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.TH EBTABLES 8  "01 May 2002"
.\"
.\" Man page written by Bart De Schuymer <bart.de.schuymer@pandora.be>
.\" It is based on the iptables man page.
.\"
.\" Iptables page by Herve Eychenne March 2000.
.\"
.\"     This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
.\"     it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
.\"     the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
.\"     (at your option) any later version.
.\"
.\"     This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
.\"     but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
.\"     MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
.\"     GNU General Public License for more details.
.\"
.\"     You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
.\"     along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
.\"     Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
.\"     
.\"
.SH NAME
ebtables(v.2.0) \- ethernet bridge packet table administration
.SH SYNOPSIS
.BR "ebtables -[ADI] " "chain rule-specification [options]"
.br
.BR "ebtables -P " "chain target"
.br
.BR "ebtables -[FLZ] [" "chain" "]"
.br
.B "ebtables -L DB"
.br
.BR "ebtables -[b] [" "y/n" "]"
.br
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B ebtables
is used to set up, maintain, and inspect the tables of Ethernet frame
rules in the Linux kernel. It works analogous as iptables, but is less
complicated. This man page is written with the man page of iptables
next to it, so don't be surprised to see copied sentences and structure.

There are three tables with built-in chains. Each chain is a list
of rules which can match frames: each rule specifies what to do with a
frame which matches. This is called a 'target'. The tables are used to
divide functionality into different sets of chains.

.SS TARGETS
A firewall rule specifies criteria for a frame, and a target. If the
frame does not match, the next rule in the chain is the examined one; if
it does match, then the next thing to do is specified by the target.
This target can be one of these values:
.IR ACCEPT ,
.IR DROP ,
.IR CONTINUE ,
an extention.
.PP
.I ACCEPT
means to let the frame through.
.I DROP
means the frame has to be dropped.
.I CONTINUE
means the next rule has to be checked. This can be handy to know how many
frames pass a certain point in the chain or to log those frames. For the
other targets see the
.B "TARGET EXTENSIONS"
section.
.SS TABLES
There are three tables.
.TP
.B "-t, --table"
This option specifies the frame matching table which the command should
operate on. The tables are: 
.BR filter ,
this is the default table and contains three chains: 
.B INPUT 
(for frames destined for the bridge itself), 
.B OUTPUT 
(for locally-generated frames) and
.B FORWARD 
(for frames being bridged).
.BR nat ,
this table is used to change the mac addresses and contains three chains: 
.B PREROUTING 
(for altering frames as soon as they come in), 
.B OUTPUT 
(for altering locally generated frames before they are bridged) and 
.B POSTROUTING
(for altering frames as they are about to go out). A small note on the naming
of chains POSTROUTING and PREROUTING: it would be more accurate to call them
PREFORWARDING and POSTFORWARDING, but for all those who come from the
.BR iptables " world to " ebtables
it is easier to have the same names.
.BR broute ,
this table is used to make a brouter, it has one chain:
.BR BROUTING .
The targets
.BR DROP " and " ACCEPT
have special meaning in this table.
.B DROP
actually means the frame has to be routed, while
.B ACCEPT
means the frame has to be bridged. The
.B BROUTING
chain is traversed very early. It is only traversed by frames entering on
a bridge enslaved nic that is in forwarding state. Normally those frames
would be bridged, but you can decide otherwise here. The
.B redirect
target is very handy here.
.SH OPTIONS
The options can be divided into several different groups.
.SS COMMANDS
These options specify the specific actions to perform; only one of them
can be specified on the command line (the
.B -Z
command is an exception). All these options only apply to the selected
(or default) table.
.TP
.B "-A, --append"
Append a rule to the end of the selected chain.
.TP
.B "-D, --delete"
Delete the specified rule from the selected chain. There are two versions
of this command. A rule number (starting at 1) or the complete rule can be
specified.
.TP
.B "-I, --insert"
Insert the specified rule into the selected chain at the specified rule number (1 meaning
the head of the chain).
.TP
.B "-L, --list"
List all rules in the selected chain. If no chain is selected, all chains
are listed. If the chainname equals 
.BR DB ,
.B ebtables
will try to show the database. This database gives a survey of the kind of
frames that pass the different bridge hooks. It uses the interfaces where
the frame came in or will go out, the protocol field and the hook. This
database is independent from the rest of
.B ebtables
and is in a different kernel module.
.TP
.B "-F, --flush"
Flush the selected chain. If no chain is selected, every chain will be
flushed. This does not change the policy of the chain.
