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PF.CONF(5)		      File Formats Manual		    PF.CONF(5)

NAME
       pf.conf -- packet filter	configuration file

DESCRIPTION
       The  pf(4) packet filter	modifies, drops	or passes packets according to
       rules or	definitions specified in pf.conf.

STATEMENT ORDER
       There are seven types of	statements in pf.conf:

       Macros
	     User-defined variables may	be defined and used later, simplifying
	     the configuration file.  Macros must be defined before  they  are
	     referenced	in pf.conf.

       Tables
	     Tables  provide  a	 mechanism  for	increasing the performance and
	     flexibility of rules with large numbers of	source or  destination
	     addresses.

       Options
	     Options tune the behaviour	of the packet filtering	engine.

       Traffic Normalization (e.g. scrub)
	     Traffic  normalization  protects internal machines	against	incon-
	     sistencies	in Internet protocols and implementations.

       Queueing
	     Queueing provides rule-based bandwidth control.

       Translation (Various forms of NAT)
	     Translation rules specify how addresses are to be mapped or redi-
	     rected to other addresses.

       Packet Filtering
	     Packet filtering provides rule-based blocking or passing of pack-
	     ets.

       With the	exception of macros and	tables,	the types of statements	should
       be grouped and appear in	pf.conf	in the	order  shown  above,  as  this
       matches	the  operation	of the underlying packet filtering engine.  By
       default pfctl(8)	enforces this order (see set require-order below).

       Comments	can be put anywhere in the file	using a	hash mark  (`#'),  and
       extend to the end of the	current	line.

       Additional  configuration  files	 can be	included with the include key-
       word, for example:

	     include "/etc/pf/sub.filter.conf"

MACROS
       Macros can be defined that will later be	expanded  in  context.	 Macro
       names must start	with a letter, and may contain letters,	digits and un-
       derscores.   Macro  names  may not be reserved words (for example pass,
       in, out).  Macros are not expanded inside quotes.

       For example,

	     ext_if = "kue0"
	     all_ifs = "{" $ext_if lo0 "}"
	     pass out on $ext_if from any to any
	     pass in  on $ext_if proto tcp from	any to any port	25

TABLES
       Tables are named	structures which can hold a  collection	 of  addresses
       and  networks.	Lookups	 against  tables in pf(4) are relatively fast,
       making a	single rule with tables	 much  more  efficient,	 in  terms  of
       processor  usage	 and  memory consumption, than a large number of rules
       which differ only in IP address (either created explicitly or automati-
       cally by	rule expansion).

       Tables can be used as the source	or destination of filter rules,	 scrub
       rules or	translation rules such as nat or rdr (see below	for details on
       the  various rule types).  Tables can also be used for the redirect ad-
       dress of	nat and	rdr rules and in the routing options of	filter	rules,
       but only	for round-robin	pools.

       Tables  can  be	defined	with any of the	following pfctl(8) mechanisms.
       As with macros, reserved	words may not be used as table names.

       manually	 Persistent tables can be manually created  with  the  add  or
		 replace  option  of pfctl(8), before or after the ruleset has
		 been loaded.

       pf.conf	 Table definitions can be placed directly in  this  file,  and
		 loaded	 at  the  same	time as	other rules are	loaded,	atomi-
		 cally.	 Table definitions inside pf.conf use the table	state-
		 ment, and are especially useful to define non-persistent  ta-
		 bles.	The contents of	a pre-existing table defined without a
		 list  of  addresses  to  initialize  it  is  not altered when
		 pf.conf is loaded.  A table initialized with the empty	 list,
		 { }, will be cleared on load.

       Tables may be defined with the following	attributes:

       persist	The persist flag forces	the kernel to keep the table even when
		no rules refer to it.  If the flag is not set, the kernel will
		automatically remove the table when the	last rule referring to
		it is flushed.

       const	The const flag prevents	the user from altering the contents of
		the  table  once  it  has  been	 created.   Without that flag,
		pfctl(8) can be	used to	add or remove addresses	from the table
		at any time, even when running with securelevel(7) = 2.

       counters
		The counters flag enables per-address packet and byte counters
		which can be displayed with pfctl(8).  Note that this  feature
		carries	significant memory overhead for	large tables.

       For example,

	     table <private> const { 10/8, 172.16/12, 192.168/16 }
	     table <badhosts> persist
	     block on fxp0 from	{ <private>, <badhosts>	} to any

       creates	a  table  called  private,  to	hold  RFC 1918 private network
       blocks, and a table called badhosts, which is initially empty.  A  fil-
       ter rule	is set up to block all traffic coming from addresses listed in
       either  table.	The private table cannot have its contents changed and
       the badhosts table will exist even when no active filter	 rules	refer-
       ence  it.   Addresses may later be added	to the badhosts	table, so that
       traffic from these hosts	can be blocked by using

	     # pfctl -t	badhosts -Tadd 204.92.77.111

       A table can also	be initialized with an address list specified  in  one
       or more external	files, using the following syntax:

	     table <spam> persist file "/etc/spammers" file "/etc/openrelays"
	     block on fxp0 from	<spam> to any

       The  files /etc/spammers	and /etc/openrelays list IP addresses, one per
       line.  Any lines	beginning with a # are treated	as  comments  and  ig-
       nored.  In addition to being specified by IP address, hosts may also be
       specified  by  their  hostname.	 When  the resolver is called to add a
       hostname	to a table, all	resulting IPv4 and IPv6	addresses  are	placed
       into  the table.	 IP addresses can also be entered in a table by	speci-
       fying a valid interface name, a valid interface group or	the self  key-
       word,  in which case all	addresses assigned to the interface(s) will be
       added to	the table.

OPTIONS
       pf(4) may be tuned for various situations using the set command.

       set timeout

	     interval	Interval between purging expired states	and fragments.
	     frag	Seconds	before an unassembled fragment is expired.
	     src.track	Length of time to retain a source tracking entry after
			the last state expires.

	     When a packet matches a stateful connection, the seconds to  live
	     for  the connection will be updated to that of the	proto.modifier
	     which corresponds to the connection  state.   Each	 packet	 which
	     matches  this  state will reset the TTL.  Tuning these values may
	     improve the performance of	the firewall at	the risk  of  dropping
	     valid idle	connections.

	     tcp.first
		   The state after the first packet.
	     tcp.opening
		   The state before the	destination host ever sends a packet.
	     tcp.established
		   The fully established state.
	     tcp.closing
		   The state after the first FIN has been sent.
	     tcp.finwait
		   The	state after both FINs have been	exchanged and the con-
		   nection is closed.  Some hosts (notably web servers on  So-
		   laris)  send	TCP packets even after closing the connection.
		   Increasing tcp.finwait (and possibly	tcp.closing) can  pre-
		   vent	blocking of such packets.
	     tcp.closed
		   The state after one endpoint	sends an RST.

	     ICMP  and UDP are handled in a fashion similar to TCP, but	with a
	     much more limited set of states:

	     udp.first
		   The state after the first packet.
	     udp.single
		   The state if	the source host	sends more than	one packet but
		   the destination host	has never sent one back.
	     udp.multiple
		   The state if	both hosts have	sent packets.
	     icmp.first
		   The state after the first packet.
	     icmp.error
		   The state after an ICMP error came back in response	to  an
		   ICMP	packet.

	     Other protocols are handled similarly to UDP:

	     other.first
	     other.single
	     other.multiple

	     Timeout  values  can be reduced adaptively	as the number of state
	     table entries grows.

	     adaptive.start
		   When	the number of state entries exceeds this value,	 adap-
		   tive	 scaling  begins.   All	timeout	values are scaled lin-
		   early with factor  (adaptive.end  -	number	of  states)  /
		   (adaptive.end - adaptive.start).
	     adaptive.end
		   When	 reaching  this	 number	 of state entries, all timeout
		   values become zero, effectively purging all	state  entries
		   immediately.	  This	value is used to define	the scale fac-
		   tor,	it should not actually be reached (set a  lower	 state
		   limit, see below).

	     Adaptive  timeouts	are enabled by default,	with an	adaptive.start
	     value equal to 60%	of the state limit, and	an adaptive.end	 value
	     equal  to	120% of	the state limit.  They can be disabled by set-
	     ting both adaptive.start and adaptive.end to 0.

	     The adaptive timeout values can be	defined	both globally and  for
	     each  rule.   When	used on	a per-rule basis, the values relate to
	     the number	of states created by the rule, otherwise to the	 total
	     number of states.

	     For example:

		   set timeout tcp.first 120
		   set timeout tcp.established 86400
		   set timeout { adaptive.start	6000, adaptive.end 12000 }
		   set limit states 10000

	     With  9000	 state table entries, the timeout values are scaled to
	     50% (tcp.first 60,	tcp.established	43200).

       set loginterface
	     Enable collection of packet and byte  count  statistics  for  the
	     given  interface  or  interface  group.   These statistics	can be
	     viewed using

		   # pfctl -s info

	     In	this example pf(4) collects statistics on the interface	 named
	     dc0:

		   set loginterface dc0

	     One can disable the loginterface using:

		   set loginterface none

       set limit
	     Sets  hard	 limits	on the memory pools used by the	packet filter.
	     See zone(9) for an	explanation of memory pools.

	     For example,

		   set limit states 20000

	     sets the maximum number of	entries	in the	memory	pool  used  by
	     state table entries (generated by pass rules which	do not specify
	     no	state) to 20000.  Using

		   set limit frags 20000

	     sets  the	maximum	 number	of entries in the memory pool used for
	     fragment reassembly (generated by scrub rules) to 20000.  Using

		   set limit src-nodes 2000

	     sets the maximum number of	entries	in the memory  pool  used  for
	     tracking source IP	addresses (generated by	the sticky-address and
	     src.track options)	to 2000.  Using

		   set limit tables 1000
		   set limit table-entries 100000

	     sets limits on the	memory pools used by tables.  The first	limits
	     the  number  of tables that can exist to 1000.  The second	limits
	     the overall number	of addresses that can be stored	in  tables  to
	     100000.

	     Various limits can	be combined on a single	line:

		   set limit { states 20000, frags 20000, src-nodes 2000 }

       set ruleset-optimization
	     none      Disable the ruleset optimizer.
	     basic     Enable basic ruleset optimization.  This	is the default
		       behaviour.  Basic ruleset optimization does four	things
		       to improve the performance of ruleset evaluations:

		       1.   remove duplicate rules
		       2.   remove rules that are a subset of another rule
		       3.   combine  multiple rules into a table when advanta-
			    geous
		       4.   re-order the rules to improve  evaluation  perfor-
			    mance

	     profile   Uses the	currently loaded ruleset as a feedback profile
		       to tailor the ordering of quick rules to	actual network
		       traffic.

	     It	 is  important	to note	that the ruleset optimizer will	modify
	     the ruleset to improve performance.  A side effect	of the ruleset
	     modification is that per-rule  accounting	statistics  will  have
	     different meanings	than before.  If per-rule accounting is	impor-
	     tant  for	billing	 purposes or whatnot, either the ruleset opti-
	     mizer should not be used or a label field should be added to  all
	     of	the accounting rules to	act as optimization barriers.

	     Optimization  can	also  be  set  as  a  command-line argument to
	     pfctl(8), overriding the settings in pf.conf.

       set optimization
	     Optimize state timeouts for one of	the following network environ-
	     ments:

	     normal
		   A normal network environment.  Suitable for almost all net-
		   works.
	     high-latency
		   A high-latency environment (such  as	 a  satellite  connec-
		   tion).
	     satellite
		   Alias for high-latency.
	     aggressive
		   Aggressively	 expire	 connections.  This can	greatly	reduce
		   the memory usage of the firewall at the  cost  of  dropping
		   idle	connections early.
	     conservative
		   Extremely conservative settings.  Avoid dropping legitimate
		   connections	at  the	 expense of greater memory utilization
		   (possibly much greater on a busy network) and slightly  in-
		   creased processor utilization.

