Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
T2465: vyos-hostsd-client needs sudo
|
|
Add support for prefix delegation when receiving the prefix via ethernet,
bridge, bond, wireless.
|
|
This is to remove the amount of duplicated entries in dictionaries. It's one
more part to move to a unified interface management.
|
|
There have been a number of complaints about DHCP not getting inserted into the `/etc/hosts` file. This should correct that problem.
|
|
|
|
Dictionary is used to remove the amount of duplicated code by e.g. ethernet
or bridge interface.
|
|
|
|
flake8: T2475: fix a number of issue reported by flake8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* 'ipv6-pd' of github.com:c-po/vyos-1x:
pppoe: dhcpv6-pd: T421: change system type to forking
pppoe: dhcpv6-pd: T421: stop service when config is removed
pppoe: dhcpv6-pd: T421: start/stop delegation with interface status
pppoe: dhcpv6-pd: T421: initial support
dhcpv6-pd: T421: migrate from ISC dhclient to wide-dhcpv6-client
|
|
Wide dhcp client forks by itself
|
|
|
|
|
|
The following configuration will assign a /64 prefix out of a /56 delegation
to eth0. The IPv6 address assigned to eth0 will be <prefix>::ffff/64.
If you do not know the prefix size delegated to you, start with sla-len 0.
pppoe pppoe0 {
authentication {
password vyos
user vyos
}
description sadfas
dhcpv6-options {
delegate eth0 {
interface-id 65535
sla-id 0
sla-len 8
}
}
ipv6 {
address {
autoconf
}
enable
}
source-interface eth1
}
vyos@vyos:~$ show interfaces
Codes: S - State, L - Link, u - Up, D - Down, A - Admin Down
Interface IP Address S/L Description
--------- ---------- --- -----------
eth0 2001:db8:8003:400::ffff/64 u/u
|
|
ISC does not support running the client on PPP(oE) interfaces which makes it
unusable for DHCPv6 Prefix Delegation tasks.
Internet Systems Consortium DHCP Client 4.4.1
Copyright 2004-2018 Internet Systems Consortium.
All rights reserved.
For info, please visit https://www.isc.org/software/dhcp/
Unsupported device type 512 for "pppoe0"
|
|
... by setting AdvAutonomousFlag=1 when an IPv6 client pool is defined.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PowerDNS recursor 4.3 now uns as user pdns and group pdns, thus the
generated configuration file and directory need to have the appropriate
permissions set.
|
|
- define XML CLI interface
- read CLI into Python dict
|
|
* 'nat-nftables' of github.com:c-po/vyos-1x: (27 commits)
nat: T2198: remove "tcp_udp" from "show nat dest stat"x
Debian: add required dependency on systemd
nat: T2198: add common ip-protocol validator
nat: T2198: use Jinja2 macro for common ruleset for SNAT and DNAT
nat: T2198: restructure DNAT template part for less duplicated code
nat: T2198: add support for SNAT based on source addresses
nat: T2198: set default protocol to all to be backwards compatible
nat: T2198: sync generated SNAT rules with VyOS 1.2
nat: T2198: sync generated DNAT rules with VyOS 1.2
nat: T2198: do not run DNAT rule if rule is disabled
nat: T2198: restructure DNAT template
nat: T2198: verify translation address for SNAT and DNAT
nat: T2198: extend verify() for destination ports
nat: T2198: migrate "log enable" node to only "log"
nat: T2198: add protocol completion helper and regex constraint
nat: T2198: migrate "show nat" commands to XML and Python
nat: T2198: add some basic verify() rules
nat: T2198: split nat-address-port include into individual files
nat: T2198: add ipv4-{address,prefix,rage}-exclude validators
nat: T2198: add new ipv4-range validator
...
|
|
|
|
|
|
It allows IP protocol numbers 0-255, protocol names e.g. tcp, ip, ipv6 and the
negated form with a leading "!".
|
|
By using a Jinja2 macro the same template code can be used to create both
source and destination NAT rules with only minor changes introduced by
e.g. the used chain (POSTROUTING vs PREROUTING).
