Name

interfaces — Shorewall interfaces file

Synopsis

/etc/shorewall[6]/interfaces

Description

The interfaces file serves to define the firewall's network interfaces to Shorewall. The order of entries in this file is not significant in determining zone composition.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.3, the interfaces file supports two different formats:

FORMAT 1 (default - deprecated)

There is a BROADCAST column which can be used to specify the broadcast address associated with the interface.

FORMAT 2

The BROADCAST column is omitted.

The format is specified by a line as follows:

?FORMAT {1|2}

The columns in the file are as follows.

ZONE - zone-name

Zone for this interface. Must match the name of a zone declared in /etc/shorewall/zones. You may not list the firewall zone in this column.

If the interface serves multiple zones that will be defined in the shorewall-hosts(5) file, you should place "-" in this column.

If there are multiple interfaces to the same zone, you must list them in separate entries.

Example:

#ZONE   INTERFACE       BROADCAST
loc     eth1            -
loc     eth2            -
INTERFACE - interface[:port]

Logical name of interface. Each interface may be listed only once in this file. You may NOT specify the name of a "virtual" interface (e.g., eth0:0) here; see https://shorewall.org/FAQ.htm#faq18. If the physical option is not specified, then the logical name is also the name of the actual interface.

You may use wildcards here by specifying a prefix followed by the plus sign ("+"). For example, if you want to make an entry that applies to all PPP interfaces, use 'ppp+'; that would match ppp0, ppp1, ppp2, …

When using Shorewall versions before 4.1.4, care must be exercised when using wildcards where there is another zone that uses a matching specific interface. See shorewall-nesting(5) for a discussion of this problem.

Shorewall allows '+' as an interface name, but that usage is deprecated. A better approach is to specify 'physical=+' in the OPTIONS column (see below).

There is no need to define the loopback interface (lo) in this file.

If a port is given, then the interface must have been defined previously with the bridge option. The OPTIONS column may not contain the following options when a port is given.

arp_filter
arp_ignore
bridge
log_martians
mss
optional
proxyarp
required
routefilter
sourceroute
upnp
wait

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.17, if you specify a zone for the 'lo' interface, then that zone must be defined as type local in shorewall6-zones(5).

BROADCAST (Optional) - {-|detect|address[,address]...}

Only available if FORMAT 1.

If you use the special value detect, Shorewall will detect the broadcast address(es) for you if your iptables and kernel include Address Type Match support.

If your iptables and/or kernel lack Address Type Match support then you may list the broadcast address(es) for the network(s) to which the interface belongs. For P-T-P interfaces, this column is left blank. If the interface has multiple addresses on multiple subnets then list the broadcast addresses as a comma-separated list.

If you don't want to give a value for this column but you want to enter a value in the OPTIONS column, enter - in this column.

OPTIONS (Optional) - [option[,option]...]

A comma-separated list of options from the following list. The order in which you list the options is not significant but the list should have no embedded white-space.

accept_ra[={0|1|2}]

IPv6 only; added in Shorewall 4.5.16. Values are:

0

Do not accept Router Advertisements.

1

Accept Route Advertisements if forwarding is disabled.

2

Overrule forwarding behavior. Accept Route Advertisements even if forwarding is enabled.

If the option is specified without a value, then the value 1 is assumed.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

arp_filter[={0|1}]

IPv4 only. If specified, this interface will only respond to ARP who-has requests for IP addresses configured on the interface. If not specified, the interface can respond to ARP who-has requests for IP addresses on any of the firewall's interface. The interface must be up when Shorewall is started.

Only those interfaces with the arp_filter option will have their setting changed; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

arp_ignore[=number]

IPv4 only. If specified, this interface will respond to arp requests based on the value of number (defaults to 1).

