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IPNAT(5)		      File Formats Manual		      IPNAT(5)

NAME
       ipnat, ipnat.conf - IPFilter NAT	file format

DESCRIPTION
       The  ipnat.conf	file  is used to specify rules for the Network Address
       Translation (NAT) component of IPFilter.	 To load  rules	 specified  in
       the ipnat.conf file, the	ipnat(8) program is used.

       For  standard  NAT functionality, a rule	should start with map and then
       proceeds	to specify the interface for which outgoing packets will  have
       their source address rewritten.	Following this it is expected that the
       old source address, and optionally port number, will be specified.

       In  general,  all  NAT rules conform to the following layout: the first
       word indicates what type	of NAT rule is present,	this  is  followed  by
       some  stanzas  to  match	 a packet, followed by a "->" and this is then
       followed	by several more	stanzas	describing the new data	to be  put  in
       the packet.

       In this text and	in others, use of the term "left hand side" (LHS) when
       talking	about  a  NAT rule refers to text that appears before the "->"
       and the "right hand side" (RHS) for text	that  appears  after  it.   In
       essence,	 the LHS is the	packet matching	and the	RHS is the new data to
       be used.

VARIABLES
       This configuration file,	like all others	used with  IPFilter,  supports
       the use of variable substitution	throughout the text.

       nif="ppp0";
       map $nif	0/0 -> 0/32

       would become

       map ppp0	0/0 -> 0/32

       Variables  can  be used recursively, such as 'foo="$bar baz";', so long
       as $bar exists when the parser reaches the assignment for foo.

       See ipnat(8) for	instructions on	how to define  variables  to  be  used
       from a shell environment.

OUTBOUND SOURCE	TRANSLATION (map'ing)
       Changing	 the source address of a packet	is traditionally performed us-
       ing map rules.  Both the	source address and optionally port number  can
       be changed according to various controls.

       To start	out with, a common rule	used is	of the form:

       map le0 0/0 -> 0/32

       Here we're saying change	the source address of all packets going	out of
       le0  (the address/mask pair of 0/0 matching all packets)	to that	of the
       interface le0 (0/32 is a	synonym	for the	interface's own	address	at the
       current point in	time.)	If we wanted to	pass the packet	 through  with
       no change in address, we	would write it as:

       map le0 0/0 -> 0/0

       If  we  only  want to change a portion of our internal network and to a
       different address that is routed	back through this host,	we might do:

       map le0 10.1.1.0/24 -> 192.168.55.3/32

       In some instances, we may have an entire	subnet	to  map	 internal  ad-
       dresses out onto, in which case we can express the translation as this:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.0/24

       IPFilter	  will	cycle  through	each  of  the  256  addresses  in  the
       192.168.55.0/24 address space to	ensure that they all get used.

       Of course this poses a problem for TCP and UDP, with  many  connections
       made,  each  with its own port number pair.  If we're unlucky, transla-
       tions can be dropped because the	new address/port pair mapping  already
       exists.	 To  mitigate this problem, we add in port translation or port
       mapping:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.0/24 portmap tcp/udp auto

       In this instance, the word "auto" tells IPFilter	to calculate a private
       range of	port numbers for each address on the LHS to use	 without  fear
       of  them	 being trampled	by others.  This can lead to problems if there
       are connections being generated more quickly than IPFilter  can	expire
       them.   In  this	 instance,  and	 if we want to get away	from a private
       range of	port numbers, we can say:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.0/24 portmap tcp/udp 5000:65000

       And now each connection through le0 will	add to the enumeration of  the
       port  number  space  5000-65000	as  well  as  the IP address subnet of
       192.168.55.0/24.

       If the new addresses to be used are in a	consecutive range, rather than
       a complete subnet, we can express this as:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> range 192.168.55.10-192.168.55.249
			     portmap tcp/udp 5000:65000

       This tells IPFilter that	it has a range of 240 IP address to use,  from
       192.168.55.10 to	192.168.55.249,	inclusive.

