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    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Firewalling
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    • O
      OutbackMatt
      last edited by

      NO I use the DNS of my Regisrar to host real domain records for the domains that I manage / operate.
      (That may change, but I want my system to be very robust first)

      My Bind9 ONLY handles dns searches for my mailserver, and one or two machines on my LAN.
      Most of my LAN users use the OpenDNS servers for normal lookups - as a way to control my users browsing habits (my kids really).

      I have a DMZ with my work servers on it (Mail server and Web server and this spam appliance- with Bind9 and not much else), and otherwise basically a normal home network with three teenagers. (I work from home).

      And checking on GRC shields up , port 53 is blocked for incoming traffic.

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      • B
        biggsy
        last edited by

        I'm not certain of this but I don't think ShieldsUp checks UDP.

        I also run my own mailserver (in a DMZ) and just use the resolver in pfSense. The only pass rules I have on WAN are TCP/25 to the mailserver and UDP/1194 to OpenVPN.

        Mine is a postfix MTA and it queries DNS, RDNS and zen for each incoming email. Never had a problem with states but only 40 to 50 inbound emails/day..

        You could disable your WAN UDP/53 rules and see what happens. Shouldn't affect your email or DNS lookups at all. Happy to send you an email, too, if you like.

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        • GrimsonG
          Grimson Banned @OutbackMatt
          last edited by

          @outbackmatt said in States:

          I have two rules on my WAN interface
          Action = pass
          IPv4
          UDP
          source = ANY
          Destination = ANY
          Destination port range is 53 to 53
          Description is DNS search
          Advanced options - State type = none

          If your description is right and you have these rules on your WAN interface you have opened up port 53 of your pfSense to the world, which is pretty stupid. Read this: https://www.netgate.com/docs/pfsense/book/firewall/index.html thoroughly and post actual screenshots of your rules/configuration in the future, to avoid confusion.

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          • O
            OutbackMatt
            last edited by

            Sure
            @biggsy, you are correct - ShieldsUP is only RDP, not UDP
            I have now removed those rules that I added last night for port 53

            Without those rules I was getting exactly the same behaviour anyway.

            What I want to achieve id to NOT create two STATEs for each outgoing port 53 UDP connections - rather then creating hundreds of thousands of them each day.

            How can I create a rule that doesn't make a STATE

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            • H
              heper
              last edited by heper

              every connection created states ... pfsense is a stateful firewall.
              when a connection is closed/ends, the state gets removed.

              if your states keep increasing & they all appear to be from your bind server, then i suggest fixing your bind
              ==> this probably means your bind is not closing its connections

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              • O
                OutbackMatt
                last edited by

                So the settings at

                GUI >> System >> Advanced >> Firewall & NAT >> Firewall adaptive timeouts
                aren't meant to work

                And the
                Firewall Rule >> Extra Options >> Advanced >> State type = None
                Isn't meant to achieve anything

                And to be honest, I'm not sure that any states get removed when a connection closes. It looks to me like all connections are staying open. Every time my max state limit is reached, pfsense just stops responding until I remove all states with a console shell command 'pfctl -F states' and they they start to build up again very quickly. Not all of my open states are from my BIND9 - it is just by far that most of them are. Over 200000 states in less than 10 hours - and this has only started to happen in the last week or so, probably since upgrade to 2.4.4

                How can I check that states are actually getting removed?