1 - reply only if the target IP address is local address configured on the incoming interface

2 - reply only if the target IP address is local address configured on the incoming interface and the sender's IP address is part from same subnet on this interface's address

3 - do not reply for local addresses configured with scope host, only resolutions for global and link

4-7 - reserved

8 - do not reply for all local addresses

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

Warning

Do not specify arp_ignore for any interface involved in Proxy ARP.

blacklist

Checks packets arriving on this interface against the shorewall-blacklist(5) file.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.13:

  • If a zone is given in the ZONES column, then the behavior is as if blacklist had been specified in the IN_OPTIONS column of shorewall-zones(5).

  • Otherwise, the option is ignored with a warning:

    WARNING: The 'blacklist' option is ignored on multi-zone interfaces

bridge

Designates the interface as a bridge. Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.7, setting this option also sets routeback.

Note

If you have a bridge that you don't intend to define bport zones on, then it is best to omit this option and simply specify routeback.

dbl={none|src|dst|src-dst}

Added in Shorewall 5.0.10. This option defined whether or not dynamic blacklisting is applied to packets entering the firewall through this interface and whether the source address and/or destination address is to be compared against the ipset-based dynamic blacklist (DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=ipset... in shorewall.conf(5)). The default is determine by the setting of DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST:

DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=No

Default is none (e.g., no dynamic blacklist checking).

DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=Yes

Default is src (e.g., the source IP address is checked).

DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=ipset[-only]

Default is src.

DYNAMIC_BLACKLIST=ipset[-only],src-dst...

Default is src-dst (e.g., the source IP addresses in checked against the ipset on input and the destination IP address is checked against the ipset on packets originating from the firewall and leaving through this interface).

The normal setting for this option will be dst or none for internal interfaces and src or src-dst for Internet-facing interfaces.

destonly

Added in Shorewall 4.5.17. Causes the compiler to omit rules to handle traffic from this interface.

dhcp

Specify this option when any of the following are true:

  1. the interface gets its IP address via DHCP

  2. the interface is used by a DHCP server running on the firewall

  3. the interface has a static IP but is on a LAN segment with lots of DHCP clients.

  4. the interface is a simple bridge with a DHCP server on one port and DHCP clients on another port.

    Note

    If you use Shorewall-perl for firewall/bridging, then you need to include DHCP-specific rules in shorewall-rules(5). DHCP uses UDP ports 67 and 68.

This option allows DHCP datagrams to enter and leave the interface.

forward[={0|1}]

IPv6 only Sets the /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/interface/forwarding option to the specified value. If no value is supplied, then 1 is assumed.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

ignore[=1]

When specified, causes the generated script to ignore up/down events from Shorewall-init for this device. Additionally, the option exempts the interface from hairpin filtering. When '=1' is omitted, the ZONE column must contain '-' and ignore must be the only OPTION.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.5, may be specified as 'ignore=1' which only causes the generated script to ignore up/down events from Shorewall-init; hairpin filtering is still applied. In this case, the above restrictions on the ZONE and OPTIONS columns are lifted.

loopback

Added in Shorewall 4.6.6. Designates the interface as the loopback interface. This option is assumed if the interface's physical name is 'lo'. Only one interface man have the loopback option specified.

logmartians[={0|1}]

IPv4 only. Turn on kernel martian logging (logging of packets with impossible source addresses. It is strongly suggested that if you set routefilter on an interface that you also set logmartians. Even if you do not specify the routefilter option, it is a good idea to specify logmartians because your distribution may have enabled route filtering without you knowing it.

Only those interfaces with the logmartians option will have their setting changed; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

To find out if route filtering is set on a given interface, check the contents of /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/interface/rp_filter - a non-zero value indicates that route filtering is enabled.

Example:

        teastep@lists:~$ cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/eth0/rp_filter 
        1
        teastep@lists:~$ 

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

This option may also be enabled globally in the shorewall.conf(5) file.

maclist

Connection requests from this interface are compared against the contents of shorewall-maclist(5). If this option is specified, the interface must be an Ethernet NIC and must be up before Shorewall is started.

mss=number

Added in Shorewall 4.0.3. Causes forwarded TCP SYN packets entering or leaving on this interface to have their MSS field set to the specified number.

nets=(net[,...])

