OPS535-L1
OPS535 Lab 1
Resources
- Link to Network Diagram for Labs/Assignments
- Link to virtual-lan setup
- Link for assigned network address lookup
- System Admin Automation using Fabric
Purpose
Libvirtd provides firewall rules to allow access to virtual machines, but assumes all connections will originate from them. It does not have a good setup to allow clients from outside your network to connect to servers you might be hosting on VMs. In this lab you will gain experience managing the firewall rules that allow greater control over traffic, along with routing information to control where outgoing traffic is sent.
Pre-Requisites
The pre-lab must be complete so that your virtual machines share access to a private network. Shut down your VMs and delete the default virtual network from your host.
Investigation 1: Virtual Networks
Perform the following steps on your host:
- Use the skills you learned in previous courses to create a new virtual network called default (we are only keeping the same network name as the old one so we don’t have to change it in every VM).
- The address range to provide is determined based on your Network Number (obtained through blackboard): 192.168.X.0/24.
- Do not provide DHCP.
- Allow it to forward to any physical device, but set the mode to ‘Open’. In virt-manager, the major difference between the three modes is the firewall rules that it will set up for you.
Hostname | Address for external network |
vm1.lab.<yourdomain>.ops | 192.168.X.53/24 |
vm2.lab.<yourdomain>.ops | 192.168.X.2/24 |
vm3.lab.<yourdomain>.ops | 192.168.X.3/24 |
Investigation 2: Advanced uses of FirewallD
Having removed the default network, you have also removed the firewall settings it was providing for you that allowed your machines to communicate with the outside world. Perform the following steps on your host.
- Set the virtual interface that is assigned to your new virtual network to be part of the ‘external’ zone. Make sure the change will be permanent.
- Ensure Masquerading is set to off for this zone.
- While masquerading would allow our machines to reach the network outside by hiding their internal addresses behind the host machine’s address, it would not help us allow new connections to be made to the servers inside our network. We will have to set that up ourselves.
- You may also wish to use the old iptables commands to list individual chains. Pay particular attention to FORWARD and POSTROUTING.
- While this (and the next step) should also work with the incoming/outgoing interface options, it does not seem to. Use the destination address only.
- This will cause traffic coming from your network to use your host’s external facing address. Unfortunately, this puts us right back where we started; any traffic your virtual machines send out will have the actual address hidden. We will need to add some rules before this to allow us to communicate with the other machines in the lab without being masqueraded.
- This rule will allow you to communicate with machines in other students’ own networks. We have lumped all of them into one /16 rule instead of having to add a separate rule for each student you wish to communicate with.
- Make sure the two rule you added to POSTROUTING that ACCEPTs traffic addressed to 192.168.0.0/16 appears before the masquerade rule you added.
- Once you are satisfied with your firewall, use firewall-cmd --runtime-to-permanent to save it.
- Make the same changes to the external zone you did on the host (i.e. no masquerading, and delete the unneeded services).
- Make sure these changes persist past rebooting.
Investigation 3: Routing
In the previous investigation you configured the firewall on the host to allow your virtual machines to communicate with other students’ networks as well as the outside world, but they can not actually reach the other networks yet, as they do not know where to send the traffic. By virtue of having an address in the 172.16.0.0/16 network, your host should already have a routing table entry for that network, but your virtual machines will not. In addition, none of your machines know how to reach other students’ virtual machines. The use of routing files will fix that.
- You could use scripts to constantly re-add routing information using the ip route command (there is a link in the weekly readings with examples of this), but it is better to configure the files that NetworkManager will use to determine routes on a permanent basis.
- In the same directory as your ifcfg files, you can create files using the name route-<interface> (where <interface> is the name of the interface you wish to create routing rules for, e.g. route-eth0 would hold routing rules for eth0).
- Add an entry for each 192.168.Y.0/24 network, accessible via 172.16.Y.1. Check for an announcement on blackboard regarding what Y value to go up to.
- Note: Do not include your own network in this list.
-->
Completing the Lab
You should now have a better network configuration for your VMs. Each machine has access to the internal-only network it already had, but now has the second network interface configured to allow access to other nearby networks (e.g. other networks in the same organization) without undergoing Network Address Translation.
Follow the instructions on blackboard to submit the lab.
Exploration Questions
- What does the priority number in a direct rule for firewalld affect?
- How are direct rules different from rich-rules?