A stateless firewall that attaches to the XDP hook for fast packet processing. This firewall is designed to read filtering rules based off of a config file and filter incoming packets. Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported! Supported protocols include TCP, UDP, and ICMP at the moment. With that said, the program comes with accepted and blocked packet statistics which can be disabled if need to be.
Additionally, if the host's NIC doesn't support XDP DRV hook (AKA native), the program will attempt to attach to the XDP SKB hook (AKA generic). The program firstly tries XDP DRV mode, though.
The following command line arguments are supported:
--config -c
=> Location to config file. Default => /etc/xdpfw/xdpfw.conf.--offload -o
=> Tries to load the XDP program in hardware/offload mode.--skb -s
=> Forces the program to load in SKB mode instead of DRV.--time -t
=> How long to run the program for in seconds before exiting. 0 or not set = infinite.--list -l
=> List all filtering rules scanned from config file.--help -h
=> Print help menu for command line options.
interface
=> The interface for the XDP program to attach to.updatetime
=> How often to update the config and filtering rules. Leaving this at 0 disables auto-updating.nostats
=> If true, no accepted/blocked packet statistics will be displayed instdout
.
Config option filters
is an array. Each filter includes the following options:
enabled
=> If true, this rule is enabled.action
=> What action to perform against the packet if matched. 0 = Block. 1 = Allow.srcip
=> The source IP address the packet must match (e.g. 10.50.0.3).dstip
=> The destination IP address the packet must match (e.g. 10.50.0.4).srcip6
=> The source IPv6 address the packet must match (e.g. fe80::18c4:dfff:fe70:d8a6).dstip6
=> The destination IPv6 address the packet must match (e.g. fe80::ac21:14ff:fe4b:3a6d).min_ttl
=> The minimum TTL (time to live) the packet must match.max_ttl
=> The maximum TTL (time to live) the packet must match.max_len
=> The maximum packet length the packet must match. This includes the entire frame (ethernet header, IP header, L4 header, and data).min_len
=> The minimum packet length the packet must match. This includes the entire frame (ethernet header, IP header, L4 header, and data).tos
=> The TOS (type of service) the packet must match.pps
=> The maximum packets per second a source IP can send before matching.bps
=> The maximum amount of bytes per second a source IP can send before matching.blocktime
=> The time in seconds to block the source IP if the rule matches and the action is block (0). Default value is1
.
TCP options exist in the main filter array and start with tcp_
. Please see below.
tcp_enabled
=> If true, check for TCP-specific matches.tcp_sport
=> The source port the packet must match.tcp_dport
=> The destination port the packet must match.tcp_urg
=> If true, the packet must have theURG
flag set to match.tcp_ack
=> If true, the packet must have theACK
flag set to match.tcp_rst
=> If true, the packet must have theRST
flag set to match.tcp_psh
=> If true, the packet must have thePSH
flag set to match.tcp_syn
=> If true, the packet must have theSYN
flag set to match.tcp_fin
=> If true, the packet must have theFIN
flag set to match.
UDP options exist in the main filter array and start with udp_
. Please see below.
udp_enabled
=> If true, check for UDP-specific matches.udp_sport
=> The source port the packet must match.udp_dport
=> The destination port the packet must match.
ICMP options exist in the main filter array and start with icmp_
. Please see below.
icmp_enabled
=> If true, check for ICMP-specific matches.icmp_code
=> The ICMP code the packet must match.icmp_type
=> The ICMP type the packet must match.
Note - Everything besides the main enabled
and action
options within a filter are not required. This means you do not have to define them within your config.
Note - As of right now, you can specify up to 100 maximum filters. This is due to BPF's max jump limit within the while loop.
Here's an example of a config:
interface = "ens18";
updatetime = 15;
filters = (
{
enabled = true,
action = 0,
udp_enabled = true,
udp_dport = 27015
},
{
enabled = true,
action = 1,
tcp_enabled = true,
tcp_syn = true,
tcp_dport = 27015
},
{
enabled = true,
action = 0,
icmp_enabled = true,
icmp_code = 0
},
{
enabled = true,
action = 0,
srcip = "10.50.0.4"
}
);
Before building, ensure the libconfig-dev
package is installed along with necessary building tools such as llvm
, clang
, and libelf-dev
. For Debian/Ubuntu, you can install this with the following as root:
apt-get install libconfig-dev llvm clang libelf-dev build-essential -y
You can use git
and make
to build this project. The following should work:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/gamemann/XDP-Firewall.git
cd XDP-Firewall
make && make install
This project requires for/while loop support with BPF. Older kernels will not support this and output an error such as:
libbpf: load bpf program failed: Invalid argument
libbpf: -- BEGIN DUMP LOG ---
libbpf:
back-edge from insn 113 to 100
libbpf: -- END LOG --
libbpf: failed to load program 'xdp_prog'
libbpf: failed to load object '/etc/xdpfw/xdpfw_kern.o'
Note - It looks like BPF while/for loop support was added in kernel 5.3. Therefore, you'll need kernel 5.3 or above for this program to run properly.
I just wanted to share other project(s) I've made using XDP for those interested.
This XDP project performs basic layer 3/4 forwarding using source port mapping similar to IPTables/NFTables. This is one of my newer projects and still a work in progress. I also feel the code is a lot neater in the XDP Forwarding project.
- Christian Deacon - Creator.