Copyright © 2001-2005 Thomas M. Eastep
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover, and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
2016/02/16
Caution
This article applies to Shorewall 3.0 and later. If you are running a version of Shorewall earlier than Shorewall 3.0.0 then please see the documentation for that release.
Note
Enabling “ping” will also enable ICMP-based traceroute. For UDP-based traceroute, see the port information page.
In Shorewall , ICMP echo-requests are treated just like any other connection request.
In order to accept ping requests from zone z1 to zone z2 where the
policy for z1 to z2 is not ACCEPT, you need a rule in
/etc/shorewall/rules
of the form:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S) Ping(ACCEPT) z1 z2
Example 1. Ping from local zone to firewall
To permit ping from the local zone to the firewall:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S) Ping(ACCEPT) loc $FW
If you would like to accept “ping” by default even when
the relevant policy is DROP or REJECT, copy
/usr/share/shorewall/action.Drop
or
/usr/share shorewall/action.Reject
respectively to
/etc/shorewall
and simply add this
line to the copy:
Ping(ACCEPT)
With that rule in place, if you want to ignore “ping” from z1 to z2 then you need a rule of the form:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S) Ping(DROP) z1 z2
Example 2. Silently drop pings from the Internet
To drop ping from the Internet, you would need this rule in
/etc/shorewall/rules
:
#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S) Ping(DROP) net $FW
Note that the above rule may be used without changing the action files to prevent your log from being flooded by messages generated from remote pinging.