Accounting rules exist simply to count packets and bytes in
categories that you define in this file. You may display these rules and
their packet and byte counters using the shorewall show accounting
command.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.18, the accounting structure can be
created with three root chains:
•accountin: Rules that are valid in the
INPUT chain (may not specify an output interface).
•accountout: Rules that are valid in the
OUTPUT chain (may not specify an input interface or a MAC address).
•accounting: Other rules.
The new structure is enabled by sectioning the accounting file in
a manner similar to the rules file[1]. The sections are INPUT,
OUTPUT and FORWARD and must appear in that order (although any
of them may be omitted). The first non-commentary record in the accounting
file must be a section header when sectioning is used.
Warning
If sections are not used, the Shorewall rules compiler cannot
detect certain violations of netfilter restrictions. These violations can
result in run-time errors such as the following:
iptables-restore v1.4.13: Can't use -o with INPUT
Beginning with Shorewall 4.4.20, the ACCOUNTING_TABLE setting was
added to shorewall.conf and shorewall6.conf. That setting determines the
Netfilter table (filter or mangle) where the accounting rules are added.
When ACCOUNTING_TABLE=mangle is specified, the available sections are
PREROUTING, INPUT, OUTPUT, FORWARD and
POSTROUTING.
Section headers have the form:
?SECTION section-name
When sections are enabled:
•A jump to a user-defined accounting chain must
appear before entries that add rules to that chain. This eliminates loops and
unreferenced chains.
•An output interface may not be specified in the
PREROUTING and INPUT sections.
•In the
OUTPUT and
POSTROUTING
sections:
•An input interface may not be specified
•Jumps to a chain defined in the INPUT or
PREROUTING sections that specifies an input interface are
prohibited
•MAC addresses may not be used
•Jump to a chain defined in the INPUT or
PREROUTING section that specifies a MAC address are prohibited.
•The default value of the CHAIN column is:
•accountin in the INPUT
section
•accountout in the OUTPUT
section
•accountfwd in the FORWARD
section
•accountpre in the PREROUTING
section
•accountpost in the POSTROUTING
section
•Traffic addressed to the firewall goes through
the rules defined in the INPUT section.
•Traffic originating on the firewall goes through
the rules defined in the OUTPUT section.
•Traffic being forwarded through the firewall goes
through the rules from the FORWARD sections.
The columns in the file are as follows (where the column name is
followed by a different name in parentheses, the different name is used in
the alternate specification syntax):
ACTION -
{COUNT|DONE|chain[:{COUNT|JUMP}]|ACCOUNT(table,network)|[?]COMMENT
comment}
What to do when a matching packet is found.
COUNT
Simply count the match and continue with the next
rule
DONE
Count the match and don't attempt to match any other
accounting rules in the chain specified in the CHAIN column.
chain[:COUNT]
Where chain is the name of a chain; shorewall will
create the chain automatically if it doesn't already exist. If a second chain
is mentioned in the CHAIN column, then a jump from this second chain to
chain is created. If no chain is named in the CHAIN column, then a jump
from the default chain to chain is created. If :COUNT is
included, a counting rule matching this entry will be added to chain.
The chain may not exceed 29 characters in length and may be composed of
letters, digits, dash ('-') and underscore ('_').
chain:JUMP
Like the previous option without the :COUNT
part.
ACCOUNT(table,network)
This action implements per-IP accounting and was added in
Shorewall 4.4.17. Requires the
ACCOUNT Target capability in your
iptables and kernel (see the output of
shorewall show capabilities).
table
is the name of an accounting table (you choose the name).
All rules specifying the same name will have their per-IP counters accumulated
in the same table.
network
is an IPv4 network in CIDR notation (e.g.,
192.168.1.0/24). The network can be as large as a /8 (class A).
One nice feature of per-IP accounting is that the counters survive
shorewall restart. This has a downside, however. If you change the
network associated with an accounting table, then you must shorewall
stop; shorewall start to have a successful restart (counters will be
cleared).
The counters in a table are printed using the
iptaccount utility. For a command synopsis, type:
iptaccount --help
As of February 2011, the ACCOUNT Target capability and the
iptaccount utility are only available when xtables-addons[2] is
installed. See http://www.shorewall.net/Accounting.html#perIP[3] for
additional information.
INLINE
Added in Shorewall 4.5.16. Allows free form iptables
matches to be specified following a ';'. In the generated iptables rule(s),
the free form matches will follow any matches that are generated by the column
contents.
NFACCT({object[!]}[,...])
Added in Shorewall 4.5.7. Provides a form of accounting
that survives
shorewall stop/shorewall start and
shorewall
restart. Requires the NFaccnt Match capability in your kernel and
iptables.
object names an nfacct object (see man
nfaccnt(8)). Multiple
rules can specify the same
object; all packets that match any of the
rules increment the packet and bytes count of the object.
Prior to Shorewall 4.5.16, only one object could be
specified. Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.16, an arbitrary number of objects
may be given.
With Shorewall 4.5.16 or later, an nfacct object in the
list may optionally be followed by ! to indicate that the nfacct
object will be incremented unconditionally for each packet. When
! is omitted, the object will be incremented only if all of
the matches in the rule succeed.
NFLOG[(nflog-parameters)] - Added in Shorewall-4.4.20.
Causes each matching packet to be sent via the currently
loaded logging back-end (usually nfnetlink_log) where it is available to
accounting daemons through a netlink socket.