       If  there were several ranges of	addresses for use, we can use each one
       in a round-robin	fashion	as followed:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> range 192.168.55.10-192.168.55.29
			     portmap tcp/udp 5000:65000	round-robin
       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> range 192.168.55.40-192.168.55.49
			     portmap tcp/udp 5000:65000	round-robin

       To specify translation rules that impact	a specific  IP	protocol,  the
       protocol	name or	number is appended to the rule like this:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.0/24 tcp/udp
       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.1/32 icmp
       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.2/32 gre

       For TCP connections exiting a connection	such as	PPPoE where the	MTU is
       slightly	 smaller  than normal ethernet,	it can be useful to reduce the
       Maximum Segment Size (MSS) offered by the internal machines  to	match,
       reducing	the liklihood that the either end will attempt to send packets
       that  are  too big and result in	fragmentation.	This is	acheived using
       the mssclamp option with	TCP map	rules like this:

       map pppoe0 0/0 -> 0/32 mssclamp 1400 tcp

       For ICMP	packets, we can	map the	ICMP id	space in query packets:

       map le0 10.0.0.0/8 -> 192.168.55.1/32 icmpidmap icmp 1000:20000

       If we wish to be	more specific about our	initial	matching  criteria  on
       the  LHS,  we  can  expand  to  using  a	syntax more similar to that in
       ipf.conf(5) :

       map le0 from 10.0.0.0/8 to 26.0.0.0/8 ->
			     192.168.55.1
       map le0 from 10.0.0.0/8 port > 1024 to 26.0.0.0/8 ->
			     192.168.55.2 portmap 5000:9999 tcp/udp
       map le0 from 10.0.0.0/8 ! to 26.0.0.0/8 ->
			     192.168.55.3 portmap 5000:9999 tcp/udp

       NOTE:  negation matching	with source addresses is NOT possible with map
	      /	map-block rules.

       The NAT code has	builtin	default	timeouts for TCP, UDP,	ICMP  and  an-
       other for all other protocols.  In general, the timeout for an entry to
       be  deleted  shrinks once a reply packet	has been seen (excluding TCP.)
       If you wish to specify your own timeouts, this can be  achieved	either
       by setting one timeout for both directions:

       map le0 0/0 -> 0/32 gre age 30

       or setting a different timeout for the reply:

       map le0 from any	to any port = 53 -> 0/32 age 60/10 udp

       A  pressing  problem  that many people encounter	when using NAT is that
       the address protocol can	be embedded inside an application's communica-
       tion.  To address this problem, IPFilter	provides a number of  built-in
       proxies for the more common trouble makers, such	as FTP.	 These proxies
       can be used as follows:

       map le0 0/0 -> 0/32 proxy port 21 ftp/tcp

       In this rule, the word "proxy" tells us that we want to connect up this
       translation with	an internal proxy.  The	"port 21" is an	extra restric-
       tion that requires the destination port number to be 21 if this rule is
       to  be activated.  The word "ftp" is the	proxy identifier that the ker-
       nel will	try and	resolve	internally, "tcp" the  protocol	 that  packets
       must match.

       See below for a list of proxies and their relative staus.

       To  associate NAT rules with filtering rules, it	is possible to set and
       match tags during either	inbound	or outbound  processing.   At  present
       the tags	for forwarded packets are not preserved	by forwarding, so once
       the  packet  leaves  IPFilter, the tag is forgotten.  For map rules, we
       can match tags set by filter rules like this:

       map le0 0/0 -> 0/32 proxy portmap 5000:5999 tag lan1 tcp

       This would be used with "pass out" rules	that includes a	stanza such as
       "set-tag	(nat = lan1)".

       If the interface	in which packets are received is  different  from  the
       interface  on  which  packets  are  sent	out, then the translation rule
       needs to	be written to take this	into account:

       map hme0,le0 0/0	-> 0/32

       Although	this might seem	counterintuitive, the interfaces  when	listed
       in rules	for ipnat.conf are always in the inbound , outbound order.  In
       this case, hme0 would be	the return interface and le0 would be the out-
       going interface.	 If you	wish to	allow return packets on	any interface,
       the correct syntax to use would be:

       map *,le0 0/0 ->	0/32

       A  special variant of map rules exists, called map-block.  This command
       is intended for use when	there is a large network to be mapped  onto  a
       smaller	network, where the difference in netmasks is upto 14 bits dif-
       ference in size.	 This is achieved by dividing the  address  space  and
       port  space  up	to ensure that each source address has its own private
       range of	ports to use.  For example, this rule:

       map-block ppp0 172.192.0.0/16 ->	209.1.2.0/24 ports auto

       would result in 172.192.0.0/24 being mapped to 209.1.2.0/32  with  each
       address,	from 172.192.0.0 to 172.192.0.255 having 252 ports of its own.
       As  opposed  to	the  above  use	of map,	if for some reason the user of
       (say) 172.192.0.2 wanted	260 simultaneous connections going  out,  they
       would  be  limited  to 252 with map-block but would just	move on	to the
       next IP address with the	map command.

