Provided by: firehol-doc_3.1.7+ds-2_all bug

NAME

       firehol-synproxy - configure synproxy

SYNOPSIS

       synproxy type rules-to-match-request action [action options]

DESCRIPTION

type  defines where the SYNPROXY will be attached.  It can be input (or in), forward (or
         pass):

         • use input (or in) when the IP of the real server is  an  IP  assigned  to  a  physical
           interface of the machine (i.e. the IP is at the firewall itself)

         • use  forward  (or  pass)  when  the  IP  of  the  real server is routed by the machine
           (i.e. SYNPROXY should look at the FORWARD chain for this traffic).

       • rules to match request are  FireHOL  optional  rule  parameters  and  should  match  the
         original client REQUEST, before any destination NAT.  inface and dst are required:

         • inface is one or more interfaces the REQUEST should be received from

         • dst is the IP of the real server, as seen by the client (before any destination NAT)

       • action defines how SYNPROXY will reach the real server and can be:

         • accept to just allow the REQUEST reach the real server without any destination NAT

         • dnat  to IP:PORT or dnat to IP1-IP2:PORT1-PORT2 or dnat to IP or dnat to :PORT to have
           SYNPROXY reach a server on another machine in a DMZ (different IP and/or PORT compared
           to the original request).  The synproxy statement supports everything supported by the
           dnat helper (see firehol-nat(5)).

         • redirect to PORT to divert the request to a port on the firewall itself.  The synproxy
           statement supports everything supported by the redirect helper (see firehol-nat(5)).

         • action  CUSTOM_ACTION  to  have  any other FireHOL action performed on the NEW socket.
           Use the action helper to define custom actions (see [firehol-action(5)][]).

         • action options are everything supported  by  FireHOL  optional  rule  parameters  that
           should  be  applied  only  on the final action of SYN packet from SYNPROXY to the real
           server.  For example this can be used to append  loglimit  "TEXT"  to  have  something
           logged  by  iptables,  or  limit  the  concurrent  sockets with connlimit.  Generally,
           everything you can write on the same line after server http accept  is  also  accepted
           here.

BACKGROUND

       SYNPROXY is a TCP SYN packets proxy.  It can be used to protect any TCP server (like a web
       server) from SYN floods and similar DDos attacks.

       SYNPROXY is a netfilter module, in the Linux kernel.  It is optimized to  handle  millions
       of packets per second utilizing all CPUs available without any concurrency locking between
       the connections.

       The net effect of this, is that the real servers will not notice  any  change  during  the
       attack.   The valid TCP connections will pass through and served, while the attack will be
       stopped at the firewall.

       For more information on why you should use a SYNPROXY, check these articles:

       • http://rhelblog.redhat.com/2014/04/11/mitigate-tcp-syn-flood-attacks-with-red-hat-
         enterprise-linux-7-beta/

       • https://r00t-services.net/knowledgebase/14/Homemade-DDoS-Protection-Using-IPTables-
         SYNPROXY.html

       SYNPROXY is included in the Linux kernels since version 3.12.

HOW IT WORKS

       • When a SYNPROXY is used, clients transparently get connected to the  SYNPROXY.   So  the
         3-way TCP handshake happens first between the client and the SYNPROXY:

         • Clients send TCP SYN to server A

         • At the firewall, when this packet arrives it is marked as UNTRACKED

         • The UNTRACKED TCP SYN packet is then given to SYNPROXY

         • SYNPROXY gets this and responds (as server A) with TCP SYN+ACK (UNTRACKED)

         • Client  responds  with  TCP  ACK (marked as INVALID or UNTRACKED in iptables) which is
           also given to SYNPROXY

       • Once a client has been connected to the SYNPROXY,  SYNPROXY  automatically  initiates  a
         3-way  TCP  handshake  with  the  real  server, spoofing the SYN packet so that the real
         server will see that the original client is attempting to connect:

         • SYNPROXY sends TCP SYN to real server A.  This is a NEW  connection  in  iptables  and
           happens on the OUTPUT chain.  The source IP of the packet is the IP of the client

         • The real server A responds with SYN+ACK to the client

         • SYNPROXY  receives  this  and responds back to the server with ACK.  The connection is
           now marked as ESTABLISHED

       • Once the connection has been established, SYNPROXY leaves the traffic flow  between  the
         client and the server

       So, SYNPROXY can be used for any kind of TCP traffic.  It can be used for both unencrypted
       and encrypted traffic, since it does not interfere with the content itself.

USE CASES

       In FireHOL SYNPROXY support is implemented as a helper.  The synproxy command can be  used
       to set up any number of SYNPROXYs.

       FireHOL can set up SYNPROXY for any of these cases:

       1. real  server  on  the firewall itself, on the same port (e.g. SYNPROXY on port 80, real
          server on port 80 too).