Limit the zone named in the ZONE column to only the listed networks. The parentheses may be omitted if only a single net is given (e.g., nets=192.168.1.0/24). Limited broadcast to the zone is supported. Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.1, multicast traffic to the zone is also supported.

nets=dynamic

Defines the zone as dynamic. Requires ipset match support in your iptables and kernel. See https://shorewall.org/Dynamic.html for further information.

nodbl

Added in Shorewall 5.0.8. When specified, dynamic blacklisting is disabled on the interface. Beginning with Shorewall 5.0.10, nodbl is equivalent to dbl=none.

nosmurfs

IPv4 only. Filter packets for smurfs (packets with a broadcast address as the source).

Smurfs will be optionally logged based on the setting of SMURF_LOG_LEVEL in shorewall.conf(5). After logging, the packets are dropped.

omitanycast

IPv6 only. Added in Shorewall 5.2.8.

Shorewall6 has traditionally generated rules for IPv6 anycast addresses. These rules include:

  1. Packets with these destination IP addresses are dropped by REJECT rules.

  2. Packets with these source IP addresses are dropped by the 'nosmurfs' interface option and by the 'dropSmurfs' action.

  3. Packets with these destination IP addresses are not logged during policy enforcement.

  4. Packets with these destination IP addresses are processes by the 'Broadcast' action.

This can be inhibited for individual interfaces by specifying noanycast for those interfaces.

Note

RFC 2526 describes IPv6 subnet anycast addresses. The RFC makes a distinction between subnets with "IPv6 address types required to have 64-bit interface identifiers in EUI-64 format" and all other subnets. When generating these anycast addresses, the Shorewall compiler does not make this distinction and unconditionally assumes that the last 128 addresses in the subnet are reserved as anycast addresses.

optional

This option indicates that the firewall should be able to start, even if the interface is not usable for handling traffic. It allows use of the enable and disable commands on the interface.

When optional is specified for an interface, Shorewall will be silent when:

  • a /proc/sys/net/ipv[46]/conf/ entry for the interface cannot be modified (including for proxy ARP or proxy NDP).

  • The first address of the interface cannot be obtained.

  • The gateway of the interface can not be obtained (provider interface).

  • The interface has been disabled using the disable command.

May not be specified with required.

physical=name

Added in Shorewall 4.4.4. When specified, the interface or port name in the INTERFACE column is a logical name that refers to the name given in this option. It is useful when you want to specify the same wildcard port name on two or more bridges. See https://shorewall.org/bridge-Shorewall-perl.html#Multiple.

If the interface name is a wildcard name (ends with '+'), then the physical name must also end in '+'. The physical name may end in '+' (or be exactly '+') when the interface name is not a wildcard name.

If physical is not specified, then it's value defaults to the interface name.

proxyarp[={0|1}]

IPv4 only. Sets /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/interface/proxy_arp. Do NOT use this option if you are employing Proxy ARP through entries in shorewall-proxyarp(5). This option is intended solely for use with Proxy ARP sub-networking as described at: http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Proxy-ARP-Subnet/index.html.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

Only those interfaces with the proxyarp option will have their setting changed; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

proxyndp[={0|1}]

IPv6 only. Sets /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/interface/proxy_ndp.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

Only those interfaces with the proxyndp option will have their setting changed; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

required

Added in Shorewall 4.4.10. If this option is set, the firewall will fail to start if the interface is not usable. May not be specified together with optional.

routeback[={0|1}]

If specified, indicates that Shorewall should include rules that allow traffic arriving on this interface to be routed back out that same interface. This option is also required when you have used a wildcard in the INTERFACE column if you want to allow traffic between the interfaces that match the wildcard.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.20, if you specify this option, then you should also specify either sfilter (see below) or routefilter on all interfaces (see below).

Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.18, you may specify this option to explicitly reset (e.g., routeback=0). This can be used to override Shorewall's default setting for bridge devices which is routeback=1.

routefilter[={0|1|2}]

IPv4 only. Turn on kernel route filtering for this interface (anti-spoofing measure).

