Provided by: xtables-addons-common_3.19-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

Name

       Xtables-addons — additional extensions for iptables, ip6tables, etc.

Targets

   ACCOUNT
       The  ACCOUNT  target  is  a high performance accounting system for large local networks. It allows per-IP
       accounting in whole prefixes of IPv4 addresses with size of up to /8 without the need to  add  individual
       accouting rule for each IP address.

       The  ACCOUNT is designed to be queried for data every second or at least every ten seconds. It is written
       as kernel module to handle high bandwidths without packet loss.

       The largest possible subnet size is 24 bit, meaning for example 10.0.0.0/8 network.  ACCOUNT  uses  fixed
       internal  data structures which speeds up the processing of each packet. Furthermore, accounting data for
       one complete 192.168.1.X/24 network takes 4 KB of memory. Memory for  16  or  24  bit  networks  is  only
       allocated when needed.

       To optimize the kernel<->userspace data transfer a bit more, the kernel module only transfers information
       about IPs, where the src/dst packet counter is not 0. This saves precious kernel time.

       There  is  no  /proc  interface  as it would be too slow for continuous access.  The read-and-flush query
       operation is the fastest, as no internal data snapshot needs to be created&copied for all data.  Use  the
       "read" operation without flush only for debugging purposes!

       Usage:

       ACCOUNT takes two mandatory parameters:

       --addr network/netmask
              where network/netmask is the subnet to account for, in CIDR syntax

       --tname NAME
              where NAME is the name of the table where the accounting information should be stored

       The  subnet  0.0.0.0/0  is  a  special  case:  all  data are then stored in the src_bytes and src_packets
       structure of slot "0". This is useful if you want to account the overall traffic  to/from  your  internet
       provider.

       The data can be queried using the userspace libxt_ACCOUNT_cl library, and by the reference implementation
       to show usage of this library, the iptaccount(8) tool.

       Here is an example of use:

       iptables  -A  FORWARD  -j  ACCOUNT  --addr 0.0.0.0/0 --tname all_outgoing; iptables -A FORWARD -j ACCOUNT
       --addr 192.168.1.0/24 --tname sales;

       This creates two tables called "all_outgoing" and "sales"  which  can  be  queried  using  the  userspace
       library/iptaccount tool.

       Note  that  this target is non-terminating — the packet destined to it will continue traversing the chain
       in which it has been used.

       Also note that once a table has  been  defined  for  specific  CIDR  address/netmask  block,  it  can  be
       referenced   multiple   times  using  -j  ACCOUNT,  provided  that  both  the  original  table  name  and
       address/netmask block are specified.

       For more information go to http://www.intra2net.com/en/developer/ipt_ACCOUNT/

   CHAOS
       Causes confusion on the other end by doing odd things with incoming packets.  CHAOS will  randomly  reply
       (or not) with one of its configurable subtargets:

       --delude
              Use  the  REJECT and DELUDE targets as a base to do a sudden or deferred connection reset, fooling
              some network scanners to return non-deterministic (randomly open/closed) results, and in  case  it
              is deemed open, it is actually closed/filtered.

       --tarpit
              Use  the  REJECT  and  TARPIT  target  as  a  base to hold the connection until it times out. This
              consumes conntrack entries when connection tracking is loaded (which usually is on most machines),
              and routers inbetween you and the Internet may fail to do their connection tracking if  they  have
              to handle more connections than they can.

       The  randomness factor of not replying vs. replying can be set during load-time of the xt_CHAOS module or
       during runtime in /sys/modules/xt_CHAOS/parameters.

       See http://inai.de/projects/chaostables/ for more information about CHAOS, DELUDE and lscan.

   DELUDE
       The DELUDE target will reply to a SYN packet with SYN-ACK, and to all other packets  with  an  RST.  This
       will terminate the connection much like REJECT, but network scanners doing TCP half-open discovery can be
       spoofed to make them belive the port is open rather than closed/filtered.

   DHCPMAC
       In  conjunction  with  ebtables, DHCPMAC can be used to completely change all MAC addresses from and to a
       VMware-based virtual machine. This is needed because VMware does  not  allow  to  set  a  non-VMware  MAC
       address  before  an  operating  system  is  booted (and the MAC be changed with `ip link set eth0 address
       aa:bb..`).

       --set-mac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff[/mask]
              Replace the client host MAC address field in the DHCP message with the  given  MAC  address.  This
              option is mandatory. The mask parameter specifies the prefix length of bits to change.

