How-To Alpine Wall: Difference between revisions

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This page shows how to configure Alpine Wall(awall) as compared to {{pkg|Shorewall}} firewall. This comparison is meant to help readers who are familiar with Shorewall learn AWall. Awall users should follow the AWall configuration examples. Use the Shorewall examples as contextual references, or ignore them, if unfamiliar with Shorewall.


= General =
[[Zero-To-Awall]] howto page is meant for users with no firewall experience and [https://git.alpinelinux.org/awall/about/ Alpine Wall User Guide] is the official source for details about the syntax.  
Purpose of this doc is to illustrate Alpine Wall (AWall) by examples.<BR>
We will explain AWall from the viewpoint of a Shorewall user.<BR>


AWall is available since Alpine v2.4.<BR>
== Installation ==
Please see [[Alpine_Wall_User's_Guide]] for details about the syntax.
Install the {{pkg|awall}} package by running the following command:{{cmd|# apk add iptables awall}}


== Structure ==
Note that awall requires {{pkg|iptables}} but works with both backends [[nftables]] and legacy [[iptables]]. It does not interact with nftables directly.
Your AWall firewall configuration file(s) goes to <code>/usr/share/awall/optional</code>.<BR>
You may have multiple configuration files ''(it is useful to have separate files for eg. HTTP,FTP and other roles)''.<BR>
Each such file is called ''Policy''.<BR>
The ''Policy(s)'' can be enabled or disabled by using the "awall [enable|disable]" command.
{{note|AWalls ''Policy'' files are not equivalent to Shorewalls <code>/etc/shorewall/policy</code> file.}}


An AWall ''Policy'' can contain definitions of:
== Configuration ==
* variables ''(like <code>/etc/shorewall/params</code>)''
 
* zones ''(like <code>/etc/shorewall/zones</code>)''
The easier method for performing initial steps for running awall: {{cmd|# awall activate}}
* interfaces ''(like <code>/etc/shorewall/interfaces</code>)''
The above command has special handling for the first run, when firewall is not yet enabled in the kernel. It performs the  below manual steps and also updates the default runlevel and files in {{Path|/etc/conf.d}}
* policies ''(like <code>/etc/shorewall/policy</code>)''
 
* filters and NAT rules ''(like <code>/etc/shorewall/rules</code>)''
Use the below commands for performing initial setup manually.
* services ''(like <code>/usr/share/shorewall/macro.HTTP</code>)''
* To update /etc/iptables: {{cmd|# awall translate}}
* To start the [[OpenRC]] services for iptables and load modules and rules for IPv4 and IPv6 {{cmd|<nowiki># rc-service iptables start 
# rc-service ip6tables start </nowiki>}}
 
=== Configuration files ===
 
Your [[Alpine Wall]] configuration files go in {{Path|/etc/awall/optional}}. From version 0.2.12 and later, Awall will look for ''Policy'' files in both the former and {{Path|/usr/share/awall/optional}}
Each such file is called a ''Policy''.<br>


== Prerequisites ==
You may have multiple ''Policy'' files. It is useful to have separate files for eg. HTTP, FTP, etc.
After installing awall package, you need to load the following iptables modules:
The ''Policy(s)'' can be enabled or disabled by using the command: {{cmd|<nowiki># awall [enable|disable]</nowiki>}}
<pre>
modprobe ip_tables
modprobe iptable_nat    #if NAT is used
</pre>


This is needed only the first time, after AWall installation.
An AWall ''Policy'' can contain definitions of:
* variables ''(like {{Path|/etc/shorewall/params}})''
* zones ''(like {{Path|/etc/shorewall/zones}})''
* interfaces ''(like {{Path|/etc/shorewall/interfaces}})''
* policies ''(like {{Path|/etc/shorewall/policy}})''
* filters and NAT rules ''(like {{Path|/etc/shorewall/rules}})''
* services ''(like {{Path|/usr/share/shorewall/macro.HTTP}})''


Make the firewall autostart at boot and autoload the needed modules:
== Basic home firewall configuration ==
<pre>
rc-update add iptables
</pre>


= A Basic Home Firewall =
The examples below show how to configure a basic home firewall using AWall. Note that AWall Policy files differ substantially from Shorewall's policy files in syntax and layout.
We will give a example on how you can convert a "Basic home firewall" from Shorewall to AWall.


== Example firewall using Shorewall ==
=== Shorewall configuration ===
Let's suppose you have the following Shorewall configuration:


'''/etc/shorewall/zones'''
Let's suppose you have the following Shorewall configuration files in {{Path|/etc/shorewall/}}, which you want to convert to a [[#AWall configuration|configuration for AWall]].  {{cat|/etc/shorewall/zones|inet  ipv4
<pre>
loc  ipv4}}
inet  ipv4
loc  ipv4
</pre>


'''/etc/shorewall/interfaces'''
{{cat|/etc/shorewall/interfaces|inet  eth0
<pre>
loc  eth1}}
inet  eth0
loc  eth1
</pre>


'''/etc/shorewall/policy'''
{{cat|/etc/shorewall/policy|fw  all  ACCEPT
<pre>
fw  all  ACCEPT
loc  inet ACCEPT
loc  inet ACCEPT
all  all  DROP
all  all  DROP}}
</pre>
 
{{cat|/etc/shorewall/masq|eth0  0.0.0.0/0}}


'''/etc/shorewall/masq'''
=== AWall configuration ===
<pre>
eth0  0.0.0.0/0
</pre>


== Example firewall using AWall ==
The equivalent AWall configuration that does the same thing as the above [[#Shorewall configuration|Shorewall example]] is given below.
Now we will configure AWall to do the same thing as we just did with the above Shorewall example.


