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COMS W4995-1 COMS W4995-1 Lecture 8. NAT, DHCP & Firewalls.

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Presentation on theme: "COMS W4995-1 COMS W4995-1 Lecture 8. NAT, DHCP & Firewalls."— Presentation transcript:

1 COMS W4995-1 COMS W4995-1 Lecture 8

2 NAT, DHCP & Firewalls

3 Outline  Network Address Translation (NAT)  Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)  Firewalls  Typical Application Domains where we use them

4  A hack to fix the IP address depletion problem. NAT is a router function where IP addresses (and possibly port numbers) of IP datagrams are replaced at the boundary of a private network.  Breaks the End-to-End argument. But it became a standard: RFC 1631 - The IP Network Address Translator (NAT)  Provides a form security by acting as a firewall home users. Small companies. Network Address Translation: a hack Is there any other solution to the IP address problem?

5 Basic operation of NAT  NAT device stores the address and port translation tables In the this example we mapped only addresses. Host private address: 10.0.1.2 public address: 128.143.71.21 Public Host Private NetworkInternet 64.236.24.4 NAT Device Private Address Public Address 10.0.1.1128.59.16.21 Source = 10.0.1.2 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 10.0.1.2 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 128.143.71.21 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 128.143.71.21 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 128.59.16.21 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 10.0.0.2 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 128.59.16.21 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 128.59.16.21 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 128.59.16.21 Source = 64.236.24.4 Destination= 10.0.0.2

6 Private Network  Private IP network is an IP network with Private IP Addresses (Can it be connected directly to the Internet?)  IP addresses in a private network can be assigned arbitrarily but they are usually picked from the reserved pool (can we use any?) Not registered and not guaranteed to be globally unique Question: how is public IP address assigned?  Generally, private networks use addresses from the following experimental address ranges (non-routable addresses): 10.0.0.0 – 10.255.255.255 172.16.0.0 – 172.31.255.255 192.168.0.0 – 192.168.255.255

7 Main uses of NAT  Pooling of IP addresses  Supporting migration between network service providers  IP masquerading and internal firewall  Load balancing of servers

8 Pooling of IP addresses  Scenario: Corporate network has many hosts but only a small number of public IP addresses.  NAT solution: Corporate network is managed with a private address space. NAT device, located at the boundary between the corporate network and the public Internet, manages a pool of public IP addresses. When a host from the corporate network sends an IP datagram to a host in the public Internet, the NAT device picks a public IP address from the address pool, and binds this address to the private address of the host.

9 Pooling of IP addresses Host private address: 10.0.1.2 public address: 128.143.71.21 Private NetworkInternet NAT Device Private Address Public Address 10.0.1.2128.59.16.21 Source = 10.0.1.2 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 10.0.1.2 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 128.143.71.21 Destination = 64.236.24.4 Source = 128.143.71.21 Destination = 64.236.24.4

10 Supporting migration between network service providers  Scenario: In practice (using CIDR), the IP addresses in a corporate network are obtained from the service provider. Changing the service provider requires changing all IP addresses in the network.  NAT solution: Assign private addresses to the hosts of the corporate network NAT device has address translation entries which bind the private address of a host to the public address. Migration to a new network service provider merely requires an update of the NAT device. The migration is not noticeable to the hosts on the network.

11 Supporting migration between network service providers

12

13 IP masquerading  Also called: Network address and port translation (NAPT), port address translation (PAT).  Scenario: Single public IP address is mapped to multiple hosts in a private network.  NAT solution: Assign private addresses to the hosts of the corporate network NAT device modifies the port numbers for outgoing traffic

14 IP masquerading

15 Load balancing of servers  Scenario: Balance the load on a set of identical servers, which are accessible from a single IP address  NAT solution: Here, the servers are assigned private addresses NAT device acts as a proxy for requests to the server from the public network The NAT device changes the destination IP address of arriving packets to one of the private addresses for a server A sensible strategy for balancing the load of the servers is to assign the addresses of the servers in a round-robin fashion.

16 Load balancing of servers

17 Concerns about NAT  Performance: Modifying the IP header by changing the IP address requires that NAT boxes recalculate the IP header checksum. Modifying port number requires that NAT boxes recalculate TCP checksum.  Fragmentation Care must be taken that a datagram that is fragmented before it reaches the NAT device, is not assigned a different IP address or different port numbers for each of the fragments.

18 Concerns about NAT  End-to-end connectivity: NAT destroys universal end-to-end reachability of hosts on the Internet. A host in the public Internet often cannot initiate communication to a host in a private network. The problem is worse, when two hosts that are in a private network need to communicate with each other.

