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    A few basic questions about features from a NOOB -

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General pfSense Questions
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    • ?
      Guest
      last edited by

      @Hollander:

      Useful, John, thank you for this suggestion  ;D

      But, as always, I don't understand it: you first kill the states, then they are re-restablished by the system, then you have to kill them again via a cronjob? But won't they be established again then?

      Or more fundamentally: shouldnt the firewall schedule take care of this automatically? As in:  this is not a bug, it is a feature'? ( ;D )

      If you kill the states after a scheduled "end of internet access" the states can't be re-established…

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      • johnpozJ
        johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
        last edited by

        yeah mine was just an example of the command, I don't have any firewall rules blocking access on a schedule.  Just showing that I killed them, and they show all gone.  Then sure they will try and reconnect.  But in the posters case his new scheduled rule will prevent them from being created.

        An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
        If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
        Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
        SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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        • C
          cneep
          last edited by

          @l3lu3:

          How tech savvy is your kid? If it were me, I'd be running it against his MAC. At the least, most kids nowadays know how to change an IP address :P That can be spoofed as well, which returns to my original question, how tech savvy?

          My thought as well. By extension, the MAC address can often be changed too. You may have better success in a small network by blocking all network traffic EXCEPT the devices that you specifically want to allow during your restricted hours.

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          • M
            Mr. Jingles
            last edited by

            Thank you John and Chemlud  ;D

            It would have been perfect if, on using the schedules, functionality had been built in to kill states for that rule automatically, but this workaround will work too.

            @cneep:

            @l3lu3:

            How tech savvy is your kid? If it were me, I'd be running it against his MAC. At the least, most kids nowadays know how to change an IP address :P That can be spoofed as well, which returns to my original question, how tech savvy?

            My thought as well. By extension, the MAC address can often be changed too. You may have better success in a small network by blocking all network traffic EXCEPT the devices that you specifically want to allow during your restricted hours.

            Is it that easy to spoof your LAN-ip adress, from, say, Win7? For even kids?

            :o

            A partial workaround might be static IP with  deny unknown clients' on the DHCP-server(?) Of course, that also hardly is 100% fool proof, as kid might simply scan the LAN and take ip of parent (provided parent isn't online).

            6 and a half billion people know that they are stupid, agressive, lower life forms.

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            • K
              kpa
              last edited by

              @Hollander:

              Is it that easy to spoof your LAN-ip adress, from, say, Win7? For even kids?

              :o

              All it takes is access to the device manager where the settings for the network adapter device offers you a field where you can enter the MAC address you want to use instead of the pre-programmed one.

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              • stephenw10S
                stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                last edited by

                @Hollander:

                For even kids?

                Especially for kids! They don't know it might be or should be difficult so they poke around until intil it's done. They've never known a computer that wasn't on the internet or a firewall that couldn't be eventually broken. Also they probably have a lot of friends who are also learning about this stuff and there's literally thousands of pages on the web explaining how to do it. Safer to assume kids know more than you!  ;)

                Steve

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                • ?
                  Guest
                  last edited by

                  @stephenw10:

                  Especially for kids! …

                  DHCP, with static mapping based on MAC, with "deny unknown clients", with static ARP. What would be the work-around to get internet access? :-\

                  EDIT: Cron job for killing states works apparently fine! However, it looks as if states for one of the users were already killed when the firewall went to "BLOCK"… strange...

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                  • stephenw10S
                    stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                    last edited by

                    I'm not saying that it's impossible to lock down a computer to prevent 'unauthorised' internet access. It's easy enough to put a security policy on a Windows box to prevent users changing the MAC but how many home computers have that?
                    I'm just saying that most computer literate school age children have probably come up against some sort of web/connection filter at some point and those who are minded to do so have probably looked into ways to get around it. Someone they are friends with will have suggested finding the MAC of a local authorised machine from the ARP table and changing your MAC to it. That friend will then gain popularity for doing so. Everybody wins. Except the network admin/parents!

