providers — Shorewall Providers file
/etc/shorewall/providers
This file is used to define additional routing tables. You will want to define an additional table if:
You have connections to more than one ISP or multiple connections to the same ISP
You run Squid as a transparent proxy on a host other than the firewall.
You have other requirements for policy routing.
Each entry in the file defines a single routing table.
If you wish to omit a column entry but want to include an entry in the next column, use "-" for the omitted entry.
The columns in the file are as follows.
The provider name. Must be a valid shell variable name. The names 'local', 'main', 'default' and 'unspec' are reserved and may not be used as provider names.
The provider number -- a number between 1 and 15. Each provider must be assigned a unique value.
A FWMARK value used in your shorewall-mangle(5) file to direct packets to this provider.
If PROVIDER_OFFSET is non-zero in shorewall.conf(5), then the value must be a multiple of 2^^PROVIDER_OFFSET. In all cases, the number of significant bits may not exceed PROVIDER_OFFSET + PROVIDER_BITS.
The name of an existing table to duplicate to create this
routing table. May be main
or the name of a
previously listed provider. You may select only certain entries from
the table to copy by using the COPY column below. This column should
contain a dash ("-') when USE_DEFAULT_RT=Yes in shorewall.conf(5).
The name of the network interface to the provider. Must be
listed in shorewall-interfaces(5). In
general, that interface should not have the
proxyarp
or proxyndp
option
specified unless loose
is given in the OPTIONS
column of this entry.
For IPv6, if the interface is an Ethernet device and an IP address is supplied, it should be the upstream router's link-level address, not its global address.
Where more than one provider is serviced through a single interface, the interface must be followed by a colon and the IP address of the interface that is supplied by the associated provider.
The IP address of the provider's gateway router. Beginning with Shorewall 4.6.2, you may also specify the MAC address of the gateway when there are multiple providers serviced through the same interface. When the MAC is not specified, Shorewall will detect the MAC during firewall start or restart.
You can enter detect here and Shorewall will attempt to detect the gateway automatically.
Beginning with Shorewall 5.0.6, you may also enter none. This causes creation of a routing table with no default route in it.
For PPP devices, you may omit this column.
A comma-separated list selected from the following. The order of the options is not significant but the list may contain no embedded white-space.
Added in Shorewall 4.5.17. Causes a host route to the provider's gateway router to be added to the provider's routing table. This is the default behavior unless overridden by a following noautosrc option.
If specified, inbound connections on this interface are to be tracked so that responses may be routed back out this same interface.
You want to specify track
if internet
hosts will be connecting to local servers through this
provider.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.3, track
defaults to the setting of the TRACK_PROVIDERS option in
shorewall.conf (5).
If you set TRACK_PROVIDERS=Yes and want to override that
setting for an individual provider, then specify
notrack
(see below).
weight
]The providers that have balance
specified will get outbound traffic load-balanced among them.
By default, all interfaces with balance
specified will have the same weight (1). You can change the
weight of an interface by specifying
balance=
weight
where weight
is the weight of the
route out of this interface.
Prior to Shorewall 5.1.1, when USE_DEFAULT_RT=Yes,
balance=1
is assumed unless the
fallback
, loose
,
load
or tproxy
option is
specified. Beginning with Shorewall 5.1.1, when
BALANCE_PROVIDERS=Yes, balance=1
is assumed
unless the fallback
, loose
,
load
or tproxy
option is
specified.I
In IPV6, the balance
option does not
cause balanced default routes to be created; it rather
causes a sequence of default routes with different metrics
to be created.
Shorewall normally adds a routing rule for each IP
address on an interface which forces traffic whose source is
that IP address to be sent using the routing table for that
interface. Setting loose
prevents creation of
such rules on this interface.
probability
Added in Shorewall 4.6.0. This option provides an
alternative method of load balancing based on probabilities.
Providers to be balanced are given a
probability
(a number 0 > n
>= 1) with up to 8 digits to the right of the decimal
point. Beginning with Shorewall 4.6.10, a warning is issued if
the sum of the probabilities is not 1.00000000.
Added in Shorewall 4.5.17. Prevents the addition of a host route to the provider's gateway router from being added to the provider's routing table. This option must be used with caution as it can cause start and restart failures.
Added in Shorewall 4.4.3. When specified, turns off
track
.
If the interface named in the INTERFACE column is not up
and configured with an IPv4 address then ignore this provider.
If not specified, the value of the optional
option for the INTERFACE in shorewall-interfaces(5)
is assumed. Use of that option is preferred to this one,
unless an address
is provider in
the INTERFACE column.