19 NAT and FTP  Normal FTP operation

20 NAT and FTP  NAT device with FTP support

21 NAT and FTP  FTP in passive mode and NAT.

22 Configuring NAT in Linux  Linux uses the Netfilter/iptable Kernel package

23 Configuring NAT with iptable  First example: iptables –t nat –A POSTROUTING –s 10.0.1.2 –j SNAT --to-source 128.16.71.21  Pooling of IP addresses: iptables –t nat –A POSTROUTING –s 10.0.1.0/24 –j SNAT --to-source 128.16.71.0–128.16.71.30  IP masquerading: iptables –t nat –A POSTROUTING –s 10.0.1.0/24 –o eth1 –j MASQUERADE  Load balancing: iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth1 -j DNAT --to- destination 10.0.1.2-10.0.1.4

24 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)

25 Dynamic Assignment of IP addresses  Dynamic assignment of IP addresses is desirable for several reasons: IP addresses are assigned on-demand Avoid manual IP configuration Support mobility of laptops Wireless networking and Home NATs  No static IP means that we have to depend on DNS for the packet routing Use of a DDNS (Dynamic DNS entry) Free sites for that service in the internet

26 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP)  Designed in 1993  Requires a server and free IP address space  Supports temporary allocation (“leases”) of IP addresses  DHCP client can acquire all IP configuration parameters  Any potential security risks?  Can we use something that can prevent unauthorized users?

27 DHCP Interaction (simplified)

28 DHCP Message Format (There are >100 different options)

29 DHCP  OpCode: 1 (Request), 2(Reply) Note: DHCP message type is sent in an option  Hardware Type: 1 (for Ethernet)  Hardware address length: 6 (for Ethernet)  Hop count: set to 0 by client  Transaction ID: Integer (used to match reply to response)  Seconds: number of seconds since the client started to boot  Client IP address, Your IP address, server IP address, Gateway IP address, client hardware address, server host name, boot file name: client fills in the information that it has, leaves rest blank

30 DHCP Message Type  Message type is sent as an option. ValueMessage Type 1DHCPDISCOVER 2DHCPOFFER 3DHCPREQUEST 4DHCPDECLINE 5DHCPACK 6DHCPNAK 7DHCPRELEASE 8DHCPINFORM

31 DHCP operations Src: 0.0.0.0, 68 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 67 DHCPDISCOVERY Yiaddr: 0.0.0.0 Transaction ID: 654 Src:128.195.31.1, 67 DHCPOFFER Yiaddr: 128.59.20.147 Transaction ID: 654 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 68 Lifetime: 3600 secs Server ID: 128.59.18.1

32 Src: 0.0.0.0, 68 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 67 DHCPREQUEST Yiaddr: 128.59.20.147 Transaction ID: 655 server ID: 128.195.31.1 Lifetime: 3600 secs Src:128.59.18.1, 67 DHCPACK Yiaddr: 128.59.20.147 Transaction ID: 655 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 68 Lifetime: 3600 secs Server ID: 128.59.18.1 DHCP operations

33 More on DHCP operations  A client may receive DCHP offers from multiple servers  The DHCPREQUEST message accepts offers from one server.  Other servers who receive this message considers it as a decline  A client can use its address after receiving DHCPACK  DHCP replies can be unicast, depending on implmentation

34 DHCP relay agent DHCPDISCOVER Giaddr: 0 Src: 0.0.0.0., 68 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 67 128.16.31.1 128.16.41.1 DHCPDISCOVER Giaddr: 128.16.41.1 Src: 0.0.0.0., 68 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 67 DHCPOFFER …… Giaddr: 128.16.41.1 Src: 128.16.31.10, 67 Dest: 128.16.41.1, 67 DHCPOFFER …… Giaddr: 128.16.41.1 Src: 128.16.41.1, 67 Dest: 255.255.255.255, 68 128.16.31.10

35 History of DHCP  Three Protocols: RARP (until 1985, no longer used) BOOTP (1985-1993) DHCP (since 1993) Secure DHCP – not a standard yet…  Only DHCP is widely used today.

36 Solutions for dynamic assignment of IP addresses  Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) RARP is no longer used Works similar to ARP Broadcast a request for the IP address associated with a given MAC address RARP server responds with an IP address Only assigns IP address (not the default router and subnetmask)

37 BOOTP  BOOTstrap Protocol (BOOTP)  Host can configure its IP parameters at boot time.  3 services.  IP address assignment.  Detection of the IP address for a serving machine.  The name of a file to be loaded and executed by the client machine (boot file name) Not only assigns IP address, but also default router, network mask, etc. Sent as UDP messages (UDP Port 67 (server) and 68 (host)) Use limited broadcast address (255.255.255.255):  These addresses are never forwarded

38 BOOTP Interaction  BOOTP can be used for downloading memory image for diskless workstations  Assignment of IP addresses to hosts is static (a) (b) (c)

39 Lab errata  In Figure 7.1, the private network interface of Router2 should be labeled with IP address "10.0.1.1/24" (instead of 10.0.0.1/24).

40 Firewalls (Slides to be added)


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