Not a groundbreaking idea but worth remembering that you can also run scheduled fw monitor using the cron. In case you have some problem occurring at the late night hours or you want to run debug at night when system is loaded less or put your case here this is one of the ways to do it.
First, the script named timed_fw_monitor.sh that starts the fw monitor:
First, the script named timed_fw_monitor.sh that starts the fw monitor:
#!/bin/bash
# We have to source Checkpoint environment variables for fw monitor to work
. /etc/profile.d/CP.sh
/opt/CPsuite-R71/fw1/bin/fw monitor -o /home/lambada/capture.cap -e 'accept icmp or port(25);'
# We have to source Checkpoint environment variables for fw monitor to work
. /etc/profile.d/CP.sh
/opt/CPsuite-R71/fw1/bin/fw monitor -o /home/lambada/capture.cap -e 'accept icmp or port(25);'
Then of course I will want to stop fw monitor , here is the script named stop_fw_monitor.sh that I also put in cron jobs that stops previously started fw monitor :
#!/bin/bash
ps ax | grep 'capture.cap' | grep -v grep | awk '{ print ("kill -s 3 " $1) | "/bin/bash" }'
ps ax | grep 'capture.cap' | grep -v grep | awk '{ print ("kill -s 3 " $1) | "/bin/bash" }'
Now my crontab looks like this:
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE – edit the master and reinstall.
# (/tmp/crontab.4760 installed on Sat May 29 11:00:22 2010)
# (Cron version — $Id: crontab.c,v 2.13 1994/01/17 03:20:37 vixie Exp $)
03 23 * * * /home/lambada/timed_fw_monitor.sh > /dev/null
17 23 * * * /home/lambada/stop_fw_monitor.sh > /dev/null
# (/tmp/crontab.4760 installed on Sat May 29 11:00:22 2010)
# (Cron version — $Id: crontab.c,v 2.13 1994/01/17 03:20:37 vixie Exp $)
03 23 * * * /home/lambada/timed_fw_monitor.sh > /dev/null
17 23 * * * /home/lambada/stop_fw_monitor.sh > /dev/null
fw monitor command reference
This is a quick reference sheet of all usable options for the fw monitor tool .At the end I put a list of fw monitor examples. The previous experience with the tool is assumed, i’ll just say that if you are serious about debugging Checkpoint products learn it and learn it well.
By default the fw monitor sniffing driver is inserted into the 4 locations on
the Firewall kernel chain .
By default the fw monitor sniffing driver is inserted into the 4 locations on
the Firewall kernel chain .
Here they are:
i (PREIN) – inbound direction before firewall Virtual
Machine (VM, and it is CP terminology) . Most important fact to know about that
is that this packet capturing location shows packets BEFORE any security rule
in the policy is applied. That is, no matter what rules say a packet should at
least be seen here, this would prove that packets actually reach the firewall
at all.
I (POSTIN) – inbound direction after firewall VM.
o (PREOUT) – outbound direction before firewall VM,
O (POSTOUT) – outbound direction after firewall VM.
Machine (VM, and it is CP terminology) . Most important fact to know about that
is that this packet capturing location shows packets BEFORE any security rule
in the policy is applied. That is, no matter what rules say a packet should at
least be seen here, this would prove that packets actually reach the firewall
at all.
I (POSTIN) – inbound direction after firewall VM.
o (PREOUT) – outbound direction before firewall VM,
O (POSTOUT) – outbound direction after firewall VM.
You can change point of insertion within the fw chain with :
# fw monitor –p<i|I|O|o> <where to
insert>
insert>
easiest way to specify where to insert is to first see the chain:
# fw ctl chain
then give relative to any module you see there <+|->module_name
# fw ctl chain
then give relative to any module you see there <+|->module_name
Now the usage itself:
# fw monitor
Usage: fw monitor [- u|s] [-i] [-d] [-T] <{-e
expression}+|-f <filter-file|->> [-l len] [-m mask] [-x offset[,len]]
[-o <file>] <[-pi pos] [-pI pos] [-po pos] [-pO pos] | -p all [-a
]> [-ci count] [-co count]
expression}+|-f <filter-file|->> [-l len] [-m mask] [-x offset[,len]]
[-o <file>] <[-pi pos] [-pI pos] [-po pos] [-pO pos] | -p all [-a
]> [-ci count] [-co count]
Round up of options:
-m mask , which point of capture is to be displayed, possible: i,I,o,O
-d/-D debug output from fw monitor itself, not very useful IMO.
-u|s print also connection/session Universal ID
- i after writing each packet flush stdout
-T add timestamp, not interesting
-e expr expression to filter the packets (in detail later)
-f filter_file the same as above but read expression from file
-l <len> packet length to capture
-d/-D debug output from fw monitor itself, not very useful IMO.