.TP
.B "-Z, --zero"
Put the counters of the selected chain on zero. If no chain is selected, all the counters
are put on zero. This can be used in conjunction with the -L command (see above). 
This will cause the rule counters to be printed on the screen before they are put on zero.
.TP
.B "-P, --policy"
Set the policy for the chain to the given target. The policy is either
.B ACCEPT
, either
.BR DROP .
.SS PARAMETERS
The following parameters make up a rule specification (as used in the add
and delete commands). A "!" argument before the specification inverts the
test for that specification. Apart from these standard parameters, there are others, see
.BR "MATCH EXTENSIONS" .
.TP
.BR "-p, --protocol " "[!] \fIprotocol\fP"
The protocol that was responsible for creating the frame. This can be a
hexadecimal number, above 
.IR 0x0600 ,
a name (e.g.
.I ARP
) or
.BR LENGTH .
The protocol field of the Ethernet frame can be used to denote the
length of the header (802.2/802.3 networks). When the value of that field is
below (or equals)
.IR 0x0600 ,
the value equals the size of the header and shouldn't be used as a
protocol number. Instead, all frames where the protocol field is used as
the length field are assumed to be of the same 'protocol'. The protocol
name used in
.B ebtables
for these frames is
.BR LENGTH .
.br
The file
.B /etc/ethertypes
can be used to show readable
characters instead of hexadecimal numbers for the protocols. For example,
.I 0x0800
will be represented by 
.IR IPV4 .
The use of this file is not case sensitive. 
See that file for more information. The flag 
.B --proto
is an alias for this option.
.TP 
.BR "-i, --in-interface " "[!] \fIname\fP"
The interface via which a frame is received (for the
.BR INPUT ,
.BR FORWARD ,
.BR PREROUTING " and " BROUTING
chains). The flag
.B --in-if
is an alias for this option.
.TP
.BR "--logical-in " "[!] \fIname\fP"
The (logical) bridge interface via which a frame is received (for the
.BR INPUT ,
.BR FORWARD ,
.BR PREROUTING " and " BROUTING
chains).
.TP
.BR "-o, --out-interface " "[!] \fIname\fP"
The interface via which a frame is going to be sent (for the
.BR OUTPUT ,
.B FORWARD
and
.B POSTROUTING
chains). The flag
.B --out-if
is an alias for this option.
.TP
.BR "--logical-out " "[!] \fIname\fP"
The (logical) bridge interface via which a frame is going to be sent (for
the
.BR OUTPUT ,
.B FORWARD
and
.B POSTROUTING
chains).
.TP
.BR "-s, --source " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The source mac address. Both mask and address are written as 6 hexadecimal
numbers seperated by colons. Alternatively one can specify Unicast,
Multicast or Broadcast.
.br
Unicast=00:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00,
Multicast=01:00:00:00:00:00/01:00:00:00:00:00 and
Broadcast=ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff/ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff. Note that a broadcast
address will also match the multicast specification. The flag
.B --src
is an alias for this option.
.TP
.BR "-d, --destination " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The destination mac address. See -s (above) for more details. The flag
.B --dst
is an alias for this option.

.SS OTHER OPTIONS
.TP
.B "-V, --version"
Show the version of the userprogram.
.TP
.B "-h, --help"
Give a brief description of the command syntax. Here you can also specify
names of extensions and
.B ebtables
will try to write help about those extensions. E.g. ebtables -h snat log ip arp.
.TP
.BR "-b --db " "[\fIy/n\fP]"
.IR "" "Enable (" y ") or disable (" n ") the database."
.TP
.BR "-j, --jump " "\fItarget\fP"
The target of the rule. This is one of the following values:
.BR ACCEPT ,
.BR DROP ,
.BR CONTINUE ,
or a target extension, see
.BR "TARGET EXTENSIONS" .
.SH MATCH EXTENSIONS
.B ebtables
extensions are precompiled into the userspace tool. So there is no need
to explicitly load them with a -m option like in iptables. However, these
extensions deal with functionality supported by supplemental kernel modules.
.SS ip
Specify ip specific fields. These will only work if the protocol equals
.BR IPv4 .
.TP
.BR "--ip-source " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The source ip address.
The flag
.B --ip-src
is an alias for this option.
.TP
.BR "--ip-destination " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The destination ip address.
The flag
.B --ip-dst
is an alias for this option.
.TP
.BR "--ip-tos " "[!] \fItos\fP"
The ip type of service, in hexadecimal numbers.
.BR IPv4 .
.TP
.BR "--ip-protocol " "[!] \fIprotocol\fP"
The ip protocol.
The flag
.B --ip-proto
is an alias for this option.