       EXAMPLE,  replacing  all  addresses  from  one  of VMware's assigned vendor IDs (00:50:56) addresses with
       something else:

       iptables -t mangle -A FORWARD -p  udp  --dport  67  -m  physdev  --physdev-in  vmnet1  -m  dhcpmac  --mac
       00:50:56:00:00:00/24 -j DHCPMAC --set-mac ab:cd:ef:00:00:00/24

       iptables  -t  mangle  -A  FORWARD  -p  udp  --dport  68  -m physdev --physdev-out vmnet1 -m dhcpmac --mac
       ab:cd:ef:00:00:00/24 -j DHCPMAC --set-mac 00:50:56:00:00:00/24

       (This assumes there is a bridge interface that  has  vmnet1  as  a  port.  You  will  also  need  to  add
       appropriate ebtables rules to change the MAC address of the Ethernet headers.)

   DNETMAP
       The  DNETMAP  target  allows dynamic two-way 1:1 mapping of IPv4 subnets. A single rule can map a private
       subnet to a shorter public  subnet,  creating  and  maintaining  unambiguous  private-public  IP  address
       bindings.  The  second  rule  can  be  used  to map new flows to a private subnet according to maintained
       bindings.  The target allows efficient public IPv4 space usage and unambiguous NAT at the same time.

       The target can be used only in the nat table in POSTROUTING or OUTPUT chains for SNAT, and in  PREROUTING
       for  DNAT. Only flows directed to bound addresses will be DNATed. The packet continues chain traversal if
       there is no free postnat address to be assigned to the prenat address. The  default  binding  TTL  is  10
       minutes  and can be changed using the default_ttl module option. The default address hash size is 256 and
       can be changed using the hash_size module option.

       --prefix addr/mask
              The network subnet to map to. If not specified, all existing prefixes are used.

       --reuse
              Reuse the entry for a given prenat address from any prefix even if the binding's TTL is < 0.

       --persistent
              Set the prefix to be persistent. It will not be removed after deleting the last iptables rule. The
              option is effective only in the first rule for a given prefix. If you need to  change  persistency
              for an existing prefix, please use the procfs interface described below.

       --static
              Do  not  create  dynamic mappings using this rule. Use static mappings only. Note that you need to
              create static mappings via the procfs interface for this rule for this option to have any effect.

       --ttl seconds
              Reset the binding's TTL value to seconds. If a negative value is specified, the binding's  TTL  is
              kept unchanged. If this option is not specified, then the default TTL value (600s) is used.

       * /proc interface

       The module creates the following entries for each new specified subnet:

       /proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Contains  the  binding table for the given subnet/mask. Each line contains prenat address, postnat
              address, ttl (seconds until the entry times out), lasthit  (last  hit  to  the  entry  in  seconds
              relative to system boot time). Please note that the ttl and lasthit entries contain an ‘S’ in case
              of a static binding.

       /proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask_stat
              Contains  statistics for a given subnet/mask. The line contains four numerical values separated by
              spaces. The first one is the number of currently used dynamic addresses  (bindings  with  negative
              TTL  excluded), the second one is the number of static assignments, the third one is the number of
              all usable addresses in the subnet, and the fourth one is  the  mean  TTL  value  for  all  active
              entries. If the prefix has the persistent flag set, it will be noted as fifth entry.

       The following write operations are supported via the procfs interface:

       echo "+prenat-address:postnat-address" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Adds a static binding between the prenat and postnap address. If postnat_address is already bound,
              any previous binding will be timed out immediately. A static binding is never timed out.

       echo "-address" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Removes the binding with address as prenat or postnat address. If the removed binding is currently
              static, it will make the entry available for dynamic allocation.

       echo "+persistent" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Sets  the  persistent flag for the prefix. It is useful if you do not want bindings to get flushed
              when the firewall is restarted. You can check if the prefix is persistent by printing the contents
              of /proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask_stat.

       echo "-persistent" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Unsets the persistent flag for the prefix. In this mode, the prefix will be deleted  if  the  last
              iptables rule for that prefix is removed.

       echo "flush" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/subnet_mask
              Flushes  all  bindings  for  the  specific  prefix. All static entries are also flushed and become
              available for dynamic bindings.

       Note! Entries are removed if the last  iptables  rule  for  a  specific  prefix  is  deleted  unless  the
       persistent flag is set.

       * Logging

       The  module logs binding add/timeout events to klog. This behaviour can be disabled using the disable_log
       module parameter.

       * Examples

       1. Map subnet 192.168.0.0/24 to subnets 20.0.0.0/26. SNAT only:

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26

       Active hosts from the 192.168.0.0/24 subnet are mapped to 20.0.0.0/26. If the packet from a not yet bound
       prenat address hits the rule and there are no free or timed-out (TTL<0) entries  in  prefix  20.0.0.0/28,
       then  a  notice  is  logged to klog and chain traversal continues. If packet from an already-bound prenat
       address hits the rule, the binding's TTL value is reset to default_ttl and SNAT is performed.

