NAT
NAT is a common method of remapping one IP address space into another by modifying network address information in the IP header of packets while they are in transit across a traffic routing device. The technique was originally used as a shortcut to avoid the need to readdress every host when a network was moved. It has become a popular and essential tool in conserving global address space in the face of IPv4 address exhaustion. One Internet-routable IP address of a NAT gateway can be used for an entire private network.
IP masquerading is a technique that hides an entire IP address space, usually consisting of private IP addresses, behind a single IP address in another, usually public address space. The hidden addresses are changed into a single (public) IP address as the source address of the outgoing IP packets so they appear as originating not from the hidden host but from the routing device itself. Because of the popularity of this technique to conserve IPv4 address space, the term NAT has become virtually synonymous with IP masquerading.
As network address translation modifies the IP address information in packets, NAT implementations may vary in their specific behavior in various addressing cases and their effect on network traffic. The specifics of NAT behavior are not commonly documented by vendors of equipment containing NAT implementations.
The computers on an internal network can use any of the addresses set aside by the IANA for private addressing (see RFC 1918). These reserved IP addresses are not in use on the Internet, so an external machine will not directly route to them. The following addresses are reserved for private use:
10.0.0.0 to 10.255.255.255 (CIDR: 10.0.0.0/8)
172.16.0.0 to 172.31.255.255 (CIDR: 172.16.0.0/12)
192.168.0.0 to 192.168.255.255 (CIDR: 192.168.0.0/16)
If an ISP deploys a CGN, and uses RFC 1918 address space to number customer gateways, the risk of address collision, and therefore routing failures, arises when the customer network already uses an RFC 1918 address space.
This prompted some ISPs to develop a policy within the ARIN to allocate new private address space for CGNs, but ARIN deferred to the IETF before implementing the policy indicating that the matter was not a typical allocation issue but a reservation of addresses for technical purposes (per RFC 2860).
IETF published RFC 6598, detailing a shared address space for use in ISP CGN deployments that can handle the same network prefixes occurring both on inbound and outbound interfaces. ARIN returned address space to the IANA for this allocation.
The allocated address block is 100.64.0.0/10.
Devices evaluating whether an IPv4 address is public must be updated to recognize the new address space. Allocating more private IPv4 address space for NAT devices might prolong the transition to IPv6.
Overview
Different NAT Types
SNAT
SNAT is the most common form of NAT and is typically referred to simply as NAT. To be more correct, what most people refer to as NAT is actually the process of PAT, or NAT overload. SNAT is typically used by internal users/private hosts to access the Internet - the source address is translated and thus kept private.
DNAT
DNAT changes the destination address of packets passing through the router, while SNAT changes the source address of packets. DNAT is typically used when an external (public) host needs to initiate a session with an internal (private) host. A customer needs to access a private service behind the routers public IP. A connection is established with the routers public IP address on a well known port and thus all traffic for this port is rewritten to address the internal (private) host.
Bidirectional NAT
This is a common scenario where both SNAT and DNAT are configured at the same time. It’s commonly used then internal (private) hosts need to establish a connection with external resources and external systems need to access internal (private) resources.
NAT, Routing, Firewall Interaction
There is a very nice picture/explanation in the Vyatta documentation which should be rewritten here.
NAT Ruleset
NAT is configured entirely on a
series of so called rules. Rules are numbered and evaluated by the
underlying OS in numerical order! The rule numbers can be changes by
utilizing the rename
and copy
commands.
Note
Changes to the NAT system only affect newly established connections. Already established connections are not affected.
Hint
When designing your NAT ruleset leave some space between consecutive rules for later extension. Your ruleset could start with numbers 10, 20, 30. You thus can later extend the ruleset and place new rules between existing ones.
Rules will be created for both SNAT and DNAT.
For Bidirectional NAT a rule for both SNAT and DNAT needs to be created.
Traffic Filters
Traffic Filters are used to control which packets will have the defined NAT rules applied. Five different filters can be applied within a NAT rule.
outbound-interface - applicable only to SNAT. It configures the interface which is used for the outside traffic that this translation rule applies to.
Example:
set nat source rule 20 outbound-interface eth0
inbound-interface - applicable only to DNAT. It configures the interface which is used for the inside traffic the translation rule applies to.
Example:
set nat destination rule 20 inbound-interface eth1
protocol - specify which types of protocols this translation rule applies to. Only packets matching the specified protocol are NATed. By default this applies to all protocols.
Example:
Set SNAT rule 20 to only NAT TCP and UDP packets
Set DNAT rule 20 to only NAT UDP packets
set nat source rule 20 protocol tcp_udp set nat destination rule 20 protocol udp
source - specifies which packets the NAT translation rule applies to based on the packets source IP address and/or source port. Only matching packets are considered for NAT.
