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Designing and Implementing Linux Firewalls with QoS Using Netfilter, Iproute2, NAT and L7-Filter

Lucian Gheorghe

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Annotation This is a practical guide to building firewalls and QoS using Linux. This book focuses on providing ready-made firewalls, traffic shaping, and packet prioritization for small, medium, and large scale organizations. Using a Linux firewall, you can do a lot more than just filtering packets. This book shows you how to implement Linux firewalls and Quality of Service, a measure of performance for a transmission system that reflects its quality and availability, using practical examples from very small to very large networks. After giving us a background of network security, the book moves on to explain the basic technologies we will work with, namely netfilter, which is a packet filtering framework, a routing package known as iproute2, NAT and filtering packages like l7-filter. These form the crux of building Linux firewalls and QOS. The later part of the book covers 5 real-world networks for which we design the security policies, build the firewall, setup the script, and verify our installation. These comprehensive set of set up scripts and set up guidelines to create firewall protection for various specific usage scenarios are unique and set this book apart. The author draws on his experience to offer the reader valuable advice on the best practices. Providing only necessary theoretical background, the book takes a practical approach, presenting case studies and plenty of illustrative examples. Chapter 1 is a brief introduction to networking concepts. It covers OSI and TCP/IP networking models with explanations on their layers, TCP and UDP as Layer 4 protocols and then rounds off the chapter with a discussion on IP addresses, Subnetting, and Supernetting. Chapter 2 discusses possible security threats and vulnerabilities found at each of the OSI layers. The goal here is to understand where and how these threats can affect us and to stay protected from attackers. It then rounds off the discussion by sketching out the basic steps required to protect the services that run on our system. Chapter 3 introduces two tools needed to build Linux firewalls and QoS. We first learn the workings of netfilter, which is a packet filtering framework, and implement what we have learnt to build a basic firewall for a Linux workstation. We then see how to perform advanced routing and traffic shaping using the IP and TC tools provided by the iproute2 package. The chapter ends with another example scenario where we implement the concepts learnt in the chapter. Chapter 4 discusses NAT, the types of NAT, how they work and how they can be implemented with Linux by giving practical examples. It also describe packet mangling, when to use it, and why to use it. Chapter 5 covers layer 7 filtering in detail. We see how to install the l7-filter package, apply the necessary Linux kernel and ip table patches, and test our installation. We then learn the different applications of l7-filter and see how to put them to practical use. We will also see how to install and use IPP2P, which is an alternative to the l7-filter package but only for P2P traffic, and finally we set up a test between the two packages. Chapter 6 raises two very popular scenarios, for which we design, implement, and test firewalls and a small QoS configuration. In the first scenario, we configure Linux as a SOHO router. Being a relatively smaller network with few devices, we learn how to adapt to what we have learnt in the earlier chapters to suit this environment and build a secure network. We implement transparent proxies using squid and iptables so that children/minors cannot access malicious or pornographic web content. Our firewall setup implements NAT to redirect traffic from certain ports to other hosts using Linux. This configuration is tested by checking the NAT table and seeing how the kernel analyzes our rules. As part of QoS, we split the bandwidth between the devices in a SOHO environment using HTB. Assuming a 1Mbps connection, we design a policy to split it between the 4 devices creating 4 HTB child classes for the 4 devices. In the end, we test our QoS configuration using the tc class show command. Chapter 7 covers the design of a firewall system for a hypermarket having the headquarters in one location, one store in the same city and several stores in other cities. The hypermarket has an application that uses MSSQL databases in each location which is replicated at the headquarters. All locations have IP Analog Telephone Adapters (IP Phones in the diagram) with subscriptions at the main provider (the HQ provider). In this example we will use, just like in the real application, H.323 as the VoIP protocol. We setup all remote locations to have an encrypted VPN connection using ip tunnel to connect to the headquarters. Users are shown how to create a QOS script with HTB that controls bandwidth usage based on priorities. The next firewall taken up is that for a small ISP setup that has one internet connection, an access network, a server farm and the internal departments. The setup of firewall scripts for each of them and methods to handle the tricky wireless server are covered. The QoS is handled by the intranet server, the wireless server and the Core router. Chapter 8 covers the design of a three-layered network deployed at a large provider of Internet and IP telephony services, the three layers being Core, Distribution and Access. It explains network configuration first on the core and distribution levels and then moves on to building firewalls. The huge size of the network also means that there is a need to tackle newer security threats. As seen in the figure we have 4 Cores running BGP under Zebra and each one peculiar in its own way. There are 3 data services that this ISP can provide to its customers: Internet access, national network access, and metropolitan network access. This chapter will show you how to handle QoS so as to limit this traffic as per one?s needs. This book is aimed at Linux Network administrators and any one interested in securing their systems behind a firewall. Basic knowledge of Linux is presumed but other than that this book shows you how to do the rest, from configuring your system to dealing with security breaches.
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