Create a new file called '''/usr/share/awall/optional/test-policy.json''' and add the following content to the file.<BR>
Create a new file called {{Path|/etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json}} and add the following content {{Cat|/etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json|<nowiki>
{{Tip|You could call it something else as long as you save it in '/usr/share/awall/optional/' and name it '???'''.json'''')}}
<pre>
{
{
   "description": "Home firewall"
   "description": "Home firewall",


   "zone": {
   "zone": {
Line 87: Line 72:


   "snat": [
   "snat": [
     { "out": "inet", "action": "masquerade" }
     { "out": "inet" }
   ]
   ]
}
}</nowiki>}}
</pre>
 
The above configuration will:
The above configuration will:
* Create a description of your ''Policy''
* Create a description of your ''Policy''
Line 96: Line 81:
* Define ''policy''
* Define ''policy''
* Define ''snat'' ''(to masqurade the outgoing traffic)''
* Define ''snat'' ''(to masqurade the outgoing traffic)''
{{Note|''snat'' means "source NAT". It does <u>not</u> mean "static NAT".}}
 
'''snat''' means "source NAT". It does <u>not</u> mean "static NAT".
 
{{Tip| AWall has a built-in zone named "_fw" which is the "firewall itself". This corresponds to the Shorewall "fw" zone.}}
{{Tip| AWall has a built-in zone named "_fw" which is the "firewall itself". This corresponds to the Shorewall "fw" zone.}}


=== Activating/Applying a Policy ===
=== Activating/Applying a Policy ===
After saving the ''Policy'' you can run the following commands to activate your firewall settings:
<pre>
awall list                  # Listing available 'Policy(s)' (This step is optional)
awall enable test-policy    # This enables the 'Policy'
awall activate              # This command genereates firewall configuration from the 'Policy' files and enables it (starts the firewall)}}
</pre>


If you have multiple policies, after enabling or disabling them, you need to always run ''awall activate'' in order to update the iptables rules.
After saving the ''Policy'' you can run the following commands to activate your firewall settings.
To listing available 'Policy(s)' {{cmd|# awall list}}
To enable the 'Policy' created in the previous section:{{cmd|# awall enable home-policy}}   
To generate firewall configuration from the 'Policy' file and enable it i.e start the firewall: {{Cmd|# awall activate}}             
 
If you have multiple policies, after enabling or disabling them, you need to always run {{Codeline|'''awall activate'''}} in order to update the iptables rules.
 
== Advanced configuration ==
 
Assuming you have your {{Path|/etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json}} with your "Basic home firewall" settings, you could choose to modify that file to test the below examples. You could also create new files in {{Path|/etc/awall/optional/}} for testing some of the below examples.
 
AWall already has a "service" definition list for several services like HTTP, FTP, SNMP, etc. '' in the file {{Path|/usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json}})''
 
{{Note|If you are adding the sample content given in this section to an already existing policy file, then make sure you add "," signs where they are needed!}}
 
=== Logging ===


= Advanced Firewall settings =
AWall will ''(since v0.2.7)'' automatically log dropped packets.
Assuming you have your '/usr/share/awall/optional/test-policy.json' with your "Basic home firewall" settings, you could choose to modify that file to test the below examples.
{{tip|You could create new files in '/usr/share/awall/optional/' for testing some of the below examples}}


== Logging ==
AWall will ''(since v0.2.7)'' automatically log dropped packets. If you are using Alpine 2.4 repository (AWall v0.2.5 or below), you should use ''"action": "logdrop"'' in order to log dropped packets.<br>
You could add the following row to the "policy" section in your ''Policy'' file in order to see the dropped packets.
You could add the following row to the "policy" section in your ''Policy'' file in order to see the dropped packets.
<pre>{ "in": "inet", "out": "loc", "action": "drop" }</pre>
<pre>{ "in": "inet", "out": "loc", "action": "drop" }</pre>


{{Note|If you are adding the above content to an already existing file, then make sure you add "," signs where they are needed!}}
=== Port forwarding ===


