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%include "default.mgp"
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%size 7
Netfilter BOF
%center
%size 4
by
Harald Welte <laforge@netfilter.org>
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%page
Netfilter BOF
Contents
Problems with current 2.4/2.6 netfilter/iptables
Solution to code replication
Solution for dynamic rulesets
Solution for API to GUI's and other management programs
Other current work
nf_conntrack - l3 independent connection tracking
ulogd2 - conntrack based flow accounting (ipfix)
qsearch - efficient in-kernel pattern matching
ctstat - runtime conntrack statistics
ipset - replacement for ippool
benchmarking at gigagbit wirespeed
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%page
Netfilter BOF
Problem with 2.4/2.6 netfilter/iptables
code replication between iptables/ip6tables/arptables/ebtables
iptables was never meant for other protocols, but people did copy+paste 'ports'
replication of
core kernel code
layer 3 independent matches (mac, interface, ...)
userspace library (libiptc)
userspace tool (iptables)
userspace plugins (libipt_xxx.so)
doesn't suit the needs for dynamically changing rulesets
dynamic rulesets becomming more common due (service selection, IDS)
a whole table is created in userspace and sent as blob to kernel
for every ruleset the table needs to be copied to userspace and back
inside kernel consistency checks on whole table, loop detection
%page
Netfilter BOF
Problem with 2.4/2.6 netfilter/iptables
too extensible for writing any forward-compatible GUI
new extensions showing up all the time
a frontend would need to know about the options and use of a new extension
thus frontends are always incomplete and out-of-date
no high-level API other than piping to iptables-restore
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%page
Netfilter BOF
Reducing code replication
code replication is a real problem: unclean, bugfixes missed
we need layer 3 independent layer for
submitting rules to the kernel
traversing packet-rulesets supporting match/target modules
registering matches/targets
layer 3 specific (like matching ipv4 address)
layer 3 independent (like matching MAC address)
solution
pkt_tables inside kernel
pkt_tables_ipv4 registers layer 3 handler with pkt_tables
pkt_tables_ipv6 registers layer 3 handler with pkt_tables
everybody registering a pkt_table (like iptable_filter) needs to specify the l3 protocol
libraries in userspace (see later)
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%page
Netfilter BOF
Supporting dynamic rulesets
atomic table-replacement turned out to be bad idea
need new interface for sending individual rules to kernel
policy routing has the same problem and good solution: rtnetlink
solution: nfnetlink
multicast-netlink based packet-orinented socket between kernel and userspace
has extra benefit that other userspace processes get notified of rule changes [just like routing daemons]
nfnetlink will be low-layer below all kernel/userspace communication
pkttnetlink [aka iptnetlink]
ctnetlink
ulog
ip_queue
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%page
Netfilter BOF
Communication with other programs
whole set of libraries
libnfnetlink for low-layer communication
libpkttnetlink for rule modifications
will handle all plugins [which are currently part of iptables]
query functions about avaliable matches/targets
query functions about parameters
query functions for help messages about specific match/parameter of a match
generic structure from which rules can be built
conversion functions to parse generic structure into in-kernel structure
conversion functions to perse kernel structure into generic structure
functions to convert generic structure in plain text
libipq will stay API-compatible to current version
libipulog will stay API-compatible to current version
libiptc will go away [compatibility layer extremely difficult]
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%page
Netfilter BOF
Optimizing rule load time
Current situation
loading 10,000 rules in 1,000 chains takes about 4 minutes on a PIII 733Mhz
this is caused by two bottlenecks
loop detection algorithm on kernel side inefficient
a couple of O^2 complexity functions in libiptc
Solution
efficient loop detection and mark_source_chains() algorithm (graph coloring)
current CVS libiptc with only one O^2 function: 2minutes37
whole reimplementation of libiptc needed for removing the last O^2 function
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%page
Netfilter BOF
nf_conntrack
USAGI did a port of ip_conntrack to ip6_conntrack
same code replication we're fighting with ip[6]tables :(
netfilter core team had ideas about layer 3 independent conntrack
Yasuyuki Kozakai implemented nf_conntrack based on those ideas
Implementation is now clean, available from CVS
Needs re-sync with all the ip_conntrack changes of the last months
Needs support for ipv4 and ipv4<->ipv6 transition NAT
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%page
Netfilter BOF
ulogd2
Linux doesn't currently offer any sane accounting system
nacctd - needs all packets via PF_PACKET in userspace
ulogd - uses efficient netlink socket, but still packet based
Solution: add per-direction packet and byte counters to ip_conntrack
combination with ctnetlink delete events
needs userspace daemon for further processing
is related to what IETF ipfix working group doees
Redesign of ulogd to ulogd2:
no difference between input and output plugins
stack of plugins like: ctnetlink->ipfix
other possible stack: ULOG->interpreter->flow_aggregator->mysql
implementation on underway, author highly motivated ;)
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%page
Netfilter BOF
qsearch
Conntrack helpers (FTP, IRC, ...) often have to do pattern-matching
Some people like to employ ipt_string matching
This all became more complex through nonlinear/fragmented skb's
Solution:
Implement a single pattern-matching api to be used from all places
Starting point: Rusty's skb_iter() and libqsearch
Turns out that libqsearch API needs more work
Many similarities to cryptoAPI
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%page
Netfilter BOF
ctstat
Martin Josefsson wrote ctstat
similar to rtstat of Robert Olsson
runtime per-cpu statistics of
number of conntracks
how many lookups
how many found
how many new
how many invalid packets
how many ignored packets
how many deleted conntracks
how many instered conntrack
how many icmp errors
how many new expects
how many deleted expects
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%page
Netfilter BOF
ipset
Implemented by Jozsef Kadlecsik
Efficient way to handle a whole set of addresses in single rule
also provides target to add addresses into set
currently implemented: ipmap, macipmap, portmap and iphash
ipmap uses bitmask where each bit represents one ip address
ipmacmap uses memory range with 8 byte per IP/mac
portmap uses memory range where each bit represents one port
iphash uses fixed size hash (for random adresses)
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%page
Netfilter BOF
benchmarking at gigagbit wirespeed
Harald did lots of benchmarking
Dual Opteron machines
e1000 Gigabit adapters with irq-affinity
2.4.x / 2.6.x kernel, both 32bit and 64bit
Results to be published soon
Performance problems mostly ip_tables related, not ip_conntrack
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%page
Netfilter BOF
Thanks
Thanks to
the BBS scenee, Z-Netz, FIDO, ...
for heavily increasing my computer usage in 1992
KNF
for bringing me in touch with the internet as early as 1994
for providing a playground for technical people
for introducing me to the existance of Linux!
Alan Cox, Alexey Kuznetsov, David Miller, Andi Kleen
for implementing (one of?) the world's best TCP/IP stacks
Paul 'Rusty' Russell
for starting the netfilter/iptables project
for trusting me to maintain it today
Astaro AG
for sponsoring my netfilter failover work
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
%page
HA for netfilter/iptables
Availability of slides / Links
The slides
http://www.gnumonks.org/
The netfilter homepage
http://www.netfilter.org/
My Sponsor, Astaro AG
http://www.astaro.com/
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