   Extended matching
       If it is	desirable to match on both the source  and  destination	 of  a
       packet  before  applying	 an  address  translation  to  it, this	can be
       achieved	by using the same from-to syntax as is	used  in  ipf.conf(5).
       What  follows  applies equally to the map rules discussed above and rdr
       rules discussed below.  A simple	example	is as follows:

       map bge0	from 10.1.0.0/16 to 192.168.1.0/24 -> 172.12.1.4

       This would only match packets that are coming from hosts	 that  have  a
       source	address	  matching  10.1.0.0/16	 and  a	 destination  matching
       192.168.1.0/24.	This can be expanded upon  with	 ports	for  TCP  like
       this:

       rdr bge0	from 10.1.0.0/16 to any	port = 25 -> 127.0.0.1 port 2501 tcp

       Where  only  TCP	packets	from 10.1.0.0/16 to port 25 will be redirected
       to port 2501.

       As with ipf.conf(5), if we have a large set of  networks	 or  addresses
       that we would like to match up with then	we can define a	pool using ip-
       pool(8)	in  ippool.conf(5)  and	then refer to it in an ipnat rule like
       this:

       map bge0	from pool/100 to any port = 25 -> 127.0.0.1 port 2501 tcp

       NOTE:  In this situation, the rule is considered	to have	a  netmask  of
	      "0"  and	thus  is looked	at last, after any rules with /16's or
	      /24's in them, even if the defined pool only has /24's or	/32's.
	      Pools may	also be	 used  wherever	 the  from-to  syntax  in  ip-
	      nat.conf(5) is allowed.

INBOUND	DESTINATION TRANSLATION	(redirection)
       Redirection  of	packets	 is used to change the destination fields in a
       packet and is supported for packets that	are moving in on a network in-
       terface.	 While the same	general	syntax for  map	 rules	is  supported,
       there are differences and limitations.

       Firstly,	 by  default all redirection rules target a single IP address,
       not a network or	range of network addresses, so	a  rule	 written  like
       this:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.0

       Will  not  spread  packets  across all 256 IP addresses in that class C
       network.	 If you	were to	try a rule like	this:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.0/24

       then you	will receive a parsing error.

       The from-to source-destination matching used with map rules can be used
       with rdr	rules, along with negation, however the	 restriction  moves  -
       only a source address match can be negated:

       rdr le0 from 1.1.0.0/16 to any -> 192.168.1.3
       rdr le0 ! from 1.1.0.0/16 to any	-> 192.168.1.4

       If  there is a consective set of	addresses you wish to spread the pack-
       ets over, then this can be done in one of two ways,  the	 word  "range"
       optional	to preserve:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.1 - 192.168.1.5
       rdr le0 0/0 -> range 192.168.1.1	- 192.168.1.5

       If there	are only two addresses to split	the packets across, the	recom-
       mended method is	to use a comma (",") like this:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.1,192.168.1.2

       If  there  is  a	large group of destination addresses that are somewhat
       disjoint	in nature, we can cycle	through	them using a round-robin tech-
       nique like this:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.1,192.168.1.2 round-robin
       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.5,192.168.1.7 round-robin
       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.9 round-robin

       If there	are a large number of redirect rules and hosts being targetted
       then it may be desirable	to have	all those from a single	source address
       be targetted at the same	destination address.   To  achieve  this,  the
       word sticky is appended to the rule like	this:

       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.1,192.168.1.2 sticky
       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.5,192.168.1.7 round-robin sticky
       rdr le0 0/0 -> 192.168.1.9 round-robin sticky

       The sticky feature can only be combined with round-robin	and the	use of
       comma.

       For  TCP	 and  UDP  packets,  it	 is possible to	both match on the des-
       tiantion	port number and	to modify it.  For example, to change the des-
       tination	port from 80 to	3128, we would use a rule like this:

       rdr de0 0/0 port	80 -> 127.0.0.1	port 3128 tcp

       If a range of ports is given on the LHS and a single port is  given  on
       the  RHS,  the  entire range of ports is	moved.	For example, if	we had
       this:

       rdr le0 0/0 port	80-88 -> 127.0.0.1 port	3128 tcp

       then port 80 would become 3128, port 81 would become 3129, etc.	If  we
       want  to	 redirect a number of different	pots to	just a single port, an
       equals sign ("=") is placed before the port  number  on	the  RHS  like
       this:

       rdr le0 0/0 port	80-88 -> 127.0.0.1 port	= 3128 tcp

       In this case, port 80 goes to 3128, port	81 to 3128, etc.