	     For example:

		   set optimization aggressive

       set block-policy
	     The block-policy option sets the default behaviour	for the	packet
	     block action:

	     drop      Packet is silently dropped.
	     return    A  TCP RST is returned for blocked TCP packets, an ICMP
		       UNREACHABLE is returned for blocked  UDP	 packets,  and
		       all other packets are silently dropped.

	     For example:

		   set block-policy return

       set fail-policy
	     The  fail-policy  option sets the behaviour of rules which	should
	     pass a packet but were unable to do so. This might	happen when  a
	     nat or route-to rule uses an empty	table as list of targets or if
	     a rule fails to create state or source node.  The following block
	     actions are possible:

	     drop      Incoming	packet is silently dropped.
	     return    Incoming	 packet	is dropped and TCP RST is returned for
		       TCP packets, an ICMP UNREACHABLE	is  returned  for  UDP
		       packets,	and no response	is sent	for other packets.

	     For example:

		   set fail-policy return

       set state-policy
	     The state-policy option sets the default behaviour	for states:

	     if-bound	  States are bound to interface.
	     floating	  States  can match packets on any interfaces (the de-
			  fault).

	     For example:

		   set state-policy if-bound

       set state-defaults
	     The state-defaults	option sets the	state options for states  cre-
	     ated from rules without an	explicit keep state.  For example:

		   set state-defaults no-sync

       set hostid
	     The  32-bit hostid	identifies this	firewall's state table entries
	     to	other firewalls	in a pfsync(4) failover	cluster.   By  default
	     the hostid	is set to a pseudo-random value, however it may	be de-
	     sirable  to  manually  configure  it,  for	example	to more	easily
	     identify the source of state table	entries.

		   set hostid 1

	     The hostid	may be specified in either decimal or hexadecimal.

       set require-order
	     By	default	pfctl(8) enforces an ordering of the  statement	 types
	     in	the ruleset to:	options, normalization,	queueing, translation,
	     filtering.	  Setting this option to no disables this enforcement.
	     There may be non-trivial and non-obvious implications to  an  out
	     of	 order ruleset.	 Consider carefully before disabling the order
	     enforcement.

       set fingerprints
	     Load fingerprints of known	operating systems from the given file-
	     name.  By default fingerprints of known operating systems are au-
	     tomatically loaded	from pf.os(5) in /etc but  can	be  overridden
	     via this option.  Setting this option may leave a small period of
	     time  where  the  fingerprints referenced by the currently	active
	     ruleset are inconsistent until the	new ruleset finishes loading.

	     For example:

		   set fingerprints "/etc/pf.os.devel"

       set skip	on <ifspec>
	     List interfaces for which packets should not be filtered.	 Pack-
	     ets  passing in or	out on such interfaces are passed as if	pf was
	     disabled, i.e. pf does not	process	them in	any way.  This can  be
	     useful on loopback	and other virtual interfaces, when packet fil-
	     tering is not desired and can have	unexpected effects.  For exam-
	     ple:

		   set skip on lo0

       set debug
	     Set the debug level to one	of the following:

	     none	   Don't generate debug	messages.
	     urgent	   Generate debug messages only	for serious errors.
	     misc	   Generate debug messages for various errors.
	     loud	   Generate debug messages for common conditions.

TRAFFIC	NORMALIZATION
       Traffic	normalization is used to sanitize packet content in such a way
       that there are no ambiguities in	packet interpretation on the receiving
       side.  The normalizer does IP fragment reassembly  to  prevent  attacks
       that  confuse  intrusion	 detection  systems  by	sending	overlapping IP
       fragments.  Packet normalization	is invoked with	the scrub directive.

       scrub has the following options:

       no-df
	     Clears the	dont-fragment bit from a matching IP packet.  Some op-
	     erating systems are known to generate fragmented packets with the
	     dont-fragment bit set.   This  is	particularly  true  with  NFS.
	     Scrub  will  drop	such  fragmented  dont-fragment	packets	unless
	     no-df is specified.

	     Unfortunately  some  operating  systems   also   generate	 their
	     dont-fragment  packets  with  a  zero  IP	identification	field.
	     Clearing the dont-fragment	bit on packets with a zero IP  ID  may
	     cause  deleterious	 results if an upstream	router later fragments
	     the packet.  Using	the random-id modifier (see below)  is	recom-
	     mended in combination with	the no-df modifier to ensure unique IP
	     identifiers.

       min-ttl <number>
	     Enforces a	minimum	TTL for	matching IP packets.

       max-mss <number>
	     Enforces a	maximum	MSS for	matching TCP packets.

       set-tos <string>	| <number>
	     Enforces  a TOS for matching IP packets.  TOS may be given	as one
	     of	 critical,  inetcontrol,  lowdelay,  netcontrol,   throughput,
	     reliability,  or  one  of	the DiffServ Code Points: ef, af11 ...
	     af43, cs0 ... cs7;	or as either hex or decimal.

       random-id
	     Replaces the IP identification field with random values  to  com-
	     pensate for predictable values generated by many hosts.  This op-
	     tion  only	 applies  to packets that are not fragmented after the
	     optional fragment reassembly.

       fragment	reassemble
	     Using scrub rules,	fragments can be reassembled by	normalization.
	     In	this case, fragments are buffered until	they form  a  complete
	     packet, and only the completed packet is passed on	to the filter.
	     The  advantage  is	 that filter rules have	to deal	only with com-
	     plete packets, and	can ignore fragments.  The drawback of caching
	     fragments is the additional memory	cost.

       reassemble tcp
	     Statefully	normalizes  TCP	 connections.	scrub  reassemble  tcp
	     rules  may	not have the direction (in/out)	specified.  reassemble
	     tcp performs the following	normalizations:

	     ttl      Neither side of the  connection  is  allowed  to	reduce
		      their  IP	 TTL.  An attacker may send a packet such that
		      it reaches the firewall, affects the firewall state, and
		      expires	before	 reaching   the	  destination	 host.
		      reassemble tcp will raise	the TTL	of all packets back up
		      to the highest value seen	on the connection.
	     timestamp modulation
		      Modern  TCP  stacks  will	 send a	timestamp on every TCP
		      packet and echo the other	endpoint's timestamp  back  to
		      them.   Many  operating  systems	will  merely start the
		      timestamp	at zero	when first booted,  and	 increment  it
		      several  times  a	second.	 The uptime of the host	can be
		      deduced by reading the timestamp and  multiplying	 by  a
		      constant.	  Also	observing several different timestamps
		      can be used to count hosts behind	 a  NAT	 device.   And
		      spoofing	TCP packets into a connection requires knowing
		      or guessing valid	timestamps.  Timestamps	merely need to
		      be monotonically increasing and not derived off a	guess-
		      able base	time.  reassemble tcp will cause scrub to mod-
		      ulate the	TCP timestamps with a random number.
	     extended PAWS checks
		      There is a problem with TCP on long fat pipes, in	that a
		      packet might get delayed for longer than	it  takes  the
		      connection  to  wrap its 32-bit sequence space.  In such
		      an occurrence, the old packet would be indistinguishable
		      from a new packet	and would be accepted  as  such.   The
		      solution	to  this  is  called  PAWS: Protection Against
		      Wrapped Sequence numbers.	 It  protects  against	it  by
		      making  sure  the	 timestamp  on each packet does	not go
		      backwards.  reassemble tcp also makes sure the timestamp
		      on the packet does not go	forward	more than the RFC  al-
		      lows.  By	doing this, pf(4) artificially extends the se-
		      curity of	TCP sequence numbers by	10 to 18 bits when the
		      host  uses  appropriately	randomized timestamps, since a
		      blind attacker would have	 to  guess  the	 timestamp  as
		      well.

       For example,

	     scrub in on $ext_if all fragment reassemble

       The  no	option prefixed	to a scrub rule	causes matching	packets	to re-
       main unscrubbed,	much in	the same way as	drop quick works in the	packet
       filter (see below).  This mechanism should be used when it is necessary
       to exclude specific packets from	broader	scrub rules.

QUEUEING
       The ALTQ	system is currently not	available in the GENERIC kernel	nor as
       loadable	modules.  In order to use the herein after called queueing op-
       tions one has to	use a custom built kernel.  Please refer to altq(4) to
       learn about the related kernel options.

       Packets can be assigned to queues for the purpose of bandwidth control.
       At least	two declarations are required to configure queues,  and	 later
       any  packet  filtering  rule  can reference the defined queues by name.
       During the filtering component of pf.conf, the  last  referenced	 queue
       name  is	 where	any  packets from pass rules will be queued, while for
       block rules it specifies	where any resulting ICMP or  TCP  RST  packets
       should  be  queued.  The	scheduler defines the algorithm	used to	decide
       which packets get delayed, dropped, or sent out immediately.  There are
       three schedulers	currently supported.

       cbq   Class Based Queueing.  Queues attached to an  interface  build  a
	     tree,  thus each queue can	have further child queues.  Each queue
	     can have a	priority and a bandwidth  assigned.   Priority	mainly
	     controls  the  time packets take to get sent out, while bandwidth
	     has primarily effects on throughput.  cbq	achieves  both	parti-
	     tioning  and  sharing  of link bandwidth by hierarchically	struc-
	     tured classes.  Each class	has its	own queue and is assigned  its
	     share  of bandwidth.  A child class can borrow bandwidth from its
	     parent class as long as excess bandwidth is  available  (see  the
	     option borrow, below).

       priq  Priority  Queueing.   Queues  are flat attached to	the interface,
	     thus, queues cannot have further child queues.  Each queue	has  a
	     unique  priority  assigned, ranging from 0	to 15.	Packets	in the
	     queue with	the highest priority are processed first.

       hfsc  Hierarchical Fair Service Curve.  Queues attached to an interface
	     build a tree, thus	each queue  can	 have  further	child  queues.
	     Each  queue  can  have  a	priority  and  a  bandwidth  assigned.
	     Priority mainly controls the time packets take to get  sent  out,
	     while bandwidth primarily affects throughput.  hfsc supports both
	     link-sharing  and	guaranteed  real-time  services.  It employs a
	     service curve based QoS model, and	its unique feature is an abil-
	     ity to decouple delay and bandwidth allocation.

       The interfaces on which queueing	should be activated are	declared using
       the altq	on declaration.	 altq on has the following keywords:

       <interface>
	     Queueing is enabled on the	named interface.

       <scheduler>
	     Specifies which queueing scheduler	to use.	  Currently  supported
	     values are	cbq for	Class Based Queueing, priq for Priority	Queue-
	     ing and hfsc for the Hierarchical Fair Service Curve scheduler.

       bandwidth <bw>
	     The  maximum bitrate for all queues on an interface may be	speci-
	     fied using	the bandwidth keyword.	The value can be specified  as
	     an	 absolute value	or as a	percentage of the interface bandwidth.
	     When using	an absolute value, the suffixes	b, Kb, Mb, and Gb  are
	     used to represent bits, kilobits, megabits, and gigabits per sec-
	     ond, respectively.	 The value must	not exceed the interface band-
	     width.  If	bandwidth is not specified, the	interface bandwidth is
	     used  (but	take note that some interfaces do not know their band-
	     width, or can adapt their bandwidth rates).

       qlimit <limit>
	     The maximum number	of packets held	in the queue.  The default  is
	     50.

       tbrsize <size>
	     Adjusts  the  size,  in bytes, of the token bucket	regulator.  If
	     not specified, heuristics based on	the  interface	bandwidth  are
	     used to determine the size.

       queue <list>
	     Defines a list of subqueues to create on an interface.

