linux iptables intro and basic network information

Introduction iptables – the standard linux firewall

iptables is a standard firewall built into common Linux distributions such as ubuntu, debian, and centOS.

First, packets are logical containers of data representing the flow of data. Protocols are languages and sets of rules used by network devices to send and/or receive data. Ports are numerical representations of protocols and are common throughout TCP/IP networking. Registered ports are those from 0 through 49151. IANA maintains the official list of both ranges.The dynamic or private ports are those from 49152 through 65535. One common use for ephemeral ports are used by servers to continue communications with a client that initially connected to one of the server’s well-known service listening ports. Here is a list of about 250 well-known ports.

iptables drops network packets when those packets meet a certain set of pre-defined CHAINS of rules stored in the computer’s memory. The chains can be placed in different binding orders and they organize the firewall.

A packet, or a datagram, is a unit of a series of bits that forms a container that can be examined, routed, dropped, and filtered in regards to it’s headers, source, destination, and content.

The packet is organized into different fields. It is typically 32bits and contains different data objects which contain mac address source/destination, and IP address source/destination. Cyclical redundancy checks (CRCs) are used to check the values of a packet before they are sent. When the datagrams reach their destination a checksum is attained and checked against the CRC field. In TCP, if the two match then the datagram is marked as successfully sent. If it is different, the source is notified that the packet is bad and will need to be resent.

Datagrams on a wired network really just represent electrons (ethernet) or pulses of light and radio waves that modulate in frequency and amplitude in optical transmissions.

CSMA/CD is used to manage collisions and prevents simultaneous transmission of data on both wired and wireless networks.

Layer 3 of the OSI model is where routers route packets to different vlans and subnets based on their field values using static routes and dynamic protocols such as RIP and OSPF. Layer 2 switches create connections between nodes with addresses in their MAC tables through Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASICs).

Services running on a server rely on field data in each datagram. The traffic is organized by standard protocols that are bound to specific ports. Each port is represented by a number and are filtered by opening or closing the ports to accept or drop packets whole field data matches that port.

Like other firewalls, iptables manages ports on a NIC where packets can enter, pass, or exit. Ports can be opened, listen, or closed for each service or kind of traffic that will be allowed. Other ports are closed for traffic to be denied.

Chains are sets of rules that manage network traffic by opening or closing ports that can be applied or bound to a Network Interface in a particular order.

There are three kinds of CHAINS:

  1. INPUT – packets coming into the PC.
  2. OUTPUT – packets leaving out our PC.
  3. FORWARD – packets that pass through the PC if it’s multi-homed and being used as a router.

Here are common iptables switches used in chains:

  • -s = source address
  • -d = destination address
  • -p = protocol
  • -j = action
  • -P = specify default policy for a chain
  • -D = delete a rule for a chain
  • -R = replace a rule for a chain
  • -F = remove all rules for specified chain.
  • -L = list all chain rules
  • -A = add/append a rule to the end of a chain

Rules are used to define and manage the traffic you want to ALLOW first in iptables. Then you add the last rule, or the catch-all rule at the bottom of these rules. The last rule blocks all other traffic not previously allowed.

Example of a rule applied to the INPUT chain:

  1. Allow HTTP traffic for an Apache2 web server on port 80 on the interface named eth0:

iptables -A INPUT -j ACCEPT -p tcp –destination-port 80 -i eth0

2. Allow FTP packets for the VSFTPD daemon/service on port 21:

iptables -A INPUT -j ACCEPT -p tcp –destination-port 21 -i eth0

3. Allow SSH traffic for Secure Shell connections on port 22:

iptables -A INPUT -j ACCEPT -p tcp –destination-port 22 -i eth0

4. Apply a CATCH-ALL rule:

iptables -A INPUT -j DROP -p tcp -i eth0

*Note – catch-all rules must be entered and applied LAST.

You can define your own iptables chains as well as view the built-in chains present. Many users will define their own iptables rules in a shell script that is run automatically at boot.

 

Usage of suid and sgid in linux

So when it comes to certain files and executable scripts, as a linux admin you may want to allow certain users to run these scripts with elevated privileges.

setuid and setgid allow you to grant limited elevated privileges (root) without having to add the users to the sudoers file.

Similar to chmod, where you indicate where you want to set the user id bit, you can set the permissions with 4, 2 and 1: suid = 4 sgid = 2 stickybit = 1

To do a suid:

$chmod 4777 script  – would give you permissions of

-rwsrwxrwx 1 jason jason

to do sgid use:

$chmod 2777 script – would give you

-rwxrwsrwx 1 jason jason

by using $chmod 6777 script – you would get

-rwsrwsrwx 1 jason jason

For setting back to normal you would use

$chmod 0777 script

SGID is often used with folders for example

$mkdir groupFolder

#chmod 2775 groupFolder

would give you:

-drwxrwsr-x 2 jason jason

when you set groupid on the folder, anyone that adds a file to that folder, the group ownership of the file will receive the group ownership of that folder.

If you have a file that is suid, and is malicious, you can find files on your system that have the suid and/or sgid bit set:

find .  -perm +6000

find .  -perm +2000

find .  -perm +4000

You should occasionally look for these files so you know which files and/or folders are automatically setting permissions.