conf: Allow to specify ranges and ports excluded from given ranges

This is useful in environments where we want to forward a large
number of ports, or all non-ephemeral ones, and some other service
running on the host needs a few selected ports.

I'm using ~ as prefix for the specification of excluded ranges and
ports to avoid the need for explicit command line quoting.

Ranges and ports can be excluded from given ranges by adding them
in the comma-separated list, prefixed by ~. Some quick examples:

  -t 5000-6000,~5555: forward ports 5000 to 6000, but not 5555

  -t ~20000-20010: forward all non-ephemeral, allowed ports, except
     for ports 20000 to 20010

...more details in usage message and man page.

Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Stefano Brivio 2022-07-13 08:05:01 +02:00
parent 4de37151c9
commit 220759efb8
2 changed files with 127 additions and 13 deletions

112
conf.c
View file

@ -124,12 +124,12 @@ enum conf_port_type {
static int conf_ports(struct ctx *c, char optname, const char *optarg,
enum conf_port_type *set)
{
int start_src = -1, end_src = -1, start_dst = -1, end_dst = -1;
int start_src, end_src, start_dst, end_dst, exclude_only = 1, i, port;
char addr_buf[sizeof(struct in6_addr)] = { 0 }, *addr = addr_buf;
void (*remap)(in_port_t port, in_port_t delta);
char addr_buf[sizeof(struct in6_addr)] = { 0 };
uint8_t *map, exclude[USHRT_MAX / 8] = { 0 };
char buf[BUFSIZ], *sep, *spec, *p;
sa_family_t af = AF_UNSPEC;
char buf[BUFSIZ], *sep, *p, *addr = addr_buf;
uint8_t *map;
if (optname == 't') {
map = c->tcp.port_to_tap;
@ -186,9 +186,9 @@ static int conf_ports(struct ctx *c, char optname, const char *optarg,
strncpy(buf, optarg, sizeof(buf) - 1);
if ((p = strchr(buf, '/'))) {
*p = 0;
p++;
if ((spec = strchr(buf, '/'))) {
*spec = 0;
spec++;
if (optname != 't' && optname != 'u')
goto bad;
@ -200,16 +200,97 @@ static int conf_ports(struct ctx *c, char optname, const char *optarg,
else
goto bad;
} else {
p = buf;
spec = buf;
addr = NULL;
}
if (strspn(p, "0123456789-,:") != strlen(p))
if (strspn(spec, "0123456789-,:~") != strlen(spec))
goto bad;
/* Mark all exclusions first, they might be given after base ranges */
p = spec;
start_src = end_src = -1;
do {
int i, port;
while (*p != '~' && start_src == -1) {
exclude_only = 0;
if (!(p = strchr(p, ',')))
break;
p++;
}
if (!p || !*p)
break;
if (*p == '~')
p++;
errno = 0;
port = strtol(p, &sep, 10);
if (sep == p)
break;
if (port < 0 || port > USHRT_MAX || errno)
goto bad;
switch (*sep) {
case '-':
if (start_src == -1) /* ~22-... */
start_src = port;
break;
case ',':
case 0:
if (start_src == -1) /* ~80 */
start_src = end_src = port;
else if (end_src == -1) /* ~22-25 */
end_src = port;
else
goto bad;
if (start_src > end_src) /* ~80-22 */
goto bad;
for (i = start_src; i <= end_src; i++) {
if (bitmap_isset(exclude, i))
goto overlap;
bitmap_set(exclude, i);
}
break;
default:
goto bad;
}
p = sep + 1;
} while (*sep);
if (exclude_only) {
for (i = 0; i < PORT_EPHEMERAL_MIN; i++) {
if (bitmap_isset(exclude, i))
continue;
bitmap_set(map, i);
if (optname == 't')
tcp_sock_init(c, 0, af, addr, i);
else if (optname == 'u')
udp_sock_init(c, 0, af, addr, i);
}
return 0;
}
/* Now process base ranges, skipping exclusions */
start_src = end_src = start_dst = end_dst = -1;
p = spec;
do {
while (*p == '~') {
if (!(p = strchr(p, ',')))
break;
p++;
}
if (!p || !*p)
break;
errno = 0;
port = strtol(p, &sep, 10);
@ -281,6 +362,9 @@ static int conf_ports(struct ctx *c, char optname, const char *optarg,
if (bitmap_isset(map, i))
goto overlap;
if (bitmap_isset(exclude, i))
continue;
bitmap_set(map, i);
if (start_dst != -1) {
@ -726,7 +810,9 @@ static void usage(const char *name)
info( " 'all': forward all unbound, non-ephemeral ports");
info( " a comma-separated list, optionally ranged with '-'");
info( " and optional target ports after ':', with optional");
info( " address specification suffixed by '/'. Examples:");
info( " address specification suffixed by '/'. Ranges can be");
info( " reduced by excluding ports or ranges prefixed by '~'");
info( " Examples:");
info( " -t 22 Forward local port 22 to 22 on guest");
info( " -t 22:23 Forward local port 22 to 23 on guest");
info( " -t 22,25 Forward ports 22, 25 to ports 22, 25");
@ -734,6 +820,8 @@ static void usage(const char *name)
info( " -t 22-80:32-90 Forward ports 22 to 80 to");
info( " corresponding port numbers plus 10");
info( " -t 192.0.2.1/5 Bind port 5 of 192.0.2.1 to guest");
info( " -t 5-25,~10-20 Forward ports 5 to 9, and 21 to 25");
info( " -t ~25 Forward all ports except for 25");
info( " default: none");
info( " -u, --udp-ports SPEC UDP port forwarding to guest");
info( " SPEC is as described for TCP above");
@ -757,6 +845,8 @@ pasta_opts:
info( " -t 22-80:32-90 Forward ports 22 to 80 to");
info( " corresponding port numbers plus 10");
info( " -t 192.0.2.1/5 Bind port 5 of 192.0.2.1 to namespace");
info( " -t 5-25,~10-20 Forward ports 5 to 9, and 21 to 25");
info( " -t ~25 Forward all bound ports except for 25");
info( " default: auto");
info( " IPv6 bound ports are also forwarded for IPv4");
info( " -u, --udp-ports SPEC UDP port forwarding to namespace");