       In the following	example, the interface dc0 should queue	up to 5Mbps in
       four second-level queues	using Class Based Queueing.  Those four	queues
       will be shown in	a later	example.

	     altq on dc0 cbq bandwidth 5Mb queue { std,	http, mail, ssh	}

       Once  interfaces	are activated for queueing using the altq directive, a
       sequence	of queue directives may	be defined.  The name associated  with
       a  queue	 must match a queue defined in the altq	directive (e.g.	mail),
       or, except for the priq scheduler, in a parent queue declaration.   The
       following keywords can be used:

       on <interface>
	     Specifies	the interface the queue	operates on.  If not given, it
	     operates on all matching interfaces.

       bandwidth <bw>
	     Specifies the maximum bitrate to be processed by the queue.  This
	     value must	not exceed the value of	the parent queue  and  can  be
	     specified	as  an	absolute  value	 or a percentage of the	parent
	     queue's bandwidth.	 If not	specified, defaults  to	 100%  of  the
	     parent  queue's  bandwidth.   The priq scheduler does not support
	     bandwidth specification.

       priority	<level>
	     Between queues a priority level can be set.  For  cbq  and	 hfsc,
	     the  range	is 0 to	7 and for priq,	the range is 0 to 15.  The de-
	     fault for all is 1.  Priq queues with a higher priority  are  al-
	     ways  served  first.   Cbq	and Hfsc queues	with a higher priority
	     are preferred in the case of overload.

       qlimit <limit>
	     The maximum number	of packets held	in the queue.  The default  is
	     50.

       The   scheduler	 can   get   additional	 parameters  with  <scheduler>
       (<parameters>).	Parameters are as follows:

       default	   Packets not matched by another queue	are assigned  to  this
		   one.	 Exactly one default queue is required.

       red	   Enable  RED	(Random	 Early	Detection) on this queue.  RED
		   drops packets with a	probability proportional to the	 aver-
		   age queue length.

       rio	   Enables  RIO	 on  this queue.  RIO is RED with IN/OUT, thus
		   running RED two times more than RIO would achieve the  same
		   effect.  RIO	is currently not supported in the GENERIC ker-
		   nel.

       ecn	   Enables  ECN	 (Explicit  Congestion	Notification)  on this
		   queue.  ECN implies RED.

       The cbq scheduler supports an additional	option:

       borrow	   The queue can borrow	bandwidth from the parent.

       The hfsc	scheduler supports some	additional options:

       realtime	<sc>
		   The minimum required	bandwidth for the queue.

       upperlimit <sc>
		   The maximum allowed bandwidth for the queue.

       linkshare <sc>
		   The bandwidth share of a backlogged queue.

       <sc> is an acronym for service curve.

       The format for service curve specifications is (m1, d,  m2).   m2  con-
       trols  the  bandwidth assigned to the queue.  m1	and d are optional and
       can be used to control the initial bandwidth assignment.	 For the first
       d milliseconds the queue	gets the bandwidth given as m1,	afterwards the
       value given in m2.

       Furthermore, with cbq and hfsc, child queues can	be specified as	in  an
       altq  declaration, thus building	a tree of queues using a part of their
       parent's	bandwidth.

       Packets can be assigned to queues based on filter rules	by  using  the
       queue keyword.  Normally	only one queue is specified; when a second one
       is  specified  it  will instead be used for packets which have a	TOS of
       lowdelay	and for	TCP ACKs with no data payload.

       To continue the previous	example, the examples below would specify  the
       four  referenced	 queues,  plus a few child queues.  Interactive	ssh(1)
       sessions	get priority over bulk transfers like scp(1) and sftp(1).  The
       queues  may  then  be  referenced  by  filtering	 rules	(see   "PACKET
       FILTERING" below).

       queue std bandwidth 10% cbq(default)
       queue http bandwidth 60%	priority 2 cbq(borrow red) \
	     { employees, developers }
       queue  developers bandwidth 75% cbq(borrow)
       queue  employees	bandwidth 15%
       queue mail bandwidth 10%	priority 0 cbq(borrow ecn)
       queue ssh bandwidth 20% cbq(borrow) { ssh_interactive, ssh_bulk }
       queue  ssh_interactive bandwidth	50% priority 7 cbq(borrow)
       queue  ssh_bulk bandwidth 50% priority 0	cbq(borrow)

       block return out	on dc0 inet all	queue std
       pass out	on dc0 inet proto tcp from $developerhosts to any port 80 \
	     queue developers
       pass out	on dc0 inet proto tcp from $employeehosts to any port 80 \
	     queue employees
       pass out	on dc0 inet proto tcp from any to any port 22 \
	     queue(ssh_bulk, ssh_interactive)
       pass out	on dc0 inet proto tcp from any to any port 25 \
	     queue mail

TRANSLATION
       Translation  rules  modify  either the source or	destination address of
       the packets associated with a stateful connection.  A stateful  connec-
       tion  is	automatically created to track packets matching	such a rule as
       long as they are	not blocked by the filtering section of	pf.conf.   The
       translation  engine  modifies  the specified address and/or port	in the
       packet, recalculates IP,	TCP and	UDP checksums as necessary, and	passes
       it to the packet	filter for evaluation.

       Since translation occurs	before filtering the filter  engine  will  see
       packets	as  they  look	after any addresses and	ports have been	trans-
       lated.  Filter rules will therefore have	to filter based	on the	trans-
       lated  address  and port	number.	 Packets that match a translation rule
       are only	automatically passed if	the pass modifier is given,  otherwise
       they are	still subject to block and pass	rules.

       The state entry created permits pf(4) to	keep track of the original ad-
       dress  for  traffic associated with that	state and correctly direct re-
       turn traffic for	that connection.

       Various types of	translation are	possible with pf:

       binat
	     A binat rule specifies a bidirectional mapping between an	exter-
	     nal IP netblock and an internal IP	netblock.

       nat   A	nat  rule specifies that IP addresses are to be	changed	as the
	     packet traverses the given	interface.  This technique allows  one
	     or	 more  IP addresses on the translating host to support network
	     traffic for a larger range	of machines on	an  "inside"  network.
	     Although  in  theory any IP address can be	used on	the inside, it
	     is	strongly recommended that one of the address ranges defined by
	     RFC 1918 be used.	These netblocks	are:

	     10.0.0.0 -	10.255.255.255 (all of net 10, i.e., 10/8)
	     172.16.0.0	- 172.31.255.255 (i.e.,	172.16/12)
	     192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255 (i.e., 192.168/16)

       rdr   The packet	is redirected to another destination  and  possibly  a
	     different port.  rdr rules	can optionally specify port ranges in-
	     stead  of	single ports.  rdr ... port 2000:2999 -> ... port 4000
	     redirects ports 2000 to 2999 (inclusive) to port 4000.   rdr  ...
	     port  2000:2999  ->  ... port 4000:* redirects port 2000 to 4000,
	     2001 to 4001, ...,	2999 to	4999.

       In addition to modifying	the address, some translation rules may	modify
       source or destination ports for tcp(4) or udp(4)	 connections;  implic-
       itly  in	the case of nat	rules and explicitly in	the case of rdr	rules.
       Port numbers are	never translated with a	binat rule.

       Evaluation order	of the translation rules is dependent on the  type  of
       the  translation	 rules	and of the direction of	a packet.  binat rules
       are always evaluated first.  Then either	the rdr	rules are evaluated on
       an inbound packet or the	nat rules on an	outbound packet.  Rules	of the
       same type are evaluated in the same order in which they appear  in  the
       ruleset.	 The first matching rule decides what action is	taken.

       The  no	option prefixed	to a translation rule causes packets to	remain
       untranslated, much in the same way as drop quick	works  in  the	packet
       filter  (see below).  If	no rule	matches	the packet it is passed	to the
       filter engine unmodified.

       Translation rules apply only to packets that pass through the specified
       interface, and if no interface is specified, translation	is applied  to
       packets on all interfaces.  For instance, redirecting port 80 on	an ex-
       ternal  interface  to an	internal web server will only work for connec-
       tions originating from the outside.  Connections	to the address of  the
       external	 interface from	local hosts will not be	redirected, since such
       packets do not actually pass through the	external interface.   Redirec-
       tions cannot reflect packets back through the interface they arrive on,
       they  can only be redirected to hosts connected to different interfaces
       or to the firewall itself.

       Note that redirecting external incoming connections to the loopback ad-
       dress, as in

	     rdr on ne3	inet proto tcp to port smtp -> 127.0.0.1 port spamd

       will effectively	allow an external host to  connect  to	daemons	 bound
       solely  to the loopback address,	circumventing the traditional blocking
       of such connections on a	real interface.	 Unless	 this  effect  is  de-
       sired,  any of the local	non-loopback addresses should be used as redi-
       rection target instead, which allows external connections only to  dae-
       mons bound to this address or not bound to any address.

       See "TRANSLATION	EXAMPLES" below.

PACKET FILTERING
       pf(4)  has the ability to block and pass	packets	based on attributes of
       their layer 3  (see  ip(4)  and	ip6(4))	 and  layer  4	(see  icmp(4),
       icmp6(4),  tcp(4),  udp(4))  headers.  In addition, packets may also be
       assigned	to queues for the purpose of bandwidth control.

       For each	packet processed by the	packet filter, the  filter  rules  are
       evaluated  in  sequential order,	from first to last.  The last matching
       rule decides what action	is taken.  If no rule matches the packet,  the
       default action is to pass the packet.

       The following actions can be used in the	filter:

       block
	     The  packet  is  blocked.	 There are a number of ways in which a
	     block rule	can behave when	blocking a packet.  The	default	behav-
	     iour is to	drop packets silently, however this can	be  overridden
	     or	made explicit either globally, by setting the block-policy op-
	     tion, or on a per-rule basis with one of the following options:

	     drop  The packet is silently dropped.
	     return-rst
		   This	 applies  only to tcp(4) packets, and issues a TCP RST
		   which closes	the connection.
	     return-icmp
	     return-icmp6
		   This	causes ICMP messages to	be returned for	packets	 which
		   match  the  rule.   By  default this	is an ICMP UNREACHABLE
		   message, however this can be	 overridden  by	 specifying  a
		   message as a	code or	number.
	     return
		   This	causes a TCP RST to be returned	for tcp(4) packets and
		   an ICMP UNREACHABLE for UDP and other packets.

	     Options  returning	ICMP packets currently have no effect if pf(4)
	     operates on a if_bridge(4), as the	code to	support	 this  feature
	     has not yet been implemented.

	     The  simplest  mechanism  to block	everything by default and only
	     pass packets that match explicit rules is specify a first	filter
	     rule of:

		   block all

       pass  The packet	is passed; state is created unless the no state	option
	     is	specified.

       By  default  pf(4)  filters packets statefully; the first time a	packet
       matches a pass rule, a state entry is created; for  subsequent  packets
       the  filter  checks  whether the	packet matches any state.  If it does,
       the packet is passed without evaluation of any rules.  After  the  con-
       nection	is  closed  or times out, the state entry is automatically re-
       moved.