Used the following configuration for testing on two systems with VyOS 1.2
and the old implementation vs the new one here.
set nat destination rule 15 description 'foo-10'
set nat destination rule 15 destination address '1.1.1.1'
set nat destination rule 15 inbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat destination rule 15 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat destination rule 15 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat destination rule 15 translation port '3389'
set nat destination rule 20 description 'foo-20'
set nat destination rule 20 destination address '2.2.2.2'
set nat destination rule 20 destination port '22'
set nat destination rule 20 inbound-interface 'eth0.201'
set nat destination rule 20 protocol 'tcp'
set nat destination rule 20 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat source rule 100 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 100 protocol 'all'
set nat source rule 100 source address '192.0.2.0/26'
set nat source rule 100 translation address 'masquerade'
set nat source rule 110 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 110 protocol 'tcp'
set nat source rule 110 source address '192.0.2.0/26'
set nat source rule 110 source port '5556'
set nat source rule 110 translation address 'masquerade'
set nat source rule 120 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 120 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat source rule 120 source address '192.0.3.0/26'
set nat source rule 120 translation address '2.2.2.2'
|
|
Build up only one output rule string by appending the configuration part by
part.
|
|
CLI commands used for ruleset generation:
set nat source rule 100 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 100 protocol 'all'
set nat source rule 100 source address '192.0.2.0/26'
set nat source rule 100 translation address 'masquerade'
set nat source rule 110 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 110 protocol 'tcp'
set nat source rule 110 source address '192.0.2.0/26'
set nat source rule 110 source port '5556'
set nat source rule 110 translation address 'masquerade'
|
|
|
|
The generated NAT rules in VyOS 1.2 are compared to the generated nftables
ruleset in VyOS 1.3 this was done by converting the 1.2 iptables ruleset to
nftables and then do the diff. To convert from iptables to nftables use the
following command:
$ iptables-save -t nat > /tmp/tmp.iptables
$ iptables-restore-translate -f /tmp/tmp.iptables
The following CLI options have been used for testing:
set nat source rule 10 description 'foo-10'
set nat source rule 10 destination address '1.1.1.1'
set nat source rule 10 destination port '1111'
set nat source rule 10 exclude
set nat source rule 10 log 'enable'
set nat source rule 10 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 10 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat source rule 10 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat source rule 15 description 'foo-10'
set nat source rule 15 destination address '1.1.1.1'
set nat source rule 15 exclude
set nat source rule 15 log 'enable'
set nat source rule 15 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 15 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat source rule 15 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat source rule 20 description 'foo-20'
set nat source rule 20 destination address '2.2.2.2'
set nat source rule 20 log 'enable'
set nat source rule 20 outbound-interface 'eth0.201'
set nat source rule 20 protocol 'tcp'
set nat source rule 20 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat source rule 100 outbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat source rule 100 protocol 'all'
set nat source rule 100 source address '192.0.2.0/26'
set nat source rule 100 translation address 'masquerade'
|
|
The generated NAT rules in VyOS 1.2 are compared to the generated nftables
ruleset in VyOS 1.3 this was done by converting the 1.2 iptables ruleset to
nftables and then do the diff. To convert from iptables to nftables use the
following command:
$ iptables-save -t nat > /tmp/tmp.iptables
$ iptables-restore-translate -f /tmp/tmp.iptables
The following CLI options have been used for testing:
set nat destination rule 10 description 'foo-10'
set nat destination rule 10 destination address '1.1.1.1'
set nat destination rule 10 destination port '1111'
set nat destination rule 10 exclude
set nat destination rule 10 inbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat destination rule 10 log
set nat destination rule 10 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat destination rule 10 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat destination rule 15 description 'foo-10'
set nat destination rule 15 destination address '1.1.1.1'
set nat destination rule 15 exclude
set nat destination rule 15 inbound-interface 'eth0.202'
set nat destination rule 15 log
set nat destination rule 15 protocol 'tcp_udp'
set nat destination rule 15 translation address '192.0.2.10'
set nat destination rule 20 description 'foo-20'
set nat destination rule 20 destination address '2.2.2.2'
set nat destination rule 20 inbound-interface 'eth0.201'
set nat destination rule 20 log
set nat destination rule 20 protocol 'tcp'
set nat destination rule 20 translation address '192.0.2.10'
|
|
|
|
Make the entire template more maintainable
|
|
|
|
Destination NAT configuration: destination ports can only be specified when
protocol is tcp, udp or tcp_udp.
|
|
|
|
|
|
- "show nat source|destination statistics" is now implemented in Python
- "show nat source|destination rules" needs a new implementation, see T2459
- "show nat source|destination translations" has been copied over from the old
repo and is here until it is rewritten, this was not possible for "rules"
as there would have been too much dependencies. This one only requires
libxml-simple-perl
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exclude validators are required to support the ! (not) operator on the CLI to
exclude addresses from NAT.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When instantiating NAT it is required to isntall some nftable jump targets.
The targets need to be added after a specific other target thus we need to
dynamically query the handler number. This is done by get_handler() which could
be moved to vyos.util at a later point in time so it can be reused for a
firewall rewrite.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|