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NPF (firewall)

This article will address the topic of NPF (firewall), which has sparked great interest and debate in various areas. NPF (firewall) is a relevant topic that has captured the attention of specialists, academics, professionals and the general public, due to its importance and relevance today. Throughout this article, different aspects of NPF (firewall) will be analyzed, such as its origins, impact, implications and possible future developments. Likewise, the opinions of experts in the field will be discussed, as well as relevant experiences and cases related to NPF (firewall). Finally, reflections and conclusions will be proposed that invite reflection and debate on this significant topic.

NPF
Original author(s)Mindaugas Rasiukevicius
Initial releaseOctober 17, 2012 (2012-10-17)
Repository
Written inC
Operating systemNetBSD
Typepacket filter, Firewall
LicenseBSD license
Websitewww.netbsd.org/~rmind/npf/ Edit this on Wikidata

NPF is a BSD licensed stateful packet filter, a central piece of software for firewalling. It is comparable to iptables, ipfw, ipfilter and PF. NPF is developed on NetBSD.

History

NPF was primarily written by Mindaugas Rasiukevicius. NPF first appeared in the NetBSD 6.0 release in 2012.

Features

NPF is designed for high performance on SMP systems and for easy extensibility. It supports various forms of Network Address Translation (NAT), stateful packet inspection, tree and hash tables for IP sets, bytecode (BPF or n-code) for custom filter rules and other features. NPF has extension framework for supporting custom modules. Features such as packet logging, traffic normalization, random blocking are provided as NPF extensions.

Example of npf.conf

# Assigning IPv4-only addresses of the specified interfaces.
$ext_if = inet4(wm0)
$int_if = inet4(wm1)

# Efficient tables to store IP sets.
table <1> type hash file "/etc/npf_blacklist"
table <2> type tree dynamic

# Variables with the service names.
$services_tcp = { http, https, smtp, domain, 9022 }
$services_udp = { domain, ntp }
$localnet = { 10.1.1.0/24 }

# Different forms of NAT are supported.
map $ext_if dynamic 10.1.1.0/24 -> $ext_if
map $ext_if dynamic 10.1.1.2 port 22 <- $ext_if port 9022

# NPF has various extensions which are supported via custom procedures.
procedure "log" {
	log: npflog0
}

#
# Grouping is mandatory in NPF.
# There must be a default group.
#

group "external" on $ext_if {
	# Stateful passing of all outgoing traffic.
	pass stateful out final all

	block in final from <1>
	pass stateful in final family inet proto tcp to $ext_if port ssh apply "log"
	pass stateful in final proto tcp to $ext_if port $services_tcp
	pass stateful in final proto udp to $ext_if port $services_udp

	# Passive FTP and traceroute
	pass stateful in final proto tcp to $ext_if port 49151-65535
	pass stateful in final proto udp to $ext_if port 33434-33600
}

group "internal" on $int_if {
	# Ingress filtering as per RFC 2827.
	block in all
	pass in final from $localnet
	pass in final from <2>
	pass out final all
}

group default {
	pass final on lo0 all
	block all
}

References

  1. ^ a b Rasiukevicius, Mindaugas (2012-10-17). "Introducing NPF in NetBSD 6.0". NetBSD-Announce (Mailing list).

External links