       This has	several	advantages.  For TCP connections, comparing  a	packet
       to a state involves checking its	sequence numbers, as well as TCP time-
       stamps  if  a  scrub reassemble tcp rule	applies	to the connection.  If
       these values are	outside	the narrow windows  of	expected  values,  the
       packet is dropped.  This	prevents spoofing attacks, such	as when	an at-
       tacker  sends packets with a fake source	address/port but does not know
       the connection's	sequence numbers.  Similarly, pf(4) knows how to match
       ICMP replies to states.	For example,

	     pass out inet proto icmp all icmp-type echoreq

       allows echo requests (such as those created by ping(8)) out statefully,
       and matches incoming echo replies correctly to states.

       Also, looking up	states is usually faster than  evaluating  rules.   If
       there  are  50  rules,  all of them are evaluated sequentially in O(n).
       Even with 50000 states, only 16	comparisons  are  needed  to  match  a
       state,  since  states  are  stored  in a	binary search tree that	allows
       searches	in O(log2 n).

       Furthermore, correct handling of	ICMP error  messages  is  critical  to
       many protocols, particularly TCP.  pf(4)	matches	ICMP error messages to
       the  correct connection,	checks them against connection parameters, and
       passes them if appropriate.  For	example	if an ICMP source quench  mes-
       sage referring to a stateful TCP	connection arrives, it will be matched
       to the state and	get passed.

       Finally,	 state	tracking  is required for nat, binat and rdr rules, in
       order to	track address and port translations and	reverse	 the  transla-
       tion on returning packets.

       pf(4)  will also	create state for other protocols which are effectively
       stateless by nature.  UDP packets are matched to	states using only host
       addresses and ports, and	other protocols	are matched  to	 states	 using
       only the	host addresses.

       If  stateless  filtering	of individual packets is desired, the no state
       keyword can be used to specify that state will not be created  if  this
       is  the	last matching rule.  A number of parameters can	also be	set to
       affect how  pf(4)  handles  state  tracking.   See  "STATEFUL  TRACKING
       OPTIONS"	below for further details.

PARAMETERS
       The  rule  parameters  specify  the packets to which a rule applies.  A
       packet always comes in on, or goes out through,	one  interface.	  Most
       parameters  are	optional.   If a parameter is specified, the rule only
       applies to packets with matching	attributes.  Certain parameters	can be
       expressed as lists, in which case pfctl(8) generates  all  needed  rule
       combinations.

       in or out
	     This rule applies to incoming or outgoing packets.	 If neither in
	     nor out are specified, the	rule will match	packets	in both	direc-
	     tions.

       log   In	 addition to the action	specified, a log message is generated.
	     Only the packet that establishes the state	is logged, unless  the
	     no	 state	option is specified.  The logged packets are sent to a
	     pflog(4) interface, by default pflog0.  This interface  is	 moni-
	     tored  by	the  pflogd(8)	logging	daemon,	which dumps the	logged
	     packets to	the file /var/log/pflog	in pcap(3) binary format.

       log (all)
	     Used to force logging of all packets for a	connection.   This  is
	     not  necessary  when  no  state is	explicitly specified.  As with
	     log, packets are logged to	pflog(4).

       log (user)
	     Logs the Unix user	ID of the user that owns the  socket  and  the
	     PID  of  the process that has the socket open where the packet is
	     sourced from or destined to (depending on which socket is local).
	     This is in	addition to the	normal information logged.

	     Only the first packet logged via log (all,	user)  will  have  the
	     user credentials logged when using	stateful matching.

       log (to <interface>)
	     Send logs to the specified	pflog(4) interface instead of pflog0.

       quick
	     If	 a  packet matches a rule which	has the	quick option set, this
	     rule is considered	the last matching rule,	and evaluation of sub-
	     sequent rules is skipped.

       on <interface>
	     This rule applies only to packets coming  in  on,	or  going  out
	     through,  this particular interface or interface group.  For more
	     information  on  interface	 groups,  see  the  group  keyword  in
	     ifconfig(8).

       <af>  This  rule	 applies only to packets of this address family.  Sup-
	     ported values are inet and	inet6.

       proto <protocol>
	     This rule applies only to packets of this protocol.  Common  pro-
	     tocols  are icmp(4), icmp6(4), tcp(4), and	udp(4).	 For a list of
	     all the protocol name to number mappings used  by	pfctl(8),  see
	     the file /etc/protocols.

       from <source> port <source> os <source> to <dest> port <dest>
	     This  rule	 applies only to packets with the specified source and
	     destination addresses and ports.

	     Addresses can be specified	in CIDR	notation (matching netblocks),
	     as	symbolic host names, interface names or	interface group	names,
	     or	as any of the following	keywords:

	     any	     Any address.
	     no-route	     Any address which is not currently	routable.
	     urpf-failed     Any source	address	that fails a  unicast  reverse
			     path forwarding (URPF) check, i.e.	packets	coming
			     in	 on  an	 interface other than that which holds
			     the route back to the packet's source address.
	     <table>	     Any address that matches the given	table.

	     Ranges of addresses are specified by using	the `-'	operator.  For
	     instance:	"10.1.1.10  -  10.1.1.12"  means  all  addresses  from
	     10.1.1.10 to 10.1.1.12, hence addresses 10.1.1.10,	10.1.1.11, and
	     10.1.1.12.

	     Interface	names and interface group names	can have modifiers ap-
	     pended:

	     :network	   Translates to the network(s)	attached to the	inter-
			   face.
	     :broadcast	   Translates  to  the	 interface's   broadcast   ad-
			   dress(es).
	     :peer	   Translates  to  the point-to-point interface's peer
			   address(es).
	     :0		   Do not include interface aliases.

	     Host names	may also have the :0 option appended to	 restrict  the
	     name resolution to	the first of each v4 and v6 address found.

	     Host  name	 resolution  and  interface to address translation are
	     done at ruleset load-time.	 When the address of an	interface  (or
	     host name)	changes	(under DHCP or PPP, for	instance), the ruleset
	     must  be  reloaded	 for the change	to be reflected	in the kernel.
	     Surrounding the interface name (and optional modifiers) in	paren-
	     theses changes this behaviour.  When the interface	name  is  sur-
	     rounded  by  parentheses, the rule	is automatically updated when-
	     ever the interface	changes	its address.   The  ruleset  does  not
	     need to be	reloaded.  This	is especially useful with nat.

	     Ports can be specified either by number or	by name.  For example,
	     port  80 can be specified as www.	For a list of all port name to
	     number mappings used by pfctl(8), see the file /etc/services.

	     Ports and ranges of ports are specified by	using these operators:

		   =	   (equal)
		   !=	   (unequal)
		   <	   (less than)
		   <=	   (less than or equal)
		   >	   (greater than)
		   >=	   (greater than or equal)
		   :	   (range including boundaries)
		   ><	   (range excluding boundaries)
		   <>	   (except range)

	     `><', `<>'	and `:'	are binary  operators  (they  take  two	 argu-
	     ments).  For instance:

	     port 2000:2004
			 means	`all  ports  >=	2000 and <= 2004', hence ports
			 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003	and 2004.

	     port 2000 >< 2004
			 means `all ports > 2000  and  <  2004',  hence	 ports
			 2001, 2002 and	2003.

	     port 2000 <> 2004
			 means	`all  ports  <	2000  or  > 2004', hence ports
			 1-1999	and 2005-65535.

	     The operating system of the source	host can be specified  in  the
	     case  of  TCP  rules  with	 the  OS modifier.  See	the "OPERATING
	     SYSTEM FINGERPRINTING" section for	more information.

	     The host, port and	OS specifications are optional,	as in the fol-
	     lowing examples:

		   pass	in all
		   pass	in from	any to any
		   pass	in proto tcp from any port <= 1024 to any
		   pass	in proto tcp from any to any port 25
		   pass	in proto tcp from 10.0.0.0/8 port > 1024 \
			 to ! 10.1.2.3 port != ssh
		   pass	in proto tcp from any os "OpenBSD"

       all   This is equivalent	to "from any to	any".

       group <group>
	     Similar to	user, this rule	only applies  to  packets  of  sockets
	     owned by the specified group.

       user <user>
	     This  rule	only applies to	packets	of sockets owned by the	speci-
	     fied user.	 For outgoing connections initiated from the firewall,
	     this is the user that opened the connection.  For	incoming  con-
	     nections to the firewall itself, this is the user that listens on
	     the destination port.  For	forwarded connections, where the fire-
	     wall  is  not  a  connection  endpoint,  the  user	 and group are
	     unknown.

	     All packets, both outgoing	and incoming, of  one  connection  are
	     associated	 with the same user and	group.	Only TCP and UDP pack-
	     ets can be	associated with	users; for other protocols these para-
	     meters are	ignored.

	     User and group refer to the effective (as opposed	to  the	 real)
	     IDs,  in  case  the socket	is created by a	setuid/setgid process.
	     User and group IDs	are stored when	a socket is  created;  when  a
	     process  creates  a  listening  socket  as	root (for instance, by
	     binding to	a privileged port) and subsequently changes to another
	     user ID (to drop privileges), the credentials will	remain root.

	     User and group IDs	can be specified as either numbers  or	names.
	     The  syntax  is  similar to the one for ports.  The value unknown
	     matches packets of	forwarded connections.	unknown	 can  only  be
	     used  with	the operators =	and !=.	 Other constructs like user >=
	     unknown are invalid.  Forwarded packets  with  unknown  user  and
	     group ID match only rules that explicitly compare against unknown
	     with  the	operators  =  or  !=.  For instance user >= 0 does not
	     match forwarded packets.  The following example allows  only  se-
	     lected users to open outgoing connections:

		   block out proto { tcp, udp }	all
		   pass	 out proto { tcp, udp }	all user { < 1000, dhartmei }

       flags <a> /<b> |	/<b> | any
	     This rule only applies to TCP packets that	have the flags <a> set
	     out  of  set  <b>.	  Flags	not specified in <b> are ignored.  For
	     stateful connections, the default is  flags  S/SA.	  To  indicate
	     that  flags should	not be checked at all, specify flags any.  The
	     flags are:	(F)IN, (S)YN, (R)ST, (P)USH, (A)CK, (U)RG, (E)CE,  and
	     C(W)R.

	     flags S/S	 Flag SYN is set.  The other flags are ignored.

	     flags S/SA	 This is the default setting for stateful connections.
			 Out  of  SYN  and  ACK, exactly SYN may be set.  SYN,
			 SYN+PSH and  SYN+RST  match,  but  SYN+ACK,  ACK  and
			 ACK+RST  do  not.   This is more restrictive than the
			 previous example.

	     flags /SFRA
			 If the	first set is not  specified,  it  defaults  to
			 none.	All of SYN, FIN, RST and ACK must be unset.

	     Because  flags  S/SA  is  applied	by default (unless no state is
	     specified), only the initial SYN packet of	a TCP  handshake  will
	     create  a	state for a TCP	connection.  It	is possible to be less
	     restrictive, and allow state creation from	intermediate (non-SYN)
	     packets, by specifying flags any.	This will cause	pf(4) to  syn-
	     chronize to existing connections, for instance if one flushes the
	     state  table.   However,  states  created	from such intermediate
	     packets may be missing connection details such as the TCP	window
	     scaling  factor.	States	which  modify the packet flow, such as
	     those affected by nat, binat or rdr rules,	modulate  or  synproxy
	     state  options,  or scrubbed with reassemble tcp will also	not be
	     recoverable from intermediate  packets.   Such  connections  will
	     stall and time out.

       icmp-type <type>	code <code>

       icmp6-type <type> code <code>
	     This  rule	only applies to	ICMP or	ICMPv6 packets with the	speci-
	     fied type and code.  Text names for  ICMP	types  and  codes  are
	     listed in icmp(4) and icmp6(4).  This parameter is	only valid for
	     rules  that  cover	protocols ICMP or ICMP6.  The protocol and the
	     ICMP type indicator (icmp-type or icmp6-type) must	match.

       tos <string> | <number>
	     This rule applies to packets with the  specified  TOS  bits  set.
	     TOS  may  be  given  as  one  of critical,	inetcontrol, lowdelay,
	     netcontrol, throughput, reliability, or one of the	DiffServ  Code
	     Points: ef, af11 ... af43,	cs0 ...	cs7; or	as either hex or deci-
	     mal.