                And one other thing that is really weird - my traffic graphs are all over the place, it is like the time jumps backwards and forwards every few seconds

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                • H
                  heper @OutbackMatt
                  last edited by

                  @outbackmatt said in States:

                  GUI >> System >> Advanced >> Firewall & NAT >> Firewall adaptive timeouts
                  aren't meant to work
                  And the
                  Firewall Rule >> Extra Options >> Advanced >> State type = None
                  Isn't meant to achieve anything

                  yes they are meant for to work. but in any normal situation, the default are fine.
                  if the numbers of states keep rising indefinately, then something is seriously wrong.

                  if there is an issue with time, then lots of weirdness can happen ... are you running this in a VM ? if yes, disable host/vm time sync

                  O 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • O
                    OutbackMatt @heper
                    last edited by

                    @heper said in States:

                    are you running this in a VM ? if yes, disable host/vm time sync

                    Yes I am running on a hyperV
                    I have disabled time Sync, and that seems to have fixed my 'states' issue following a reboot

                    My traffic graphs till look a mess , but that's no big deal

                    Thanks for the host time trick

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                    • O
                      OutbackMatt
                      last edited by

                      Perhaps that is not yet sorted
                      18 hours since last post and 126970 states just got cleared

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                      • DerelictD
                        Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                        last edited by

                        By default, a UDP state is automatically removed after 60 seconds of inactivity. Setting the firewall to Conservative in System > Advanced, Firewall & NAT increases that to 15 minutes. pfctl -st will show you the current timeouts.

                        You would likely need two rules to pass the UDP traffic without creating any states:

                        INSIDE (LAN) Pass UDP source BIND_SERVER dest any port 53 State: No
                        OUTSIDE (WAN) Pass UDP source any dest BIND_SERVER port 53 State: No

                        And I think the following will work for TCP:

                        INSIDE (LAN) Pass TCP source BIND_SERVER dest any port 53 TCP Flags any State: No
                        OUTSIDE (WAN) Pass TCP source any dest BIND_SERVER port 53 TCP flags any state: No

                        You probably also need floating rules that match these in the outbound direction on the other interface to keep states from being created there too.

                        Really hard to believe you're doing 100K DNS queries a minute though. I'd fix that instead.

                        Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                        A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                        DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                        Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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                        • O
                          OutbackMatt
                          last edited by OutbackMatt

                          The thing is that I really am NOT doing 100000 DNS checks a minute.
                          I just did another 'pfctl -F states' - the previous one was 16 to 18 hours ago, and 165109 states were cleared.

                          I doubt that I have done even half that number of DNS checks in that same 18 or so hours.
                          My mailserver isn't very busy, I handle maybe 500 messages per day, and there should be about 20 DNS lookups for each of those, and perhaps a DNS check for some other incoming connection attempts (to see where the connection is from) for those accessing my websites, or trying to connect IMAP or POP (eg users and hackers). I have only about 80 or so users, and I block say six or seven hacking attempts per day.

                          This just doesn't match the number of states at all. It is really hard to see how I could get to 200 000 states per day, even if most of them are duplicated, but for different interfaces.

                          It is like all of the states are remembered and none are dropped at all. I was thinking if I didn't record states for port 53, that it would lighten the load and I may get more than 24 hours without having to manually force the dropping of all states.

                          I can't check the web based GUI for states as the GUI times out when the states table is large, the states display doesn't show created time anyway. I have many tens of thousands of states that show NO_TRAFFIC:SINGLE or SINGLE:NO_TRAFFIC, not all of these are port 53, but many are.

                          There is clearly a problem in my setup, but I have no idea on how to track it down.
                          My entire rule set is three NAT Port forward auto generated rules.
                          #1 forwards mail ports to my mailserver
                          #2 forwards web server ports to my web server
                          #3 custom RDP port forward to my desktop

                          This isn't a fancy setup.
                          This is intended to protect my home office from outside attack, and safeguard my teenagers while they web surf.

                          What could be causing the states to be persistent?
                          This seems to have started with 2.4.4

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                          • DerelictD
                            Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                            last edited by

                            Really hard to say based on what has been shown. pfctl -vvss | grep -A3 _some_criteria_ where _some_criteria is something like a remote DNS server that gets used all the time and has a bunch of states but is manageable to work with. Something to narrow it down.

                            That will show you when the state was created, when it last passed traffic, etc.