-u|s print also connection/session Universal ID
- i after writing each packet flush stdout
-T add timestamp, not interesting
-e expr expression to filter the packets (in detail later)
-f filter_file the same as above but read expression from file
-l <len> packet length to capture
Expressions
On the very low level fw monitor understands byte offsets from the header
start. So to specify for example 20th byte of the IP packet (that is source IP)
you can just use:
On the very low level fw monitor understands byte offsets from the header
start. So to specify for example 20th byte of the IP packet (that is source IP)
you can just use:
# fw monitor -e 'accept [12,b]=8.8.8.8;'
Where:
12 – offset in bytes from the beginning of the packet
b – mandatory, means big endian order.
4 – not seen here but size (in bytes) of how many bytes to look for from the
starting offset (default is 4 )
12 – offset in bytes from the beginning of the packet
b – mandatory, means big endian order.
4 – not seen here but size (in bytes) of how many bytes to look for from the
starting offset (default is 4 )
To look for source port 53 (UDP/TCP) in raw packet:
# fw monitor -m i -e 'accept [20:2,b]=53;'
Here I say to fw monitor to look at 2 bytes at offset 20.
Here I say to fw monitor to look at 2 bytes at offset 20.
While this way of looking at packets is the most general and therefore includes
all cases, you rarely have the need for such a granular looking glass. In 99%
of the cases you will be doing alright with a limited known set of expressions.
Just for that Checkpoint defined and kindly provided us in every Splat
installation with definition files that give meaningful synonyms to the most
used patterns. There are few definition files but they circularly reference
each other providing multiple synonyms for the same pattern.
I put all those predefined patterns in the list below for the easy to use
reference.
all cases, you rarely have the need for such a granular looking glass. In 99%
of the cases you will be doing alright with a limited known set of expressions.
Just for that Checkpoint defined and kindly provided us in every Splat
installation with definition files that give meaningful synonyms to the most
used patterns. There are few definition files but they circularly reference
each other providing multiple synonyms for the same pattern.
I put all those predefined patterns in the list below for the easy to use
reference.
Summary table of possible expressions to be fed to the fw monitor | |
---|---|
Specifying Hosts | |
host(IP_address) | to or from this host |
src=IP_address | where source ip = IP_address |
dst=IP_address | where destination ip = IP_address |
net(network_address,netmask) | to or from this network |
to_net(network_address,netmask) | to this network |
from_net(network_address,netmask) | from this network |
Specifying ports | |
port(port_number) | having this source or destination port |
sport=port_number | having this source port |
dport=port_number | having this destination port |
tcpport(port_number) | having this source or destination port that is also TCP |
udpport(port_number) | having this source or destination port that is also UDP |
Specifying protocols | |
ip_p=<protocol_number_as_per_IANA> | this way you can specifiy any known protocol by its registered number in IANAFor detailed list of protocol numbers see www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers |
icmp | what it says , icmp protocol |
tcp | TCP |
udp | UDP |
Protocol specific oprions | |
IP | |
ip_tos = <value> | TOS field of the IP packet |
ip_len = <length_in_bytes> | Length of the IP packet in bytes |
ip_src/ ip_dst = <IP_address> | Source or destination IP address of the packet |
ip_p =<protocol_number_as_per_IANA> | See above |
ICMP | |
echo_reply | ICMP reply packets |
echo_req | Echo requests |
ping | Echo requests and echo replies |
icmp_error | ICMP error messages (Redirect,Unreachables,Time exceeded,Source quench,Parameter problem) |
traceroute | Traceroute as implemented in Unix (UDP packets to high ports) |
tracert | Traceroute as implemented in Windows (ICMP packets , TTL <30) |
icmp_type = <ICMP types as per RFC> | catch packets of certain type |
icmp_code = <ICMP type as per RFC> | catch packets of certain code |
ICMP types and where applicable respective codes:ICMP_ECHOREPLY ICMP_UNREACH ICMP_UNREACH_NET ICMP_UNREACH_HOST ICMP_UNREACH_PROTOCOL ICMP_UNREACH_PORT ICMP_UNREACH_NEEDFRAG ICMP_UNREACH_SRCFAIL ICMP_SOURCEQUENCH ICMP_REDIRECT ICMP_REDIRECT_NET ICMP_REDIRECT_HOST ICMP_REDIRECT_TOSNET ICMP_REDIRECT_TOSHOST ICMP_ECHO ICMP_ROUTERADVERT ICMP_ROUTERSOLICIT ICMP_TIMXCEED ICMP_TIMXCEED_INTRANS ICMP_TIMXCEED_REASS ICMP_PARAMPROB ICMP_TSTAMP ICMP_TSTAMPREPLY ICMP_IREQ ICMP_IREQREPLY ICMP_MASKREQ ICMP_MASKREPLY | |