28
passt.1
View file

@ -306,7 +306,10 @@ For low (< 1024) ports, see \fBNOTES\fR.
.BR ports
A comma-separated list of ports, optionally ranged with \fI-\fR, and,
optionally, with target ports after \fI:\fR, if they differ. Specific addresses
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR. Examples:
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR. Within given ranges, selected ports
and ranges can be excluded by an additional specification prefixed by \fI~\fR.
Specifying excluded ranges only implies that all other ports are forwarded.
Examples:
.RS
.TP
-t 22
@ -326,6 +329,15 @@ Forward local ports 22 to 80 to corresponding ports on the guest plus 10
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1, to port 22 on the guest
.TP
-t 2000-5000,~3000-3010
Forward local ports 2000 to 5000, but not 3000 to 3010
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/20-30,~25
Forward local ports 20 to 24, and 26 to 30, bound to 192.0.2.1
.TP
-t ~20000-20010
Forward all ports to the guest, except for the range from 20000 to 20010
.RE
Default is \fBnone\fR.
@ -368,7 +380,10 @@ periodically derived (every second) from listening sockets reported by
.BR ports
A comma-separated list of ports, optionally ranged with \fI-\fR, and,
optionally, with target ports after \fI:\fR, if they differ. Specific addresses
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR. Examples:
can be bound as well, separated by \fI/\fR. Within given ranges, selected ports
and ranges can be excluded by an additional specification prefixed by \fI~\fR.
Specifying excluded ranges only implies that all other ports are forwarded.
Examples:
.RS
.TP
-t 22
@ -389,6 +404,15 @@ namespace
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/22
Forward local port 22, bound to 192.0.2.1, to port 22 in the target namespace
.TP
-t 2000-5000,~3000-3010
Forward local ports 2000 to 5000, but not 3000 to 3010
.TP
-t 192.0.2.1/20-30,~25
Forward local ports 20 to 24, and 26 to 30, bound to 192.0.2.1
.TP
-t ~20000-20010
Forward all ports to the namespace, except for the range from 20000 to 20010
.RE
IPv6 bound ports are also forwarded for IPv4.