       2. real server on the firewall itself, on a different port (e.g. SYNPROXY  on  port  2200,
          real server on port 22).

       3. real  server  on  a  different machine, without NAT (e.g. SYNPROXY on a router catching
          traffic towards IP A, port 80 and real server is at IP A port 80 too).

       4. real server on a different machine,  with  NAT  (e.g. SYNPROXY  on  a  router  catching
          traffic towards IP A, port 80 and real server is at IP 10.1.1.1 port 90).

       5. screening incoming traffic that should never be sent to a real server so that traps and
          dynamic blacklists can be created using traffic that  has  been  screened  by  SYNPROXY
          (eliminate “internet noise” and spoofed packets).

       So, generally, all cases are covered.

DESIGN

       The general guidelines for using synproxy in FireHOL, are:

       1. Design your firewall as you would normally do without SYNPROXY

       2. Test  that it works without SYNPROXY.  Test especially the servers you want to protect.
          They should be working too

       3. Add synproxy statements for the servers you want to protect.

       To achieve these requirements:

       1. The helper will automatically do everything needed for SYNPROXY to:

           • receive the initial SYN packet from the client

           • respond back to the client with SYN+ACK

           • receive the first ACK packet from the client

           • send the initial SYN packet to the server

       There are cases where the above are very tricky to achieve.  You don’t need to match these
       in your firehol.conf.  The synproxy helper will automatically take care of them.  However:

              You  do  need  the  allow  the flow of traffic between the real server and the real
              client (as you normally do without a synproxy, with  a  client,  server,  or  route
              statement in an interface or router section).

       2. The  helper  will  prevent the 3-way TCP handshake between SYNPROXY and the real server
          interact with other destination NAT rules you may have.  However for  this  to  happen,
          make  sure you place the synproxy statements above any destination NAT rules (redirect,
          dnat, transparent_squid, transparent_proxy, tproxy, etc).  So:

                  SYNPROXY will interact with destination NAT you have in  firehol.conf  only  if
                  the synproxy statements are place below the destination NAT ones.

                  You  normally  do not need to have synproxy interact with other destination NAT
                  rules.  The synproxy helper will handle the destination NAT (dnat or  redirect)
                  it needs by itself.

                  So  place  synproxy statements above all destination NAT statements, unless you
                  know what you are doing.

       3. The helper will allow the 3-way TCP handshake between  SYNPROXY  and  the  real  server
          interact  with  source  NAT  rules  you may have (snat, masquerade), since these may be
          needed to reach the real server.

LIMITATIONS

       1. Internally there are matches that are made without taking  into  account  the  original
          inface.   So, in case different actions have to be taken depending on the interface the
          request is received, src should be added to differentiate the traffic between  the  two
          flows.

       2. SYNPROXY  does  not  inherit MARKs from the original request packets.  It should and it
          would make matching a lot easier, but it does not.  This means  that  for  all  packets
          generated by SYNPROXY, inface is lost.

       3. FireHOL  internally uses a MARK to tag packets send from SYNPROXY to the target server.
          This is used for 3 reasons:

           • isolate these packets from other destination NAT rules.  If they were  not  isolated
             from the destination NAT rules, then packets from the SYNPROXY could be matched by a
             transparent proxy and enter your web proxy.  They could be matched by a  transparent
             proxy because they actually originate from the local machine.

           • isolate  the same packets from the rest of the packet filtering rules.  Without this
             isolation, most probably the packets will have been dropped since they come from lo.

           • report if orphan synproxy packets are encountered.  So packets  the  FireHOL  engine
             failed  to  match  properly,  should  appear  with  a  iptables  log  saying “ORPHAN
             SYNPROXY->SERVER”.  If you don’t have such logs, everything works as expected.

OTHER OPTIONS

       You  can  change  the  TCP  options   used   by   synproxy   by   setting   the   variable
       FIREHOL_SYNPROXY_OPTIONS.  The default is this:

              FIREHOL_SYNPROXY_OPTIONS="--sack-perm --timestamp --wscale 7 --mss 1460"

       If you want to see it in action in the iptables log, then enable logging:

              FIREHOL_SYNPROXY_LOG=1

       The  default is disabled (0).  If you enable it, every step of the 3-way setup between the
       client and SYNPROXY and the SYN packet of SYNPROXY towards the real server will be  logged
       by iptables.

       Using      the      variable      FIREHOL_CONNTRACK_LOOSE_MATCHING     you     can     set
       net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_tcp_loose.  FireHOL will automatically set this  to  0  when  a
       synproxy is set up.

       Using  the  variable  FIREHOL_TCP_TIMESTAMPS you can set net.ipv4.tcp_timestamps.  FireHOL
       will automatically set this to 1 when a synproxy is set up.