?COMMENT
The remainder of the line is treated as a comment which
is attached to subsequent rules until another COMMENT line is found or until
the end of the file is reached. To stop adding comments to rules, use a line
with only the word ?COMMENT.
CHAIN - {-|chain}
The name of a chain. If specified as - the
accounting chain is assumed when the file is un-sectioned. When the
file is sectioned, the default is one of accountin, accountout, etc. depending
on the section. This is the chain where the accounting rule is added. The
chain will be created if it doesn't already exist. The chain may
not exceed 29 characters in length.
SOURCE -
{-|any|all|interface|interface:address|address}
Packet Source.
The name of an interface, an address (host or net)
or an interface name followed by ":" and a host or net
address. An ipset name is also accepted as an address.
DEST -
{-|any|all|interface|interface:address|address}
This column was formerly named DESTINATION.
Packet Destination.
Format same as SOURCE column.
PROTO -
{-|{any|all|protocol-name|protocol-number|ipp2p[:{udp|all}]}[,...]}
This column was formerly named PROTOCOL
A protocol-name (from protocols(5)), a
protocol-number, ipp2p, ipp2p:udp or
ipp2p:all
Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.12, this column can accept a
comma-separated list of protocols.
DPORT -
{-|any|all|ipp2p-option|port-name-or-number[,port-name-or-number]...}
Destination Port number. Service name from
services(5) or
port number. May only be specified if the protocol is TCP (6), UDP
(17), DCCP (33), SCTP (132) or UDPLITE (136).
You may place a comma-separated list of port names or numbers in
this column if your kernel and iptables include multi-port match
support.
If the PROTOCOL is ipp2p then this column must contain an
ipp2p-option ("iptables -m ipp2p --help") without the
leading "--". If no option is given in this column, ipp2p
is assumed.
This column was formerly named DEST PORT(S).
SPORT -
{-|any|all|port-name-or-number[,port-name-or-number]...}
Service name from
services(5) or
port number. May
only be specified if the protocol is TCP (6), UDP (17), DCCP (33), SCTP (132)
or UDPLITE (136).
You may place a comma-separated list of port numbers in this
column if your kernel and iptables include multi-port match support.
Beginning with Shorewall 4.5.15, you may place '=' in this column,
provided that the DEST PORT(S) column is non-empty. This causes the rule to
match when either the source port or the destination port in a packet
matches one of the ports specified in DPORT. Use of '=' requires multi-port
match in your iptables and kernel.
This column was formerly labelled SOURCE PORT(S).
USER -
[!][user-name-or-number][:group-name-or-number][+program-name]
This column was formerly named USER/GROUP and may only be
non-empty if the
CHAIN is
OUTPUT.
When this column is non-empty, the rule applies only if the
program generating the output is running under the effective user
and/or group specified (or is NOT running under that id if
"!" is given).
Examples:
joe
program must be run by joe
:kids
program must be run by a member of the 'kids' group
!:kids
program must not be run by a member of the 'kids'
group
+upnpd
#program named upnpd
Important
The ability to specify a program name was removed from Netfilter in kernel
version 2.6.14.
MARK - [!]value[/mask][:C]
Defines a test on the existing packet or connection mark.
The rule will match only if the test returns true.
If you don't want to define a test but need to specify anything in
the following columns, place a "-" in this field.
!
Inverts the test (not equal)
value
Value of the packet or connection mark.
mask
A mask to be applied to the mark before testing.
:C
Designates a connection mark. If omitted, the packet
mark's value is tested.
IPSEC - option-list (Optional - Added in
Shorewall 4.4.13 but broken until 4.5.4.1 )
The option-list consists of a comma-separated list of
options from the following list. Only packets that will be encrypted or have
been decrypted via an SA that matches these options will have their source
address changed.
reqid=number
where
number is specified using
setkey(8) using
the 'unique:
number option for the SPD level.
spi=<number>
where number is the SPI of the SA used to
encrypt/decrypt packets.
proto=ah|esp|ipcomp
IPSEC Encapsulation Protocol
mss=number
sets the MSS field in TCP packets
mode=transport|tunnel
IPSEC mode
tunnel-src=address[/mask]
only available with mode=tunnel
tunnel-dst=address[/mask]
only available with mode=tunnel
strict
Means that packets must match all rules.
next
Separates rules; can only be used with strict
yes or ipsec
When used by itself, causes all traffic that will be
encrypted/encapsulated or has been decrypted/un-encapsulated to match the
rule.
no or none
When used by itself, causes all traffic that will not be
encrypted/encapsulated or has been decrypted/un-encapsulated to match the
rule.
in
May only be used in the FORWARD section and must be the
first or the only item the list. Indicates that matching packets have been
decrypted in input.
out
May only be used in the FORWARD section and must be the
first or the only item in the list. Indicates that matching packets will be
encrypted on output.
If this column is non-empty and sections are not used, then:
•A chain NAME appearing in the ACTION column must
be a chain branched either directly or indirectly from the accipsecin
or accipsecout chain.
•The CHAIN column must contain either
accipsecin or accipsecout or a chain branched either directly or
indirectly from those chains.
•These rules will NOT appear in the
accounting chain.
In all of the above columns except ACTION and CHAIN,
the values -, any and all may be used as wildcard'gs.
Omitted trailing columns are also treated as wildcard'g.