	     For example, the following	rules are identical:

		   pass	all tos	lowdelay
		   pass	all tos	0x10
		   pass	all tos	16

       allow-opts
	     By	 default,  IPv4	 packets  with IP options or IPv6 packets with
	     routing extension headers are blocked.  When allow-opts is	speci-
	     fied for a	pass rule, packets that	pass the filter	based on  that
	     rule  (last  matching)  do	 so even if they contain IP options or
	     routing extension headers.	 For packets  that  match  state,  the
	     rule that initially created the state is used.  The implicit pass
	     rule that is used when a packet does not match any	rules does not
	     allow IP options.

       label <string>
	     Adds  a  label  (name) to the rule, which can be used to identify
	     the rule.	For instance, pfctl -s labels shows  per-rule  statis-
	     tics for rules that have labels.

	     The following macros can be used in labels:

		   $if	     The interface.
		   $srcaddr  The source	IP address.
		   $dstaddr  The destination IP	address.
		   $srcport  The source	port specification.
		   $dstport  The destination port specification.
		   $proto    The protocol name.
		   $nr	     The rule number.

	     For example:

		   ips = "{ 1.2.3.4, 1.2.3.5 }"
		   pass	in proto tcp from any to $ips \
			 port >	1023 label "$dstaddr:$dstport"

	     expands to

		   pass	in inet	proto tcp from any to 1.2.3.4 \
			 port >	1023 label "1.2.3.4:>1023"
		   pass	in inet	proto tcp from any to 1.2.3.5 \
			 port >	1023 label "1.2.3.5:>1023"

	     The  macro	 expansion for the label directive occurs only at con-
	     figuration	file parse time, not during runtime.

       queue <queue> | (<queue>, <queue>)
	     Packets matching this rule	will  be  assigned  to	the  specified
	     queue.   If  two  queues  are  given, packets which have a	TOS of
	     lowdelay and TCP ACKs with	no data	payload	will  be  assigned  to
	     the second	one.  See "QUEUEING" for setup details.

	     For example:

		   pass	in proto tcp to	port 25	queue mail
		   pass	in proto tcp to	port 22	queue(ssh_bulk,	ssh_prio)

       set prio	priority | (priority, priority)
	     Packets  matching	this rule will be assigned a specific queueing
	     priority.	Priorities are assigned	as integers 0 through  7.   If
	     the  packet  is  transmitted on a vlan(4) interface, the queueing
	     priority will be written as the priority code point in the	802.1Q
	     VLAN header.  If two priorities are given,	packets	which  have  a
	     TOS  of  lowdelay	and  TCP ACKs with no data payload will	be as-
	     signed to the second one.

	     For example:

		   pass	in proto tcp to	port 25	set prio 2
		   pass	in proto tcp to	port 22	set prio (2, 5)

       tag <string>
	     Packets matching this rule	will  be  tagged  with	the  specified
	     string.   The  tag	acts as	an internal marker that	can be used to
	     identify these packets later on.  This can	be used, for  example,
	     to	 provide  trust	between	interfaces and to determine if packets
	     have been processed by translation	 rules.	  Tags	are  "sticky",
	     meaning  that  the	 packet	will be	tagged even if the rule	is not
	     the last matching rule.  Further matching rules can  replace  the
	     tag  with a new one but will not remove a previously applied tag.
	     A packet is only ever assigned one	tag at a time.	Packet tagging
	     can be done during	nat, rdr, or binat rules in addition to	filter
	     rules.  Tags take the same	macros as labels (see above).

       tagged <string>
	     Used with filter, translation or  scrub  rules  to	 specify  that
	     packets  must  already  be	 tagged	with the given tag in order to
	     match the rule.  Inverse tag matching can also be done by	speci-
	     fying the ! operator before the tagged keyword.

       rtable <number>
	     Used to select an alternate routing table for the routing lookup.
	     Only  effective  before the route lookup happened,	i.e. when fil-
	     tering inbound.

       divert-to <host>	port <port>
	     Used to redirect packets to a local  socket  bound	 to  host  and
	     port.  The	packets	will not be modified, so getsockname(2)	on the
	     socket  will  return  the	original  destination  address	of the
	     packet.

       divert-reply
	     Used to receive replies for sockets that are bound	 to  addresses
	     which are not local to the	machine.  See setsockopt(2) for	infor-
	     mation on how to bind these sockets.

       probability <number>
	     A	probability  attribute can be attached to a rule, with a value
	     set between 0 and 1, bounds not included.	In that	case, the rule
	     will be honoured using the	given probability value	only.  For ex-
	     ample, the	following rule will drop 20% of	incoming ICMP packets:

		   block in proto icmp probability 20%

       prio <number>
	     Only match	packets	which have the	given  queueing	 priority  as-
	     signed.

ROUTING
       If  a  packet matches a rule with a route option	set, the packet	filter
       will route the packet according to the type of route option.  When such
       a rule creates state, the route option is also applied to  all  packets
       matching	the same connection.

       route-to
	     The  route-to option routes the packet to the specified interface
	     with an optional address for the next hop.	 When a	route-to  rule
	     creates  state,  only  packets that pass in the same direction as
	     the filter	rule specifies will be routed in  this	way.   Packets
	     passing  in the opposite direction	(replies) are not affected and
	     are routed	normally.

       reply-to
	     The reply-to option is similar to route-to,  but  routes  packets
	     that  pass	 in  the opposite direction (replies) to the specified
	     interface.	 Opposite direction is only defined in the context  of
	     a	state  entry, and reply-to is useful only in rules that	create
	     state.  It	can be used on systems with multiple external  connec-
	     tions  to	route all outgoing packets of a	connection through the
	     interface the  incoming  connection  arrived  through  (symmetric
	     routing enforcement).

       dup-to
	     The dup-to	option creates a duplicate of the packet and routes it
	     like  route-to.   The  original packet gets routed	as it normally
	     would.

POOL OPTIONS
       For nat and rdr rules, (as well	as  for	 the  route-to,	 reply-to  and
       dup-to  rule  options)  for which there is a single redirection address
       which has a subnet mask smaller than 32 for IPv4	or 128 for IPv6	 (more
       than one	IP address), a variety of different methods for	assigning this
       address can be used:

       bitmask
	     The bitmask option	applies	the network portion of the redirection
	     address  to the address to	be modified (source with nat, destina-
	     tion with rdr).

       random
	     The random	option selects an address at random within the defined
	     block of addresses.

       source-hash
	     The source-hash option uses a hash	of the source address  to  de-
	     termine  the  redirection	address, ensuring that the redirection
	     address is	always the same	for a given source.  An	 optional  key
	     can be specified after this keyword either	in hex or as a string;
	     by	 default  pfctl(8)  randomly  generates	 a key for source-hash
	     every time	the ruleset is reloaded.

       round-robin
	     The round-robin option loops through the redirection address(es).

	     When more than one	redirection address is specified,  round-robin
	     is	the only permitted pool	type.

       static-port
	     With  nat rules, the static-port option prevents pf(4) from modi-
	     fying the source port on TCP and UDP packets.

       Additionally, the sticky-address	option can be specified	to help	ensure
       that multiple connections from the same source are mapped to  the  same
       redirection  address.   This  option  can  be  used with	the random and
       round-robin pool	options.  Note that by default these associations  are
       destroyed as soon as there are no longer	states which refer to them; in
       order  to make the mappings last	beyond the lifetime of the states, in-
       crease the global options with set timeout  src.track.	See  "STATEFUL
       TRACKING	OPTIONS" for more ways to control the source tracking.

STATE MODULATION
       Much  of	 the security derived from TCP is attributable to how well the
       initial sequence	numbers	(ISNs) are chosen.  Some popular stack	imple-
       mentations  choose  very	poor ISNs and thus are normally	susceptible to
       ISN prediction exploits.	 By applying a modulate	state rule  to	a  TCP
       connection, pf(4) will create a high quality random sequence number for
       each connection endpoint.

       The  modulate state directive implicitly	keeps state on the rule	and is
       only applicable to TCP connections.

       For instance:

	     block all
	     pass out proto tcp	from any to any	modulate state
	     pass in  proto tcp	from any to any	port 25	flags S/SFRA modulate state

       Note that modulated connections will not	recover	when the  state	 table
       is  lost	 (firewall  reboot,  flushing the state	table, etc...).	 pf(4)
       will not	be able	to infer a connection  again  after  the  state	 table
       flushes	the  connection's modulator.  When the state is	lost, the con-
       nection may be left dangling until the respective  endpoints  time  out
       the  connection.	  It  is possible on a fast local network for the end-
       points to start an ACK storm while trying to  resynchronize  after  the
       loss  of	 the  modulator.  The default flags settings (or a more	strict
       equivalent) should be used on  modulate	state  rules  to  prevent  ACK
       storms.

       Note  that  alternative	methods	 are  available	to prevent loss	of the
       state table and allow for firewall failover.  See carp(4) and pfsync(4)
       for further information.

SYN PROXY
       By default, pf(4) passes	packets	that are part of  a  tcp(4)  handshake
       between	the endpoints.	The synproxy state option can be used to cause
       pf(4) itself to complete	the handshake with the active  endpoint,  per-
       form  a	handshake  with	the passive endpoint, and then forward packets
       between the endpoints.

       No packets are sent to the passive endpoint before the active  endpoint
       has  completed  the  handshake, hence so-called SYN floods with spoofed
       source addresses	will not reach the passive  endpoint,  as  the	sender
       can't complete the handshake.

       The proxy is transparent	to both	endpoints, they	each see a single con-
       nection	from/to	 the other endpoint.  pf(4) chooses random initial se-
       quence numbers for both handshakes.  Once the handshakes	are completed,
       the sequence number modulators  (see  previous  section)	 are  used  to
       translate  further  packets of the connection.  synproxy	state includes
       modulate	state.

       Rules with synproxy will	not work if pf(4) operates on a	bridge(4).

       Example:

	     pass in proto tcp from any	to any port www	synproxy state

STATEFUL TRACKING OPTIONS
       A number	of options related to stateful tracking	can be	applied	 on  a
       per-rule	 basis.	 keep state, modulate state and	synproxy state support
       these options, and keep state must be specified explicitly to apply op-
       tions to	a rule.

       max <number>
	     Limits the	number of concurrent states the	rule may create.  When
	     this limit	is reached, further packets that  would	 create	 state
	     will not match this rule until existing states time out.
       no-sync
	     Prevent  state  changes  for states created by this rule from ap-
	     pearing on	the pfsync(4) interface.
       <timeout> <seconds>
	     Changes the timeout values	used for states	created	by this	 rule.
	     For a list	of all valid timeout names, see	"OPTIONS" above.
       sloppy
	     Uses a sloppy TCP connection tracker that does not	check sequence
	     numbers  at  all, which makes insertion and ICMP teardown attacks
	     way easier.  This is intended to be used in situations where  one
	     does  not	see  all  packets  of a	connection, e.g. in asymmetric
	     routing situations.  Cannot be used  with	modulate  or  synproxy
	     state.

