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# nftables puppet module |
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|
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[](https://forge.puppetlabs.com/puppet/nftables) |
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[](https://forge.puppetlabs.com/puppet/nftables) |
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[](http://www.puppetmodule.info/m/puppet-nftables) |
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[](LICENSE) |
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This module manages an opinionated nftables configuration. |
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By default it sets up a firewall that drops every connection, except |
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outbound ICMP, DNS, NTP, HTTP, and HTTPS, and inbound ICMP and SSH |
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traffic: |
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include nftables |
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This can be overridden using parameters, for example, this allows all |
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outbound traffic: |
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|
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class { 'nftables': |
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out_all => true, |
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} |
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There are also pre-built rules for specific services, for example this |
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will allow a web server to serve traffic over HTTPS: |
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|
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include nftables |
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include nftables::rules::https |
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Note that the module conflicts with the `firewalld` system and will |
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stop it in Puppet runs. |
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|
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## Configuration |
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|
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The main configuration file loaded by the nftables service |
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will be `files/config/puppet.nft`, all other files created |
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by that module go into `files/config/puppet` and will also |
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be purged if not managed anymore. |
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|
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The main configuration file includes dedicated files for |
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the filter and NAT tables, as well as processes any |
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`custom-*.nft` files before hand. |
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|
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The filter and NAT tables both have all the master chains |
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(`INPUT`, `OUTPUT`, `FORWARD` in case of filter and `PREROUTING` |
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and `POSTROUTING` in case of NAT) configured, to which you |
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can hook in your own chains that can contain specific |
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rules. |
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|
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All filter masterchains drop by default. |
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By default we have a set of `default_MASTERCHAIN` chains |
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configured to which you can easily add your custom rules. |
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For specific needs you can add your own chain. |
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There is a global chain, that defines the default behavior |
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for all masterchains. This chain is empty by default. |
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|
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`INPUT` and `OUTPUT` to the loopback device is allowed by |
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default, though you could restrict it later. |
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On the other hand, if you don't want any of the default tables, chains |
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and rules created by the module, you can set `nftables::inet_filter` |
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and/or `nftables::nat` to `false` and build your whole nftables |
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configuration from scratch by using the building blocks provided by |
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this module. Look at `nftables::inet_filter` for inspiration. |
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|
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## Rules Validation |
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Initially puppet deploys all configuration to |
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`/etc/nftables/puppet-preflight/` and |
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`/etc/nftables/puppet-preflight.nft`. This is validated with |
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`nft -c -I /etc/nftables/puppet-preflight/ -f /etc/nftables/puppet-preflight.nft`. |
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If and only if successful the configuration will be copied to |
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the real locations before the service is reloaded. |
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## Un-managed rules |
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By default, rules added manually by the administrator to the in-memory |
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ruleset will be left untouched. However, |
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`nftables::purge_unmanaged_rules` can be set to `true` to revert this |
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behaviour and force a reload of the ruleset during the Puppet run if |
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non-managed changes are detected. |
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## Basic types |
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### nftables::config |
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Manages a raw file in `/etc/nftables/puppet/${name}.nft` |
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Use this for any custom table files. |
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### nftables::chain |
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Prepares a chain file as a `concat` file to which you will |
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be able to add dedicated rules through `nftables::rule`. |
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The name must be unique for all chains. The inject |
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parameter can be used to directly add a jump to a |
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masterchain. inject must follow the pattern |
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`ORDER-MASTERCHAIN`, where order references a 2-digit |
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number which defines the rule order (by default use e.g. 20) |
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and masterchain references the chain to hook in the new |
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chain. It's possible to specify the in-interface name and |
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out-interface name for the inject rule. |
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### nftables::rule |
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A simple way to add rules to any chain. The name must be: |
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`CHAIN_NAME-rulename`, where CHAIN_NAME refers to your |
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chain and an arbitrary name for your rule. |
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The rule will be a `concat::fragment` to the chain |
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`CHAIN_NAME`. |
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You can define the order by using the `order` param. |
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Before defining your own rule, take a look to the list of ready-to-use rules |
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available in the |
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[REFERENCE](https://github.com/voxpupuli/puppet-nftables/blob/master/REFERENCE.md), |
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somebody might have encapsulated a rule definition for you already. |
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### nftables::set |
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Adds a named set to a given table. It allows composing the |
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set using individual parameters but also takes raw input |
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via the content and source parameters. |
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### nftables::simplerule |
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Allows expressing firewall rules without having to use nftables's language by |
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adding an abstraction layer a-la-Firewall. It's rather limited how far you can |
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go so if you need rather complex rules or you can speak nftables it's |
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recommended to use `nftables::rule` directly. |
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## Facts |
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One structured fact `nftables` is available |
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``` |
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{ |
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tables => [ |
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"bridge-filter", |
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"bridge-nat", |
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"inet-firewalld", |
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"ip-firewalld", |
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"ip6-firewalld" |
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], |
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version => "0.9.3" |
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} |
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``` |
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* `nftables.version` is the version of the nft command from `nft --version`. |
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* `nftables.tables` is the list of tables installed on the machine from `nft list tables`. |
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## Editor goodies |
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If you're using Emacs there are some snippets for |
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[Yasnippet](https://github.com/joaotavora/yasnippet) available |
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[here](https://github.com/nbarrientos/dotfiles/tree/master/.emacs.d/snippets/puppet-mode) |
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that could make your life easier when using the module. This is third |
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party configuration that's only included here for reference so changes |
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in the interfaces exposed by this module are not guaranteed to be |
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automatically applied there. |