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Special Forums IP Networking howto start with gateway / router / masquerading Post 302341869 by gratuitous_arp on Thursday 6th of August 2009 07:54:36 PM
Old 08-06-2009
Santiago,

Masquerading is a form of network address translation (NAT). Outside of iptables, masquerading is also commonly called port address translation (PAT). Any packet which leaves a particular interface of the router will have its IP header modified to use the source IP address of the exit interfaced used on the router. Try looking up PAT on wikipedia for a good description.

With your configuration of iptables, any packet leaving any interface on the router should take on the address of the interface which it left. I would think hosts on both of the 172 networks would have problems with reply traffic from hosts on different networks, and nodes on the 192 network would not be able to access hosts on the 172 network but would be able to reach the Internet.

As an example, suppose a PC on the 172.16.70.0 network pings the PC on the 192 network.

When the packet hits the router and is routed to the 192 network, the packet is NATed, and its source IP address changes to 192.168.1.224. The PC on the 192 network gets the ping, and replies to it normally (with a destination IP address of 192.168.1.224).

The router forwards the packet back to the ping originator on the 172 network, but masquerades the source IP address to 172.16.70.254 as it sends it out that interface. The PC on the 172 network is waiting for a reply from 192.168.1.32 -- getting an echo reply from 172.16.70.254 would sound like bogus traffic. Thus, it never receives a reply from the 192 node and you get an error message.

Unless my thinking is fuzzy or iptables is doing something else behind the scenes, it would sound like you only want to masquerade for traffic going out of the 192 interface of the router. Try it out and see if it works as it is. If not, you can tell iptables to only masquerade for traffic leaving the 192 interface by using the '-o <INTERFACE NAME>' option within the iptables command string you posted earlier.
 

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CARP(4) 						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						   CARP(4)

NAME
carp -- Common Address Redundancy Protocol SYNOPSIS
device carp DESCRIPTION
The carp interface is a pseudo-device that implements and controls the CARP protocol. CARP allows multiple hosts on the same local network to share a set of IP addresses. Its primary purpose is to ensure that these addresses are always available, but in some configurations carp can also provide load balancing functionality. A carp interface can be created at runtime using the ifconfig carpN create command or by configuring it via cloned_interfaces in the /etc/rc.conf file. To use carp, the administrator needs to configure at minimum a common virtual host ID (VHID) and virtual host IP address on each machine which is to take part in the virtual group. Additional parameters can also be set on a per-interface basis: advbase and advskew, which are used to control how frequently the host sends advertisements when it is the master for a virtual host, and pass which is used to authenticate carp advertisements. The advbase parameter stands for ``advertisement base''. It is measured in seconds and specifies the base of the advertisement interval. The advskew parameter stands for ``advertisement skew''. It is measured in 1/256 of seconds. It is added to the base advertisement interval to make one host advertise a bit slower that the other does. Both advbase and advskew are put inside CARP adver- tisements. These configurations can be done using ifconfig(8), or through the SIOCSVH ioctl(2). Additionally, there are a number of global parameters which can be set using sysctl(8): net.inet.carp.allow Accept incoming carp packets. Enabled by default. net.inet.carp.preempt Allow virtual hosts to preempt each other. It is also used to failover carp interfaces as a group. When the option is enabled and one of the carp enabled physical interfaces goes down, advskew is changed to 240 on all carp interfaces. See also the first example. Disabled by default. net.inet.carp.log Value of 0 disables any logging. Value of 1 enables logging state changes of carp interfaces. Values above 1 enable logging of bad carp packets. Default value is 1. net.inet.carp.arpbalance Balance local traffic using ARP (see below). Disabled by default. net.inet.carp.suppress_preempt A read only value showing the status of preemption suppression. Preemption can be suppressed if link on an inter- face is down or when pfsync(4) interface is not synchronized. Value of 0 means that preemption is not suppressed, since no problems are detected. Every problem increments suppression counter. ARP level load balancing The carp has limited abilities for load balancing the incoming connections between hosts in Ethernet network. For load balancing operation, one needs several CARP interfaces that are configured to the same IP address, but to a different VHIDs. Once an ARP request is received, the CARP protocol will use a hashing function against the source IP address in the ARP request to determine which VHID should this request belong to. If the corresponding CARP interface is in master state, the ARP request will be replied, otherwise it will be ignored. See the EXAMPLES section for a practical example of load balancing. The ARP load balancing has some limitations. First, ARP balancing only works on the local network segment. It cannot balance traffic that crosses a router, because the router itself will always be balanced to the same virtual host. Second, ARP load balancing can lead to asym- metric routing of incoming and outgoing traffic, and thus combining it with pfsync(4) is dangerous, because this creates a race condition between balanced routers and a host they are serving. Imagine an incoming packet creating state on the first router, being forwarded to its destination, and destination replying faster than the state information is packed and synced with the second router. If the reply would be load balanced to second router, it will be dropped due to no state. EXAMPLES
For firewalls and routers with multiple interfaces, it is desirable to failover all of the carp interfaces together, when one of the physical interfaces goes down. This is achieved by the preempt option. Enable it on both host A and B: sysctl net.inet.carp.preempt=1 Assume that host A is the preferred master and 192.168.1.x/24 is configured on one physical interface and 192.168.2.y/24 on another. This is the setup for host A: ifconfig carp0 create ifconfig carp0 vhid 1 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.1/24 ifconfig carp1 create ifconfig carp1 vhid 2 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.2.1/24 The setup for host B is identical, but it has a higher advskew: ifconfig carp0 create ifconfig carp0 vhid 1 advskew 100 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.1/24 ifconfig carp1 create ifconfig carp1 vhid 2 advskew 100 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.2.1/24 Because of the preempt option, when one of the physical interfaces of host A fails, advskew is adjusted to 240 on all its carp interfaces. This will cause host B to preempt on both interfaces instead of just the failed one. In order to set up an ARP balanced virtual host, it is necessary to configure one virtual host for each physical host which would respond to ARP requests and thus handle the traffic. In the following example, two virtual hosts are configured on two hosts to provide balancing and failover for the IP address 192.168.1.10. First the carp interfaces on host A are configured. The advskew of 100 on the second virtual host means that its advertisements will be sent out slightly less frequently. ifconfig carp0 create ifconfig carp0 vhid 1 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.10/24 ifconfig carp1 create ifconfig carp1 vhid 2 advskew 100 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.10/24 The configuration for host B is identical, except the advskew is on virtual host 1 rather than virtual host 2. ifconfig carp0 create ifconfig carp0 vhid 1 advskew 100 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.10/24 ifconfig carp1 create ifconfig carp1 vhid 2 pass mekmitasdigoat 192.168.1.10/24 Finally, the ARP balancing feature must be enabled on both hosts: sysctl net.inet.carp.arpbalance=1 When the hosts receive an ARP request for 192.168.1.10, the source IP address of the request is used to compute which virtual host should answer the request. The host which is master of the selected virtual host will reply to the request, the other(s) will ignore it. This way, locally connected systems will receive different ARP replies and subsequent IP traffic will be balanced among the hosts. If one of the hosts fails, the other will take over the virtual MAC address, and begin answering ARP requests on its behalf. SEE ALSO
inet(4), pfsync(4), rc.conf(5), ifconfig(8), sysctl(8) HISTORY
The carp device first appeared in OpenBSD 3.5. The carp device was imported into FreeBSD 5.4. BSD
January 5, 2010 BSD
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