Example:
Set SNAT rule 20 to only NAT packets arriving from the 192.0.2.0/24 network
Set SNAT rule 30 to only NAT packets arriving from the 203.0.113.0/24 network with a source port of 80 and 443
set nat source rule 20 source address 192.0.2.0/24 set nat source rule 30 source address 203.0.113.0/24 set nat source rule 30 source port 80,443
destination - specify which packets the translation will be applied to, only based on the destination address and/or port number configured.
Note
If no destination is specified the rule will match on any destination address and port.
Example:
Configure SNAT rule (40) to only NAT packets with a destination address of 192.0.2.1.
set nat source rule 40 destination address 192.0.2.1
Address Conversion
Every NAT rule has a translation command defined. The address defined for the translation is the address used when the address information in a packet is replaced.
Source Address
For SNAT rules the packets source address will be replaced with the address specified in the translation command. A port translation can also be specified and is part of the translation address.
Note
The translation address must be set to one of the available addresses on the configured outbound-interface or it must be set to masquerade which will use the primary IP address of the outbound-interface as its translation address.
Note
When using NAT for a large number of host systems it recommended that a minimum of 1 IP address is used to NAT every 256 private host systems. This is due to the limit of 65,000 port numbers available for unique translations and a reserving an average of 200-300 sessions per host system.
Example:
Define a discrete source IP address of 100.64.0.1 for SNAT rule 20
Use address masquerade (the interfaces primary address) on rule 30
For a large amount of private machines behind the NAT your address pool might to be bigger. Use any address in the range 100.64.0.10 - 100.64.0.20 on SNAT rule 40 when doing the translation
set nat source rule 20 translation address 100.64.0.1
set nat source rule 30 translation address 'masquerade'
set nat source rule 40 translation address 100.64.0.10-100.64.0.20
Destination Address
For DNAT rules the packets destination address will be replaced by the specified address in the translation address command.
Example:
DNAT rule 10 replaces the destination address of an inbound packet with 192.0.2.10
set nat destination rule 10 translation address 192.0.2.10
Configuration Examples
To setup SNAT, we need to know:
The internal IP addresses we want to translate
The outgoing interface to perform the translation on
The external IP address to translate to
In the example used for the Quick Start configuration above, we demonstrate the following configuration:
set nat source rule 100 outbound-interface 'eth0'
set nat source rule 100 source address '192.168.0.0/24'
set nat source rule 100 translation address 'masquerade'
Which generates the following configuration:
rule 100 {
outbound-interface eth0
source {
address 192.168.0.0/24
}
translation {
address masquerade
}
}
In this example, we use masquerade as the translation address instead of an IP address. The masquerade target is effectively an alias to say “use whatever IP address is on the outgoing interface”, rather than a statically configured IP address. This is useful if you use DHCP for your outgoing interface and do not know what the external address will be.
When using NAT for a large number of host systems it recommended that a minimum of 1 IP address is used to NAT every 256 host systems. This is due to the limit of 65,000 port numbers available for unique translations and a reserving an average of 200-300 sessions per host system.
Example: For an ~8,000 host network a source NAT pool of 32 IP addresses is recommended.
A pool of addresses can be defined by using a hyphen between two IP addresses:
set nat source rule 100 translation address '203.0.113.32-203.0.113.63'
Avoiding “leaky” NAT
Linux netfilter will not NAT traffic marked as INVALID. This often confuses people into thinking that Linux (or specifically VyOS) has a broken NAT implementation because non-NATed traffic is seen leaving an external interface. This is actually working as intended, and a packet capture of the “leaky” traffic should reveal that the traffic is either an additional TCP “RST”, “FIN,ACK”, or “RST,ACK” sent by client systems after Linux netfilter considers the connection closed. The most common is the additional TCP RST some host implementations send after terminating a connection (which is implementation-specific).
In other words, connection tracking has already observed the connection be closed and has transition the flow to INVALID to prevent attacks from attempting to reuse the connection.
You can avoid the “leaky” behavior by using a firewall policy that drops “invalid” state packets.
Having control over the matching of INVALID state traffic, e.g. the ability to selectively log, is an important troubleshooting tool for observing broken protocol behavior. For this reason, VyOS does not globally drop invalid state traffic, instead allowing the operator to make the determination on how the traffic is handled.
Hairpin NAT/NAT Reflection
A typical problem with using NAT and hosting public servers is the ability for internal systems to reach an internal server using it’s external IP address. The solution to this is usually the use of split-DNS to correctly point host systems to the internal address when requests are made internally. Because many smaller networks lack DNS infrastructure, a work-around is commonly deployed to facilitate the traffic by NATing the request from internal hosts to the source address of the internal interface on the firewall.