       2. Use of --reuse and --ttl switches, multiple rule interaction:

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26 --reuse --ttl 200

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 30.0.0.0/26

       Active hosts from 192.168.0.0/24 subnet are mapped to 20.0.0.0/26 with TTL = 200 seconds. If there are no
       free addresses in first prefix, the next one (30.0.0.0/26) is used with the default TTL. It is  important
       to note that the first rule SNATs all flows whose source address is already actively bound (TTL>0) to ANY
       prefix. The --reuse parameter makes this functionality work even for inactive (TTL<0) entries.

       If both subnets are exhausted, then chain traversal continues.

       3. Map 192.168.0.0/24 to subnets 20.0.0.0/26 in a bidirectional way:

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26

       iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -j DNETMAP

       If  the  host  192.168.0.10  generates  some traffic, it gets bound to first free address in the subnet —
       20.0.0.0. Now, any traffic directed to 20.0.0.0 gets DNATed to 192.168.0.10 as long as there is an active
       (TTL>0) binding. There is no need to specify --prefix parameter in a PREROUTING rule, because  this  way,
       it  DNATs  traffic  to all active prefixes. You could specify the prefix you would like to make DNAT work
       for a specific prefix only.

       4. Map 192.168.0.0/24 to subnets 20.0.0.0/26 with static assignments only:

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26 --static

       echo "+192.168.0.10:20.0.0.1" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/20.0.0.0_26
       echo "+192.168.0.11:20.0.0.2" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/20.0.0.0_26
       echo "+192.168.0.51:20.0.0.3" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/20.0.0.0_26

       This configuration will allow only preconfigured static bindings to work due to the static  rule  option.
       Without this flag, dynamic bindings would be created using non-static entries.

       5. Persistent prefix:

       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26 --persistent
       or
       iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 192.168.0.0/24 -j DNETMAP --prefix 20.0.0.0/26
       echo "+persistent" >/proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/20.0.0.0_26

       Now, we can check the persistent flag of the prefix:
       cat /proc/net/xt_DNETMAP/20.0.0.0_26
       0 0 64 0 persistent

       Flush the iptables nat table and see that prefix is still in existence:
       iptables -F -t nat
       ls -l /proc/net/xt_DNETMAP
       -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 06-10 09:01 20.0.0.0_26
       -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 06-10 09:01 20.0.0.0_26_stat

   ECHO
       The ECHO target will send back all packets it received. It serves as an examples for an Xtables target.

       ECHO takes no options.

   IPMARK
       Allows  you to mark a received packet basing on its IP address. This can replace many mangle/mark entries
       with only one, if you use firewall based classifier.

       This target is to be used inside the mangle table.

       --addr {src|dst}
              Select source or destination IP address as a basis for the mark.

       --and-mask mask
              Perform bitwise AND on the IP address and this bitmask.

       --or-mask mask
              Perform bitwise OR on the IP address and this bitmask.

       --shift value
              Shift addresses to the right by the given number of bits before taking it as a mark. (This is done
              before ANDing or ORing it.) This option is needed to select part of an IPv6 address, because marks
              are only 32 bits in size.

       The order of IP address bytes is reversed to meet "human order of bytes": 192.168.0.1 is  0xc0a80001.  At
       first the "AND" operation is performed, then "OR".

       Examples:

       We  create  a  queue for each user, the queue number is adequate to the IP address of the user, e.g.: all
       packets going to/from 192.168.5.2 are directed to 1:0502 queue, 192.168.5.12 -> 1:050c etc.

       We have one classifier rule:

              tc filter add dev eth3 parent 1:0 protocol ip fw

       Earlier we had many rules just like below:

              iptables -t mangle -A POSTROUTING -o eth3 -d 192.168.5.2 -j MARK --set-mark 0x10502

              iptables -t mangle -A POSTROUTING -o eth3 -d 192.168.5.3 -j MARK --set-mark 0x10503

       Using IPMARK target we can replace all the mangle/mark rules with only one:

              iptables -t mangle -A POSTROUTING -o eth3 -j IPMARK --addr dst --and-mask 0xffff --or-mask 0x10000

       On the routers with hundreds of users there should be significant load decrease (e.g. twice).

       (IPv6 example) If the source address is of the form 2001:db8:45:1d:20d:93ff:fe9b:e443 and  the  resulting
       mark should be 0x93ff, then a right-shift of 16 is needed first:

              -t mangle -A PREROUTING -s 2001:db8::/32 -j IPMARK --addr src --shift 16 --and-mask 0xFFFF

   LOGMARK
       The LOGMARK target will log packet and connection marks to syslog.

