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    Suricata InLine with igb NICs

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved IDS/IPS
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    • stephenw10S
      stephenw10 Netgate Administrator @boobletins
      last edited by

      @boobletins said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

      Manually configuring it off solved this issue for me

      It solved the netmap errors? Did you see any other errors that lead you to try this?

      Are you actually using IPv6?

      Steve

      B 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • N
        newUser2pfSense
        last edited by

        For me, I have IPv6 blocked on my WAN as a rule in the Firewall > Rules; it's practically at the top. However, I noticed a mix of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in my System Logs > Firewall > Normal View tab. As well, I currently have Suricata running in Legacy Mode and have a ton of IPv6 addresses of SURICATA zero length padN option in the Alerts tab and all IPv6 addresses in the Blocks tab. Maybe I'm completely wrong but if I have IPv6 blocked on the WAN, should IPv6 addresses be showing up at all in the logs?

        bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • bmeeksB
          bmeeks @newUser2pfSense
          last edited by bmeeks

          @newuser2pfsense said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

          For me, I have IPv6 blocked on my WAN as a rule in the Firewall > Rules; it's practically at the top. However, I noticed a mix of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in my System Logs > Firewall > Normal View tab. As well, I currently have Suricata running in Legacy Mode and have a ton of IPv6 addresses of SURICATA zero length padN option in the Alerts tab and all IPv6 addresses in the Blocks tab. Maybe I'm completely wrong but if I have IPv6 blocked on the WAN, should IPv6 addresses be showing up at all in the logs?

          You will likely have IPv6 Link-Local addresses created on your interfaces by default. I have them on all of my local firewall interfaces, including my WAN even though my ISP does not provide any type of IPv6 connectivity.

          A typical Windows domain will spew a lot of IPv6 stuff by default. In fact, IPv6 is a preferred communications route for Windows domain traffic unless it is explicitly disabled. Most of that will be via link-local addresses.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • B
            boobletins @stephenw10
            last edited by

            @stephenw10

            I suppose "solved" is a strong word. What I should have said is that before I couldn't complete a single speedtest and now I can complete an arbitrary number without netmap errors. Suricata also lasted through the night in IPS mode on my LAN interface (igb) without crashing which is extremely rare. I won't know if it's truly solved until it lasts through more like a week or month.

            I can reliably crash the interface by enabling TXCSUM_IPV6 and running a speedtest.

            I'm not a pfSense expert -- so when you ask if I'm using IPv6, all I know to say is that I have "Allow IPv6" enabled in the UI, and I see a smattering of IPv6 IPs in both Suricata Alerts and states (the majority are IPv4).

            Here is what I settled on for my boot.conf.local after referring these links:
            https://calomel.org/freebsd_network_tuning.html
            https://suricata.readthedocs.io/en/suricata-4.0.5/performance/packet-capture.html#rss

            kern.ipc.nmbclusters="1048576"
            hw.pci.enable_msix=1
            
            hw.em.msix=1
            hw.em.smart_pwr_down=0
            hw.em.num_queues=1   # https://suricata.readthedocs.io/en/suricata-4.0.5/performance/packet-capture.html#rss
            
            # below this line is all from: https://calomel.org/freebsd_network_tuning.html
            if_igb_load="YES"
            hw.igb.enable_msix="1"
            hw.igb.enable_aim="1"
            hw.igb.rx_process_limit="100" #default
            hw.igb.num_queues="3"  # (default 0 , queues equal the number of CPU real cores if queues available on card)
            hw.igb.max_interrupt_rate="16000" #double default
            coretemp_load="YES"
            hw.intr_storm_threshold="9000" #default
            
            if_em_load="YES"
            hw.em.enable_msix="1"
            hw.em.msix=1
            
            autoboot_delay="-1"
            net.isr.maxthreads="-1"
            net.isr.bindthreads="1"  # (default 0, runs randomly on any one cpu core)
            
            #Larger buffers and TCP Large Window Extensions
            net.inet.tcp.rfc1323=1
            net.inet.tcp.recvbuf_inc=65536     # (default 16384)
            net.inet.tcp.sendbuf_inc=65536     # (default 8192)
            net.inet.tcp.sendspace=65536       # (default 32768)
            net.inet.tcp.mssdflt=1460   # Option 1 (default 536)
            net.tcp.minmss=536  # (default 216)
            
            #syn protection
            net.inet.tcp.syncache.rexmtlimit=0  # (default 3)
            
            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • B
              boobletins @stephenw10
              last edited by boobletins

              @stephenw10 said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

              Did you see any other errors that lead you to try this?

