Matching connection tracking stateful metainformation

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Revision as of 13:56, 10 January 2017 by Arturo (talk | contribs) (→‎Matching conntrack information: add some bits about status matches)
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As in iptables, you can match the state tracking information (sometimes refered as conntrack or ct information) that Netfilter collects through the Connection Tracking System to deploy stateful firewalls.

Matching conntrack information

nftables provides the ct selector which can be used to match:

  • State information: new, established, related and invalid. In this regard, there is no changes with iptables.
  • The conntrack mark.
  • Status information: expected, seen-reply, assured, confirmed, snat, dnat, dying.

Matching the state information

The following example shows how to deploy an extremely simple stateful firewall with nftables:

nft add rule filter input ct state established,related counter accept #1
nft add rule filter input counter drop #2

The rule #1 allows packets that are part of an already established communication with the network. Thus, any attempt from a computer in the network to reach your computer will be dropped. However, the traffic that is part of a flow that you have started will be accepted. Note that the example above uses a comma separated list of the states that you want to match.

If you are not familiar with Netfilter flow state machine, you can give a quick read to this link.

Matching the conntrack mark

The following example shows how to match packets based on the conntrack mark:

nft add rule filter input ct mark 123 counter

To know more about conntrack marks and packet marks, see Setting packet metainformation.

notrack

You can use the notrack support to explicitly skip connection tracking for matching packets.

The example below skips traffic for 80/tcp and 443/tcp:

nft add rule ip raw prerouting tcp dport { 80, 443 } notrack

Suppor for this was added in linux kernel 4.10 and in nftables v0.7.