       --log-level level
              A logging level between 0 and 8 (inclusive).

       --log-prefix string
              Prefix  log messages with the specified prefix; up to 29 bytes long, and useful for distinguishing
              messages in the logs.

   PROTO
       The PROTO target modifies the protocol number in IP packet header.

       --proto-set proto_num
              This option is mandatory. proto_num is the protocol  number  to  which  you  want  to  modify  the
              packets.

       --stop-at-frag
              This  option  is  only  valid  for IPv6 rules. When specifying this option, the fragment extension
              header will be seen as a non-extension header.

       --stop-at-auth
              This option is only valid  for  IPv6  rules.  When  specifying  this  option,  the  authentication
              extension header will be seen as a non-extension header.

       For IPv4 packets, the Protocol field is modified and the checksum is re-calculated.

       For  IPv6  packets,  the  scenario  can  be more complex due to the introduction of the extension headers
       mechanism. By default, the PROTO target will scan the IPv6 packet, finding the last extension header  and
       modify  its  Next-header  field.   Normally,  the  following headers will be seen as an extension header:
       NEXTHDR_HOP, NEXTHDR_ROUTING, NEXTHDR_FRAGMENT, NEXTHDR_AUTH, NEXTHDR_DEST.

       For fragmented packets, only the first fragment is processed and other fragments are not touched.

   SYSRQ
       The SYSRQ target allows to remotely trigger sysrq on the local machine over  the  network.  This  can  be
       useful  when vital parts of the machine hang, for example an oops in a filesystem causing locks to be not
       released and processes to get stuck as a result — if still possible, use /proc/sysrq-trigger.  Even  when
       processes  are  stuck,  interrupts  are likely to be still processed, and as such, sysrq can be triggered
       through incoming network packets.

       The xt_SYSRQ implementation uses a salted hash and a sequence number to  prevent  network  sniffers  from
       either  guessing  the  password or replaying earlier requests. The initial sequence number comes from the
       time of day so you will have a small window of vulnerability  should  time  go  backwards  at  a  reboot.
       However,  the  file /sys/module/xt_SYSREQ/seqno can be used to both query and update the current sequence
       number. Also, you should limit as to who can issue commands using -s and/or -m mac,  and  also  that  the
       destination is correct using -d (to protect against potential broadcast packets), noting that it is still
       short of MAC/IP spoofing:

              -A  INPUT  -s  10.10.25.1  -m mac --mac-source aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff -d 10.10.25.7 -p udp --dport 9 -j
              SYSRQ

              (with IPsec) -A INPUT -s 10.10.25.1 -d 10.10.25.7 -m policy  --dir  in  --pol  ipsec  --proto  esp
              --tunnel-src 10.10.25.1 --tunnel-dst 10.10.25.7 -p udp --dport 9 -j SYSRQ

       You  should  also  limit  the  rate  at  which connections can be received to limit the CPU time taken by
       illegal requests, for example:

              -A INPUT -s 10.10.25.1 -m mac --mac-source aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff -d 10.10.25.7 -p  udp  --dport  9  -m
              limit --limit 5/minute -j SYSRQ

       This extension does not take any options. The -p udp options are required.

       The SYSRQ password can be changed through /sys/module/xt_SYSRQ/parameters/password, for example:

              echo -n "password" >/sys/module/xt_SYSRQ/parameters/password

       The module will not respond to sysrq requests until a password has been set.

       Alternatively,  the  password  may  be  specified  at  modprobe  time, but this is insecure as people can
       possible see it through ps(1). You can use an option line  in  e.g.  /etc/modprobe.d/xt_sysrq  if  it  is
       properly guarded, that is, only readable by root.

              options xt_SYSRQ password=cookies

       The  hash  algorithm can also be specified as a module option, for example, to use SHA-256 instead of the
       default SHA-1:

              options xt_SYSRQ hash=sha256

       The xt_SYSRQ module is normally silent unless a successful request is  received,  but  the  debug  module
       parameter can be used to find exactly why a seemingly correct request is not being processed.

       To trigger SYSRQ from a remote host, just use socat:

       sysrq_key="s"  # the SysRq key(s)
       password="password"
       seqno="$(date +%s)"
       salt="$(dd bs=12 count=1 if=/dev/urandom 2>/dev/null |
           openssl enc -base64)"
       ipaddr="2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:ff00:0042:8329"
       req="$sysrq_key,$seqno,$salt"
       req="$req,$(echo -n "$req,$ipaddr,$password" | sha1sum | cut -c1-40)"

       echo "$req" | socat stdin udp-sendto:$ipaddr:9

       See the Linux docs for possible sysrq keys. Important ones are: re(b)oot, power(o)ff, (s)ync filesystems,
       (u)mount  and  remount  readonly. More than one sysrq key can be used at once, but bear in mind that, for
       example, a sync may not complete before a subsequent reboot or poweroff.