                    It would be a mistake to assume that just because users are children they will not be familiar with basic networking. It's in their interests to keep you thinking they aren't.  ;)

                    Steve

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                    • D
                      DownloadDeviant
                      last edited by

                      @chemlud:

                      DHCP, with static mapping based on MAC, with "deny unknown clients", with static ARP. What would be the work-around to get internet access? :-\

                      Exactly what my thinking was and then running the CRON jobs. I am even thinking of VLAN-ing him to keep him completely separate and isolated. I already have him setup on a guest wifi network that is isolated from us. So, now I guess I have to buy a smart or managed switch. The $$$$ keeps flying away! lol

                      Kind of how it is setup on my DD-WRT router. Again, DD-WRT itself is 50/50 reliable and then there are fixes and new versions and then what was working doesn't work any more. lol I have a love/hate relationship with it. lol

                      @stephenw10:

                      I'm not saying that it's impossible to lock down a computer to prevent 'unauthorised' internet access. It's easy enough to put a security policy on a Windows box to prevent users changing the MAC but how many home computers have that?
                      I'm just saying that most computer literate school age children have probably come up against some sort of web/connection filter at some point and those who are minded to do so have probably looked into ways to get around it. Someone they are friends with will have suggested finding the MAC of a local authorised machine from the ARP table and changing your MAC to it. That friend will then gain popularity for doing so. Everybody wins. Except the network admin/parents!

                      It would be a mistake to assume that just because users are children they will not be familiar with basic networking. It's in their interests to keep you thinking they aren't.  ;)

                      Steve

                      Uhhhhh, YEP! lol Been through this. Trust me I am so freaking glad he is 19 now. From the time he was 14 it was a total battle royal. The parental software out there is a joke - Net Nanny, etc., I tried them all! The kids go to forums or chat and learn from each other how to hack it and bypass it. And the sw companies move like molasses when it comes to fixing their bugs. I spent 3 solid months playing email ping pong with Net Nanny actually helping them fix their own darn bugs and I just had had enough. By the time he was 17, I had to go to the extreme level. I literally had the machine locked down and frozen with Deep Freeze by Faronics with only his game folders and a homework folder on a separate isolated HD being the only things on his PC that he could alter. And it worked too! He was so pissed you could see the hate! lol I even had the BIOS locked with a password too.

                      So now he is a 19 yr old college freshman about to become a sophomore and a full summer ahead of him and I am not going to deal with him PCing into the wee small hours. I will pull the router plug out if I have to and that is in a steel locked cabinet that he definitely can't get to. lol Hence, why I drool over something rock solid and automated to save me the stress.

                      System: pfSense 2.4.3p1 - ZFS CPU: AMD Athlon 5350 (Kabini) MOBO: ASRock AM1H-ITX HD: 60GB SSD Patriot Inferno RAM: G.SKILL 8GB DDR3 2133 NIC: Intel I350-T2 PS: Lite-On 75W AC PACKAGES: Cron, NUT

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                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Agreed, a separate interface is the way go for real security.
                        Then put a super cheap switch between the router and the hostile machine. Power that switch from via timer. Done!  ;)

                        Steve

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                        • ?
                          Guest
                          last edited by

                          @chemlud:

                          @Hollander:

                          Useful, John, thank you for this suggestion  ;D

                          But, as always, I don't understand it: you first kill the states, then they are re-restablished by the system, then you have to kill them again via a cronjob? But won't they be established again then?

                          Or more fundamentally: shouldnt the firewall schedule take care of this automatically? As in:  this is not a bug, it is a feature'? ( ;D )

                          If you kill the states after a scheduled "end of internet access" the states can't be re-established…

                          Lately I checked for states after "end of internet" and after the subsequent Cron job to kill all states and found for one of the IPs active states 1.5 hours after the end of internet… How can that happen?  :o

                          I would like to monitor the states via email report, but unfortunately there is no log for the states and I don't know the command to be executed to post the current states of the box.... Can anybody help me out, please?  :)

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                          • johnpozJ
                            johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                            last edited by

                            I showed you the command to list states for an IP, or all of them pfctl -ss

                            You may need to kill both sides of the state..  When you kill the states, what do you show with the -ss for your host your worried about?  You may need to use the -k twice, etc.

                            I would suggest you read the man on pfctl, I would of assumed that would of been step one after I gave the command example ;)

                            http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pfctl&sektion=8

                            NAME
                                pfctl - control the packet filter (PF) device

                            SYNOPSIS
                                pfctl [-deghnPqrvz] [-a anchor] [-D macro=value] [-F modifier] [-f file]
                                      [-i interface] [-K host | network] [-k host | network | label | id]
                                      [-L statefile] [-o level] [-p device] [-S statefile]
                                      [-s modifier [-R id]] [-t table -T command [address …]]
                                      [-x level]

                            An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                            If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                            Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                            SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                            • ?
                              Guest
                              last edited by

                              Yess, I must confess I started with Linux/BSD last fall, so I'm far from pro… Should invest a little more time, but currently it is a little bit too much around here. I'll do my very best  :D

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                              • johnpozJ
                                johnpoz LAYER 8 Global Moderator
                                last edited by

                                Huh?  From your title of the thread we understand your not a pro ;)

                                Given a command, with examples that showed listing of states doesn't seem too far reaching to think the person with the interest the function would breeze over the doc for the command given..

