Provided by: firehol-doc_3.1.7+ds-2.1_all bug

NAME

       firehol-protection - add extra protections to a definition

SYNOPSIS

       protection [reverse] strong [requests/period [burst]]

       protection [reverse] flood-protection-type [requests/period [burst]]

       protection [reverse] { bad-packets | packet-protection-type }

       protection [reverse] connlimit connections [mask prefix]

       protection  [reverse]  connrate rate [burst amount] [srcmask prefix] [htable-size buckets]
       [htable-max entries] [htable-expire msec] [htable-gcinterval msec]

DESCRIPTION

       The protection subcommand sets protection rules on an interface or router.

       Flood protections honour the values requests/period and burst.  They are used to limit the
       rate of certain types of traffic.

       The  default  rate  FireHOL  uses  is  100  operations per second with a burst of 50.  Run
       iptables -m limit --help for more information.

       The protection type  strong  will  switch  on  all  protections  (both  packet  and  flood
       protections) except all-floods.  It has aliases full and all.

       The  protection  type  bad-packets  will  switch  on  all packet protections but not flood
       protections.

       You can specify multiple protection types by using  multiple  protection  commands  or  by
       using a single command and enclosing the types in quotes.

              Note

              On a router, protections are normally set up on inface.

              The  reverse option will set up the protections on outface.  You must use it as the
              first keyword.

PACKET PROTECTION TYPES

       bad-packets:
              Drops all the bad packets detected by these rules.

       invalid
              Drops all incoming invalid packets, as detected INVALID by the connection tracker.

              See also FIREHOL_DROP_INVALID in firehol-defaults.conf(5) which allows setting this
              function globally.

       fragments
              Drops all packet fragments.

              This  rule  will  probably  never match anything since iptables(8) reconstructs all
              packets automatically before the firewall rules are processed  whenever  connection
              tracking is running.

       new-tcp-w/o-syn
              Drops all TCP packets that initiate a socket but have not got the SYN flag set.

       malformed-xmas
              Drops all TCP packets that have all TCP flags set.

       malformed-null
              Drops all TCP packets that have all TCP flags unset.

       malformed-bad
              Drops all TCP packets that have illegal combinations of TCP flags set.

   EXAMPLES
              protection bad-packets

FLOOD PROTECTION TYPES

       icmp-floods [requests/period [burst]]
              Allows only a certain amount of ICMP echo requests.

       syn-floods [requests/period [burst]]
              Allows only a certain amount of new TCP connections.

              Be  careful  to  not set the rate too low as the rule is applied to all connections
              regardless of their final result (rejected, dropped, established, etc).

       all-floods [requests/period [burst]]
              Allows only a certain amount of new connections.

              Be careful to not set the rate too low as the rule is applied  to  all  connections
              regardless of their final result (rejected, dropped, established, etc).

   EXAMPLES
              protection all-floods 90/sec 40

CLIENT LIMITING TYPES

       These protections were added in v3.

       These protections are used to limit the connections client make, per interface or router.

       They  support  appending  optional rule parameters to limit their scope to certain clients
       only.

       protection [reverse] connlimit connections [mask prefix]
              Allow only a number of connections per  client  (implemented  with  connlimit  with
              fixed type=saddr).

       protection  [reverse]  connrate rate [burst amount] [srcmask prefix] [htable-size buckets]
       [htable-max entries] [htable-expire msec] [htable-gcinterval msec]
              Allow up to a rate of new connections per client (implemented with  hashlimit  with
              fixed type=upto and mode=srcip).

   EXAMPLES
       Limit the number of concurrent connections to 10 per client

              protection connlimit 10 mask 32

       Limit  the number of concurrent connections to 100 per client class-C and also limit it to
       5 for 1.2.3.4

              protection connlimit 100 mask 24
              protection connlimit 5 src 1.2.3.4

       In the last example above, if you want to give client 1.2.3.4 more  connections  than  all
       others, you should exclude it from the first connlimit statement, like this:

              protection connlimit 100 mask 24 src not 1.2.3.4
              protection connlimit 200 src 1.2.3.4

       Limit all clients to 10 concurrect connections and 60 connections/minute

              protection connlimit 10
              protection connrate 60/minute

KNOWN ISSUES

       When  using  multiple  types  in  a single command, if the quotes are forgotten, incorrect
       rules will be generated without warning.

       When using multiple types in a single command, FireHOL will silently ignore any types that
       come  after  a  group type (bad-packets, strong and its aliases).  Only use group types on
       their own line.

SEE ALSO

firehol(1) - FireHOL program

       • firehol.conf(5) - FireHOL configuration

       • firehol-interface(5) - interface definition

       • firehol-router(5) - router definition

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

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

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

AUTHORS

       FireHOL Team.