       Using the variable FIREHOL_TCP_SYN_COOKIES you can set  net.ipv4.tcp_syncookies.   FireHOL
       will automatically set this to 1 when a synproxy is set up.

       On  a  busy server, you are advised to increase the maximum connection tracker entries and
       its hash table size.

       • Using      the      variable      FIREHOL_CONNTRACK_HASHSIZE      you      can       set
         /sys/module/nf_conntrack/parameters/hashsize.

       • Using the variable FIREHOL_CONNTRACK_MAX you can set net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_max.

       FireHOL will not alter these variables by itself.

SYNPROXY AND DYNAMIC IP

       By  default the synproxy helper requires from you to define a dst IP of the server that is
       to be protected.  This is required because the destination IP will be used  to  match  the
       SYN packet the synproxy sends to the server.

       There  is however another way that allows the use of synproxy in environments where the IP
       of the server is unknown (like a dynamic IP DSL):

       1. First you need to set FIREHOL_SYNPROXY_EXCLUDE_OWNER=1.  This will  make  synproxy  not
          match  packets  that  are  generated  by  the  local  machine, even if the process that
          generates them uses your public IP (the packets in order to be matched they  will  need
          not have a UID or GID).

       2. Next you will need to exclude you lan IPs by adding src not "${UNROUTABLE_IPS}" (or any
          other network you know you use) to the synproxy statement.

EXAMPLES

       Protect a web server running on the firewall with IP 1.2.3.4, from clients on eth0:

              ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 dst 1.2.3.4 dport 80 accept

              interface eth0 wan
                  server http accept

       Protect a web server running on port 90 on the firewall with IP 1.2.3.4, from  clients  on
       eth0 that believe the web server is running on port 80:

              server_myhttp_ports="tcp/90"
              client_myhttp_ports="default"

              ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 dst 1.2.3.4 dport 80 redirect to 90

              interface eth0 wan
                  server myhttp accept # packet filtering works with the real ports

       Protect  a  web  server  running  on  another machine (5.6.7.8), while the firewall is the
       router (without NAT):

              ipv4 synproxy forward inface eth0 dst 5.6.7.8 dport 80 accept

              router wan2lan inface eth0 outface eth1
                  server http accept dst 5.6.7.8

       Protect a web server running on another machine in a DMZ (public IP is  1.2.3.4  on  eth0,
       web server IP is 10.1.1.1 on eth1):

              ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 \
                  dst 1.2.3.4 dport 80 dnat to 10.1.1.1

              router wan2lan inface eth0 outface eth1
                  server http accept dst 10.1.1.1

       Note  that  we used input not forward, because the firewall has the IP 1.2.3.4 on its eth0
       interface.  The client request is expected on input.

       Protect an array of 10 web servers running on 10 other machines in a  DMZ  (public  IP  is
       1.2.3.4 on eth0, web servers IPs are 10.1.1.1 to 10.1.1.10 on eth1):

              ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 \
                  dst 1.2.3.4 dport 80 dnat to 10.1.1.1-10.1.1.10 persistent

              router wan2lan inface eth0 outface eth1
                  server http accept dst 10.1.1.1-10.1.1.10

       The  above  configuration  is  a  load balancer.  Requests towards 1.2.3.4 port 80 will be
       distributed to the 10 web servers with persistence (each client will  always  see  one  of
       them).

       Catch  all  traffic  towards  SSH port tcp/22 and send it to TRAP_AND_DROP as explained in
       Working With Traps.  At the same time, allow SSH on port tcp/2200  (without  altering  the
       ssh server):

               # definition of action TRAP_AND_DROP
               ipv4 action TRAP_AND_DROP sockets_suspects_trap 3600 86400 1 src not "${UNROUTABLE_IPS}" next action DROP

               # send ssh traffic to TRAP_AND_DROP
               ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 dst 1.2.3.4 dport 22 action TRAP_AND_DROP

               # accept ssh traffic on tcp/2200
               ipv4 synproxy input inface eth0 dst 1.2.3.4 dport 2200 redirect to 22

               interface eth0 wan
                  server ssh accept

SEE ALSO

firehol(1) - FireHOL program

       • firehol.conf(5) - FireHOL configuration

       • firehol-interface(5) - interface definition

       • firehol-router(5) - router definition

       • firehol-params(5) - optional rule parameters

       • firehol-masquerade(5) - masquerade helper

       • FireHOL Website (http://firehol.org/)

       • FireHOL Online PDF Manual (http://firehol.org/firehol-manual.pdf)

       • FireHOL Online Documentation (http://firehol.org/documentation/)

       • NAT HOWTO (http://www.netfilter.org/documentation/HOWTO/NAT-HOWTO-6.html)

       • netfilter  flow  diagram  (http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/Netfilter-
         packet-flow.svg)

AUTHORS

       FireHOL Team.