       An IPv4 address should have no leading zeros, an IPv6 address should be in the  full  expanded  form  (as
       shown above). The debug option will cause output to be emitted in the same form.

       The  hashing  scheme  should  be  enough  to prevent mis-use of SYSRQ in many environments, but it is not
       perfect: take reasonable precautions to protect your machines.

   TARPIT
       Captures and holds incoming TCP connections using no local per-connection resources.

       TARPIT only works at the TCP level, and is totally application agnostic. This module will  answer  a  TCP
       request  and  play  along like a listening server, but aside from sending an ACK or RST, no data is sent.
       Incoming packets are ignored and dropped. The attacker will terminate the session eventually. This module
       allows the initial packets of an attack to be captured by other software for inspection.  In  most  cases
       this is sufficient to determine the nature of the attack.

       This  offers  similar  functionality  to LaBrea <http://www.hackbusters.net/LaBrea/> but does not require
       dedicated hardware or IPs. Any TCP port that you would normally DROP  or  REJECT  can  instead  become  a
       tarpit.

       --tarpit
              This  mode  completes a connection with the attacker but limits the window size to 0, thus keeping
              the attacker waiting long periods of time. While he is maintaining state  of  the  connection  and
              trying  to  continue  every  60-240  seconds, we keep none, so it is very lightweight. Attempts to
              close the connection are ignored, forcing the remote side to time  out  the  connection  in  12-24
              minutes. This mode is the default.

       --honeypot
              This  mode completes a connection with the attacker, but signals a normal window size, so that the
              remote side will attempt to send data, often with some very nasty exploit attempts. We can capture
              these packets for decoding and further analysis. The module does not send  any  data,  so  if  the
              remote expects an application level response, the game is up.

       --reset
              This mode is handy because we can send an inline RST (reset). It has no other function.

       To tarpit connections to TCP port 80 destined for the current machine:

              -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j TARPIT

       To  significantly  slow  down  Code  Red/Nimda-style  scans  of  unused  address space, forward unused ip
       addresses to a Linux box not acting as a router (e.g. "ip route 10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 ip.of.linux.box" on  a
       Cisco), enable IP forwarding on the Linux box, and add:

              -A FORWARD -p tcp -j TARPIT

              -A FORWARD -j DROP

       NOTE:  If  you use the conntrack module while you are using TARPIT, you should also use unset tracking on
       the packet, or the kernel will unnecessarily allocate resources for each TARPITted connection. To  TARPIT
       incoming connections to the standard IRC port while using conntrack, you could:

              -t raw -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 6667 -j CT --notrack

              -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 6667 -j NFLOG

              -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 6667 -j TARPIT

Matches

   condition
       This matches if a specific condition variable is (un)set.

       [!] --condition name
              Match on boolean value stored in /proc/net/nf_condition/name.

   dhcpmac
       --mac aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff[/mask]
              Matches  the  DHCP  "Client  Host"  address (a MAC address) in a DHCP message.  mask specifies the
              prefix length of the initial portion to match.

   fuzzy
       This module matches a rate limit based on a fuzzy logic controller (FLC).

       --lower-limit number
              Specifies the lower limit, in packets per second.

       --upper-limit number
              Specifies the upper limit, also in packets per second.

   geoip
       Match a packet by its source or destination country.

       [!] --src-cc, --source-country country[,country...]
              Match packet coming from (one of) the specified country(ies)

       [!] --dst-cc, --destination-country country[,country...]
              Match packet going to (one of) the specified country(ies)

       NOTE:  The country is inputed by its ISO-3166 code.

       The extra files you will need is the binary database files. They  are  generated  from  a  country-subnet
       database  with  the  geoip_build_db.pl  tool that is shipped with the source package, and which should be
       available in compiled packages in /usr/lib(exec)/xtables-addons/. The first command retrieves  CSV  files
       from MaxMind, while the other two build packed bisectable range files:

       mkdir -p /usr/share/xt_geoip; cd /tmp; $path/to/xt_geoip_dl;

       $path/to/xt_geoip_build -D /usr/share/xt_geoip GeoIP*.csv;

       The shared library is hardcoded to look in these paths, so use them.

   gradm
       This module matches packets based on grsecurity RBAC status.

       [!] --enabled
              Matches packets if grsecurity RBAC is enabled.

