From: Jason Opperisano <opie@817west.com>
To: netfilter@lists.netfilter.org
Subject: Re: Connection tracking via RPC transaction ID
Date: Wed, 20 Apr 2005 15:13:03 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20050420191303.GA25136@bender.817west.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4266A285.1040205@rfmd.com>
On Wed, Apr 20, 2005 at 02:42:13PM -0400, Stephen P. Schaefer wrote:
> I'm trying to SNAT an NFS client, but the NFS server (a NetApp) has
> two IP addresses, and though DNS advertises it at the first address,
> e.g. 192.168.200.10, its answers come back from the other address,
> e.g., 192.168.2.150. If I'm not behind the SNAT, there's no problem
> because the client kernel ignores the source IP address and just looks
> at the RPC transaction ID, but behind the SNAT, the fact that the
> answer comes back from a different address than that to which the
> request went breaks connection tracking. I've currently worked around
> the problem with a DNAT rule:
>
> iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -d 192.168.200.10 -i eth1 -j DNAT
> --to-destination 192.168.2.150
>
> ...but I'm woried that this is less than robust. In particular, I
> don't understad why the NetApp uses one address or the other to reply,
> and what will keep it from behaving differently tomorrow. Is there a
> connection tracking module that works on RPC transaction ID and can
> ignore the source address? Would it be difficult to write? Is there
> code that does something similar that I should study?
there's an RPC conntrack module in PoM:
http://svn.netfilter.org/netfilter/trunk/patch-o-matic-ng/rpc/
it's 2.4-only, and i have no clue if it helps with this specific
situation.
-j
--
"Quagmire: Tuesdays in the '80s I was always in bed by 8... and home
by 11."
--Family Guy
prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-04-20 19:13 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-04-20 18:42 Connection tracking via RPC transaction ID Stephen P. Schaefer
2005-04-20 19:13 ` Jason Opperisano [this message]
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