Inline on a Linux Bridge

A Linux can be configured to operate in bridge mode. Two or more physical interfaces are assigned to the bridge. A single IP address is shared across the interfaces. By default any packet that arrives on one interface is immediately routed out another bridge interface.

Linux packages required:

  • bridge-utils
  • ebtables

In our example of setting up bridge mode we will use a local address of 192.168.1.11/24 and interfaces eth0 and eth1 as the bridge interfaces (more detailed documentation is available here). You may omit the ‘#’ character and everything after it.

  1. brctl addbr br0 # create bridge device
  2. brctl stp br0 off # Disable spanning tree protocol
  3. brctl addif br0 eth0 # Add eth0 to bridge
  4. brctl addif br0 eth1 # Add eth1 to bridge
  5. ifconfig eth0 0 0.0.0.0 # Get rid of interface IP addresses
  6. ifconfig eth1 0 0.0.0.0 # ditto # Set the bridge IP address and enable it
  7. ifconfig br0 192.168.1.11 netmask 255.255.255.0 up

If you have not already done so, remember to add a default route, such as this one for a gateway of 192.168.1.1.

  1. ip route add default via 192.168.1.1

At this point it is a good idea to test connectivity to verify the basic bridge is functional.

Once the bridge is verified to work, this is the basic traffic pattern of interest.

Picture of traffic flow through a bridge with ATS

Picture of traffic flow through a bridge with ATS

The green arrows are packets originating from the client and the red arrows are packets originating from the origin server. All traffic not directed to the local address will pass through the bridge. We need to break into some of the traffic and subject it to routing so that it can be routed to ATS. This requires ebtables. The flows we want to intercept are green 1 (from client to bridge) and red 1 (origin server to bridge).

In this example we will intercept port 80 (HTTP) traffic. We will use the BROUTING chain because it is traversed only for packets that originated externally and arrived on a (forwarding enabled) interface. Although it looks like this will intercept all port 80 traffic it will only affect the two flows described above. -j redirect marks the packet as being diverted to the bridge and not forwarded, and the DROP target puts the packets in the normal iptables routing so that we can use standard device tests on them [1]. Although this example handles only port 80, other ports are the same except for the port value. Note also the port here is the port from the point of view of the clients and origin servers, not the Traffic Server server port.

  1. ebtables -t broute -F # Flush the table
  2. # inbound traffic
  3. ebtables -t broute -A BROUTING -p IPv4 --ip-proto tcp --ip-dport 80 \
  4. -j redirect --redirect-target DROP
  5. # returning outbound traffic
  6. ebtables -t broute -A BROUTING -p IPv4 --ip-proto tcp --ip-sport 80 \
  7. -j redirect --redirect-target DROP

Traffic Server operates at layer 3 so we need to use iptables to handle IP packets appropriately.:

  1. iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -i eth1 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 \
  2. -j TPROXY --on-ip 0.0.0.0 --on-port 8080 --tproxy-mark 1/1
  3. iptables -t mangle -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp -m tcp --sport 80 \
  4. -j MARK --set-mark 1/1

At this point the directionality of the interfaces matters. For the example eth1 is the inbound (client side) interface, while eth0 is the outbound (origin server side) interface. We mark both flows of packets so that we can use policy routing on them. For inbound packets we need to use TPROXY to force acceptance of packets to foreign IP addresses. For returning outbound packets there will be a socket open bound to the foreign address, we need only force it to be delivered locally. The value for --on-ip is 0 because the target port is listening and not bound to a specific address. The value for --on-port must match the Traffic Server server port. Otherwise its value is arbitrary. --dport and --sport specify the port from the point of view of the clients and origin servers.

Once the flows are marked we can force them to be delivered locally via the loopback interface via a policy routing table.:

  1. ip rule add fwmark 1/1 table 1
  2. ip route add local 0.0.0.0/0 dev lo table 1

The marking used is arbitrary but it must be consistent between iptables and the routing rule. The table number must be in the range 1..253.

To configure Traffic Server set the following values in records.config

Additional troubleshooting

  • Check to make sure that iptables is not filtering (blocking) incoming HTTP connections.

    It is frequently the case that the default tables prevent incoming HTTP. You can clear all filters with the commands:

    1. iptables -t filter --flush FORWARD
    2. iptables -t filter --flush INPUT

    That is a bit drastic and should only be used for testing / debugging. A live system will likely need some filters in place but that is beyond the scope of this document. If this fixes the problem, then your filter set is too restrictive.

    Note that this problem will prevent the basic bridge (without ATS) from allowing HTTP traffic through.

  • Verify that IP packet forwarding is enabled.

    You can check this with:

    1. cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward

    The output should be a non-zero value (usually ‘1’). If it is zero, you can set it with:

    1. echo '1' > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward

    This can setting can be persisted by putting it in /etc/sysctl.conf:

    1. net/ipv4/ip_forward=1

Footnotes

[1]The —redirect-target can be omitted, but then the iptables rules would need to use —physdev instead of just -i. The actual packet processing is identical.