Forge Home

speedychains

A companion module for puppetlabs-firewall that generates huge iptables chains and applies them in seconds

8,241 downloads

8,241 latest version

3.8 quality score

We run a couple of automated
scans to help you access a
module's quality. Each module is
given a score based on how well
the author has formatted their
code and documentation and
modules are also checked for
malware using VirusTotal.

Please note, the information below
is for guidance only and neither of
these methods should be considered
an endorsement by Puppet.

Version information

  • 1.0.0 (latest)
released Sep 19th 2015

Start using this module

  • r10k or Code Manager
  • Bolt
  • Manual installation
  • Direct download

Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'jethrocarr-speedychains', '1.0.0'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add jethrocarr-speedychains
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install jethrocarr-speedychains --version 1.0.0

Direct download is not typically how you would use a Puppet module to manage your infrastructure, but you may want to download the module in order to inspect the code.

Download

Documentation

jethrocarr/speedychains — version 1.0.0 Sep 19th 2015

puppet-speedychains

Overview

A companion module for puppetlabs-firewall that generates iptables/ip6tables chains and applies them in seconds, even with thousands of entries.

Ideal for dealing with massive GeoIP rulesets, blocklists or explicit client access lists.

Module Description

With the puppet-rirs module it becomes possible to easily get lists of geographic IP address ranges to use in various firewalls or application policies.

However whilst application rulesets can generally be generated in mere seconds using ERB templates, applying thousands of iptables/ip6tables rules can take many HOURS using the puppetlabs-firewall module as it treats every entry as an independent resource that needs to be checked, compared and then saved.

This makes the use of any massive firewall rulesets such as GeoIP but also huge block lists or explicit client-permit lists almost impossible to manage with Puppet.

This module provides a solution where arrays of IP addresses can be provided to the module and used to generate iptables/ip6tables chains which can then be easily referenced with the puppetlabs-firewall module.

Usage

Use the speedychains defined resource to generate and apply an array of IP addresses that you provide, and provide the name of the chain and the action (ACCEPT|REJECT|DROP) that you want applied to the address in the chain.

speedychains { 'home-lan':
  chain_provider => 'iptables',
  rule_action    => 'accept',
  rule_addresses => ['192.168.0.0/16', '172.16.0.0/12'],
}

Valid parameters are:

  • chain_name: (optional) Name of the chain, defaults to $name

  • chain_provider: The provider used, currently limited to either 'iptables' or 'ip6tables'

  • rule_action: The action to take for each address added to the rules.

  • rule_addresses: An array of IP addresses to go into the chain.

By default the chain will do nothing until you direct traffic into that chain, you can do this with puppetlabs-firewall as per the following example:

firewall { "100 Example Rule":
  provider => 'iptables',
  proto    => 'tcp',
  port     => '9000',
  jump     => 'home-lan',
  require  => Speedychains['home-lan'],
}

GeoIP Example

A common case will be using this as a companion module to puppet-rirs, the following shows how to permit access to port 9000 from country New Zealand/NZ only:

speedychains { 'geoip-nz-v4':
  chain_provider => 'iptables',
  rule_action    => 'accept',
  rule_addresses => rir_allocations('apnic', 'ipv4', 'nz'),
}

firewall { "100 V4 Permit Port 9k":
  provider => 'iptables',
  proto    => 'tcp',
  port     => '9000',
  jump     => 'geoip-nz-v4',
  require  => Speedychains['geoip-nz-v4'],
}

Remember that the chain can be defined once and then used by multiple firewall rules anywhere in your manifests/modules, as long as you remember to set the require statement.

Purging

Some users like to have the firewall module purge all unmanaged rules, so that rather than needing to ensure unwanted rules => absent, only the rules explicitly defined will ever be on the system. This config looks like:

resources { 'firewall':
  purge => true
}

Unfortunatly this is no longer possible when using Speedychains since the rules we add are technically unmanaged by Puppet (that's why it's fast!). Now in theory our rules shouldn't get purged since we tell the firewall module specifically NOT to purge our chain, but this code seems buggy and just purges everything regardless of ignore => 'string' or purge => false rules on chains.

Thankfully we can get the desired behavior, by moving to defining all the default/system chains as purgable, thus leaving other chains to be managed as per their specific settings.

# Blow away any existing rules in standard chains. We have to use this more
# verbose approach, since the usual approach of:
#
# resources {'firewall':
#   purge => true
# }
#
# Is buggy and will purge all records from all chains, even if the other
# chains are set to purge => false, or use ignore => "comment" :-(

firewallchain { ['INPUT:filter:IPv4', 'FORWARD:filter:IPv4', 'OUTPUT:filter:IPv4']:
  purge => true,
}

firewallchain { ['INPUT:filter:IPv6', 'FORWARD:filter:IPv6', 'OUTPUT:filter:IPv6']:
  purge => true,
}

# Purge any unmanaged firewall chains
resources { 'firewallchain':
  purge => true,
}

When speedychains creates it's chains, it uses the Puppet firewall module to do so, however it manages the purge/update of the rules in it's chains itself.

Limitations

  1. Currently limited to GNU/Linux platform due to it's iptables/ip6tables focus, however I'm very open to accepting any pull requests that can add support for other platforms and firewall systems.

  2. When listing iptables rules on a server with large chains, it will take ages as it tries to resolve reverse DNS. You can avoid this by calling it with the -n option, eg iptables -n -L. This isn't a speedchains limitation but rather just a default with the iptables tool on Linux. You can also decide to list specific chains, eg just the INPUT rules with iptables -n -L INPUT.

  3. See comments in Purging section above for limitations around purging.

  4. Persistency isn't handled by this module. Generally what happens is that the rules generated by this module get saved when puppetlabs-firewall next does a save, generally this always happens after defining the chains, since most users will have an firewall record that calls the chain and triggers an update of the saved copy. But it does mean if the chain itself changes and nothing else does, it doesn't get saved back to disk. Ideally need a way to hook into the firewall module's save functionality, don't really want to clone it all...

License

This module is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"). See the LICENSE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.