CT HELPER ~~~~~~~~~ [verse] *ct helper* 'helper' *{ type* 'type' *protocol* 'protocol' *;* [*l3proto* 'family' *;*] *}* Ct helper is used to define connection tracking helpers that can then be used in combination with the *ct helper set* statement. 'type' and 'protocol' are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default, i.e. in the inet table the kernel will try to load both the ipv4 and ipv6 helper backends, if they are supported by the kernel. .conntrack helper specifications [options="header"] |================= |Keyword | Description | Type | type | name of helper type | quoted string (e.g. "ftp") |protocol | layer 4 protocol of the helper | string (e.g. ip) |l3proto | layer 3 protocol of the helper | address family (e.g. ip) |================= .defining and assigning ftp helper ---------------------------------- Unlike iptables, helper assignment needs to be performed after the conntrack lookup has completed, for example with the default 0 hook priority. table inet myhelpers { ct helper ftp-standard { type "ftp" protocol tcp } chain prerouting { type filter hook prerouting priority filter; tcp dport 21 ct helper set "ftp-standard" } } ---------------------------------- CT TIMEOUT ~~~~~~~~~~ [verse] *ct timeout* 'name' *{ protocol* 'protocol' *; policy = {* 'state'*:* 'value' [*,* ...] *} ;* [*l3proto* 'family' *;*] *}* Ct timeout is used to update connection tracking timeout values.Timeout policies are assigned with the *ct timeout set* statement. 'protocol' and 'policy' are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default. .conntrack timeout specifications [options="header"] |================= |Keyword | Description | Type | protocol | layer 4 protocol of the timeout object | string (e.g. ip) |state | connection state name | string (e.g. "established") |value | timeout value for connection state | unsigned integer |l3proto | layer 3 protocol of the timeout object | address family (e.g. ip) |================= .defining and assigning ct timeout policy ---------------------------------- table ip filter { ct timeout customtimeout { protocol tcp; l3proto ip policy = { established: 120, close: 20 } } chain output { type filter hook output priority filter; policy accept; ct timeout set "customtimeout" } } ---------------------------------- .testing the updated timeout policy ---------------------------------- % conntrack -E It should display: [UPDATE] tcp 6 120 ESTABLISHED src=172.16.19.128 dst=172.16.19.1 sport=22 dport=41360 [UNREPLIED] src=172.16.19.1 dst=172.16.19.128 sport=41360 dport=22 ---------------------------------- CT EXPECTATION ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [verse] *ct expectation* 'name' *{ protocol* 'protocol' *; dport* 'dport' *; timeout* 'timeout' *; size* 'size' *; [*l3proto* 'family' *;*] *}* Ct expectation is used to create connection expectations. Expectations are assigned with the *ct expectation set* statement. 'protocol', 'dport', 'timeout' and 'size' are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default. .conntrack expectation specifications [options="header"] |================= |Keyword | Description | Type |protocol | layer 4 protocol of the expectation object | string (e.g. ip) |dport | destination port of expected connection | unsigned integer |timeout | timeout value for expectation | unsigned integer |size | size value for expectation | unsigned integer |l3proto | layer 3 protocol of the expectation object | address family (e.g. ip) |================= .defining and assigning ct expectation policy --------------------------------------------- table ip filter { ct expectation expect { protocol udp dport 9876 timeout 2m size 8 l3proto ip } chain input { type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept; ct expectation set "expect" } } ---------------------------------- COUNTER ~~~~~~~ [verse] *counter* ['packets bytes'] .Counter specifications [options="header"] |================= |Keyword | Description | Type |packets | initial count of packets | unsigned integer (64 bit) |bytes | initial count of bytes | unsigned integer (64 bit) |================= QUOTA ~~~~~ [verse] *quota* [*over* | *until*] ['used'] .Quota specifications [options="header"] |================= |Keyword | Description | Type |quota | quota limit, used as the quota name | Two arguments, unsigned integer (64 bit) and string: bytes, kbytes, mbytes. "over" and "until" go before these arguments |used | initial value of used quota | Two arguments, unsigned integer (64 bit) and string: bytes, kbytes, mbytes |=================