       As  with	 map rules, it is possible to manually set a timeout using the
       age option, like	this:

       rdr le0 0/0 port	53 -> 127.0.0.1	port 10053 udp age 5/5

       The use of proxies is not restricted to map  rules  and	outbound  ses-
       sions.  Proxies can also	be used	with redirect rules, although the syn-
       tax is slightly different:

       rdr ge0 0/0 port	21 -> 127.0.0.1	port 21	tcp proxy ftp

       For  rdr	 rules,	 the  interfaces supplied are in the same order	as map
       rules - input first, then output.  In situations	where the outgoing in-
       terface is not certain, it is also possible to use a wildcard ("*")  to
       effect a	match on any interface.

       rdr le0,* 0/0 ->	192.168.1.0

       A  single  rule,	 with as many options set as possible would look some-
       thing like this:

       rdr le0,ppp0 9.8.7.6/32 port 80 -> 1.1.1.1,1.1.1.2 port 80 tcp
	   round-robin frag age	40/40 sticky mssclamp 1000 tag tagged

REWRITING SOURCE AND DESTINATION
       Whilst the above	two commands provide a lot of flexibility in  changing
       addressing  fields  in packets, often it	can be of benefit to translate
       both source and destination at the same time or to  change  the	source
       address	on  input  or the destination address on output.  Doing	all of
       these things can	be accomplished	using rewrite NAT rules.

       A rewrite rule requires the same	level of packet	 matching  as  before,
       protocol	 and source/destination	information but	in addition allows ei-
       ther in or out to be specified like this:

       rewrite in on ppp0 proto	tcp from any to	any port = 80 ->
	    src	0/0 dst	127.0.0.1,3128;
       rewrite out on ppp0 from	any to any ->
	    src	0/32 dst 10.1.1.0/24;

       On the RHS we can specify both new source and  destination  information
       to  place  into the packet being	sent out.  As with other rules used in
       ipnat.conf, there are shortcuts syntaxes	available to use the  original
       address	information  (0/0) and the address associated with the network
       interface (0/32.)  For TCP and UDP, both	address	and  port  information
       can  be	changed.   At  present it is only possible to specify either a
       range of	port numbers to	be used	(X-Y) or a single port number (= X) as
       follows:

       rewrite in on le0 proto tcp from	any to any port	= 80 ->
	    src	0/0,2000-20000 dst 127.0.0.1,port = 3128;

       There are four fields that are stepped through in enumerating the  num-
       ber space available for creating	a new destination:

       source address

       source port

       destination address

       destination port

       If  one of these	happens	to be a	static then it will be skipped and the
       next one	incremented.  As an example:

       rewrite out on le0 proto	tcp from any to	any port = 80 ->
	    src	1.0.0.0/8,5000-5999 dst	2.0.0.0/24,6000-6999;

       The translated packets would be:

       1st src=1.0.0.1,5000 dst=2.0.0.1,6000

       2nd src=1.0.0.2,5000 dst=2.0.0.1,6000

       3rd src=1.0.0.2,5001 dst=2.0.0.1,6000

       4th src=1.0.0.2,5001 dst=2.0.0.2,6000

       5th src=1.0.0.2,5001 dst=2.0.0.2,6001

       6th src=1.0.0.3,5001 dst=2.0.0.2,6001

       and so on.

       As with map rules, it is	possible to specify a range  of	 addresses  by
       including the word range	before the addresses:

       rewrite from any	to any port = 80 ->
	    src	1.1.2.3	- 1.1.2.6 dst 2.2.3.4 -	2.2.3.6;

DIVERTING PACKETS
       If  you'd like to send packets to a UDP socket rather than just another
       computer	to be decapsulated, this can be	achieved using a divert	rule.

       Divert rules can	be used	with both inbound and outbound packet matching
       however the rule	must specify host addresses for	the outer packet,  not
       ranges  of  addresses or	netmasks, just single addresses.  Additionally
       the syntax must supply required information for	UDP.   An  example  of
       what a divert rule looks	ike is as follows:

       divert in on le0	proto udp from any to any port = 53 ->
	    src	192.1.1.1,54 dst 192.168.1.22.1,5300;

       On  the	LHS is a normal	set of matching	capabilities but on the	RHS it
       is a requirement	to specify both	the source and	destination  addresses
       and ports.

       As this feature is intended to be used with targetting packets at sock-
       ets  and	 not  IPFilter running on other	systems, there is no rule pro-
       vided to	undivert packets.

       NOTE:  Diverted packets may be fragmented if the	addition of the	encap-
	      sulating IP header plus UDP header causes	the packet  to	exceed
	      the  size	allowed	by the outbound	network	interface.  At present
	      it is not	possible to cause Path MTU discovery to	happen as this
	      feature is intended to be	transparent to both  endpoints.	  Path
	      MTU  Discovery  If  Path MTU discovery is	being used and the "do
	      not fragment" flag is set	in packets to be encapsulated, an ICMP
	      error message will be sent back to the sender if the new	packet
	      would need to be fragmented.