       Multiple	options	can be specified, separated by commas:

	     pass in proto tcp from any	to any \
		   port	www keep state \
		   (max	100, source-track rule,	max-src-nodes 75, \
		   max-src-states 3, tcp.established 60, tcp.closing 5)

       When  the  source-track	keyword	is specified, the number of states per
       source IP is tracked.

       source-track rule
	     The maximum number	of states created by this rule is  limited  by
	     the  rule's max-src-nodes and max-src-states options.  Only state
	     entries created by	this particular	rule count toward  the	rule's
	     limits.
       source-track global
	     The number	of states created by all rules that use	this option is
	     limited.	Each  rule  can	 specify  different  max-src-nodes and
	     max-src-states options, however state entries created by any par-
	     ticipating	rule count towards each	individual rule's limits.

       The following limits can	be set:

       max-src-nodes <number>
	     Limits the	maximum	number of source addresses which can  simulta-
	     neously have state	table entries.
       max-src-states <number>
	     Limits  the  maximum  number of simultaneous state	entries	that a
	     single source address can create with this	rule.

       For stateful TCP	connections, limits on established  connections	 (con-
       nections	 which have completed the TCP 3-way handshake) can also	be en-
       forced per source IP.

       max-src-conn <number>
	     Limits the	maximum	number of simultaneous TCP  connections	 which
	     have completed the	3-way handshake	that a single host can make.
       max-src-conn-rate <number> / <seconds>
	     Limit the rate of new connections over a time interval.  The con-
	     nection rate is an	approximation calculated as a moving average.

       Because	the 3-way handshake ensures that the source address is not be-
       ing spoofed, more aggressive action can be taken	based on these limits.
       With the	overload <table> state option, source IP addresses  which  hit
       either  of  the	limits on established connections will be added	to the
       named table.  This table	can be used in the ruleset  to	block  further
       activity	 from  the offending host, redirect it to a tarpit process, or
       restrict	its bandwidth.

       The optional flush keyword kills	all states  created  by	 the  matching
       rule  which  originate  from  the host which exceeds these limits.  The
       global modifier to the flush command kills all states originating  from
       the offending host, regardless of which rule created the	state.

       For  example,  the  following  rules will protect the webserver against
       hosts making more than 100 connections in 10 seconds.  Any  host	 which
       connects	 faster	 than  this  rate  will	 have its address added	to the
       <bad_hosts> table and have all states originating from it flushed.  Any
       new packets arriving from this host will	be dropped unconditionally  by
       the block rule.

	     block quick from <bad_hosts>
	     pass in on	$ext_if	proto tcp to $webserver	port www keep state \
		     (max-src-conn-rate	100/10,	overload <bad_hosts> flush global)

OPERATING SYSTEM FINGERPRINTING
       Passive	OS  Fingerprinting  is a mechanism to inspect nuances of a TCP
       connection's initial SYN	packet and guess at the	host's operating  sys-
       tem.   Unfortunately these nuances are easily spoofed by	an attacker so
       the fingerprint is not useful in	making security	 decisions.   But  the
       fingerprint is typically	accurate enough	to make	policy decisions upon.

       The  fingerprints  may  be specified by operating system	class, by ver-
       sion, or	by subtype/patchlevel.	The class of an	 operating  system  is
       typically  the vendor or	genre and would	be OpenBSD for the pf(4) fire-
       wall itself.  The version of the	oldest available  OpenBSD  release  on
       the main	FTP site would be 2.6 and the fingerprint would	be written

	     "OpenBSD 2.6"

       The  subtype  of	 an operating system is	typically used to describe the
       patchlevel if that patch	led to changes in the TCP stack	behavior.   In
       the  case  of  OpenBSD,	the only subtype is for	a fingerprint that was
       normalized by the no-df scrub option and	would be specified as

	     "OpenBSD 3.3 no-df"

       Fingerprints  for  most	popular	 operating  systems  are  provided  by
       pf.os(5).   Once	 pf(4)	is running, a complete list of known operating
       system fingerprints may be listed by running:

	     # pfctl -so

       Filter rules can	enforce	policy at any level of operating system	speci-
       fication	assuming a fingerprint is present.  Policy could limit traffic
       to approved operating systems or	 even  ban  traffic  from  hosts  that
       aren't at the latest service pack.

       The  unknown class can also be used as the fingerprint which will match
       packets for which no operating system fingerprint is known.

       Examples:

	     pass  out proto tcp from any os OpenBSD
	     block out proto tcp from any os Doors
	     block out proto tcp from any os "Doors PT"
	     block out proto tcp from any os "Doors PT SP3"
	     block out from any	os "unknown"
	     pass on lo0 proto tcp from	any os "OpenBSD	3.3 lo0"

       Operating system	fingerprinting is limited only to the TCP SYN  packet.
       This  means that	it will	not work on other protocols and	will not match
       a currently established connection.

       Caveat: operating system	fingerprints are  occasionally	wrong.	 There
       are  three problems: an attacker	can trivially craft his	packets	to ap-
       pear as any operating system he	chooses;  an  operating	 system	 patch
       could change the	stack behavior and no fingerprints will	match it until
       the  database  is  updated; and multiple	operating systems may have the
       same fingerprint.

BLOCKING SPOOFED TRAFFIC
       "Spoofing" is the faking	of IP addresses, typically for malicious  pur-
       poses.	The antispoof directive	expands	to a set of filter rules which
       will block all traffic with a source IP from  the  network(s)  directly
       connected  to  the  specified  interface(s)  from  entering  the	system
       through any other interface.

       For example, the	line

	     antispoof for lo0

       expands to

	     block drop	in on !	lo0 inet from 127.0.0.1/8 to any
	     block drop	in on !	lo0 inet6 from ::1 to any

       For non-loopback	interfaces, there are additional rules to block	incom-
       ing packets with	a source  IP  address  identical  to  the  interface's
       IP(s).	For  example,  assuming	the interface wi0 had an IP address of
       10.0.0.1	and a netmask of 255.255.255.0,	the line

	     antispoof for wi0 inet

       expands to

	     block drop	in on !	wi0 inet from 10.0.0.0/24 to any
	     block drop	in inet	from 10.0.0.1 to any

       Caveat: Rules created by	the antispoof directive	interfere with packets
       sent over loopback interfaces to	 local	addresses.   One  should  pass
       these explicitly.

FRAGMENT HANDLING
       The size	of IP datagrams	(packets) can be significantly larger than the
       maximum	transmission  unit  (MTU) of the network.  In cases when it is
       necessary or more efficient to  send  such  large  packets,  the	 large
       packet  will be fragmented into many smaller packets that will each fit
       onto the	wire.  Unfortunately for a firewalling device, only the	 first
       logical	fragment will contain the necessary header information for the
       subprotocol that	allows pf(4) to	filter on things such as TCP ports  or
       to perform NAT.

       Besides	the use	of scrub rules as described in "TRAFFIC	NORMALIZATION"
       above, there are	three options for handling  fragments  in  the	packet
       filter.

       One  alternative	 is  to	filter individual fragments with filter	rules.
       If no scrub rule	applies	to a fragment, it is  passed  to  the  filter.
       Filter  rules  with  matching  IP  header parameters decide whether the
       fragment	is passed or blocked, in the same way as complete packets  are
       filtered.   Without reassembly, fragments can only be filtered based on
       IP header fields	(source/destination address, protocol),	since  subpro-
       tocol  header  fields  are  not	available  (TCP/UDP port numbers, ICMP
       code/type).  The	fragment option	can be used to restrict	 filter	 rules
       to  apply  only	to  fragments, but not complete	packets.  Filter rules
       without the fragment option still apply	to  fragments,	if  they  only
       specify IP header fields.  For instance,	the rule

	     pass in proto tcp from any	to any port 80

       never  applies  to  a  fragment,	 even if the fragment is part of a TCP
       packet with destination port 80,	because	without	reassembly this	infor-
       mation is not available for each	fragment.  This	also means that	 frag-
       ments  cannot  create  new or match existing state table	entries, which
       makes stateful filtering	and address translation	(NAT, redirection) for
       fragments impossible.

       It's also possible to reassemble	only certain fragments	by  specifying
       source  or  destination	addresses  or protocols	as parameters in scrub
       rules.

       In most cases, the benefits of reassembly outweigh the additional  mem-
       ory  cost,  and	it's  recommended to use scrub rules to	reassemble all
       fragments via the fragment reassemble modifier.

       The  memory  allocated  for  fragment  caching  can  be	limited	 using
       pfctl(8).   Once	this limit is reached, fragments that would have to be
       cached are dropped until	other entries time out.	 The timeout value can
       also be adjusted.

       When forwarding reassembled IPv6	packets, pf refragments	them with  the
       original	 maximum  fragment  size.  This	allows the sender to determine
       the optimal fragment size by path MTU discovery.

ANCHORS
       Besides the main	ruleset, pfctl(8) can load rulesets  into  anchor  at-
       tachment	points.	 An anchor is a	container that can hold	rules, address
       tables, and other anchors.

       An  anchor  has	a  name	which specifies	the path where pfctl(8)	can be
       used to access the anchor to perform operations on it, such as  attach-
       ing  child  anchors  to	it  or	loading	rules into it.	Anchors	may be
       nested, with components separated by `/'	 characters,  similar  to  how
       file system hierarchies are laid	out.  The main ruleset is actually the
       default	anchor,	so filter and translation rules, for example, may also
       be contained in any anchor.

       An anchor can reference another anchor attachment point using the  fol-
       lowing kinds of rules:

       nat-anchor <name>
	     Evaluates the nat rules in	the specified anchor.

       rdr-anchor <name>
	     Evaluates the rdr rules in	the specified anchor.

       binat-anchor <name>
	     Evaluates the binat rules in the specified	anchor.

       anchor <name>
	     Evaluates the filter rules	in the specified anchor.

       load anchor <name> from <file>
	     Loads the rules from the specified	file into the anchor name.

       When  evaluation	of the main ruleset reaches an anchor rule, pf(4) will
       proceed to evaluate all rules specified in that anchor.

       Matching	filter and translation rules marked with the quick option  are
       final  and  abort  the evaluation of the	rules in other anchors and the
       main ruleset.  If the anchor itself is marked with  the	quick  option,
       ruleset	evaluation  will  terminate  when  the anchor is exited	if the
       packet is matched by any	rule within the	anchor.

       anchor rules are	evaluated relative to the anchor  in  which  they  are
       contained.  For example,	all anchor rules specified in the main ruleset
       will  reference	anchor	attachment points underneath the main ruleset,
       and anchor rules	specified in a file loaded from	 a  load  anchor  rule
       will be attached	under that anchor point.

       Rules may be contained in anchor	attachment points which	do not contain
       any  rules  when	the main ruleset is loaded, and	later such anchors can
       be manipulated through pfctl(8) without reloading the main  ruleset  or
       other anchors.  For example,

	     ext_if = "kue0"
	     block on $ext_if all
	     anchor spam
	     pass out on $ext_if all
	     pass in on	$ext_if	proto tcp from any \
		   to $ext_if port smtp

       blocks all packets on the external interface by default,	then evaluates
       all  rules  in the anchor named "spam", and finally passes all outgoing
       connections and incoming	connections to port 25.

	     # echo "block in quick from 1.2.3.4 to any" | \
		   pfctl -a spam -f -

       This loads a single rule	into the anchor, which blocks all packets from
       a specific address.

