• Daniel Borkmann's avatar
    netfilter: nf_conntrack: add direction support for zones · deedb590
    Daniel Borkmann authored
    This work adds a direction parameter to netfilter zones, so identity
    separation can be performed only in original/reply or both directions
    (default). This basically opens up the possibility of doing NAT with
    conflicting IP address/port tuples from multiple, isolated tenants
    on a host (e.g. from a netns) without requiring each tenant to NAT
    twice resp. to use its own dedicated IP address to SNAT to, meaning
    overlapping tuples can be made unique with the zone identifier in
    original direction, where the NAT engine will then allocate a unique
    tuple in the commonly shared default zone for the reply direction.
    In some restricted, local DNAT cases, also port redirection could be
    used for making the reply traffic unique w/o requiring SNAT.
    
    The consensus we've reached and discussed at NFWS and since the initial
    implementation [1] was to directly integrate the direction meta data
    into the existing zones infrastructure, as opposed to the ct->mark
    approach we proposed initially.
    
    As we pass the nf_conntrack_zone object directly around, we don't have
    to touch all call-sites, but only those, that contain equality checks
    of zones. Thus, based on the current direction (original or reply),
    we either return the actual id, or the default NF_CT_DEFAULT_ZONE_ID.
    CT expectations are direction-agnostic entities when expectations are
    being compared among themselves, so we can only use the identifier
    in this case.
    
    Note that zone identifiers can not be included into the hash mix
    anymore as they don't contain a "stable" value that would be equal
    for both directions at all times, f.e. if only zone->id would
    unconditionally be xor'ed into the table slot hash, then replies won't
    find the corresponding conntracking entry anymore.
    
    If no particular direction is specified when configuring zones, the
    behaviour is exactly as we expect currently (both directions).
    
    Support has been added for the CT netlink interface as well as the
    x_tables raw CT target, which both already offer existing interfaces
    to user space for the configuration of zones.
    
    Below a minimal, simplified collision example (script in [2]) with
    netperf sessions:
    
      +--- tenant-1 ---+   mark := 1
      |    netperf     |--+
      +----------------+  |                CT zone := mark [ORIGINAL]
       [ip,sport] := X   +--------------+  +--- gateway ---+
                         | mark routing |--|     SNAT      |-- ... +
                         +--------------+  +---------------+       |
      +--- tenant-2 ---+  |                                     ~~~|~~~
      |    netperf     |--+                +-----------+           |
      +----------------+   mark := 2       | netserver |------ ... +
       [ip,sport] := X                     +-----------+
                                            [ip,port] := Y
    On the gateway netns, example:
    
      iptables -t raw -A PREROUTING -j CT --zone mark --zone-dir ORIGINAL
      iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o <dev> -j SNAT --to-source <ip> --random-fully
    
      iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -m conntrack --ctdir ORIGINAL -j CONNMARK --save-mark
      iptables -t mangle -A POSTROUTING -m conntrack --ctdir REPLY -j CONNMARK --restore-mark
    
    conntrack dump from gateway netns:
    
      netperf -H 10.1.1.2 -t TCP_STREAM -l60 -p12865,5555 from each tenant netns
    
      tcp 6 431995 ESTABLISHED src=40.1.1.1 dst=10.1.1.2 sport=5555 dport=12865 zone-orig=1
                               src=10.1.1.2 dst=10.1.1.1 sport=12865 dport=1024
                   [ASSURED] mark=1 secctx=system_u:object_r:unlabeled_t:s0 use=1
    
      tcp 6 431994 ESTABLISHED src=40.1.1.1 dst=10.1.1.2 sport=5555 dport=12865 zone-orig=2
                               src=10.1.1.2 dst=10.1.1.1 sport=12865 dport=5555
                   [ASSURED] mark=2 secctx=system_u:object_r:unlabeled_t:s0 use=1
    
      tcp 6 299 ESTABLISHED src=40.1.1.1 dst=10.1.1.2 sport=39438 dport=33768 zone-orig=1
                            src=10.1.1.2 dst=10.1.1.1 sport=33768 dport=39438
                   [ASSURED] mark=1 secctx=system_u:object_r:unlabeled_t:s0 use=1
    
      tcp 6 300 ESTABLISHED src=40.1.1.1 dst=10.1.1.2 sport=32889 dport=40206 zone-orig=2
                            src=10.1.1.2 dst=10.1.1.1 sport=40206 dport=32889
                   [ASSURED] mark=2 secctx=system_u:object_r:unlabeled_t:s0 use=2
    
    Taking this further, test script in [2] creates 200 tenants and runs
    original-tuple colliding netperf sessions each. A conntrack -L dump in
    the gateway netns also confirms 200 overlapping entries, all in ESTABLISHED
    state as expected.
    
    I also did run various other tests with some permutations of the script,
    to mention some: SNAT in random/random-fully/persistent mode, no zones (no
    overlaps), static zones (original, reply, both directions), etc.
    
      [1] http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.security.firewalls.netfilter.devel/57412/
      [2] https://paste.fedoraproject.org/242835/65657871/Signed-off-by: default avatarDaniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarPablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
    deedb590
nf_nat_core.c 24.3 KB