forget to po the link here http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-questions/2008-June/177636.html
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 11:16 AM, Bill Yuan <byc...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Lan, > > Thanks for your reply, I am reading some old emails which you sent in 2008 > while other place asked a same question as mine, > > > On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 1:53 AM, Ian Smith <smi...@nimnet.asn.au> wrote: > >> In freebsd-questions Digest, Vol 418, Issue 18, Message: 1 >> On Sun, 10 Jun 2012 17:43:39 +0800 Bill Yuan <byc...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> > how to allow by MAC in ipfw >> > >> > currently i set the rule like below >> > >> > 1 allow ip from any to any MAC any to <MAC Address 1> >> > 1 allow ip from any to any MAC <MAC Address 1> any >> > 2 deny all from any to any >> > >> > i want to only allow the mac address to go through the freebsd >> firewall, >> > >> > but I found it is not working on my freebsd but it works on pfsense! >> > >> > so maybe that means the environment is not the same ? and how to setup >> the >> > ipfw properly to support this ? >> >> Bill, you did get some good clues in the earlier thread, but it's not >> clear if you took note of them. There's also been some confusion .. >> >> Firstly, read up on layer2 (ethernet, MAC-level) filtering options in >> ipfw(8). Thoroughly, several times, until you've got it. Seriously. >> >> After enabling sysctl net.link.ether.ipfw=1 (add it to /etc/sysctl.conf) >> ipfw will be invoked 4 times instead of the normal 2, on every packet. >> >> Read carefully ipfw(8) section 'PACKET FLOW', and see that only on the >> inbound pass invoked from ether_demux() and the outbound pass invoked >> from ether_output_frame() can you test for MAC addresses (or mac-types); >> the 'normal' layer3 passes examine packets that have no layer2 headers. >> >> You could just add 'layer2' to any rules filtering on MAC addresses, and >> omit MAC addresses from all layer 3 (IP) rules, but I'd recommend using >> a method like shown there to separate layer2 and layer3 flows early on: >> >> # packets from ether_demux >> ipfw add 10 skipto 1000 all from any to any layer2 in >> # packets from ip_input >> ipfw add 10 skipto 2000 all from any to any not layer2 in >> # packets from ip_output >> ipfw add 10 skipto 3000 all from any to any not layer2 out >> # packets from ether_output_frame >> ipfw add 10 skipto 4000 all from any to any layer2 out >> >> So at (eg) 1000 and 4000 place your incoming and outgoing MAC filtering >> rules (remembering the reversed order of MAC addresses vs IP addresses, >> and to allow broadcasts as well), pass good guys and/or block bad guys, >> then deal with your normal IPv4|v6 traffic in a separate section(s). >> >> Or you could just split the flows into two streams, one for layer2 for >> your MAC filtering, the other for layer3, ie the rest of your ruleset. >> >> HTH, Ian [please cc me on any reply] >> > > _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-questions-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"