              No -- I didn't see any specific IPv6 errors. I just started investigating the interface settings using information from here: https://calomel.org/freebsd_network_tuning.html and noticed that ifconfig showed TXCSUM_IPV6 enabled when I thought it was supposed to be disabled. Disabling it seems to have created a more stable interface with netmap enabled.

              I would receive 2 types of netmap errors previously "bad pkt" errors and "netmap_transmit" errors eg

              [2925] netmap_transmit           igb0 full hwcur 203 hwtail 204 qlen 1022 len 1514 m 0xfffff8000df20500
              [1071] netmap_grab_packets       bad pkt at 419 len 2167
              

              I've tried using -txcsum6 the same on my WAN (em0) interface, but I still get bad packets there. I don't know if that has to do with the lack of msix support on that interface or my configuration settings. Still trying to figure that one out.

              Here's my dmesg output for em0 and igb0 in case that helps.

              em0: <Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection 7.6.1-k> mem 0xdf100000-0xdf11ffff irq 16 at device 31.6 on pci0
              em0: Using an MSI interrupt
              em0: Ethernet address: 00:30:18:ce:19:cf
              em0: netmap queues/slots: TX 1/1024, RX 1/1024
              ses0 at ahciem0 bus 0 scbus6 target 0 lun 0
              em0: link state changed to UP
              em0: promiscuous mode enabled
              
              igb0: <Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection, Version - 2.5.3-k> port 0xe000-0xe01f mem 0xdf000000-0xdf01ffff,0xdf020000-0xdf023fff irq 17 at device 0.0 on pci1
              igb0: Using MSIX interrupts with 3 vectors
              igb0: Ethernet address: 00:30:18:ce:19:d0
              igb0: Bound queue 0 to cpu 0
              igb0: Bound queue 1 to cpu 1
              igb0: netmap queues/slots: TX 2/1024, RX 2/1024
              igb0: link state changed to UP
              igb0: permanently promiscuous mode enabled
              
              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • B
                boobletins @newUser2pfSense
                last edited by

                @newuser2pfsense said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

                I'm wondering if we could put that information in the loader.conf.local file?

                It looks like the right place to put this is described here:

                https://www.netgate.com/docs/pfsense/development/executing-commands-at-boot-time.html
                

                I tried to offer an example but Akismet thinks its spam. Let's see if this post will go through?

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • N
                  newUser2pfSense
                  last edited by newUser2pfSense

                  boobletins...I read through the link you provided but I'm not sure myself on what the syntax should be to add to the loader.conf.local file. I was looking to use the loader.conf.local file for an interim fix until the FreeBSD developers are able to solve the netmap issue(s) in a future release.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • GrimsonG
                    Grimson Banned
                    last edited by

                    Look closely at https://www.netgate.com/docs/pfsense/packages/package-list.html there is a package that might help with running a command on system startup.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • N
                      newUser2pfSense
                      last edited by

                      Grimson...You're right. I didn't see it. Shellcmd - The shellcmd utility is used to manage commands on system startup. Now we just need the syntax to use.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • stephenw10S
                        stephenw10 Netgate Administrator
                        last edited by

                        Shellcmd just runs commands like they would be at the command line. The only difference is you often need the complete path to the command as it runs as a different user. But you could use:
                        ifconfig igb0 -rxcsum -rxcsum6 -txcsum -txcsum6 -lro -tso -vlanhwtso

                        That should run OK.

                        Steve

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • NollipfSenseN
                          NollipfSense
                          last edited by

                          I noticed that with the release of pfSenxe 2.4.4, there was a dramatic increase of Netmap errors (https://forum.netgate.com/topic/136191/netmap-alerts-gotten-worst-with-2-4-4). I also have an igb network card.

                          The major headache is this issue turns into finger pointing...pfSense says its FreeBSD 11.2, Netmap says its Suricata, FreeBSD says its the network card, and Suricata says its Netmap.

                          My feeling is since we're ultimately using pfSense, it's pfSense responsibility to ensure that we achieve synergy of a robust firewall with all parts working seamlessly. Inline mode is an important part of firewall intrusion detection prevention system in that it provides a more efficient screening.

                          pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                          pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • B
                            boobletins
                            last edited by

                            It looks like in that thread you seemed to have solved the issue, is that the case? (I ask because I'm interested in knowing if I've solved this issue for myself as well).