Added in Shorewall 4.6.6, primary is equivalent to balance=1 and is preferred when the remaining providers specify fallback or tproxy.
source-address
Specifies the source address to use when routing to this
provider and none is known (the local client has bound to the
0 address). May not be specified when an
address
is given in the INTERFACE
column. If this option is not used, Shorewall substitutes the
primary IP address on the interface named in the INTERFACE
column.
number
Specifies the MTU when forwarding through this provider. If not given, the MTU of the interface named in the INTERFACE column is assumed.
weight
]Indicates that a default route through the provider
should be added to the default routing table (table 253). If a
weight
is given, a balanced route
is added with the weight of this provider equal to the
specified weight
. If the option is
given without a weight
, a separate
default route is added through the provider's gateway; the
route has a metric equal to the provider's NUMBER.
Prior to Shorewall 4.4.24, the option is ignored with a
warning message if USE_DEFAULT_RT=Yes in
shorewall.conf
.
In IPV6, specifying the fallback
option on multiple providers does not cause balanced
fallback routes to be created; it rather causes a sequence
of fallback routes with different metrics to be
created.
Added in Shorewall 4.5.4. Used for supporting the TPROXY
action in shorewall-mangle(5). See https://shorewall.org/Shorewall_Squid_Usage.html.
When specified, the MARK, DUPLICATE and GATEWAY columns should
be empty, INTERFACE should be set to 'lo' and
tproxy
should be the only OPTION. Only one
tproxy
provider is allowed.
Added in Shorewall 4.5.21. This is the default behavior that results in a host route to the defined GATEWAY being inserted into the main routing table and into the provider's routing table. hostroute is required for older distributions but nohostroute (below) is appropriate for recent distributions. hostroute may interfere with Zebra's ability to add routes on some distributions such as Debian 7. This option defaults to on when BALANCE_PROVIDERS=Yes, in shorewall.conf(5).
Added in Shorewall 4.5.21. nohostroute inhibits addition of a host route to the defined GATEWAY being inserted into the main routing table and into the provider's routing table. nohostroute is not appropriate for older distributions but is appropriate for recent distributions. nohostroute allows Zebra's to correctly add routes on some distributions such as Debian 7. This option defaults to off when BALANCE_PROVIDERS=Yes, in shorewall.conf(5).
Added in Shorewall 5.0.2 and alters the behavior of the disable command:
The provider's routing table still contains the apprioriate default route.
Unless the noautosrc
option is
specified, routing rules are generated to route traffic
from the interfaces address(es) out of the provider's
routing table.
Persistent routing rules in shorewall-rtrules(5) are present.
The generated script will attempt to reenable a
disabled persistent provider during execution of the
start, restart and
reload commands. When
persistent
is not specified, only the
enable and reenable
commands can reenable the provider.
RESTORE_DEFAULT_ROUTE=Yes in shorewall[6].conf is not
recommended when the persistent
option is
used, as restoring default routes to the main routing table
can prevent link status monitors such as foolsm from
correctly detecting non-working providers.
none
|interface[,interface]...}]A comma-separated list of other interfaces on your firewall.
Wildcards specified using an asterisk ("*") are permitted (e.g.,
tun* ). Usually used only when DUPLICATE is main
.
Only copy routes through INTERFACE and through interfaces listed
here. If you only wish to copy routes through INTERFACE, enter
none
in this column.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.17, blackhole, unreachable and prohibit routes are no longer copied by default but may be copied by including blackhole,unreachable and prohibit respectively in the COPY list.
You run squid in your DMZ on IP address 192.168.2.99. Your DMZ interface is eth2
#NAME NUMBER MARK DUPLICATE INTERFACE GATEWAY OPTIONS Squid 1 1 - eth2 192.168.2.99 -
eth0 connects to ISP 1. The IP address of eth0 is 206.124.146.176 and the ISP's gateway router has IP address 206.124.146.254.
eth1 connects to ISP 2. The IP address of eth1 is 130.252.99.27 and the ISP's gateway router has IP address 130.252.99.254.
eth2 connects to a local network.
#NAME NUMBER MARK DUPLICATE INTERFACE GATEWAY OPTIONS COPY ISP1 1 1 main eth0 206.124.146.254 track,balance eth2 ISP2 2 2 main eth1 130.252.99.254 track,balance eth2
You run squid in your DMZ on IP address 2002:ce7c:92b4:1::2. Your DMZ interface is eth2
#NAME NUMBER MARK DUPLICATE INTERFACE GATEWAY OPTIONS Squid 1 1 - eth2 2002:ce7c:92b4:1::2 -
eth0 connects to ISP 1. The ISP's gateway router has IP address 2001:ce7c:92b4:1::2.
eth1 connects to ISP 2. The ISP's gateway router has IP address 2001:d64c:83c9:12::8b.
eth2 connects to a local network.
#NAME NUMBER MARK DUPLICATE INTERFACE GATEWAY OPTIONS COPY ISP1 1 1 main eth0 2001:ce7c:92b4:1::2 track eth2 ISP2 2 2 main eth1 2001:d64c:83c9:12::8b track eth2