FreeBSD's Network Address Translation daemon, commonly known as natd(8) is a daemon that accepts incoming raw IP packets, changes the source to the local machine and re-injects these packets back into the outgoing IP packet stream. natd does this by changing the source IP address and port such that when data is received back, it is able to determine the original location of the data and forward it back to its original requester.
The most common use of NAT is to perform what is commonly known as Internet Connection Sharing.
Due to the diminishing IP space in IPv4, and the increased number of users on high-speed consumer lines such as cable or DSL, people are increasingly in need of an Internet Connection Sharing solution. The ability to connect several computers online through one connection and IP address makes natd(8) a reasonable choice.
Most commonly, a user has a machine connected to a cable or DSL line with one IP address and wishes to use this one connected computer to provide Internet access to several more over a LAN.
To do this, the FreeBSD machine on the Internet must act as a gateway. This gateway machine must have two NICs--one for connecting to the Internet router, the other connecting to a LAN. All the machines on the LAN are connected through a hub or switch.
A setup like this is commonly used to share an Internet connection. One of the LAN machines is connected to the Internet. The rest of the machines access the Internet through that ``gateway'' machine.
The following options must be in the kernel configuration file:
options IPFIREWALL options IPDIVERT
Additionally, at choice, the following may also be suitable:
options IPFIREWALL_DEFAULT_TO_ACCEPT options IPFIREWALL_VERBOSE
The following must be in /etc/rc.conf:
gateway_enable="YES" firewall_enable="YES" firewall_type="OPEN" natd_enable="YES" natd_interface="fxp0" natd_flags=""
gateway_enable="YES" | Sets up the machine to act as a gateway. Running sysctl net.inet.ip.forwarding=1 would have the same effect. |
firewall_enable="YES" | Enables the firewall rules in /etc/rc.firewall at boot. |
firewall_type="OPEN" | This specifies a predefined firewall ruleset that allows anything in. See /etc/rc.firewall for additional types. |
natd_interface="fxp0" | Indicates which interface to forward packets through (the interface connected to the Internet). |
natd_flags="" | Any additional configuration options passed to natd(8) on boot. |
Having the previous options defined in /etc/rc.conf would run natd -interface fxp0 at boot. This can also be run manually.
Each machine and interface behind the LAN should be assigned IP address numbers in the private network space as defined by RFC 1918 and have a default gateway of the natd machine's internal IP address.
For example, client a and b behind the LAN have IP addresses of 192.168.0.2 and 192.168.0.3, while the natd machine's LAN interface has an IP address of 192.168.0.1. Client a and b's default gateway must be set to that of the natd machine, 192.168.0.1. The natd machine's external, or Internet interface does not require any special modification for natd to work.
The drawback with natd is that the LAN clients are not accessible from the Internet. Clients on the LAN can make outgoing connections to the world but cannot receive incoming ones. This presents a problem if trying to run Internet services on one of the LAN client machines. A simple way around this is to redirect selected Internet ports on the natd machine to a LAN client.
For example, an IRC server runs on Client A, and a web server runs on Client B. For this to work properly, connections received on ports 6667 (irc) and 80 (web) must be redirected to the respective machines.
The -redirect_port must be passed to natd(8) with the proper options. The syntax is as follows:
-redirect_port proto targetIP:targetPORT[-targetPORT] [aliasIP:]aliasPORT[-aliasPORT] [remoteIP[:remotePORT[-remotePORT]]]
In the above example, the argument should be:
-redirect_port tcp 192.168.0.2:6667 6667 -redirect_port tcp 192.168.0.3:80 80This will redirect the proper tcp ports to the LAN client machines.
The -redirect_port argument can be used to indicate port ranges over individual ports. For example, tcp 192.168.0.2:2000-3000 2000-3000 would redirect all connections received on ports 2000 to 3000 to ports 2000 to 3000 on Client A.
These options can be used when directly running natd(8) or placed within the
natd_flags=""option in /etc/rc.conf.
For further configuration options, consult natd(8)
Address redirection is useful if several IP addresses are available, yet they must be on one machine. With this, natd(8) can assign each LAN client its own external IP address. natd(8) then rewrites outgoing packets from the LAN clients with the proper external IP address and redirects all traffic incoming on that particular IP address back to the specific LAN client. This is also known as static NAT. For example, the IP addresses 128.1.1.1, 128.1.1.2, and 128.1.1.3 belong to the natd gateway machine. 128.1.1.1 can be used as the natd gateway machine's external IP address, while 128.1.1.2 and 128.1.1.3 are forwarded back to LAN clients A and B.
The -redirect_address syntax is as follows:
-redirect_address localIP publicIP
localIP | The internal IP address of the LAN client. |
publicIP | The external IP address corresponding to the LAN client. |
In the example, this argument would read:
-redirect_address 192.168.0.2 128.1.1.2 -redirect_address 192.168.0.3 128.1.1.3
Like -redirect_port, these arguments are also placed within natd_flags of /etc/rc.conf. With address redirection, there is no need for port redirection since all data received on a particular IP address is redirected.
The external IP addresses on the natd machine must be active and aliased to the external interface. Look at rc.conf(5) to do so.
This, and other documents, can be downloaded from ftp://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/.
For questions about FreeBSD, read the
documentation
before contacting <questions@FreeBSD.org>.
For questions about this documentation, e-mail <doc@FreeBSD.org>.