                            NO_TRAFFIC:SINGLE should drop off fairly quickly by default.

                            Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                            A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                            DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                            Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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                            • O
                              OutbackMatt
                              last edited by

                              running 'pftcl --vvss | grep -A3 8.8.8.8:53 >/tmp/output.txt creates an output file that starts like this (37855 lines in total!!)

                              0_1543199174870_04f31338-43b3-4c1e-82d8-0dd05b5624a6-image.png

                              8.8.8.8:53 is Google DNS server which is queried reasonably frequently it seems from my BIND9
                              Does that first one look to be 28 hours, 18 minutes and 40 seconds old, and already expired?
                              Whiteout is my public IP address
                              Red-out is other public IP addresses

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                              • O
                                OutbackMatt
                                last edited by OutbackMatt

                                This post is deleted!
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                                • DerelictD
                                  Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                  last edited by

                                  All of those expires in 00:00:00 are very very strange.

                                  It's like your states aren't expiring out of the state table when they should. I've never seen anything like that before.

                                  I would completely revisit anything you have done to try to solve this problem. Custom rules, state timeouts, etc.

                                  Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                                  A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                                  DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                                  Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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                                  • DerelictD
                                    Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                    last edited by

                                    What is the output of pfctl -st ??

                                    Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                                    A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                                    DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                                    Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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                                    • O
                                      OutbackMatt
                                      last edited by

                                      0_1543202637949_b8a2823e-190b-4d02-ad97-21e867f773cb-image.png

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                                      • DerelictD
                                        Derelict LAYER 8 Netgate
                                        last edited by

                                        Those expired states should be being purged every 10 seconds based on interval.

                                        I would undo everything you have done to try to solve this. All adjusted timeouts, adaptive settings, etc.

                                        These are the defaults for mode Normal:

                                        tcp.first                   120s
                                        tcp.opening                  30s
                                        tcp.established           86400s
                                        tcp.closing                 900s
                                        tcp.finwait                  45s
                                        tcp.closed                   90s
                                        tcp.tsdiff                   30s
                                        udp.first                    60s
                                        udp.single                   30s
                                        udp.multiple                 60s
                                        icmp.first                   20s
                                        icmp.error                   10s
                                        other.first                  60s
                                        other.single                 30s
                                        other.multiple               60s
                                        frag                         30s
                                        interval                     10s
                                        src.track                     0s
                                        

                                        This points to something with the clock as has been mentioned before:

                                        https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=222126

                                        Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
                                        A comprehensive network diagram is worth 10,000 words and 15 conference calls.
                                        DO NOT set a source address/port in a port forward or firewall rule unless you KNOW you need it!
                                        Do Not Chat For Help! NO_WAN_EGRESS(TM)

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                                        • O
                                          OutbackMatt
                                          last edited by

                                          Reading the link that you provided, the suggested 'fix' (last post) is to upgrade to FreeBSD 12

                                          which isn't general release yet, although it is getting close (perhaps weeks away)

                                          I created a new PFsense VM on my hyperV server running 2.3.5-Release, and already it seems that my internet is MUCH smoother and the states tables is NOT growing outlandishly, and my traffic graphs display nicely.

                                          Problem is that I can't install any packages (mail reports, snort etc) unless I 'upgrade' to the newest version of PFSense.

                                          I'm open to suggestions.
                                          I'll probably try 2.4.1 as that is the next upgrade and I will see what happens

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                                          • O
                                            OutbackMatt
                                            last edited by OutbackMatt

                                            Looking quickly at the release notes it seems that PFsense 2.4.0 was the first to use FreeBSD 11.x

                                            And the instant that I upgrade 2.3.5 to current release the traffic graphs stop being normal, and the states table grows etc
                                            (another observation I made is that while the newer release is booting on the VM, the Caps light on the keyboard toggles on/off hundreds of times per second)

                                            I'll run up another 2.3.5 and use that without the extra packages for the time being

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