administrate your {pve} hosts from remote, you
133 need to create rules to allow traffic from those remote IPs to the web
134 GUI (port 8006). You may also want to allow ssh (port 22), and maybe
135 SPICE (port 3128).
136
137 TIP: Please open a SSH connection to one of your {PVE} hosts before
138 enabling the firewall. That way you still have access to the host if
139 something goes wrong .
140
141 To simplify that task, you can instead create an IPSet called
142 ``management'', and add all remote IPs there. This creates all required
143 firewall rules to access the GUI from remote.
144
145
146 [[pve_firewall_host_specific_configuration]]
147 Host Specific Configuration
148 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
149
150 Host related configuration is read from:
151
152 /etc/pve/nodes/<nodename>/host.fw
153
154 This is useful if you want to overwrite rules from `cluster.fw`
155 config. You can also increase log verbosity, and set netfilter related
156 options. The configuration can contain the following sections:
157
158 `[OPTIONS]`::
159
160 This is used to set host related firewall options.
161
162 include::pve-firewall-host-opts.adoc[]
163
164 `[RULES]`::
165
166 This sections contains host specific firewall rules.
167
168 [[pve_firewall_vm_container_configuration]]
169 VM/Container Configuration
170 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
171
172 VM firewall configuration is read from:
173
174 /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
175
176 and contains the following data:
177
178 `[OPTIONS]`::
179
180 This is used to set VM/Container related firewall options.
181
182 include::pve-firewall-vm-opts.adoc[]
183
184 `[RULES]`::
185
186 This sections contains VM/Container firewall rules.
187
188 `[IPSET <name>]`::
189
190 IP set definitions.
191
192 `[ALIASES]`::
193
194 IP Alias definitions.
195
196
197 Enabling the Firewall for VMs and Containers
198 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
199
200 Each virtual network device has its own firewall enable flag. So you
201 can selectively enable the firewall for each interface. This is
202 required in addition to the general firewall `enable` option.
203
204
205 Firewall Rules
206 --------------
207
208 Firewall rules consists of a direction (`IN` or `OUT`) and an
209 action (`ACCEPT`, `DENY`, `REJECT`). You can also specify a macro
210 name. Macros contain predefined sets of rules and options. Rules can be
211 disabled by prefixing them with `|`.
212
213 .Firewall rules syntax
214 ----
215 [RULES]
216
217 DIRECTION ACTION [OPTIONS]
218 |DIRECTION ACTION [OPTIONS] # disabled rule
219
220 DIRECTION MACRO(ACTION) [OPTIONS] # use predefined macro
221 ----
222
223 The following options can be used to refine rule matches.
224
225 include::pve-firewall-rules-opts.adoc[]
226
227 Here are some examples:
228
229 ----
230 [RULES]
231 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0
232 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 # a comment
233 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 192.168.2.192 # only allow SSH from 192.168.2.192
234 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 10.0.0.1-10.0.0.10 # accept SSH for IP range
235 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source 10.0.0.1,10.0.0.2,10.0.0.3 #accept ssh for IP list
236 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source +mynetgroup # accept ssh for ipset mynetgroup
237 IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 -source myserveralias #accept ssh for alias myserveralias
238
239 |IN SSH(ACCEPT) -i net0 # disabled rule
240
241 IN DROP # drop all incoming packages
242 OUT ACCEPT # accept all outgoing packages
243 ----
244
245
246 [[pve_firewall_security_groups]]
247 Security Groups
248 ---------------
249
250 A security group is a collection of rules, defined at cluster level, which
251 can be used in all VMs' rules. For example you can define a group named
252 ``webserver'' with rules to open the 'http' and 'https' ports.