icmp_ip_len = <length> | Length of ICMP packet |
icmp_ip_ttl = <TTL> | TTL of ICMP packet, use with icmp protocol otherwise will catch ANY packet with TTL given |
< cut here—-bunch of other icmp-related fields like ID ,sequence I don’t see any value in bringing here–> | |
TCP | |
syn | SYN flag set |
fin | FIN flag set |
rst | RST flag set |
ack | ACK flag set |
first | first packet (means SYN is set but ACK is not) |
not_first | not first packet (SYN is not set) |
established | established connection (means ACK is set but SYN is not) |
last | last packet in stream (ACK and FIN are set) |
tcpdone | RST or FIN are set |
th_flags – more general way to match the flags inside TCP packets | |
th_flags = TH_PUSH | Push flag set |
th_flags = TH_URG | Urgent flag set |
UDP | |
uh_ulen = <length_in_bytes> | Length of the UDP header (doesnt include IP header) |
And the last thing to remember before we move to examples – expressions support logical operators and numerical values support relative operators:
and – logical AND
or – logical OR
not - logical NOT
> MORE than
< LESS than
>= MORE than or EQUAL to
<= LESS than or EQUAL to
You can combine logical expressions and influence order by using ()
or – logical OR
not - logical NOT
> MORE than
< LESS than
>= MORE than or EQUAL to
<= LESS than or EQUAL to
You can combine logical expressions and influence order by using ()
Below is laundry list of examples to showcase the reference table above.
# fw monitor -m i -e 'accept host(208.44.108.136) ;'
# fw monitor -e 'accept src=216.12.145.20 ;' packets where source ip = 216.12.145.20
# fw monitor -e 'accept src=216.12.145.20 or dst= 216.12.145.20;' packets where source or destination ip = 216.12.145.20
# fw monitor -e 'accept port(25) ;' packets where destination or source port = 25
# fw monitor -e 'accept dport=80 ;' packets where destination port = 80
#fw monitor -e 'accept sport>22 and dport>22 ; ' packets with source and destination ports greater than 22
# fw monitor -e 'accept ip_len = 1477;' packets where their length equals exactly 1477 bytes
# fw monitor -e 'accept icmp_type=ICMP_UNREACH;' ICMP packets of Unreachable type
# fw monitor -e 'accept from_net(216.163.137.68,24);' packets having source IP in the network 216.163.137.0/24
# fw monitor -e 'accept from_net(216.163.137.68,24) and port(25) and dst=8.8.8.8 ;' packets coming from network 216.163.137.0/24 that are destined to the host 8.8.8.8 and hving source or destination port = 25
# fw monitor -m i -x 40,450 -e 'accept port(80);' incoming packets before any rules are applied also
display contents of the packet starting at 40th byte of 450 bytes length
# fw monitor -m i -pi -ipopt_strip -e 'accept host(66.240.206.90);' incoming packets from/to host 66.240.206.90 , insert sniffer before module named ipopt_strip
# fw monitor -D -m i -pi -ipopt_strip -e 'accept host(66.240.206.90);' same as above but add debug info
# fw monitor -e 'accept src=216.12.145.20 ;' packets where source ip = 216.12.145.20
# fw monitor -e 'accept src=216.12.145.20 or dst= 216.12.145.20;' packets where source or destination ip = 216.12.145.20
# fw monitor -e 'accept port(25) ;' packets where destination or source port = 25
# fw monitor -e 'accept dport=80 ;' packets where destination port = 80
#fw monitor -e 'accept sport>22 and dport>22 ; ' packets with source and destination ports greater than 22
# fw monitor -e 'accept ip_len = 1477;' packets where their length equals exactly 1477 bytes
# fw monitor -e 'accept icmp_type=ICMP_UNREACH;' ICMP packets of Unreachable type
# fw monitor -e 'accept from_net(216.163.137.68,24);' packets having source IP in the network 216.163.137.0/24
# fw monitor -e 'accept from_net(216.163.137.68,24) and port(25) and dst=8.8.8.8 ;' packets coming from network 216.163.137.0/24 that are destined to the host 8.8.8.8 and hving source or destination port = 25
# fw monitor -m i -x 40,450 -e 'accept port(80);' incoming packets before any rules are applied also
display contents of the packet starting at 40th byte of 450 bytes length
# fw monitor -m i -pi -ipopt_strip -e 'accept host(66.240.206.90);' incoming packets from/to host 66.240.206.90 , insert sniffer before module named ipopt_strip
# fw monitor -D -m i -pi -ipopt_strip -e 'accept host(66.240.206.90);' same as above but add debug info
3 comments:
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