                                I would think the same thing be it a linux/bsd command or a windows cmd..  If I say told you to release your dhcp lease you could use ipconfig /releaseall

                                Wouldn't you look up the command ipconfig?  Not like gave you example pfctl and then expected you to recompile your kernel ;)

                                An intelligent man is sometimes forced to be drunk to spend time with his fools
                                If you get confused: Listen to the Music Play
                                Please don't Chat/PM me for help, unless mod related
                                SG-4860 24.11 | Lab VMs 2.8, 24.11

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                                • ?
                                  Guest
                                  last edited by

                                  cough I didn't start this thread, I actually hijacked it. cough, cough  ::)

                                  … but the pfctl does nicely what it is supposed to do with the mail report. Unfortunately the mail report allows eMails only at full hours (no minutes to be added to the job...). (edit: me idi**, found the jobs in Cron to edit the time of execution  ;)). However, very nice indeed!

                                  And I compiled my kernel with the router at the same time :P

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                                  • ?
                                    Guest
                                    last edited by

                                    It's absolutely fascinating:

                                    20:00 firewall turns off internet (block rule all IPs and all ports with schedule)
                                    20:02 all states are gone (pfctl -ss | grep <ip>via mail report, and checked by hand)

                                    however, as pidgin, thunderbird and firefox are still open on this particular computer:

                                    20:04 states (more than a dozen) to google (993) and to one of these infamous game servers (443) are up again (in both directions):

                                    re2 tcp 74.125.136.16:993 <- 10.xxx.xxx.xxx:38268      ESTABLISHED:ESTABLISHED
                                    re1 tcp 10.xxx.xxx.xxx:38268 -> 83.xxx.xxx.xxx:40101 -> 74.125.136.16:993      ESTABLISHED:ESTABLISHED

                                    or

                                    re2 tcp 216.66.6.120:443 <- 10.xxx.xxx.xxx:37596      ESTABLISHED:ESTABLISHED
                                    re1 tcp 10.xxx.xxx.xxx:37596 -> 83.xxx.xxx.xxx:44266 -> 216.66.6.120:443      ESTABLISHED:ESTABLISHED

                                    …for example...

                                    The Cron job to kill all states for this particular local IP doesn't change anything, all states present (again?) 5 minutes after the pfctl -k <ip>command.

                                    Only killing each and every state at once apparently really ends the game(s), so to say.</ip></ip>

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                                    • ?
                                      Guest
                                      last edited by

                                      @johnpoz:

                                      …  Or you could issue a pfctl -f state

                                      Which would kill all states - if possible target just his IP.. so doesn't break your connections.

                                      Actually, the correct command to kill all states is

                                      pfctl -F state

                                      (there is an error at the man page for pfctl at openBSD, there it is "states", which actually doesn't work… :-D )

                                      http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=pfctl&sektion=8

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                                      • stephenw10S
                                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                                        last edited by

                                        The pf in FreeBSD has moved significantly away from that in OpenBSD. Also the pf in pfSense is different to that in the base FreeBSD version so even this page may not be entirely correct. But, yes 'F' appears correct.  :)

                                        Steve

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                                        • M
                                          mervincm
                                          last edited by

                                          I found the easiest way to avoid all the hassle with killed connections and existing states etc was to take the other approach.

                                          make an alias for IP addresses you want to block called blocked
                                          make a schedule for the hours you want it to work named limits

                                          Firewall rules, LAN tab,
                                          first rule is the antilockout rule
                                          second rule says when the controlled devices ARE allowed on,
                                          allow source blocked  schedule limits
                                          third rule is
                                          allow source!blocked

                                          works very well.

                                          PS its trivial to get an app to change the mac address, so its not exactly fullproof.  I told my kid that its his reminder , not designed to be full proof.

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                                          • ?
                                            Guest
                                            last edited by

                                            …today I found some states (I think it was one of these game IPs) 1.5 hours after the block kicked in and a subsequent pfctl -F state.

                                            I don't believe any longer in any of those firewalls, rules, whatsoever. An open browser is apparently enough to restart the states, no idea how that works...

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