253
254 ----
255 # /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
256
257 [group webserver]
258 IN ACCEPT -p tcp -dport 80
259 IN ACCEPT -p tcp -dport 443
260 ----
261
262 Then, you can add this group to a VM's firewall
263
264 ----
265 # /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
266
267 [RULES]
268 GROUP webserver
269 ----
270
271 [[pve_firewall_ip_aliases]]
272 IP Aliases
273 ----------
274
275 IP Aliases allow you to associate IP addresses of networks with a
276 name. You can then refer to those names:
277
278 * inside IP set definitions
279 * in `source` and `dest` properties of firewall rules
280
281
282 Standard IP Alias `local_network`
283 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
284
285 This alias is automatically defined. Please use the following command
286 to see assigned values:
287
288 ----
289 # pve-firewall localnet
290 local hostname: example
291 local IP address: 192.168.2.100
292 network auto detect: 192.168.0.0/20
293 using detected local_network: 192.168.0.0/20
294 ----
295
296 The firewall automatically sets up rules to allow everything needed
297 for cluster communication (corosync, API, SSH) using this alias.
298
299 The user can overwrite these values in the `cluster.fw` alias
300 section. If you use a single host on a public network, it is better to
301 explicitly assign the local IP address
302
303 ----
304 # /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
305 [ALIASES]
306 local_network 1.2.3.4 # use the single IP address
307 ----
308
309 [[pve_firewall_ip_sets]]
310 IP Sets
311 -------
312
313 IP sets can be used to define groups of networks and hosts. You can
314 refer to them with `+name` in the firewall rules' `source` and `dest`
315 properties.
316
317 The following example allows HTTP traffic from the `management` IP
318 set.
319
320 IN HTTP(ACCEPT) -source +management
321
322
323 Standard IP set `management`
324 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
325
326 This IP set applies only to host firewalls (not VM firewalls). Those
327 IPs are allowed to do normal management tasks (PVE GUI, VNC, SPICE,
328 SSH).
329
330 The local cluster network is automatically added to this IP set (alias
331 `cluster_network`), to enable inter-host cluster
332 communication. (multicast,ssh,...)
333
334 ----
335 # /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
336
337 [IPSET management]
338 192.168.2.10
339 192.168.2.10/24
340 ----
341
342
343 Standard IP set `blacklist`
344 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
345
346 Traffic from these IPs is dropped by every host's and VM's firewall.
347
348 ----
349 # /etc/pve/firewall/cluster.fw
350
351 [IPSET blacklist]
352 77.240.159.182
353 213.87.123.0/24
354 ----
355
356
357 [[pve_firewall_ipfilter_section]]
358 Standard IP set `ipfilter-net*`
359 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
360
361 These filters belong to a VM's network interface and are mainly used to prevent
362 IP spoofing. If such a set exists for an interface then any outgoing traffic
363 with a source IP not matching its interface's corresponding ipfilter set will
364 be dropped.
365
366 For containers with configured IP addresses these sets, if they exist (or are
367 activated via the general `IP Filter` option in the VM's firewall's *options*
368 tab), implicitly contain the associated IP addresses.
369
370 For both virtual machines and containers they also implicitly contain the
371 standard MAC-derived IPv6 link-local address in order to allow the neighbor
372 discovery protocol to work.
373
374 ----
375 /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
376
377 [IPSET ipfilter-net0] # only allow specified IPs on net0
378 192.168.2.10
379 ----
380
381
382 Services and Commands
383 ---------------------
384
385 The firewall runs two service daemons on each node:
386
387 * pvefw-logger: NFLOG daemon (ulogd replacement).
388 * pve-firewall: updates iptables rules
389
390 There is also a CLI command named `pve-firewall`, which can be used to
391 start and stop the firewall service:
392
393 # pve-firewall start
394 # pve-firewall stop
395
396 To get the status use:
397
398 # pve-firewall status
399
400 The above command reads and compiles all firewall rules, so you will
401 see warnings if your firewall configuration contains any errors.