       [!] --disabled
              Matches packets if grsecurity RBAC is disabled.

   iface
       Allows  you  to  check interface states. First, an interface needs to be selected for comparison. Exactly
       one option of the following three must be specified:

       --iface name
              Check the states on the given interface.

       --dev-in
              Check the states on the interface on which the packet came in. If the input  device  is  not  set,
              because for example you are using -m iface in the OUTPUT chain, this submatch returns false.

       --dev-out
              Check  the  states  on  the interface on which the packet will go out. If the output device is not
              set, because for example you are using -m iface in the INPUT chain, this submatch returns false.

       Following that, one can select the interface properties to check for:

       [!] --up, [!] --down
              Check the UP flag.

       [!] --broadcast
              Check the BROADCAST flag.

       [!] --loopback
              Check the LOOPBACK flag.

       [!] --pointtopoint
              Check the POINTTOPOINT flag.

       [!] --running
              Check the RUNNING flag. Do NOT rely on it!

       [!] --noarp, [!] --arp
              Check the NOARP flag.

       [!] --promisc
              Check the PROMISC flag.

       [!] --multicast
              Check the MULTICAST flag.

       [!] --dynamic
              Check the DYNAMIC flag.

       [!] --lower-up
              Check the LOWER_UP flag.

       [!] --dormant
              Check the DORMANT flag.

   ipp2p
       This module matches certain packets in P2P flows. It is not designed to match all packets belonging to  a
       P2P connection — use IPP2P together with CONNMARK for this purpose.

       Use  it  together  with  -p  tcp  or -p udp to search these protocols only or without -p switch to search
       packets of both protocols.

       IPP2P provides the following options, of which one or more may be specified on the command line:

       --edk  Matches as many eDonkey/eMule packets as possible.

       --kazaa
              Matches as many KaZaA packets as possible.

       --gnu  Matches as many Gnutella packets as possible.

       --dc   Matches as many Direct Connect packets as possible.

       --bit  Matches BitTorrent packets.

       --apple
              Matches AppleJuice packets.

       --soul Matches some SoulSeek packets. Considered as beta, use careful!

       --winmx
              Matches some WinMX packets. Considered as beta, use careful!

       --ares Matches Ares and AresLite packets. Use together with -j DROP only.

       --debug
              Prints some information about each hit into kernel logfile. May produce huge logfiles so beware!

       Note that ipp2p may not (and often, does not) identify all packets that are  exchanged  as  a  result  of
       running filesharing programs.

       There  is  more  information on http://ipp2p.org/ , but it has not been updated since September 2006, and
       the syntax there is different from the ipp2p.c provided in Xtables-addons; most importantly, the  --ipp2p
       flag was removed due to its ambiguity to match "all known" protocols.

   ipv4options
       The "ipv4options" module allows to match against a set of IPv4 header options.

       --flags [!]symbol[,[!]symbol...]
              Specify  the  options  that shall appear or not appear in the header. Each symbol specification is
              delimited by a comma, and a '!' can be prefixed to a symbol to negate its  presence.  Symbols  are
              either the name of an IPv4 option or its number. See examples below.

       --any  By  default,  all  of  the  flags  specified  must  be  present/absent,  that is, they form an AND
              condition. Use the --any flag instead to use an OR condition where only at least one  symbol  spec
              must be true.

       Known symbol names (and their number):

       1 — nop

       2 — security — RFC 1108

       3 — lsrr — Loose Source Routing, RFC 791

       4 — timestamp — RFC 781, 791

       7 — record-route — RFC 791

       9 — ssrr — Strict Source Routing, RFC 791

       11 — mtu-probe — RFC 1063

       12 — mtu-reply — RFC 1063

       18 — traceroute — RFC 1393

       20 — router-alert — RFC 2113

       Examples:

       Match packets that have both Timestamp and NOP: -m ipv4options --flags nop,timestamp

       ~ that have either of Timestamp or NOP, or both: --flags nop,timestamp --any

       ~ that have Timestamp and no NOP: --flags '!nop,timestamp'

       ~ that have either no NOP or a timestamp (or both conditions): --flags '!nop,timestamp' --any

   length2
       This module matches the length of a packet against a specific value or range of values.

       [!] --length length[:length]
              Match exact length or length range.

       --layer3
              Match the layer3 frame size (e.g. IPv4/v6 header plus payload).

       --layer4
              Match the layer4 frame size (e.g. TCP/UDP header plus payload).

       --layer5
              Match the layer5 frame size (e.g. TCP/UDP payload, often called layer7).

