* Automagic proxy arp?
@ 2006-02-22 15:24 Chinh Nguyen
2006-02-22 16:13 ` Rob Sterenborg
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Chinh Nguyen @ 2006-02-22 15:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: netfilter
Hi,
I have a machine M that is 'walled' off from the rest of the local subnet
similar to this.
.1 .2 .3 .4-.254
+-------+ +---------+
+ M + ------ eth1 FW eth0 ---- local subnet
+-------+ +---------+
With ip_forward on and using standard forward rules on FW (e.g., -A FORWARD
--in-interface eth1 -j ACCEPT, -A FORWARD --in-interface eth0 -m state --state
ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT), M can reach the local subnet.
However, I need to add a routing entry in M to send all local traffic to FW.
Otherwise, M will attempt to arp the destination as they are all on same subnet.
The linux arp man page claims that linux will "automagic proxy arp when a route
exists and it is forwarding".
Does anyone know how to set up iptables on FW to enable this "automagic"?
I've also tried using explicit forward rules such as "--in eth1 -d !.1 -j
ACCEPT", "--in eth1 -d .4 -j ACCEPT, --in eth1 -d .5 -j ACCEPT, etc." to no effect.
Thanks.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: Automagic proxy arp?
2006-02-22 15:24 Automagic proxy arp? Chinh Nguyen
@ 2006-02-22 16:13 ` Rob Sterenborg
2006-02-22 17:28 ` Chinh Nguyen
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Rob Sterenborg @ 2006-02-22 16:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: netfilter
On Wed, February 22, 2006 16:24, Chinh Nguyen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a machine M that is 'walled' off from the rest of the local subnet
> similar to this.
>
> .1 .2 .3 .4-.254
> +-------+ +---------+
> + M + ------ eth1 FW eth0 ---- local subnet
> +-------+ +---------+
>
> With ip_forward on and using standard forward rules on FW (e.g., -A FORWARD
> --in-interface eth1 -j ACCEPT, -A FORWARD --in-interface eth0 -m state
> --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT), M can reach the local subnet.
>
> However, I need to add a routing entry in M to send all local traffic to FW.
> Otherwise, M will attempt to arp the destination as they are all on same
> subnet.
> The linux arp man page claims that linux will "automagic proxy arp when a
> route exists and it is forwarding".
The "linux arp man page"... Not the iptables man page.
> Does anyone know how to set up iptables on FW to enable this "automagic"?
Aren't you confusing things ? arp != iptables.
From man arp(8) :
NOTE: As of kernel 2.2.0 it is no longer possible to set an ARP entry for an
entire subnet. Linux instead does automagic proxy arp when a route exists and
it is forwarding. See arp(7) for details.
> I've also tried using explicit forward rules such as "--in eth1 -d !.1 -j
> ACCEPT", "--in eth1 -d .4 -j ACCEPT, --in eth1 -d .5 -j ACCEPT, etc." to no
> effect.
Why is it such a problem to set the default gateway of "M" to the firewall ?
You say it works when you add a routing rule for for the firewall, but if the
firewall is the only machine that "M" can reach, you might as well use it as
default gateway.
Gr,
Rob
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: Automagic proxy arp?
2006-02-22 16:13 ` Rob Sterenborg
@ 2006-02-22 17:28 ` Chinh Nguyen
0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Chinh Nguyen @ 2006-02-22 17:28 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: netfilter
Rob Sterenborg wrote:
> .1 .2 .3 .4-.254
> +-------+ +---------+
> + M + ------ eth1 FW eth0 ---- local subnet
> +-------+ +---------+
> The "linux arp man page"... Not the iptables man page.
>
>
>>Does anyone know how to set up iptables on FW to enable this "automagic"?
>
It turns out the trick is to add an explicit route on the FW to machine M such
as "route add -host M/32 dev eth1" whereas the default route to local subnet is
eth0. Of course, you must also enable proxy_arp for both eth1 and eth0.
Given this configuration, the FW will proxy arp for all machines on local subnet
(on eth1), and will proxy arp for M (on eth0).
>
> Aren't you confusing things ? arp != iptables.
>>From man arp(8) :
>
> NOTE: As of kernel 2.2.0 it is no longer possible to set an ARP entry for an
> entire subnet. Linux instead does automagic proxy arp when a route exists and
> it is forwarding. See arp(7) for details.
>
>
I only thought the solution may lie in iptables because the only systems related
to forwarding in linux that I know of is 1. the ip_forward option in the kernel
and 2. iptables can define forwarding rules.
As such, I assumed that when the arp man pages write about forwarding enabling
automagic proxy arp, it relates to iptables.
I also thought about turning FW into a bridge but there may be some degradation
because both interfaces with have to be in promiscuous mode.
> Why is it such a problem to set the default gateway of "M" to the firewall ?
> You say it works when you add a routing rule for for the firewall, but if the
> firewall is the only machine that "M" can reach, you might as well use it as
> default gateway.
Eventually, the subnet where M is sitting will have more than one machines (say,
N, O, P). For example, as a DMZ. It would be nice to have M, N, O, and P reach
each other as well as the rest of local subnet without adding customized routing
rules on each of them.
Actually, for a DMZ the configuration would be reversed. You want the local
subnet to reach M, N, O, P and not vice versa (by using iptables to only
allowing forwarding to start from the eth0 side). In this case, it would not be
feasible to add a special route for all the local boxes for M, etc. It looks
like I can achieve the same thing by just adding 4 route entries on FW for M, N,
O, P.
Regards,
Chinh
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
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2006-02-22 15:24 Automagic proxy arp? Chinh Nguyen
2006-02-22 16:13 ` Rob Sterenborg
2006-02-22 17:28 ` Chinh Nguyen
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