.SS arp
Specify arp specific fields. These will only work if the protocol equals
.BR ARP " or " RARP .
.TP
.BR "--arp-opcode " "[!] \fIopcode\fP"
The (r)arp opcode (decimal or a string, for more details see ebtables -h arp).
.TP
.BR "--arp-htype " "[!] \fIhardware type\fP"
The hardware type, this can be a decimal or the string "Ethernet". This
is normally Ethernet (value 1).
.TP
.BR "--arp-ptype " "[!] \fIprotocol type\fP"
The protocol type for which the (r)arp is used (hexadecimal or the string "IPv4").
This is normally IPv4 (0x0800). 
.TP
.BR "--arp-ip-src " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The ARP IP source address specification.
.TP
.BR "--arp-ip-dst " "[!] \fIaddress\fP[/\fImask\fP]"
The ARP IP destination address specification.
.SS vlan
Specify 802.1Q VLAN specific fields. These will only work if the protocol equals
.BR 802_1Q .
For more details see
.BR "ebtables -h vlan" .
.TP
.BR "--vlan-id " "[!] \fIid\fP"
The VLAN identifier (decimal number from 0 to 4095).
.TP
.BR "--vlan-prio " "[!] \fIprio\fP"
The VLAN priority type, this can be a decimal number from 0 to 7. The default value is 0.
.SH WATCHER EXTENSION(S)
Watchers are things that only look at frames passing by. These watchers only see the
frame if the frame passes all the matches of the rule.
.SS log
The fact that the log module is a watcher lets us log stuff while giving a target
by choice. Note that the log module therefore is not a target.
.TP
.B "--log"
.br
Use this if you won't specify any other log options, so if you want to use the default
settings: log-prefix="", no arp logging, no ip logging, log-level=info.
.TP
.B --log-level "\fIlevel\fP"
.br
defines the logging level. For the possible values: ebtables -h log.
The default level is 
.IR info .
.TP
.BR --log-prefix " \fItext\fP"
.br
defines the prefix to be printed before the logging information.
.TP
.B --log-ip 
.br
will log the ip information when a frame made by the ip protocol matches 
the rule. The default is no ip information logging.
.TP
.B --log-arp
.br
will log the (r)arp information when a frame made by the (r)arp protocols
matches the rule. The default is no (r)arp information logging.
.SS TARGET EXTENSIONS
.TP
.B snat
The
.B snat
target can only be used in the
.BR POSTROUTING " chain of the " nat " table."
It specifies that the source mac address has to be changed.
.br
.BR "--to-source " "\fIaddress\fP"
.br
The flag
.B --to-src
is an alias for this option.
.br
.BR "--snat-target " "\fItarget\fP"
.br
Specifies the standard target. After doing the snat, the rule still has 
to give a standard target so
.B ebtables
knows what to do.
The default target is ACCEPT. Making it CONTINUE could let you use
multiple target extensions on the same frame. Making it DROP doesn't
make sense, but you could do that too.
.TP
.B dnat
The
.B dnat
target can only be used in the
.BR BROUTING " chain of the " broute " table and the "
.BR PREROUTING " and " OUTPUT " chains of the " nat " table."
It specifies that the destination mac address has to be changed.
.br
.BR "--to-destination " "\fIaddress\fP"
.br
The flag
.B --to-dst
is an alias for this option.
.br
.BR "--dnat-target " "\fItarget\fP"
.br
Specifies the standard target. After doing the dnat, the rule still has to
give a standard target so
.B ebtables
knows what to do.
The default target is ACCEPT. Making it CONTINUE could let you use 
multiple target extensions on the same frame. Making it DROP only makes
sense in the BROUTING chain but using the redirect target is more logical
there.
.TP
.B redirect
The
.B redirect
target will change the MAC target address to that of the bridge device the
frame arrived on. This target can only be used in the
.BR BROUTING " chain of the " broute " table and the "
.BR PREROUTING " chain of the " nat " table."
.br
.BR "--redirect-target " "\fItarget\fP"
.br
Specifies the standard target. After doing the MAC redirect, the rule
still has to give a standard target so
.B ebtables
knows what to do.
The default target is ACCEPT. Making it CONTINUE could let you use 
multiple target extensions on the same frame. Making it DROP in the
BROUTING chain will let the frames be routed.
.SH FILES
.I /etc/ethertypes
.SH BUGS
This won't work on an architecture with a user32/kernel64 situation like the Sparc64.
.SH AUTHOR
.IR "" "Bart De Schuymer <" bart.de.schuymer@pandora.be >
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR iptables "(8), " brctl (8)