Only those interfaces with the routefilter option will have their setting changes; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

The value 2 is only available with Shorewall 4.4.5.1 and later when the kernel version is 2.6.31 or later. It specifies a loose form of reverse path filtering.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

This option can also be enabled globally via the ROUTE_FILTER option in the shorewall.conf(5) file.

Important

If ROUTE_FILTER=Yes in shorewall.conf(5), or if your distribution sets net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter=1 in /etc/sysctl.conf, then setting routefilter=0 in an interface entry will not disable route filtering on that interface! The effective setting for an interface is the maximum of the contents of /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/all/rp_filter and the routefilter setting specified in this file (/proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/interface/rp_filter).

Note

There are certain cases where routefilter cannot be used on an interface:

  • If USE_DEFAULT_RT=Yes in shorewall.conf(5) and the interface is listed in shorewall-providers(5).

  • If there is an entry for the interface in shorewall-providers(5) that doesn't specify the balance option.

  • If IPSEC is used to allow a road-warrior to have a local address, then any interface through which the road-warrior might connect cannot specify routefilter.

Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.1, when routefilter is set to a non-zero value, the logmartians option is also implicitly set. If you actually want route filtering without logging, then you must also specify logmartians=0 after routefilter.

rpfilter

Added in Shorewall 4.5.7. This is an anti-spoofing measure that requires the 'RPFilter Match' capability in your iptables and kernel. It provides a more efficient alternative to the sfilter option below. It performs a function similar to routefilter (see above) but works with Multi-ISP configurations that do not use balanced routes.

sfilter=(net[,...])

Added in Shorewall 4.4.20. This option provides an anti-spoofing alternative to routefilter on interfaces where that option cannot be used, but where the routeback option is required (on a bridge, for example). On these interfaces, sfilter should list those local networks that are connected to the firewall through other interfaces.

sourceroute[={0|1}]

If this option is not specified for an interface, then source-routed packets will not be accepted from that interface unless it has been explicitly enabled via sysconf. Only set this option to 1 (enable source routing) if you know what you are doing. This might represent a security risk and is usually unneeded.

Only those interfaces with the sourceroute option will have their setting changed; the value assigned to the setting will be the value specified (if any) or 1 if no value is given.

Note

This option does not work with a wild-card physical name (e.g., eth0.+). Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.10, If this option is specified, a warning is issued and the option is ignored.

tcpflags[={0|1}]

Packets arriving on this interface are checked for certain illegal combinations of TCP flags. Packets found to have such a combination of flags are handled according to the setting of TCP_FLAGS_DISPOSITION after having been logged according to the setting of TCP_FLAGS_LOG_LEVEL.

Beginning with Shorewall 4.6.0, tcpflags=1 is the default. To disable this option, specify tcpflags=0.

unmanaged

Added in Shorewall 4.5.18. Causes all traffic between the firewall and hosts on the interface to be accepted. When this option is given:

  • The ZONE column must contain '-'.

  • Only the following other options are allowed with unmanaged:

    arp_filter
    arp_ignore
    ignore
    routefilter
    optional
    physical
    routefilter
    proxyarp
    proxyudp
    sourceroute
upnp

Incoming requests from this interface may be remapped via UPNP (upnpd). See https://shorewall.org/UPnP.html. Supported in IPv4 and in IPv6 in Shorewall 5.1.4 and later.

upnpclient

This option is intended for laptop users who always run Shorewall on their system yet need to run UPnP-enabled client apps such as Transmission (BitTorrent client). The option causes Shorewall to detect the default gateway through the interface and to accept UDP packets from that gateway. Note that, like all aspects of UPnP, this is a security hole so use this option at your own risk. Supported in IPv4 and in IPv6 in Shorewall 5.1.4 and later.

wait=seconds

Added in Shorewall 4.4.10. Causes the generated script to wait up to seconds seconds for the interface to become usable before applying the required or optional options.