This technique is commonly referred to as NAT Reflection or Hairpin NAT.
Example:
Redirect Microsoft RDP traffic from the outside (WAN, external) world via DNAT in rule 100 to the internal, private host 192.0.2.40.
Redirect Microsoft RDP traffic from the internal (LAN, private) network via DNAT in rule 110 to the internal, private host 192.0.2.40. We also need a SNAT rule 110 for the reverse path of the traffic. The internal network 192.0.2.0/24 is reachable via interface eth0.10.
set nat destination rule 100 description 'Regular destination NAT from external'
set nat destination rule 100 destination port '3389'
set nat destination rule 100 inbound-interface 'pppoe0'
set nat destination rule 100 protocol 'tcp'
set nat destination rule 100 translation address '192.0.2.40'
set nat destination rule 110 description 'NAT Reflection: INSIDE'
set nat destination rule 110 destination port '3389'
set nat destination rule 110 inbound-interface 'eth0.10'
set nat destination rule 110 protocol 'tcp'
set nat destination rule 110 translation address '192.0.2.40'
set nat source rule 110 description 'NAT Reflection: INSIDE'
set nat source rule 110 destination address '192.0.2.0/24'
set nat source rule 110 outbound-interface 'eth0.10'
set nat source rule 110 protocol 'tcp'
set nat source rule 110 source address '192.0.2.0/24'
set nat source rule 110 translation address 'masquerade'
Which results in a configuration of:
vyos@vyos# show nat
destination {
rule 100 {
description "Regular destination NAT from external"
destination {
port 3389
}
inbound-interface pppoe0
protocol tcp
translation {
address 192.0.2.40
}
}
rule 110 {
description "NAT Reflection: INSIDE"
destination {
port 3389
}
inbound-interface eth0.10
protocol tcp
translation {
address 192.0.2.40
}
}
}
source {
rule 110 {
description "NAT Reflection: INSIDE"
destination {
address 192.0.2.0/24
}
outbound-interface eth0.10
protocol tcp
source {
address 192.0.2.0/24
}
translation {
address masquerade
}
}
}
Destination NAT
DNAT is typically referred to as a Port Forward. When using VyOS as a NAT router and firewall, a common configuration task is to redirect incoming traffic to a system behind the firewall.
In this example, we will be using the example Quick Start configuration above as a starting point.
To setup a destination NAT rule we need to gather:
The interface traffic will be coming in on;
The protocol and port we wish to forward;
The IP address of the internal system we wish to forward traffic to.
In our example, we will be forwarding web server traffic to an internal web server on 192.168.0.100. HTTP traffic makes use of the TCP protocol on port 80. For other common port numbers, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_TCP_and_UDP_port_numbers
Our configuration commands would be:
set nat destination rule 10 description 'Port Forward: HTTP to 192.168.0.100'
set nat destination rule 10 destination port '80'
set nat destination rule 10 inbound-interface 'eth0'
set nat destination rule 10 protocol 'tcp'
set nat destination rule 10 translation address '192.168.0.100'
Which would generate the following NAT destination configuration:
nat {
destination {
rule 10 {
description "Port Forward: HTTP to 192.168.0.100"
destination {
port 80
}
inbound-interface eth0
protocol tcp
translation {
address 192.168.0.100
}
}
}
}
Note
If forwarding traffic to a different port than it is arriving on, you may also configure the translation port using set nat destination rule [n] translation port.
This establishes our Port Forward rule, but if we created a firewall policy it will likely block the traffic.
It is important to note that when creating firewall rules that the DNAT translation occurs before traffic traverses the firewall. In other words, the destination address has already been translated to 192.168.0.100.
So in our firewall policy, we want to allow traffic coming in on the outside interface, destined for TCP port 80 and the IP address of 192.168.0.100.
set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 20 action 'accept'
set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 20 destination address '192.168.0.100'
set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 20 destination port '80'
set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 20 protocol 'tcp'
set firewall name OUTSIDE-IN rule 20 state new 'enable'
This would generate the following configuration:
rule 20 {
action accept
destination {
address 192.168.0.100
port 80
}
protocol tcp
state {
new enable
}
}
Note
If you have configured the INSIDE-OUT policy, you will need to add additional rules to permit inbound NAT traffic.
1-to-1 NAT
Another term often used for DNAT is 1-to-1 NAT. For a 1-to-1 NAT configuration, both DNAT and SNAT are used to NAT all traffic from an external IP address to an internal IP address and vice-versa.
Typically, a 1-to-1 NAT rule omits the destination port (all ports) and replaces the protocol with either all or ip.
Then a corresponding SNAT rule is created to NAT outgoing traffic for the internal IP to a reserved external IP. This dedicates an external IP address to an internal IP address and is useful for protocols which don’t have the notion of ports, such as GRE.
