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4. Using the Sentry Firewall CDROM

4.1 Introduction

The configuration scripts which are run from /etc/rc.d/rc.S first look for a configuration file called 'sentry.conf' on a floppy disk which, if present, will be mounted on /floppy. In order to configure the Linux system for use in any particular environment the user must have the ability to replace the system default files with his/her own copies. The 'sentry.conf' file basically tells the configuration scripts which files it should replace and where those files are.

A good example of a sentry.conf file can be found on the Sentry Firewall CD in the directory /SENTRY/scripts/cd-config/. Configuration floppy disk images(1.44M) can also be found in /SENTRY/images/ on the CD. These files are also available on the website, http://www.SentryFirewall.com/


4.2 The sentry.conf file

The main configuration file for the system is called 'sentry.conf'. It will first be looked for on a floppy disk(/dev/fd0). The file accepts several configuration directives, many of which will be discussed below.


Example

A basic configuration file looks like the following (everything after a '#' sign is interpreted as a comment):

----snip----
## Basic Sentry Firewall CD config file(sentry.conf)

rc.local = /floppy/config1/rc.local
fstab = /floppy/config1/fstab

passwd = /floppy/config1/passwd
shadow = /floppy/config1/shadow

# EOF #
----snip----

The syntax is pretty simple, the default 'rc.local' file will be replaced with the user defined 'rc.local' file located in the '/floppy/config1/' directory. Same goes for 'fstab', 'passwd', and the 'shadow' file. But it is important to remember, the first place the sentry.conf file will be looked for is on /dev/fd0, which if found, will be mounted on /floppy. This is why all these files appear to be located in the /floppy directory, it is simply the mount point for the floppy disk.

NOTE: As of version 1.3.0, a user may now omit the `/floppy' prefix. So, for example a line in sentry.conf that says the following:

   shadow = config1/shadow

Will be assumed to mean(in most cases) the following:

   fstab = /floppy/config1/shadow
As long as /floppy/config1/shadow exists.


Unfortunately, you cannot arbitrarily replace files, for example the following will likely not be parsed correctly:

     foo.conf = /floppy/config1/foo.conf

The configuration scripts only recognize a certain number of configuration files, so it probably won't know what to do with "foo.conf". There are other very easy ways to copy configuration files into their proper location, however. These methods will be discussed below.


4.3 Network Configuration

As of version 1.0.5, a new syntax for the configuration directives are recognized; those with an "http://" or "ftp://" prefix. This basically means that the following syntax is now supported:

     inetd.conf = ftp://[user:pass@]123.123.123.123/config1/inetd.conf
     hosts = http://[user:pass@]123.123.123.123/config1/hosts

As of version 1.3.0, "https://", "scp://", and "sftp://" URLs are also supported. For example:

     shadow = scp://<user>:<pass>@123.123.123.123/dir/shadow
     passwd = sftp://<user>:<pass>@123.123.123.123/dir/passwd
     fstab = https://[user:pass@]123.123.123.123/dir/fstab

NOTE: The username and password fields are required when retrieving files via scp or sftp. Empty passwords are not permitted.


In order to accomplish this the configuration scripts need to have the ability to set up an ethernet interface, as well as obtain nameserver information from the sentry.conf file. The syntax to accomplish this is the following:

     device{1..10} = <device>:<driver>:<IP address>[|Gateway_IP]

     or..

     device{1..10} = <device>:<driver>:dhcp[|Hostname]

And to set up a nameserver:

     nameserver = <IP_ADDRESS>


Additionally, when retrieving files using "http", "https", or "ftp", you may also set up a proxy server. The following directives will allow you to do so (they may not all be required for your setup):

     http_proxy = http://<hostname>/
     ftp_proxy = http://<hostname>/
     proxy-user = <PROXY_USER>
     proxy-passwd = <PROXY_PASSWORD>

Passive FTP may also be required. If so, use the 'passive-ftp' option, ie:

     passive-ftp = <on|off>  ## Default == off


So, for example to set up an interface called "eth0", which uses the "tulip" driver and can obtain its ip address from a DHCP server, we can use the following line:

     device1 = eth0:tulip:dhcp

As you can see, a total of 10 devices are allowed. Let's say we now want to set up an interface "eth1" that uses an "rtl8139" chip, and has a static IP(192.168.1.2) and a default gateway(192.168.1.1):

     device2 = eth1:8139too:192.168.1.2|192.168.1.1

NOTE: It is important to keep in mind that whatever devices you set up during the configuration process will be promptly taken down after the configuration is complete. This setup is only used so you can retrieve configuration files over the network, via http(s)/ftp/scp/sftp. For more permanent network configuration, please use the rc.inet1 file.


Example

----snip----
## Basic Sentry Firewall CD config file to retrieve files via HTTP(s)/FTP/SCP/SFTP.

device1 = eth0:tulip:192.168.1.2|192.168.1.1
nameserver = 123.123.123.123  ## This should be the IP of your DNS server.

rc.M = ftp://user:[email protected]/node1/rc.M
rc.inet1 = http://user:[email protected]/all_nodes/rc.inet1

passwd = scp://user:[email protected]/all_nodes/passwd
shadow = sftp://user:[email protected]/node1/shadow

# EOF #
----snip----


4.4 Other Useful Configuration Directives

Copy file /floppy/someconfig.conf to /etc/someconfig.conf -

     /floppy/someconfig.conf |= /etc/someconfig.conf

     OR, this does the same thing -

     /etc/someconfig.conf = /floppy/someconfig.conf

     and this is also possible(v1.3.0) -

     /etc/someconfig.conf = ftp://<server>/someconfig.conf

Make a symlink called /etc/someconfig.conf that points to /etc/otherconfig.conf -

     /etc/someconfig.conf => /etc/otherconfig.conf

The include directive. Grabs another sentry.conf file either from another location -

     include = ftp://user:[email protected]/node1/sentry.conf

Keep in mind, however, that the include directive is one of the first directives to be parsed. Any configuration directives parsed from the included sentry.conf file that conflict with directives in the previously parsed sentry.conf files will clobber the old ones.


4.5 Putting it all together, managing multiple nodes from a single location.

In order to manage multiple nodes at a single location, you can use a bare sentry.conf file located on a floppy disk, and then grab files from your ftp or http servers.

----snip----
## Basic Sentry Firewall CD config file.

device1 = eth0:tulip:dhcp
nameserver = <DNS_IP>
include = ftp://user:[email protected]/node1/sentry.conf

----snip----

The included sentry.conf file will then be parsed, and files replaced via http or ftp if you like. You can now edit your sentry.conf and configuration files at a central location.


4.6 Example sentry.conf and disk images

An example configuration disk image is available on the CDROM. The disk is an ext2 formatted disk, and is located in the '/SENTRY/images/' directory on the CD. There is also a very complete sentry.conf file on the disk which may help clarify alot of these directives. Use a command like the following to create the configuration disk:

blah@wherever:~$ dd if=/cdrom/SENTRY/images/ext2-144.img of=/dev/fd0
2880+0 records in
2880+0 records out

The disk images and a sample sentry.conf file can also be found on the website, http://www.SentryFirewall.com/



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