COMMON OPTIONS
       This section deals with options that are	available with all rules.

       purge  When  the	 purge	keyword	 is added to the end of	a NAT rule, it
	      will cause all of	the active NAT sessions	to be removed when the
	      rule is removed as an individual operation. If all  of  the  NAT
	      rules  are  flushed  out,	 it is expected	that the operator will
	      similarly	flush the NAT table and	thus NAT sessions are not  re-
	      moved when the NAT rules are flushed out.

RULE ORDERING
       NOTE: Rules in ipnat.conf are read in sequentially as listed and	loaded
       into the	kernel in this fashion BUT packet matching is done on netmask,
       going  from  32	down to	0.  If a rule uses pool	or hash	to reference a
       set of addresses	or networks, the netmask value	for  these  fields  is
       considered to be	"0".  So if your ipnat.conf has	the following rules:

       rdr le0 192.0.0.0/8 port	80 -> 127.0.0.1	3132 tcp
       rdr le0 192.2.0.0/16 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3131 tcp
       rdr le0 from any	to pool/100 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 port 3130 tcp
       rdr le0 192.2.2.0/24 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3129 tcp
       rdr le0 192.2.2.1 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3128 tcp

       then  the  rule with 192.2.2.1 will match first,	regardless of where it
       appears in the ordering of the above rules.   In	 fact,	the  order  in
       which they would	be used	to match a packet is:

       rdr le0 192.2.2.1 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3128 tcp
       rdr le0 192.2.2.0/24 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3129 tcp
       rdr le0 192.2.0.0/16 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3131 tcp
       rdr le0 192.0.0.0/8 port	80 -> 127.0.0.1	3132 tcp
       rdr le0 from any	to pool/100 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 port 3130 tcp

       where the first line is actually	a /32.

       If your ipnat.conf file has entries with	matching target	fields (source
       address	for map	rules and destination address for rdr rules), then the
       ordering	in the ipnat.conf file does matter.  So	if you had the follow-
       ing:

       rdr le0 from 1.1.0.0/16 to 192.2.2.1 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3129 tcp
       rdr le0 from 1.1.1.0/24 to 192.2.2.1 port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 3128 tcp

       Then no packets will match the 2nd rule,	they'll	all match the first.

IPv6
       In all of the examples above, where an IPv4 address is present, an IPv6
       address can also	be used. All rules must	use either IPv4	addresses with
       both halves of the NAT rule or IPv6 addresses for both  halves.	Mixing
       IPv6 addresses with IPv4	addresses, in a	single rule, will result in an
       error.

       For  shorthand  notations  such	as  "0/32", the	equivalent for IPv6 is
       "0/128".	IPFilter will treat any	netmask	greater	than 32	as an implicit
       direction that the address should be IPv6, not IPv4.  To	be unambiguous
       with 0/0, for IPv6 use ::0/0.

KERNEL PROXIES
       IP Filter comes with a few, simple, proxies built into the code that is
       loaded into the kernel to allow secondary channels to be	opened without
       forcing the packets through a user program.  The	current	state  of  the
       proxies is listed below,	as one of three	states:

       Aging - protocol	is roughly understood from the time at which the proxy
	      was written but it is not	well tested or maintained;

       Developmental  -	basic functionality exists, works most of the time but
	      may be problematic in extended real use;

       Experimental - rough support for	the protocol at	best, may or  may  not
	      work  as testing has been	at best	sporadic, possible large scale
	      changes to the code in order to properly support the protocol.

       Mature -	well tested, protocol is properly understood by	the proxy;

       The currently compiled in proxy list is as follows:

       FTP - Mature
	      (map ... proxy port ftp ftp/tcp)

       IRC - Experimental
	      (proxy port 6667 irc/tcp)

       rpcbind - Experimental

       PPTP - Experimental

       H.323 - Experimental
	      (map ... proxy port 1720 h323/tcp)

       Real Audio (PNA)	- Aging

       DNS - Developmental
	      (map ... proxy port 53 dns/udp { block .cnn.com; })

       IPsec - Developmental
	      (map ... proxy port 500 ipsec/tcp)

       netbios - Experimental

       R-command - Mature
	      (map ... proxy port shell	rcmd/tcp)

KERNEL PROXIES
FILES
       /dev/ipnat
       /etc/protocols
       /etc/services
       /etc/hosts

SEE ALSO
       ipnat(4), hosts(5), ipf(5), services(5),	ipf(8),	ipnat(8)

								      IPNAT(5)

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