                            If you're game, could you give me the output from the following shell commands (case sensitive):

                            ifconfig igb0 | grep CSUM
                            sysctl -a | grep igb
                            sysctl -a | grep netmap
                            
                            • How many CPU cores do you have?
                            • Is hyperthreading enabled?
                            • How much RAM do you have?
                            • Are you running Suricata on more than 1 interface? (If so, what's the second interface? Also: run the shell commands above on that interface)

                            I've gone a few days now without netmap errors on either my em0 or igb0 interface with Suricata in inline IPS mode and 2 speedtests / hour. I'm becoming more confident that I have a working configuration, but if we can eliminate them from yours as well that'd be some welcome evidence...

                            NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • NollipfSenseN
                              NollipfSense @boobletins
                              last edited by stephenw10

                              @boobletins said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

                              ifconfig igb0 | grep CSUM

                              Shell Output - ifconfig igb0 | grep CSUM
                              options=5400b8<VLAN_MTU,VLAN_HWTAGGING,JUMBO_MTU,VLAN_HWCSUM,VLAN_HWTSO,NETMAP,TXCSUM_IPV6>

                              Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep igb

                              device	igb
                              hw.igb.tx_process_limit: -1
                              hw.igb.rx_process_limit: 100
                              hw.igb.num_queues: 0
                              hw.igb.header_split: 0
                              hw.igb.max_interrupt_rate: 8000
                              hw.igb.enable_msix: 1
                              hw.igb.enable_aim: 1
                              hw.igb.txd: 1024
                              hw.igb.rxd: 1024
                              dev.igb.1.host.header_redir_missed: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.serdes_violation_pkt: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.length_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.tx_good_bytes: 5014864175
                              dev.igb.1.host.rx_good_bytes: 344809214
                              dev.igb.1.host.breaker_tx_pkt_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.tx_good_pkt: 63
                              dev.igb.1.host.breaker_rx_pkt_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.breaker_rx_pkts: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.rx_pkt: 77
                              dev.igb.1.host.host_tx_pkt_discard: 0
                              dev.igb.1.host.breaker_tx_pkt: 0
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.rx_overrun: 0
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.rx_desc_min_thresh: 0
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.tx_queue_min_thresh: 0
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.tx_queue_empty: 4315841
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.tx_abs_timer: 0
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.tx_pkt_timer: 4315904
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.rx_abs_timer: 2921232
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.rx_pkt_timer: 2921155
                              dev.igb.1.interrupts.asserts: 8803973
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tso_ctx_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tso_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_1024_1522: 3233544
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_512_1023: 62481
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_256_511: 72052
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_128_255: 119162
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_65_127: 781667
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_frames_64: 46998
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.mcast_pkts_txd: 269918
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.bcast_pkts_txd: 118
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.good_pkts_txd: 4315904
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.total_pkts_txd: 4315904
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.total_octets_txd: 5014886629
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.good_octets_txd: 5014885349
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.total_octets_recvd: 344809463
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.good_octets_recvd: 344808248
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_1024_1522: 49390
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_512_1023: 61271
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_256_511: 60178
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_128_255: 132406
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_65_127: 2127900
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.rx_frames_64: 490087
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.mcast_pkts_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.bcast_pkts_recvd: 4
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.good_pkts_recvd: 2921232
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.total_pkts_recvd: 2921232
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.unsupported_fc_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.xoff_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.xoff_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.xon_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.xon_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.coll_ext_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.tx_no_crs: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.alignment_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.crc_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_jabber: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_oversize: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_fragmented: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_undersize: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_no_buff: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.recv_length_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.missed_packets: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.defer_count: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.sequence_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.symbol_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.collision_count: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.late_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.multiple_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.single_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mac_stats.excess_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.lro_flushed: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.lro_queued: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.rx_bytes: 152608531
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.rx_packets: 1226723
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.rxd_tail: 994
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.rxd_head: 995
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.tx_packets: 257
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.no_desc_avail: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.txd_tail: 339
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.txd_head: 339
                              dev.igb.1.queue1.interrupt_rate: 76923
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.lro_flushed: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.lro_queued: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.rx_bytes: 180516276
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.rx_packets: 1694509
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.rxd_tail: 812
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.rxd_head: 813
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.tx_packets: 4315647
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.no_desc_avail: 0
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.txd_tail: 442
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.txd_head: 442
                              dev.igb.1.queue0.interrupt_rate: 90909
                              dev.igb.1.fc_low_water: 29480
                              dev.igb.1.fc_high_water: 29488
                              dev.igb.1.rx_buf_alloc: 34
                              dev.igb.1.tx_buf_alloc: 14
                              dev.igb.1.extended_int_mask: 2147484419
                              dev.igb.1.interrupt_mask: 4
                              dev.igb.1.rx_control: 67141658
                              dev.igb.1.device_control: 1087373896
                              dev.igb.1.watchdog_timeouts: 0
                              dev.igb.1.rx_overruns: 0