       The anchor can also be populated	by adding a load anchor	rule after the
       anchor rule:

	     anchor spam
	     load anchor spam from "/etc/pf-spam.conf"

       When pfctl(8) loads pf.conf, it will also load all the rules  from  the
       file /etc/pf-spam.conf into the anchor.

       Optionally,  anchor rules can specify packet filtering parameters using
       the same	syntax as filter rules.	 When parameters are used, the	anchor
       rule  is	 only evaluated	for matching packets.  This allows conditional
       evaluation of anchors, like:

	     block on $ext_if all
	     anchor spam proto tcp from	any to any port	smtp
	     pass out on $ext_if all
	     pass in on	$ext_if	proto tcp from any to $ext_if port smtp

       The rules inside	anchor spam are	only evaluated for  tcp	 packets  with
       destination port	25.  Hence,

	     # echo "block in quick from 1.2.3.4 to any" | \
		   pfctl -a spam -f -

       will only block connections from	1.2.3.4	to port	25.

       Anchors may end with the	asterisk (`*') character, which	signifies that
       all anchors attached at that point should be evaluated in the alphabet-
       ical ordering of	their anchor name.  For	example,

	     anchor "spam/*"

       will  evaluate  each  rule  in each anchor attached to the spam anchor.
       Note that it will only evaluate anchors that are	directly  attached  to
       the spam	anchor,	and will not descend to	evaluate anchors recursively.

       Since  anchors  are  evaluated relative to the anchor in	which they are
       contained, there	is a mechanism for accessing the parent	 and  ancestor
       anchors	of  a  given anchor.  Similar to file system path name resolu-
       tion, if	the sequence ".." appears as an	 anchor	 path  component,  the
       parent  anchor  of  the	current	 anchor	in the path evaluation at that
       point will become the new current anchor.  As an	example, consider  the
       following:

	     # echo ' anchor "spam/allowed" ' |	pfctl -f -
	     # echo -e ' anchor	"../banned" \n pass' | \
		   pfctl -a spam/allowed -f -

       Evaluation  of the main ruleset will lead into the spam/allowed anchor,
       which will evaluate the rules in	the spam/banned	anchor,	if any,	before
       finally evaluating the pass rule.

       Filter rule anchors can also be loaded inline in	the ruleset  within  a
       brace  ('{'  '}')  delimited block.  Brace delimited blocks may contain
       rules or	other brace-delimited blocks.  When anchors  are  loaded  this
       way the anchor name becomes optional.

	     anchor "external" on egress {
		     block
		     anchor out	{
			     pass proto	tcp from any to	port { 25, 80, 443 }
		     }
		     pass in proto tcp to any port 22
	     }

       Since the parser	specification for anchor names is a string, any	refer-
       ence  to	 an  anchor name containing `/'	characters will	require	double
       quote (`"') characters around the anchor	name.

TRANSLATION EXAMPLES
       This example maps incoming requests on port 80 to port 8080, on which a
       daemon is running (because, for example,	it is not  run	as  root,  and
       therefore lacks permission to bind to port 80).

       # use a macro for the interface name, so	it can be changed easily
       ext_if =	"ne3"

       # map daemon on 8080 to appear to be on 80
       rdr on $ext_if proto tcp	from any to any	port 80	-> 127.0.0.1 port 8080

       If  the	pass  modifier is given, packets matching the translation rule
       are passed without inspecting the filter	rules:

       rdr pass	on $ext_if proto tcp from any to any port 80 ->	127.0.0.1 \
	     port 8080

       In the example below, vlan12 is configured as  192.168.168.1;  the  ma-
       chine   translates   all	  packets   coming  from  192.168.168.0/24  to
       204.92.77.111 when they are going  out  any  interface  except  vlan12.
       This  has  the  net  effect of making traffic from the 192.168.168.0/24
       network	appear	as  though  it	is  the	 Internet   routable   address
       204.92.77.111  to  nodes	 behind	any interface on the router except for
       the  nodes  on  vlan12.	 (Thus,	 192.168.168.1	 can   talk   to   the
       192.168.168.0/24	nodes.)

       nat on !	vlan12 from 192.168.168.0/24 to	any -> 204.92.77.111

       In  the	example	 below,	 the  machine  sits  between  a	 fake internal
       144.19.74.*  network, and a routable external IP	of 204.92.77.100.  The
       no nat rule excludes protocol AH	from being translated.

       # NO NAT
       no nat on $ext_if proto ah from 144.19.74.0/24 to any
       nat on $ext_if from 144.19.74.0/24 to any -> 204.92.77.100

       In the example below, packets bound for one specific server, as well as
       those generated by the sysadmins	are not	proxied; all other connections
       are.

       # NO RDR
       no rdr on $int_if proto { tcp, udp } from any to	$server	port 80
       no rdr on $int_if proto { tcp, udp } from $sysadmins to any port	80
       rdr on $int_if proto { tcp, udp } from any to any port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 \
	     port 80

       This longer example uses	both a NAT and a  redirection.	 The  external
       interface has the address 157.161.48.183.  On localhost,	we are running
       ftp-proxy(8),  waiting  for  FTP	 sessions to be	redirected to it.  The
       three mandatory anchors for ftp-proxy(8)	are omitted from this example;
       see the ftp-proxy(8) manpage.

       # NAT
       # Translate outgoing packets' source addresses (any protocol).
       # In this case, any address but the gateway's external address is mapped.
       nat on $ext_if inet from	! ($ext_if) to any -> ($ext_if)

       # NAT PROXYING
       # Map outgoing packets' source port to an assigned proxy	port instead of
       # an arbitrary port.
       # In this case, proxy outgoing isakmp with port 500 on the gateway.
       nat on $ext_if inet proto udp from any port = isakmp to any -> ($ext_if)	\
	     port 500

       # BINAT
       # Translate outgoing packets' source address (any protocol).
       # Translate incoming packets' destination address to an internal	machine
       # (bidirectional).
       binat on	$ext_if	from 10.1.2.150	to any -> $ext_if

       # RDR
       # Translate incoming packets' destination addresses.
       # As an example,	redirect a TCP and UDP port to an internal machine.
       rdr on $ext_if inet proto tcp from any to ($ext_if) port	8080 \
	     ->	10.1.2.151 port	22
       rdr on $ext_if inet proto udp from any to ($ext_if) port	8080 \
	     ->	10.1.2.151 port	53

       # RDR
       # Translate outgoing ftp	control	connections to send them to localhost
       # for proxying with ftp-proxy(8)	running	on port	8021.
       rdr on $int_if proto tcp	from any to any	port 21	-> 127.0.0.1 port 8021

       In this example,	a NAT gateway is set  up  to  translate	 internal  ad-
       dresses	using  a pool of public	addresses (192.0.2.16/28) and to redi-
       rect incoming web server	connections to a group of web servers  on  the
       internal	network.

       # NAT LOAD BALANCE
       # Translate outgoing packets' source addresses using an address pool.
       # A given source	address	is always translated to	the same pool address by
       # using the source-hash keyword.
       nat on $ext_if inet from	any to any -> 192.0.2.16/28 source-hash

       # RDR ROUND ROBIN
       # Translate incoming web	server connections to a	group of web servers on
       # the internal network.
       rdr on $ext_if proto tcp	from any to any	port 80	\
	     ->	{ 10.1.2.155, 10.1.2.160, 10.1.2.161 } round-robin

FILTER EXAMPLES
       # The external interface	is kue0
       # (157.161.48.183, the only routable address)
       # and the private network is 10.0.0.0/8,	for which we are doing NAT.

       # use a macro for the interface name, so	it can be changed easily
       ext_if =	"kue0"

       # normalize all incoming	traffic
       scrub in	on $ext_if all fragment	reassemble

       # block and log everything by default
       block return log	on $ext_if all

       # block anything	coming from source we have no back routes for
       block in	from no-route to any

       # block packets whose ingress interface does not	match the one in
       # the route back	to their source	address
       block in	from urpf-failed to any

       # block and log outgoing	packets	that do	not have our address as	source,
       # they are either spoofed or something is misconfigured (NAT disabled,
       # for instance),	we want	to be nice and do not send out garbage.
       block out log quick on $ext_if from ! 157.161.48.183 to any

       # silently drop broadcasts (cable modem noise)
       block in	quick on $ext_if from any to 255.255.255.255

       # block and log incoming	packets	from reserved address space and	invalid
       # addresses, they are either spoofed or misconfigured, we cannot	reply to
       # them anyway (hence, no	return-rst).
       block in	log quick on $ext_if from { 10.0.0.0/8,	172.16.0.0/12, \
	     192.168.0.0/16, 255.255.255.255/32	} to any

       # ICMP

       # pass out/in certain ICMP queries and keep state (ping)
       # state matching	is done	on host	addresses and ICMP id (not type/code),
       # so replies (like 0/0 for 8/0) will match queries
       # ICMP error messages (which always refer to a TCP/UDP packet) are
       # handled by the	TCP/UDP	states
       pass on $ext_if inet proto icmp all icmp-type 8 code 0

       # UDP

       # pass out all UDP connections and keep state
       pass out	on $ext_if proto udp all

       # pass in certain UDP connections and keep state	(DNS)
       pass in on $ext_if proto	udp from any to	any port domain

       # TCP

       # pass out all TCP connections and modulate state
       pass out	on $ext_if proto tcp all modulate state

       # pass in certain TCP connections and keep state	(SSH, SMTP, DNS, IDENT)
       pass in on $ext_if proto	tcp from any to	any port { ssh,	smtp, domain, \
	     auth }

       # Do not	allow Windows 9x SMTP connections since	they are typically
       # a viral worm. Alternately we could limit these	OSes to	1 connection each.
       block in	on $ext_if proto tcp from any os {"Windows 95",	"Windows 98"} \
	     to	any port smtp

       # IPv6
       # pass in/out all IPv6 traffic: note that we have to enable this	in two
       # different ways, on both our physical interface	and our	tunnel
       pass quick on gif0 inet6
       pass quick on $ext_if proto ipv6

       # Packet	Tagging

       # three interfaces: $int_if, $ext_if, and $wifi_if (wireless). NAT is
       # being done on $ext_if for all outgoing	packets. tag packets in	on
       # $int_if and pass those	tagged packets out on $ext_if.	all other
       # outgoing packets (i.e., packets from the wireless network) are	only
       # permitted to access port 80.

       pass in on $int_if from any to any tag INTNET
       pass in on $wifi_if from	any to any

       block out on $ext_if from any to	any
       pass out	quick on $ext_if tagged	INTNET
       pass out	on $ext_if proto tcp from any to any port 80

       # tag incoming packets as they are redirected to	spamd(8). use the tag
       # to pass those packets through the packet filter.