       If  no --layer* option is given, --layer3 is assumed by default. Note that using --layer5 may not match a
       packet if it is not one of the recognized types (currently TCP, UDP, UDPLite, ICMP, AH and ESP) or  which
       has no 5th layer.

   lscan
       Detects  simple  low-level scan attempts based upon the packet's contents.  (This is different from other
       implementations, which also try to match the rate of new connections.)  Note  that  an  attempt  is  only
       discovered  after  it  has  been  carried out, but this information can be used in conjunction with other
       rules to block the remote host's future connections. So this match module will match  on  the  (probably)
       last packet the remote side will send to your machine.

       --stealth
              Match if the packet did not belong to any known TCP connection (Stealth/FIN/XMAS/NULL scan).

       --synscan
              Match  if  the  connection  was a TCP half-open discovery (SYN scan), i.e. the connection was torn
              down after the 2nd packet in the 3-way handshake.

       --cnscan
              Match if the connection was a TCP full open discovery (connect scan), i.e. the connection was torn
              down after completion of the 3-way handshake.

       --grscan
              Match if data in the connection only flew in the  direction  of  the  remote  side,  e.g.  if  the
              connection  was  terminated after a locally running daemon sent its identification. (E.g. openssh,
              smtp, ftpd.) This may falsely trigger on warranted single-direction data flows, usually bulk  data
              transfers  such  as  FTP  DATA  connections or IRC DCC. Grab Scan Detection should only be used on
              ports where a protocol runs that is guaranteed to do a bidirectional exchange of bytes.

       --mirai
              Match if the TCP ISN is equal to the IPv4 destination address; this is used by the devices in  the
              Mirai botnet as a form of TCP SYN scan, so you will have to explicitly specify --syn for the rule.

       NOTE: Some clients (Windows XP for example) may do what looks like a SYN scan, so be advised to carefully
       use xt_lscan in conjunction with blocking rules, as it may lock out your very own internal network.

   psd
       Attempt to detect TCP and UDP port scans. This match was derived from Solar Designer's scanlogd.

       --psd-weight-threshold threshold
              Total  weight  of the latest TCP/UDP packets with different destination ports coming from the same
              host to be treated as port scan sequence.

       --psd-delay-threshold delay
              Delay (in hundredths of second) for the packets with different destination ports coming  from  the
              same host to be treated as possible port scan subsequence.

       --psd-lo-ports-weight weight
              Weight of the packet with privileged (<=1024) destination port.

       --psd-hi-ports-weight weight
              Weight of the packet with non-priviliged destination port.

   quota2
       The  "quota2"  implements  a  named  counter  which  can  be increased or decreased on a per-match basis.
       Available modes are packet counting or byte counting.  The value of the counter can  be  read  and  reset
       through procfs, thereby making this match a minimalist accounting tool.

       When  counting  down  from the initial quota, the counter will stop at 0 and the match will return false,
       just like the original "quota" match. In growing (upcounting) mode, it will always return true.

       --grow Count upwards instead of downwards.

       --no-change
              Makes it so the counter or quota amount is never changed by packets matching this  rule.  This  is
              only  really  useful  in  "quota"  mode,  as  it will allow you to use complex prerouting rules in
              association with the quota system, without counting a packet twice.

       --name name
              Assign the counter a specific name. This option must be present, as an empty name is not  allowed.
              Names starting with a dot or names containing a slash are prohibited.

       [!] --quota iq
              Specify the initial quota for this counter. If the counter already exists, it is not reset. An "!"
              may be used to invert the result of the match. The negation has no effect when --grow is used.

       --packets
              Count packets instead of bytes that passed the quota2 match.

       Because  counters  in  quota2  can  be  shared, you can combine them for various purposes, for example, a
       bytebucket filter that only lets as much traffic go out as has come in:

       -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 6881 -m quota --name bt --grow; -A OUTPUT -p tcp --sport 6881 -m quota --name bt;

   pknock
       Pknock match implements so-called "port knocking", a stealthy system for network authentication: a client
       sends packets to selected ports in a specific sequence (= simple mode, see example 1 below),  or  a  HMAC
       payload  to  a  single  port  (=  complex mode, see example 2 below), to a target machine that has pknock
       rule(s) installed. The target machine then decides whether  to  unblock  or  block  (again)  the  pknock-
       protected port(s).  This can be used, for instance, to avoid brute force attacks on ssh or ftp services.