                              dev.igb.1.tx_dma_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.1.mbuf_defrag_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.1.link_irq: 2
                              dev.igb.1.dropped: 0
                              dev.igb.1.tx_processing_limit: -1
                              dev.igb.1.rx_processing_limit: 100
                              dev.igb.1.fc: 3
                              dev.igb.1.enable_aim: 1
                              dev.igb.1.nvm: -1
                              dev.igb.1.%parent: pci3
                              dev.igb.1.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x10a7 subvendor=0x8086 subdevice=0x10a7 class=0x020000
                              dev.igb.1.%location: slot=0 function=1 dbsf=pci0:3:0:1
                              dev.igb.1.%driver: igb
                              dev.igb.1.%desc: Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection, Version - 2.5.3-k
                              dev.igb.0.host.header_redir_missed: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.serdes_violation_pkt: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.length_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.tx_good_bytes: 702511124
                              dev.igb.0.host.rx_good_bytes: 8859910607
                              dev.igb.0.host.breaker_tx_pkt_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.tx_good_pkt: 389
                              dev.igb.0.host.breaker_rx_pkt_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.breaker_rx_pkts: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.rx_pkt: 179
                              dev.igb.0.host.host_tx_pkt_discard: 0
                              dev.igb.0.host.breaker_tx_pkt: 0
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.rx_overrun: 0
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.rx_desc_min_thresh: 0
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.tx_queue_min_thresh: 0
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.tx_queue_empty: 8008878
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.tx_abs_timer: 0
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.tx_pkt_timer: 8009267
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.rx_abs_timer: 9004187
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.rx_pkt_timer: 9004008
                              dev.igb.0.interrupts.asserts: 18858568
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tso_ctx_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tso_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_1024_1522: 49679
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_512_1023: 59868
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_256_511: 65957
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_128_255: 117544
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_65_127: 4903787
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_frames_64: 2812432
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.mcast_pkts_txd: 217
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.bcast_pkts_txd: 321
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.good_pkts_txd: 8009267
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.total_pkts_txd: 8009267
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.total_octets_txd: 702511679
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.good_octets_txd: 702510340
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.total_octets_recvd: 8859907035
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.good_octets_recvd: 8859915684
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_1024_1522: 5630206
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_512_1023: 67795
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_256_511: 155128
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_128_255: 445051
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_65_127: 765396
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.rx_frames_64: 1940609
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.mcast_pkts_recvd: 218995
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.bcast_pkts_recvd: 47673
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.good_pkts_recvd: 9004185
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.total_pkts_recvd: 9004224
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_drop: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.mgmt_pkts_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.unsupported_fc_recvd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.xoff_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.xoff_recvd: 1
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.xon_txd: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.xon_recvd: 1
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.coll_ext_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.tx_no_crs: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.alignment_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.crc_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_errs: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_jabber: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_oversize: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_fragmented: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_undersize: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_no_buff: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.recv_length_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.missed_packets: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.defer_count: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.sequence_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.symbol_errors: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.collision_count: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.late_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.multiple_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.single_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mac_stats.excess_coll: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.lro_flushed: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.lro_queued: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.rx_bytes: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.rx_packets: 2432
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.rxd_tail: 35
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.rxd_head: 36
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.tx_packets: 1
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.no_desc_avail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.txd_tail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.txd_head: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue1.interrupt_rate: 16129
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.lro_flushed: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.lro_queued: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.rx_bytes: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.rx_packets: 7244
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.rxd_tail: 180
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.rxd_head: 181
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.tx_packets: 9386
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.no_desc_avail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.txd_tail: 755
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.txd_head: 755
                              dev.igb.0.queue0.interrupt_rate: 16129
                              dev.igb.0.fc_low_water: 29480
                              dev.igb.0.fc_high_water: 29488
                              dev.igb.0.rx_buf_alloc: 34
                              dev.igb.0.tx_buf_alloc: 14
                              dev.igb.0.extended_int_mask: 2147484419
                              dev.igb.0.interrupt_mask: 4
                              dev.igb.0.rx_control: 67141658
                              dev.igb.0.device_control: 1490027080
                              dev.igb.0.watchdog_timeouts: 0
                              dev.igb.0.rx_overruns: 0
                              dev.igb.0.tx_dma_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.mbuf_defrag_fail: 0
                              dev.igb.0.link_irq: 70
                              dev.igb.0.dropped: 0
                              dev.igb.0.tx_processing_limit: -1
                              dev.igb.0.rx_processing_limit: 100
                              dev.igb.0.fc: 3
                              dev.igb.0.enable_aim: 1
                              dev.igb.0.nvm: -1
                              dev.igb.0.%parent: pci3
                              dev.igb.0.%pnpinfo: vendor=0x8086 device=0x10a7 subvendor=0x8086 subdevice=0x10a7 class=0x020000
                              dev.igb.0.%location: slot=0 function=0 dbsf=pci0:3:0:0
                              dev.igb.0.%driver: igb
                              dev.igb.0.%desc: Intel(R) PRO/1000 Network Connection, Version - 2.5.3-k
                              dev.igb.%parent:
                              