402
403 If you want to see the generated iptables rules you can use:
404
405 # iptables-save
406
407 [[pve_firewall_default_rules]]
408 Default firewall rules
409 ----------------------
410
411 The following traffic is filtered by the default firewall configuration:
412
413 Datacenter incomming/outgoing DROP/REJECT
414 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
415
416 If the input/output policy for the firewall is set to DROP/REJECT, the following
417 traffic is still allowed for the host:
418
419 * traffic over the loopback interface
420 * already established connections
421 * traffic using the igmp protocol
422 * tcp traffic from management hosts to port 8006 in order to allow access to
423 the web interface
424 * tcp traffic from management hosts to the port range 5900 to 5999 allowing
425 traffic for the VNC web console
426 * tcp traffic from management hosts to port 3128 for connections to the SPICE
427 proxy
428 * tcp traffic from management hosts to port 22 to allow ssh access
429 * udp traffic in the cluster network to port 5404 and 5405 for corosync
430 * udp multicast traffic in the cluster network
431 * icmp traffic type 3,4 or 11
432
433 The following traffic is dropped, but not logged even with logging enabled:
434
435 * tcp connections with invalid connection state
436 * Broad-, multi- and anycast traffic not related to corosync
437 * tcp traffic to port 43
438 * udp traffic to ports 135 and 445
439 * udp traffic to the port range 137 to 139
440 * udp traffic form source port 137 to port range 1024 to 65535
441 * udp traffic to port 1900
442 * tcp traffic to port 135, 139 and 445
443 * udp traffic originating from source port 53
444
445 The rest of the traffic is dropped/rejected and logged.
446 This may vary depending on the additional options enabled in
447 *Firewall* -> *Options*, such as NDP, SMURFS and TCP flag filtering.
448
449 Please inspect the output of
450
451 # iptables-save
452
453 to see the firewall chains and rules active on your system.
454
455 VM/CT incomming/outgoing DROP/REJECT
456 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
457
458 This drops/rejects all the traffic to the VMs, with some exceptions for DHCP, NDP,
459 Router Advertisement, MAC and IP filtering depending on the set configuration.
460 The same rules for dropping/rejecting packets are inherited from the datacenter,
461 while the exceptions for accepted incomming/outgoing traffic of the host do not
462 apply.
463
464 Again, please inspect the output of
465
466 # iptables-save
467
468 to see in detail the firewall chains and rules active for the VMs/CTs.
469
470 Logging of firewall rules
471 -------------------------
472
473 By default, all logging of traffic filtered by the firewall rules is disabled.
474 To enable logging, the `loglevel` for incommig and/or outgoing traffic has to be
475 set in *Firewall* -> *Options*. This can be done for the host as well as for the
476 VM/CT firewall individually. By this, logging of {PVE}'s standard firewall rules
477 is enabled and the output can be observed in *Firewall* -> *Log*.
478 Further, only some dropped or rejected packets are logged for the standard rules
479 (see xref:pve_firewall_default_rules[default firewall rules]).
480
481 `loglevel` does not affect how much of the filtered traffic is logged. It
482 changes a `LOGID` appended as prefix to the log output for easier filtering and
483 post-processing.
484
485 `loglevel` is one of the following flags:
486
487 [[pve_firewall_log_levels]]
488 [width="25%", options="header"]
489 |===================
490 | loglevel | LOGID
491 | nolog | no log
492 | emerg | 0
493 | alert | 1
494 | crit | 2
495 | err | 3
496 | warning | 4
497 | notice | 5
498 | info | 6
499 | debug | 7
500 |===================
501
502 A typical firewall log output looks like this:
503
504 ----
505 VMID LOGID CHAIN TIMESTAMP POLICY: PACKET_DETAILS
506 ----
507
508 In case of the host firewall, `VMID` is equal to 0.
509
510
511 Logging of user defined firewall rules
512 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
513
514 In order to log packets filtered by user-defined firewall rules, it is possible
515 to set a log-level parameter for each rule individually.
516 This allows to log in a fine grained manner and independent of the log-level
517 defined for the standard rules in *Firewall* -> *Options*.