       Example prerequisites:

              modprobe cn

              modprobe xt_pknock

       Example 1 (TCP mode, manual closing of opened port not possible):

              iptables -P INPUT DROP

              iptables  -A  INPUT  -p  tcp  -m  pknock --knockports 4002,4001,4004 --strict --name SSH --time 10
              --autoclose 60 --dport 22 -j ACCEPT

       The rule will allow tcp port 22 for the attempting IP address after the successful reception of  TCP  SYN
       packets  to ports 4002, 4001 and 4004, in this order (a.k.a. port-knocking).  Port numbers in the connect
       sequence must follow the exact specification, no other ports may be  "knocked"  inbetween.  The  rule  is
       named  'SSH'  —  a  file  of  the  same  name  for  tracking  port  knocking  states  will  be created in
       /proc/net/xt_pknock .  Successive port knocks must occur with delay of at most 10 seconds. Port 22  (from
       the example) will be automatiaclly dropped after 60 minutes after it was previously allowed.

       Example  2  (UDP mode — non-replayable and non-spoofable, manual closing of opened port possible, secure,
       also called "SPA" = Secure Port Authorization):

              iptables -A INPUT -p udp -m pknock --knockports 4000 --name FTP --opensecret foo --closesecret bar
              --autoclose 240 -j DROP

              iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m pknock --checkip --name FTP --dport 21 -j ACCEPT

       The first rule will create an "ALLOWED" record in /proc/net/xt_pknock/FTP after the successful  reception
       of  an UDP packet to port 4000. The packet payload must be constructed as a HMAC256 using "foo" as a key.
       The HMAC content is the particular client's IP address as a 32-bit network byteorder quantity,  plus  the
       number  of  minutes  since  the  Unix  epoch,  also  as  a 32-bit value.  (This is known as Simple Packet
       Authorization, also called "SPA".)  In such case, any subsequent attempt to connect to port 21  from  the
       client's IP address will cause such packets to be accepted in the second rule.

       Similarly,  upon  reception  of an UDP packet constructed the same way, but with the key "bar", the first
       rule will remove a previously installed "ALLOWED" state record from /proc/net/xt_pknock/FTP, which  means
       that the second rule will stop matching for subsequent connection attempts to port 21.  In case no close-
       secret   packet  is  received  within  4  hours,  the  first  rule  will  remove  "ALLOWED"  record  from
       /proc/net/xt_pknock/FTP itself.

       Things worth noting:

       General:

       Specifying --autoclose 0 means that no automatic close will be performed at all.

       xt_pknock is capable of sending information about successful matches via a netlink socket  to  userspace,
       should you need to implement your own way of receiving and handling portknock notifications.

       TCP mode:

       This  mode  is  not  immune  against  eavesdropping, spoofing and replaying of the port knock sequence by
       someone else (but its use may still be sufficient for scenarios where these factors are  not  necessarily
       this  important,  such as bare shielding of the SSH port from brute-force attacks).  However, if you need
       these features, you should use UDP mode.

       It is always wise to specify three or more ports that are not monotonically increasing or decreasing with
       a small stepsize (e.g. 1024,1025,1026) to avoid accidentally triggering the rule by a portscan.

       Specifying the inter-knock timeout with --time is mandatory in TCP mode, to  avoid  permanent  denial  of
       services by clogging up the peer knock-state tracking table that xt_pknock internally keeps, should there
       be a DDoS on the first-in-row knock port from more hostile IP addresses than what the actual size of this
       table is (defaults to 16, can be changed via the "peer_hasht_ents" module parameter).  It is also wise to
       use  as  short  a  time  as  possible  (1  second) for --time for this very reason. You may also consider
       increasing the size of the peer knock-state tracking table. Using --strict also helps, as it requires the
       knock sequence to be exact. This means that if the hostile client sends more knocks  to  the  same  port,
       xt_pknock  will mark such attempt as failed knock sequence and will forget it immediately.  To completely
       thwart this kind of DDoS, knock-ports would need to have an additional rate-limit protection. Or you  may
       consider using UDP mode.

       UDP mode:

       This  mode  is  immune  against eavesdropping, replaying and spoofing attacks.  It is also immune against
       DDoS attack on the knockport.

       For this mode to work, the clock difference on the client and on the  server  must  be  below  1  minute.
       Synchronizing time on both ends by means of NTP or rdate is strongly suggested.

       There  is a rate limiter built into xt_pknock which blocks any subsequent open attempt in UDP mode should
       the request arrive within less than one minute since the first successful open. This is  intentional;  it
       thwarts eventual spoofing attacks.

       Because the payload value of an UDP knock packet is influenced by client's IP address, UDP mode cannot be
       used across NAT.

       For  sending  UDP  "SPA"  packets,  you  may  use either knock.sh or knock-orig.sh. These may be found in
       doc/pknock/util.

See also

       iptables(8), ip6tables(8), iptables-extensions(8), iptaccount(8)

       For developers, the book "Writing Netfilter  modules"  at  http://inai.de/documents/Netfilter_Modules.pdf
       provides detailed information on how to write such modules/extensions.

                                                                                               xtables-addons(8)