                              Shell Output - sysctl -a | grep netmap
                              device	netmap
                              dev.netmap.ixl_rx_miss_bufs: 0
                              dev.netmap.ixl_rx_miss: 0
                              dev.netmap.iflib_rx_miss_bufs: 0
                              dev.netmap.iflib_rx_miss: 0
                              dev.netmap.iflib_crcstrip: 1
                              dev.netmap.bridge_batch: 1024
                              dev.netmap.default_pipes: 0
                              dev.netmap.priv_buf_num: 4098
                              dev.netmap.priv_buf_size: 2048
                              dev.netmap.buf_curr_num: 163840
                              dev.netmap.buf_num: 163840
                              dev.netmap.buf_curr_size: 4096
                              dev.netmap.buf_size: 4096
                              dev.netmap.priv_ring_num: 4
                              dev.netmap.priv_ring_size: 20480
                              dev.netmap.ring_curr_num: 200
                              dev.netmap.ring_num: 200
                              dev.netmap.ring_curr_size: 36864
                              dev.netmap.ring_size: 36864
                              dev.netmap.priv_if_num: 1
                              dev.netmap.priv_if_size: 1024
                              dev.netmap.if_curr_num: 100
                              dev.netmap.if_num: 100
                              dev.netmap.if_curr_size: 1024
                              dev.netmap.if_size: 1024
                              dev.netmap.generic_rings: 1
                              dev.netmap.generic_ringsize: 1024
                              dev.netmap.generic_mit: 100000
                              dev.netmap.admode: 0
                              dev.netmap.fwd: 0
                              dev.netmap.flags: 0
                              dev.netmap.adaptive_io: 0
                              dev.netmap.txsync_retry: 2
                              dev.netmap.no_pendintr: 1
                              dev.netmap.mitigate: 1
                              dev.netmap.no_timestamp: 0
                              dev.netmap.verbose: 0
                              dev.netmap.ix_rx_miss_bufs: 0
                              dev.netmap.ix_rx_miss: 0
                              dev.netmap.ix_crcstrip: 0
                              

                              Every couple of days I get one or two netmap bad packet alert even after increasing this - netmap.buf_size: 4096. I run both Suricata and Snort on Wan and Lan however, I only enable blocking on Suricata WAN...all else are disabled. I have 8GB RAM however, I can only use 6GB as a failed processor killed a row/channel in my HP Pavilion 6242n trash find I converted into a pfSense firewall.

                              pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                              pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • B
                                boobletins
                                last edited by boobletins

                                Under System / Advanced / Networking, is "Allow IPv6" checked?

                                And how many CPU cores? Is hyperthreading enabled?

                                NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • NollipfSenseN
                                  NollipfSense @boobletins
                                  last edited by

                                  @boobletins said in Suricata InLine with igb NICs:

                                  Under System / Advanced / Networking, is "Allow IPv6" checked?

                                  And how many CPU cores? Is hyperthreading enabled?

                                  Yes...allowed IPv6 checked...CPU Type AMD Athlon(tm) 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 4800+
                                  2 CPUs: 1 package(s) x 2 core(s)
                                  AES-NI CPU Crypto: No

                                  No sure where to check for hyperthread...now I will disable IPv6...thought I did.