518
519 While the `loglevel` for each individual rule can be defined or changed easily
520 in the WebUI during creation or modification of the rule, it is possible to set
521 this also via the corresponding `pvesh` API calls.
522
523 Further, the log-level can also be set via the firewall configuration file by
524 appending a `-log <loglevel>` to the selected rule (see
525 xref:pve_firewall_log_levels[possible log-levels]).
526
527 For example, the following two are ident:
528
529 ----
530 IN REJECT -p icmp -log nolog
531 IN REJECT -p icmp
532 ----
533
534 whereas
535
536 ----
537 IN REJECT -p icmp -log debug
538 ----
539
540 produces a log output flagged with the `debug` level.
541
542
543 Tips and Tricks
544 ---------------
545
546 How to allow FTP
547 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
548
549 FTP is an old style protocol which uses port 21 and several other dynamic ports. So you
550 need a rule to accept port 21. In addition, you need to load the `ip_conntrack_ftp` module.
551 So please run:
552
553 modprobe ip_conntrack_ftp
554
555 and add `ip_conntrack_ftp` to `/etc/modules` (so that it works after a reboot).
556
557
558 Suricata IPS integration
559 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
560
561 If you want to use the http://suricata-ids.org/[Suricata IPS]
562 (Intrusion Prevention System), it's possible.
563
564 Packets will be forwarded to the IPS only after the firewall ACCEPTed
565 them.
566
567 Rejected/Dropped firewall packets don't go to the IPS.
568
569 Install suricata on proxmox host:
570
571 ----
572 # apt-get install suricata
573 # modprobe nfnetlink_queue
574 ----
575
576 Don't forget to add `nfnetlink_queue` to `/etc/modules` for next reboot.
577
578 Then, enable IPS for a specific VM with:
579
580 ----
581 # /etc/pve/firewall/<VMID>.fw
582
583 [OPTIONS]
584 ips: 1
585 ips_queues: 0
586 ----
587
588 `ips_queues` will bind a specific cpu queue for this VM.
589
590 Available queues are defined in
591
592 ----
593 # /etc/default/suricata
594 NFQUEUE=0
595 ----
596
597
598 Notes on IPv6
599 -------------
600
601 The firewall contains a few IPv6 specific options. One thing to note is that
602 IPv6 does not use the ARP protocol anymore, and instead uses NDP (Neighbor
603 Discovery Protocol) which works on IP level and thus needs IP addresses to
604 succeed. For this purpose link-local addresses derived from the interface's MAC
605 address are used. By default the `NDP` option is enabled on both host and VM
606 level to allow neighbor discovery (NDP) packets to be sent and received.
607
608 Beside neighbor discovery NDP is also used for a couple of other things, like
609 auto-configuration and advertising routers.
610
611 By default VMs are allowed to send out router solicitation messages (to query
612 for a router), and to receive router advertisement packets. This allows them to
613 use stateless auto configuration. On the other hand VMs cannot advertise
614 themselves as routers unless the ``Allow Router Advertisement'' (`radv: 1`) option
615 is set.
616
617 As for the link local addresses required for NDP, there's also an ``IP Filter''
618 (`ipfilter: 1`) option which can be enabled which has the same effect as adding
619 an `ipfilter-net*` ipset for each of the VM's network interfaces containing the
620 corresponding link local addresses. (See the
621 <<pve_firewall_ipfilter_section,Standard IP set `ipfilter-net*`>> section for details.)
622
623
624 Ports used by {pve}
625 -------------------
626
627 * Web interface: 8006
628 * VNC Web console: 5900-5999
629 * SPICE proxy: 3128
630 * sshd (used for cluster actions): 22
631 * rpcbind: 111
632 * corosync multicast (if you run a cluster): 5404, 5405 UDP
633
634
635 ifdef::manvolnum[]
636
637 Macro Definitions
638 -----------------
639
640 include::pve-firewall-macros.adoc[]
641
642
643 include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
644
645 endif::manvolnum[]