Here’s an extract of a simple 1-to-1 NAT configuration with one internal and one external interface:
set interfaces ethernet eth0 address '192.168.1.1/24'
set interfaces ethernet eth0 description 'Inside interface'
set interfaces ethernet eth1 address '192.0.2.30/24'
set interfaces ethernet eth1 description 'Outside interface'
set nat destination rule 2000 description '1-to-1 NAT example'
set nat destination rule 2000 destination address '192.0.2.30'
set nat destination rule 2000 inbound-interface 'eth1'
set nat destination rule 2000 translation address '192.168.1.10'
set nat source rule 2000 description '1-to-1 NAT example'
set nat source rule 2000 outbound-interface 'eth1'
set nat source rule 2000 source address '192.168.1.10'
set nat source rule 2000 translation address '192.0.2.30'
Firewall rules are written as normal, using the internal IP address as the source of outbound rules and the destination of inbound rules.
NAT before VPN
Some application service providers (ASPs) operate a VPN gateway to provide access to their internal resources, and require that a connecting organisation translate all traffic to the service provider network to a source address provided by the ASP.
Example Network
Here’s one example of a network environment for an ASP. The ASP requests that all connections from this company should come from 172.29.41.89 - an address that is assigned by the ASP and not in use at the customer site.
Configuration
The required configuration can be broken down into 4 major pieces:
A dummy interface for the provider-assigned IP;
NAT (specifically, Source NAT);
IPSec IKE and ESP Groups;
IPSec VPN tunnels.
Dummy interface
The dummy interface allows us to have an equivalent of the Cisco IOS Loopback interface - a router-internal interface we can use for IP addresses the router must know about, but which are not actually assigned to a real network.
We only need a single step for this interface:
set interfaces dummy dum0 address '172.29.41.89/32'
NAT Configuration
set nat source rule 110 description 'Internal to ASP'
set nat source rule 110 destination address '172.27.1.0/24'
set nat source rule 110 outbound-interface 'any'
set nat source rule 110 source address '192.168.43.0/24'
set nat source rule 110 translation address '172.29.41.89'
set nat source rule 120 description 'Internal to ASP'
set nat source rule 120 destination address '10.125.0.0/16'
set nat source rule 120 outbound-interface 'any'
set nat source rule 120 source address '192.168.43.0/24'
set nat source rule 120 translation address '172.29.41.89'
IPSec IKE and ESP
The ASP has documented their IPSec requirements:
IKE Phase:
aes256 Encryption
sha256 Hashes
ESP Phase:
aes256 Encryption
sha256 Hashes
DH Group 14
Additionally, we want to use VPNs only on our eth1 interface (the external interface in the image above)
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike ikev2-reauth 'no'
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike key-exchange 'ikev1'
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike lifetime '7800'
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike proposal 1 dh-group '14'
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike proposal 1 encryption 'aes256'
set vpn ipsec ike-group my-ike proposal 1 hash 'sha256'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp compression 'disable'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp lifetime '3600'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp mode 'tunnel'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp pfs 'disable'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp proposal 1 encryption 'aes256'
set vpn ipsec esp-group my-esp proposal 1 hash 'sha256'
set vpn ipsec ipsec-interfaces interface 'eth1'
IPSec VPN Tunnels
We’ll use the IKE and ESP groups created above for this VPN. Because we need access to 2 different subnets on the far side, we will need two different tunnels. If you changed the names of the ESP group and IKE group in the previous step, make sure you use the correct names here too.
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 authentication mode 'pre-shared-secret'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 authentication pre-shared-secret 'PASSWORD IS HERE'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 connection-type 'initiate'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 default-esp-group 'my-esp'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 ike-group 'my-ike'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 ikev2-reauth 'inherit'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 local-address '203.0.113.46'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 tunnel 0 local prefix '172.29.41.89/32'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 tunnel 0 remote prefix '172.27.1.0/24'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 tunnel 1 local prefix '172.29.41.89/32'
set vpn ipsec site-to-site peer 198.51.100.243 tunnel 1 remote prefix '10.125.0.0/16'
Testing and Validation
If you’ve completed all the above steps you no doubt want to see if it’s all working.
Start by checking for IPSec SAs (Security Associations) with:
$ show vpn ipsec sa
Peer ID / IP Local ID / IP
------------ -------------
198.51.100.243 203.0.113.46
Tunnel State Bytes Out/In Encrypt Hash NAT-T A-Time L-Time Proto
------ ----- ------------- ------- ---- ----- ------ ------ -----
0 up 0.0/0.0 aes256 sha256 no 1647 3600 all
1 up 0.0/0.0 aes256 sha256 no 865 3600 all
That looks good - we defined 2 tunnels and they’re both up and running.