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* Advice setting up DMZ
@ 2005-01-05  1:28 Thomas Simmons
  2005-01-05  2:51 ` John A. Sullivan III
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread
From: Thomas Simmons @ 2005-01-05  1:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netfilter

I will soon be setting up a Linux firewall at work and I would like to 
get some advice on the best way to implement it. Currently the question 
regards routing to the DMZ. We currently have ~30 websites being hosted 
on an IIS server thats directly connected to the internet. The server 
has multiple ip address assigned to the public interface, one for each 
site, and a default ip. This server also hosts an FTP site for each 
website, that uses the same ip as its website counterpart. Let's just 
say the public IP's assigned to this server are 
111.111.111.1-111.111.111.32. My first thought was to add 30+ aliases to 
the firewalls public interface and use DNAT rules to forward traffic on 
needed ports to the webserver which would have a private ip. I would add 
something like this to my script.

IFCCMD="/sbin/ifconfig"
IPTCMD="/sbin/iptables/"
PUBIF="eth2"
DMZIF="eth1"
PUBMSK="255.255.255.128"


$IFCCMD $PUBIF:1 111.111.111.1 netmask $PUBMSK
$IPTCMD -A PREROUTING -t nat -p tcp -d 111.111.111.1 --dport 80 -j DNAT 
--to-destination 192.168.11.1:80
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $PUBIF -o $DMZIF -p tcp --dport 80 -d 192.168.11.1 
-j ACCEPT
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $DMZIF -o $PUBIF -p tcp --sport 80 -s 192.168.11.1 
-j ACCEPT

$IFCCMD $PUBIF:1 111.111.111.1 netmask $PUBMSK
$IPTCMD -A PREROUTING -t nat -p tcp -d 111.111.111.1 --dport 443 -j DNAT 
--to-destination 192.168.11.1:443
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $PUBIF -o $DMZIF -p tcp --dport 443 -d 
192.168.11.1 -j ACCEPT
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $DMZIF -o $PUBIF -p tcp --sport 443 -s 
192.168.11.1 -j ACCEPT

$IFCCMD $PUBIF:1 111.111.111.1 netmask $PUBMSK
$IPTCMD -A PREROUTING -t nat -p tcp -d 111.111.111.1 --dport 21 -j DNAT 
--to-destination 192.168.11.1:21
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $PUBIF -o $DMZIF -p tcp --dport 21 -d 192.168.11.1 
-j ACCEPT
$IPTCMD -A FORWARD -i $DMZIF -o $PUBIF -p tcp --sport 21 -s 192.168.11.1 
-j ACCEPT

$IPTCMD -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.11.1 -o $PUBIF -j SNAT --to 
111.111.111.1

I would have to do this for each website, so basically I would be doing 
that 30 more times in the script, with only ip changes. I have tested it 
(not with 30 ip's, only 3) but it seems to work great. Is there a better 
way to do what I need? Is this what is called 1-to-1 nat? The system 
that we are using as the firewall is a 1GHz Celeron w/ 256MB RAM. The OS 
is basically a Debian base install w/ 2.4.27-custom kernel. The public 
and DMZ interfaces have GBE cards installed, so this system shouldn't 
have any speed problems with this configuration. Is that a fair 
assumption? Thanks in advance for any suggestions.

Regards,
Thomas



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2005-01-06 11:49 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2005-01-05  1:28 Advice setting up DMZ Thomas Simmons
2005-01-05  2:51 ` John A. Sullivan III
2005-01-05  6:19   ` newbie question on ports faisal gillani
2005-01-06  2:07   ` Advice setting up DMZ Thomas Simmons
2005-01-06 11:49     ` John A. Sullivan III

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