Overview
This plugin creates firewall rules to allow traffic to/from container IP address via the host network. It does not create any network interfaces and therefore does not set up connectivity by itself. It is intended to be used as a chained plugins.
Operation
The following network configuration file
{
"cniVersion": "0.3.1",
"name": "bridge-firewalld",
"plugins": [
{
"type": "bridge",
"bridge": "cni0",
"isGateway": true,
"ipMasq": true,
"ipam": {
"type": "host-local",
"subnet": "10.88.0.0/16",
"routes": [
{ "dst": "0.0.0.0/0" }
]
}
},
{
"type": "firewall"
}
]
}
will allow any IP addresses configured by earlier plugins to send/receive traffic via the host.
A successful result would simply be an empty result, unless a previous plugin passed a previous result, in which case this plugin will return that previous result.
Backends
This plugin supports multiple firewall backends that implement the desired functionality.
Available backends include iptables
and firewalld
and may be selected with the backend
key.
If no backend
key is given, the plugin will use firewalld if the service exists on the D-Bus system bus.
If no firewalld service is found, it will fall back to iptables.
firewalld backend rule structure
When the firewalld
backend is used, this example will place the IPAM allocated address for the container (e.g. 10.88.0.2) into firewalld’s trusted
zone, allowing it to send/receive traffic.
A sample standalone config list (with the file extension .conflist) using firewalld backend might look like:
{
"cniVersion": "0.3.1",
"name": "bridge-firewalld",
"plugins": [
{
"type": "bridge",
"bridge": "cni0",
"isGateway": true,
"ipMasq": true,
"ipam": {
"type": "host-local",
"subnet": "10.88.0.0/16",
"routes": [
{ "dst": "0.0.0.0/0" }
]
}
},
{
"type": "firewall",
"backend": "firewalld"
}
]
}
FORWARD_IN_ZONES_SOURCE
chain:
-d 10.88.0.2 -j FWDI_trusted
CNI_FORWARD_OUT_ZONES_SOURCE
chain:
-s 10.88.0.2 -j FWDO_trusted
iptables backend rule structure
A sample standalone config list (with the file extension .conflist) using iptables backend might look like:
{
"cniVersion": "0.3.1",
"name": "bridge-firewalld",
"plugins": [
{
"type": "bridge",
"bridge": "cni0",
"isGateway": true,
"ipMasq": true,
"ipam": {
"type": "host-local",
"subnet": "10.88.0.0/16",
"routes": [
{ "dst": "0.0.0.0/0" }
]
}
},
{
"type": "firewall",
"backend": "iptables"
}
]
}
When the iptables
backend is used, the above example will create two new iptables chains in the filter
table and add rules that allow the given interface to send/receive traffic.
FORWARD
A new chain, CNI-FORWARD is added to the FORWARD chain. CNI-FORWARD is the chain where rules will be added when containers are created and from where rules will be removed when containers terminate.
FORWARD
chain:
-j CNI-FORWARD
CNI-FORWARD will have a pair of rules added, one for each direction, using the IPAM assigned IP address of the container as shown:
CNI-FORWARD
chain:
-d 10.88.0.2 -m conntrack --ctstate RELATED,ESTABLISHED -j ACCEPT
-s 10.88.0.2 -j ACCEPT
The CNI-FORWARD
chain first sends all traffic to CNI-ADMIN
chain, which is intended as an user-controlled chain for custom rules that run prior to rules managed by the firewall
plugin. The firewall
plugin does not add, delete or modify rules in the CNI-ADMIN
chain.
CNI-FORWARD
chain:
-j CNI-ADMIN
The chain name CNI-ADMIN
can be overridden by specifying iptablesAdminChainName
in the plugin configuration
{
"type": "firewall",
"backend": "iptables",
"iptablesAdminChainName": "SOME-OTHER-CHAIN-NAME",
}