       rdr on $ext_if inet proto tcp from <spammers> to	port smtp \
	       tag SPAMD -> 127.0.0.1 port spamd

       block in	on $ext_if
       pass in on $ext_if inet proto tcp tagged	SPAMD

GRAMMAR
       Syntax for pf.conf in BNF:

       line	      =	( option | pf-rule | nat-rule |	binat-rule | rdr-rule |
			antispoof-rule | altq-rule | queue-rule	| trans-anchors	|
			anchor-rule | anchor-close | load-anchor | table-rule |
			include	)

       option	      =	"set" (	[ "timeout" ( timeout |	"{" timeout-list "}" ) ] |
			[ "ruleset-optimization" [ "none" | "basic" | "profile"	]] |
			[ "optimization" [ "default" | "normal"	|
			"high-latency" | "satellite" |
			"aggressive" | "conservative" ]	]
			[ "limit" ( limit-item | "{" limit-list	"}" ) ]	|
			[ "loginterface" ( interface-name | "none" ) ] |
			[ "block-policy" ( "drop" | "return" ) ] |
			[ "state-policy" ( "if-bound" |	"floating" ) ]
			[ "state-defaults" state-opts ]
			[ "require-order" ( "yes" | "no" ) ]
			[ "fingerprints" filename ] |
			[ "skip	on" ifspec ] |
			[ "debug" ( "none" | "urgent" |	"misc" | "loud"	) ] )

       pf-rule	      =	action [ ( "in"	| "out"	) ]
			[ "log"	[ "(" logopts ")"] ] [ "quick" ]
			[ "on" ifspec ]	[ route	] [ af ] [ protospec ]
			hosts [	filteropt-list ]

       logopts	      =	logopt [ "," logopts ]
       logopt	      =	"all" |	"user" | "to" interface-name

       filteropt-list =	filteropt-list filteropt | filteropt
       filteropt      =	user | group | flags | icmp-type | icmp6-type |	"tos" tos |
			( "no" | "keep"	| "modulate" | "synproxy" ) "state"
			[ "(" state-opts ")" ] |
			"fragment" | "no-df" | "min-ttl" number	| "set-tos" tos	|
			"max-mss" number | "random-id" | "reassemble tcp" |
			fragmentation |	"allow-opts" |
			"label"	string | "tag" string |	[ ! ] "tagged" string |
			"set prio" ( number | "(" number [ [ "," ] number ] ")"	) |
			"queue"	( string | "(" string [	[ "," ]	string ] ")" ) |
			"rtable" number	| "probability"	number"%" | "prio" number

       nat-rule	      =	[ "no" ] "nat" [ "pass"	[ "log"	[ "(" logopts ")" ] ] ]
			[ "on" ifspec ]	[ af ]
			[ protospec ] hosts [ "tag" string ] [ "tagged"	string ]
			[ "->" ( redirhost | "{" redirhost-list	"}" )
			[ portspec ] [ pooltype	] [ "static-port" ] ]

       binat-rule     =	[ "no" ] "binat" [ "pass" [ "log" [ "("	logopts	")" ] ]	]
			[ "on" interface-name ]	[ af ]
			[ "proto" ( proto-name | proto-number )	]
			"from" address [ "/" mask-bits ] "to" ipspec
			[ "tag"	string ] [ "tagged" string ]
			[ "->" address [ "/" mask-bits ] ]

       rdr-rule	      =	[ "no" ] "rdr" [ "pass"	[ "log"	[ "(" logopts ")" ] ] ]
			[ "on" ifspec ]	[ af ]
			[ protospec ] hosts [ "tag" string ] [ "tagged"	string ]
			[ "->" ( redirhost | "{" redirhost-list	"}" )
			[ portspec ] [ pooltype	] ]

       antispoof-rule =	"antispoof" [ "log" ] [	"quick"	]
			"for" ifspec [ af ] [ "label" string ]

       table-rule     =	"table"	"<" string ">" [ tableopts-list	]
       tableopts-list =	tableopts-list tableopts | tableopts
       tableopts      =	"persist" | "const" | "counters" | "file" string |
			"{" [ tableaddr-list ] "}"
       tableaddr-list =	tableaddr-list [ "," ] tableaddr-spec |	tableaddr-spec
       tableaddr-spec =	[ "!" ]	tableaddr [ "/"	mask-bits ]
       tableaddr      =	hostname | ifspec | "self" |
			ipv4-dotted-quad | ipv6-coloned-hex

       altq-rule      =	"altq on" interface-name queueopts-list
			"queue"	subqueue
       queue-rule     =	"queue"	string [ "on" interface-name ] queueopts-list
			subqueue

       anchor-rule    =	"anchor" [ string ] [ (	"in" | "out" ) ] [ "on"	ifspec ]
			[ af ] [ protospec ] [ hosts ] [ filteropt-list	] [ "{"	]

       anchor-close   =	"}"

       trans-anchors  =	( "nat-anchor" | "rdr-anchor" |	"binat-anchor" ) string
			[ "on" ifspec ]	[ af ] [ "proto" ] [ protospec ] [ hosts ]

       load-anchor    =	"load anchor" string "from" filename

       queueopts-list =	queueopts-list queueopts | queueopts
       queueopts      =	[ "bandwidth" bandwidth-spec ] |
			[ "qlimit" number ] | [	"tbrsize" number ] |
			[ "priority" number ] |	[ schedulers ]
       schedulers     =	( cbq-def | priq-def | hfsc-def	)
       bandwidth-spec =	"number" ( "b" | "Kb" |	"Mb" | "Gb" | "%" )

       action	      =	"pass" | "block" [ return ] | [	"no" ] "scrub"
       return	      =	"drop" | "return" | "return-rst" [ "( ttl" number ")" ]	|
			"return-icmp" [	"(" icmpcode [ [ "," ] icmp6code ] ")" ] |
			"return-icmp6" [ "(" icmp6code ")" ]
       icmpcode	      =	( icmp-code-name | icmp-code-number )
       icmp6code      =	( icmp6-code-name | icmp6-code-number )

       ifspec	      =	( [ "!"	] ( interface-name | interface-group ) ) |
			"{" interface-list "}"
       interface-list =	[ "!" ]	( interface-name | interface-group )
			[ [ ","	] interface-list ]
       route	      =	( "route-to" | "reply-to" | "dup-to" )
			( routehost | "{" routehost-list "}" )
			[ pooltype ]
       af	      =	"inet" | "inet6"

       protospec      =	"proto"	( proto-name | proto-number |
			"{" proto-list "}" )
       proto-list     =	( proto-name | proto-number ) [	[ "," ]	proto-list ]

       hosts	      =	"all" |
			"from" ( "any" | "no-route" | "urpf-failed" | "self" | host |
			"{" host-list "}" ) [ port ] [ os ]
			"to"   ( "any" | "no-route" | "self" | host |
			"{" host-list "}" ) [ port ]

       ipspec	      =	"any" |	host | "{" host-list "}"
       host	      =	[ "!" ]	( address [ "/"	mask-bits ] | "<" string ">" )
       redirhost      =	address	[ "/" mask-bits	]
       routehost      =	"(" interface-name [ address [ "/" mask-bits ] ] ")"
       address	      =	( interface-name | interface-group |
			"(" ( interface-name | interface-group ) ")" |
			hostname | ipv4-dotted-quad | ipv6-coloned-hex )
       host-list      =	host [ [ "," ] host-list ]
       redirhost-list =	redirhost [ [ "," ] redirhost-list ]
       routehost-list =	routehost [ [ "," ] routehost-list ]

       port	      =	"port" ( unary-op | binary-op |	"{" op-list "}"	)
       portspec	      =	"port" ( number	| name ) [ ":" ( "*" | number |	name ) ]
       os	      =	"os"  (	os-name	| "{" os-list "}" )
       user	      =	"user" ( unary-op | binary-op |	"{" op-list "}"	)
       group	      =	"group"	( unary-op | binary-op | "{" op-list "}" )

       unary-op	      =	[ "=" |	"!=" | "<" | "<=" | ">"	| ">=" ]
			( name | number	)
       binary-op      =	number ( "<>" |	"><" | ":" ) number
       op-list	      =	( unary-op | binary-op ) [ [ "," ] op-list ]

       os-name	      =	operating-system-name
       os-list	      =	os-name	[ [ ","	] os-list ]

       flags	      =	"flags"	( [ flag-set ] "/"  flag-set | "any" )
       flag-set	      =	[ "F" ]	[ "S" ]	[ "R" ]	[ "P" ]	[ "A" ]	[ "U" ]	[ "E" ]
			[ "W" ]

       icmp-type      =	"icmp-type" ( icmp-type-code | "{" icmp-list "}" )
       icmp6-type     =	"icmp6-type" ( icmp-type-code |	"{" icmp-list "}" )
       icmp-type-code =	( icmp-type-name | icmp-type-number )
			[ "code" ( icmp-code-name | icmp-code-number ) ]
       icmp-list      =	icmp-type-code [ [ "," ] icmp-list ]

       tos	      =	( "lowdelay" | "throughput" | "reliability" |
			[ "0x" ] number	)

       state-opts     =	state-opt [ [ "," ] state-opts ]
       state-opt      =	( "max"	number | "no-sync" | timeout | "sloppy"	|
			"source-track" [ ( "rule" | "global" ) ] |
			"max-src-nodes"	number | "max-src-states" number |
			"max-src-conn" number |
			"max-src-conn-rate" number "/" number |
			"overload" "<" string ">" [ "flush" ] |
			"if-bound" | "floating"	)

       fragmentation  =	[ "fragment reassemble"	]

       timeout-list   =	timeout	[ [ ","	] timeout-list ]
       timeout	      =	( "tcp.first" |	"tcp.opening" |	"tcp.established" |
			"tcp.closing" |	"tcp.finwait" |	"tcp.closed" |
			"udp.first" | "udp.single" | "udp.multiple" |
			"icmp.first" | "icmp.error" |
			"other.first" |	"other.single" | "other.multiple" |
			"frag" | "interval" | "src.track" |
			"adaptive.start" | "adaptive.end" ) number

       limit-list     =	limit-item [ [ "," ] limit-list	]
       limit-item     =	( "states" | "frags" | "src-nodes" ) number

       pooltype	      =	( "bitmask" | "random" |
			"source-hash" [	( hex-key | string-key ) ] |
			"round-robin" )	[ sticky-address ]

       subqueue	      =	string | "{" queue-list	"}"
       queue-list     =	string [ [ "," ] string	]
       cbq-def	      =	"cbq" [	"(" cbq-opt [ [	"," ] cbq-opt ]	")" ]
       priq-def	      =	"priq" [ "(" priq-opt [	[ "," ]	priq-opt ] ")" ]
       hfsc-def	      =	"hfsc" [ "(" hfsc-opt [	[ "," ]	hfsc-opt ] ")" ]
       cbq-opt	      =	( "default" | "borrow" | "red" | "ecn" | "rio" )
       priq-opt	      =	( "default" | "red" | "ecn" | "rio" )
       hfsc-opt	      =	( "default" | "red" | "ecn" | "rio" |
			linkshare-sc | realtime-sc | upperlimit-sc )
       linkshare-sc   =	"linkshare" sc-spec
       realtime-sc    =	"realtime" sc-spec
       upperlimit-sc  =	"upperlimit" sc-spec
       sc-spec	      =	( bandwidth-spec |
			"(" bandwidth-spec number bandwidth-spec ")" )
       include	      =	"include" filename

FILES
       /etc/hosts      Host name database.
       /etc/pf.conf    Default	location of the	ruleset	file.  The file	has to
		       be created manually as it is not	installed with a stan-
		       dard installation.
       /etc/pf.os      Default location	of OS fingerprints.
       /etc/protocols  Protocol	name database.
       /etc/services   Service name database.

SEE ALSO
       altq(4),	carp(4), icmp(4), icmp6(4), ip(4), ip6(4),  pf(4),  pfsync(4),
       tcp(4),	 udp(4),   hosts(5),   pf.os(5),   protocols(5),  services(5),
       ftp-proxy(8), pfctl(8), pflogd(8)

HISTORY
       The pf.conf file	format first appeared in OpenBSD 3.0.

FreeBSD	12.2			March 10, 2019			    PF.CONF(5)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=pf.conf&sektion=5&manpath=FreeBSD+12.2-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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