                                  pfSense+ 23.09 Lenovo Thinkcentre M93P SFF Quadcore i7 dual Raid-ZFS 128GB-SSD 32GB-RAM PCI-Intel i350-t4 NIC, -Intel QAT 8950.
                                  pfSense+ 23.09 VM-Proxmox, Dell Precision Xeon-W2155 Nvme 500GB-ZFS 128GB-RAM PCIe-Intel i350-t4, Intel QAT-8950, P-cloud.

                                  B 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • B
                                    boobletins @NollipfSense
                                    last edited by boobletins

                                    @nollipfsense

                                    So here are some initial suggestions. Please keep in mind that I've been working on this for ~1 week (in other words: not long), and I'm not a FreeBSD, pfSense, or Suricata expert.

                                    Start by making a backup of your configuration.

                                    Do these first:
                                    My understanding is that flow control should be off on any netmap interface. You have bi-directional flow control enabled:

                                    dev.igb.0.fc: 3
                                    

                                    Disable flow control on all active interfaces using system tunables. Set dev.igb.0.fc=0 (and dev.igb.1.fc=0)

                                    Actively set energy efficient ethernet to disabled:
                                    dev.igb.0.eee_disabled=1

                                    Actively force IPv6_TXCSUM6 off by adding the following to config.xml in a shellcmd tag:

                                    ifconfig igb0 -rxcsum -rxcsum6 -txcsum -txcsum6 -lro -tso -vlanhwtso
                                    

                                    (see above in this thread for a link on where/how to do that).

                                    Edit:
                                    To be clear: anywhere I have a command that says "igb0" or "igb.0" you will want to duplicate that for igb1 and any other interface you're running netmap on.

                                    So you will need 2 shellcmd lines in config.xml, and two new system tunables for flow control, etc


                                    Consider changing later:

                                    Set rx processing limit:
                                    dev.igb.0.rx_processing_limit: -1

                                    It looks like your txd and rxd are both set to 1024 currently, I suggest you move those to 4096:
                                    hw.igb.txd=4096
                                    hw.igb.rxd=4096

                                    By changing your txd and rxd we may need to revisit your netmap buf/ring (memory settings).

                                    We may also revisit your interrupt and queue settings.

                                    NollipfSenseN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • B
                                      boobletins
                                      last edited by

                                      It would be great if you could let me know what happens after the initial changes -- if you continue to get netmap errors or not.

                                      If you do, don't jump right to the 2nd section of changes, we should verify that the changes we made above took properly. I learned the hard way that I was putting some settings in the wrong places.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • N
                                        newUser2pfSense
                                        last edited by newUser2pfSense

                                        boobletins...I apologize for not getting back sooner; other projects. I added the shellcmd line to the /cf/conf/config.xml file as you suggested. I re-enabled Suricata in Inline IPS Mode and restarted pfSense. I ran ifconfig against all four ethernet interfaces on my SuperMicro adapter and TXCSUM_IPV6 was not listed.

                                        One thing I find interesting is in the Services > Suricata > Alerts tab, all of the text is now black in color when before making the above change it was all red in color in Inline IPS Mode. As well, there are no entries in the Blocks tab when before making the change it was automagically populated with over 300 blocked IP addresses in Inline IPS Mode. I don't know if this is normal or not. I didn't change any of the Suricata WAN Categories.

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                                        • B
                                          boobletins
                                          last edited by

                                          If you are running Suricata in inline mode, you will not see blocked IP addresses in the blocked tab, as any traffic that conforms to your "drop" rules is automatically intercepted and dropped (as opposed to initially logged, then ip banned as in Legacy mode).

                                          The red text in the Alerts tab is letting you know that the traffic was indeed intercepted and dropped (since you don't have any information in the Block tab anymore).

                                          That you are missing both blocks and red text means that either no traffic has conformed to your block rules yet, or something has gone wrong.

                                          Double check which mode Suricata is running in. Then double check that you have some drop rules defined.

                                          But originally the issue was netmap, yes? If so, have you see any netmap errors? Can you complete a speedtest with Suricata enabled in inline mode now?

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • N
                                            newUser2pfSense
                                            last edited by newUser2pfSense

                                            I guess my "drop" rules are just based on the Suricata WAN Categories I selected/checked? When you checkmark what you want, Suricata applies those rules to the incoming data and drops it?

                                            I'm definitely running in Inline IPS Mode and all of the Alerts entries are in black colored text. As well, all of the text I typed into the loader.conf.local file is commented out.

                                            Yes, the original issue was many, many, netmap_grab_packets console/log messages. At the time of this post, I don't have any netmap errors, yet ☺ . I can actually complete a speedtest in Inline IPS Mode now.

                                            bmeeksB 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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