Example

IPv4 Example 1:

Suppose you have eth0 connected to a DSL modem and eth1 connected to your local network and that your local subnet is 192.168.1.0/24. The interface gets its IP address via DHCP from subnet 206.191.149.192/27. You have a DMZ with subnet 192.168.2.0/24 using eth2. Your iptables and/or kernel do not support "Address Type Match" and you prefer to specify broadcast addresses explicitly rather than having Shorewall detect them.

Your entries for this setup would look like:

?FORMAT 1
#ZONE   INTERFACE BROADCAST        OPTIONS
net     eth0      206.191.149.223  dhcp
loc     eth1      192.168.1.255
dmz     eth2      192.168.2.255
Example 2:

The same configuration without specifying broadcast addresses is:

?FORMAT 2
#ZONE   INTERFACE OPTIONS
net     eth0      dhcp
loc     eth1      
dmz     eth2
Example 3:

You have a simple dial-in system with no Ethernet connections.

?FORMAT 2
#ZONE   INTERFACE OPTIONS
net     ppp0      -
Example 4 (Shorewall 4.4.9 and later):

You have a bridge with no IP address and you want to allow traffic through the bridge.

?FORMAT 2
#ZONE   INTERFACE OPTIONS
-       br0       bridge

FILES

/etc/shorewall/interfaces

/etc/shorewall6/interfaces

Documentation


Frequently Used Articles

- FAQs - Manpages - Configuration File Basics - Beginner Documentation - Troubleshooting

Shorewall 4.4/4.5/4.6 Documentation

Shorewall 4.0/4.2 Documentation


Shorewall 5.0/5.1/5.2 HOWTOs and Other Articles

- 6to4 and 6in4 Tunnels - Accounting - Actions - Aliased (virtual) Interfaces (e.g., eth0:0) - Anatomy of Shorewall - Anti-Spoofing Measures - AUDIT Target support - Bandwidth Control - Blacklisting/Whitelisting - Bridge/Firewall - Building Shorewall from GIT - Commands - Compiled Programs - Configuration File Basics - DHCP - DNAT - Docker - Dynamic Zones - ECN Disabling by host or subnet - Events - Extension Scripts - Fallback/Uninstall - FAQs - Features - Fool's Firewall - Forwarding Traffic on the Same Interface - FTP and Shorewall - Helpers/Helper Modules - Installation/Upgrade - IPP2P - IPSEC - Ipsets - IPv6 Support - ISO 3661 Country Codes - Kazaa Filtering - Kernel Configuration - KVM (Kernel-mode Virtual Machine) - Limiting Connection Rates - Linux Containers (LXC) - Linux-vserver - Logging - Macros - MAC Verification - Manpages - Manual Chains - Masquerading - Multiple Internet Connections from a Single Firewall - Multiple Zones Through One Interface - My Shorewall Configuration - Netfilter Overview - Network Mapping - No firewalling of traffic between bridge port - One-to-one NAT - Operating Shorewall - OpenVPN - OpenVZ - Packet Marking - Packet Processing in a Shorewall-based Firewall - 'Ping' Management - Port Forwarding - Port Information - Port Knocking (deprecated) - Port Knocking, Auto Blacklisting and Other Uses of the 'Recent Match' - PPTP - Proxy ARP - QuickStart Guides - Release Model - Requirements - Routing and Shorewall - Routing on One Interface - Samba - Shared Shorewall/Shorewall6 Configuration - Shorewall Events - Shorewall Init - Shorewall Lite - Shorewall on a Laptop - Shorewall Perl - Shorewall Setup Guide - SMB - SNAT - Split DNS the Easy Way - Squid with Shorewall - Starting/stopping the Firewall - Static (one-to-one) NAT - Support - Tips and Hints - Traffic Shaping/QOS - Simple - Traffic Shaping/QOS - Complex - Transparent Proxy - UPnP - Upgrade Issues - Upgrading to Shorewall 4.4 (Upgrading Debian Lenny to Squeeze) - VPN - VPN Passthrough - White List Creation - Xen - Shorewall in a Bridged Xen DomU - Xen - Shorewall in Routed Xen Dom0

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