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iptables-wrappers

This repository consists of wrapper scripts to help with using iptables in containers.

Specifically, it provides a wrapper script to select between the two modes of iptables 1.8 ("legacy" and "nft") at runtime, so that hostNetwork containers that examine or modify iptables rules will work correctly regardless of which mode the underlying system is using.

Background

As of iptables 1.8, the iptables command line clients come in two different versions/modes: "legacy", which uses the kernel iptables API just like iptables 1.6 and earlier did, and "nft", which translates the iptables command-line API into the kernel nftables API.

Because they connect to two different subsystems in the kernel, you cannot mix and match between them; in particular, if you are adding a new rule that needs to run either before or after some existing rules (such as the system firewall rules), then you need to create your rule with the same iptables mode as the other rules were created with, since otherwise the ordering may not be what you expect. (eg, if you prepend a rule using the nft-based client, it will still run after all rules that were added with the legacy iptables client.)

In particular, this means that if you create a container image that will make changes to iptables rules in the host network namespace, and you want that container to be able to work on any host, then you need to figure out at run time which mode the host is using, and then also use that mode yourself. This wrapper is designed to do that for you.

Additional iptables-nft 1.8.0-1.8.3 compatibility problems

In addition to the general problem of needing to use the right mode, there is a second problem with iptables 1.8, which is that the first few releases (1.8.0, 1.8.1, and 1.8.2) had bugs in nft mode that made them not work with kubelet and some other programs. In particular:

  • Some commands did not exit with success or failure in exactly the same situations as the legacy clients. Eg, with the legacy clients, iptables -F CHAIN would exit with an error if the chain did not exist, but with the nft-based clients up to 1.8.2, it would exit with success.

  • In some cases it was possible to add a rule with iptables -A but then have iptables -C claim that the rule did not exist. (This led to kubelet repeatedly creating more and more copies of the same rule, thinking it had not been created yet.)

iptables 1.8.3 fixes these compatibility problems, but has a slightly different problem, which is that iptables-nft will get stuck in an infinite loop if it can't load the kernel nf_tables module. The wrapper script has code to deal with this.

All currently-known problems are fixed in iptables 1.8.4.

iptables-wrapper

The iptables-wrapper-installer.sh script in this repo will install an iptables-wrapper script alongside iptables-legacy and iptables-nft in /usr/sbin (or /sbin), and adjust the symlinks on iptables, iptables-save, etc, to point to the wrapper.

(Because of the known bugs, iptables-wrapper-installer.sh will refuse to install the wrappers into a container with iptables earlier than 1.8.2. If you really know what you're doing you can pass --no-sanity-check to install anyway. Because it can work around the bugs in 1.8.3, the installer will allow you to install with iptables 1.8.3.)

The first time the wrapper is run, it will figure out which mode the system is using, update the iptables, iptables-save, etc, links to point to either the nft or legacy copies of iptables as appropriate, and then exec the appropriate binary. After that first call, the wrapper will not be used again; future calls to iptables will go directly to the correct underlying binary.

Building a container image that uses iptables

When building a container image that needs to run iptables in the host network namespace, install iptables 1.8.3 or later in the container using whatever tools you normally would. Then copy the iptables-wrapper-installer.sh script into your container, and run it to have it set up run-time autodetection.

Some distro-specific examples:

  • Alpine Linux

    FROM alpine:3.10
    
    RUN apk add --no-cache iptables
    COPY iptables-wrapper-installer.sh /
    RUN /iptables-wrapper-installer.sh
    
  • Debian GNU/Linux

    Debian stable (buster) ships iptables 1.8.2, but iptables 1.8.3 is available in buster-backports, so you should install it from there:

    FROM debian:buster
    
    RUN echo deb http://deb.debian.org/debian buster-backports main >> /etc/apt/sources.list; \
        apt-get update; \
        apt-get -t buster-backports -y --no-install-recommends install iptables
    
    COPY iptables-wrapper-installer.sh /
    RUN /iptables-wrapper-installer.sh
    
  • Fedora

    Fedora 31 is the first release to include iptables 1.8.3. (Similarly to the Debian example, you might be able to build an image based on Fedora 30 or 29 if you use dnf --releasever 31 ... to install the F31 iptables packages.)

    FROM fedora:31
    
    RUN dnf install -y iptables iptables-nft
    
    COPY iptables-wrapper-installer.sh /
    RUN /iptables-wrapper-installer.sh
    
  • RHEL / CentOS

    RHEL/CentOS 7 ship iptables 1.4, which does not support nft mode. RHEL/CentOS 8 ship a hacked version of iptables 1.8 that only supports nft mode. Therefore, neither can be used as a basis for a portable iptables-using container image.

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