== Port-Forwarding ==
Let's suppose you have a local web server (192.168.1.10) that you want to make accessible from the "inet".<br>
Let's suppose you have a local web server (192.168.1.10) that you want to make accessible from the "inet".<BR>
With Shorewall you would have a rule like this in your {{Cat|/etc/shorewall/rules|<nowiki>#ACTION  SOURCE  DEST              PROTO  DEST PORT(S)   SOURCEPORT(S)   ORIGINALDEST
With Shorewall you would have a rule like this in your '/etc/shorewall/rules':
DNAT    inet    loc:192.168.1.10  tcp    80</nowiki>}}
<pre>
#ACTION  SOURCE  DEST              PROTO  DEST   SOURCE    ORIGINAL
#                                          PORT(S) PORT(S)   DEST
DNAT    inet    loc:192.168.1.10  tcp    80
</pre>


Lets configure our AWall ''Policy'' file likewise by adding the following content.
Lets configure our AWall ''Policy'' file likewise by adding the following content.
Line 148: Line 135:
* "variable" section where we specify some IP-addresses
* "variable" section where we specify some IP-addresses
* "filter" section where we do the actual port-forwarding (using the variables we just created and using some preexisting "services" definitions)
* "filter" section where we do the actual port-forwarding (using the variables we just created and using some preexisting "services" definitions)
{{Note|If you are adding the above content to a already existing file, then make sure you add "," signs where they are needed!}}
{{Tip|AWall already has a "service" definition list for several services like HTTP, FTP, SNMP, etc. ''(see '/usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json')''}}


== Create your own service definitions ==
If you need to forward to a different port (e.g. 8080) you can do:
 
<pre>
"dnat": [
  {"in": "inet", "dest": "$STATIC_IP", "to-addr": "$APACHE", "service": "http", "to-port": 8080 }
]
</pre>
 
=== Create your own service definitions ===
 
{{Note| You can not override a "service" definition that comes from {{Path|/usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json}}}}
 
You can add your own service definitions into your ''Policy'' files:
You can add your own service definitions into your ''Policy'' files:
<pre>
<pre>
Line 158: Line 154:
   }
   }
</pre>
</pre>
{{Note|If you are adding the above content to a already existing file, then make sure you add "," signs where they are needed!}}
{{todo|Does the 'home made' definitions override the '/usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json' if they are named likewise}}


== Inherit services or variables ==  
=== Inherit services or variables ===
 
You can import a ''Policy'' into other ''Policy'' files for inheriting services or variables definitions:
You can import a ''Policy'' into other ''Policy'' files for inheriting services or variables definitions:
<pre>
<pre>
Line 167: Line 162:
</pre>
</pre>


== Specify load order ==
=== Customize policy loading order ===
By default policies are loaded on alphabetical order.<BR>
 
You can change the load order with the keywords "before" and "after":
By default policies are loaded on alphabetical order. The load order can be changed with the keywords "before" and "after":
<pre>
<pre>
"before": "myfirewall"
"before": "myfirewall"
Line 175: Line 170:
</pre>
</pre>


[[Category:Networking]]
== Troubleshooting ==
[[Category:Security]]
 
If you end up in some kind of trouble, you might find some commands useful when debugging:
{{cmd|awall                # (With no parameters) Shows some basic help about awall application
awall dump            # Dump definitions like zones and variables
iptables -L -n        # Show what's in <code>iptables</code>}}
 
== See also ==
 
* [https://git.alpinelinux.org/awall/about/ Alpine Wall User Guide]
* [[Zero-To-Awall]]
* [https://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/how-to-set-up-a-firewall-with-awall-on-alpine-linux/ How To Set Up a Firewall with Awall on Alpine Linux]
 
[[Category:Firewall]]

Latest revision as of 16:56, 24 January 2026

This page shows how to configure Alpine Wall(awall) as compared to Shorewall firewall. This comparison is meant to help readers who are familiar with Shorewall learn AWall. Awall users should follow the AWall configuration examples. Use the Shorewall examples as contextual references, or ignore them, if unfamiliar with Shorewall.

Zero-To-Awall howto page is meant for users with no firewall experience and Alpine Wall User Guide is the official source for details about the syntax.

Installation

Install the awall package by running the following command:

# apk add iptables awall

Note that awall requires iptables but works with both backends nftables and legacy iptables. It does not interact with nftables directly.

Configuration

The easier method for performing initial steps for running awall:

# awall activate

The above command has special handling for the first run, when firewall is not yet enabled in the kernel. It performs the below manual steps and also updates the default runlevel and files in /etc/conf.d

Use the below commands for performing initial setup manually.

  • To update /etc/iptables:

    # awall translate

  • To start the OpenRC services for iptables and load modules and rules for IPv4 and IPv6

    # rc-service iptables start # rc-service ip6tables start

Configuration files

Your Alpine Wall configuration files go in /etc/awall/optional. From version 0.2.12 and later, Awall will look for Policy files in both the former and /usr/share/awall/optional Each such file is called a Policy.

You may have multiple Policy files. It is useful to have separate files for eg. HTTP, FTP, etc.

The Policy(s) can be enabled or disabled by using the command:

# awall [enable|disable]

An AWall Policy can contain definitions of:

  • variables (like /etc/shorewall/params)
  • zones (like /etc/shorewall/zones)
  • interfaces (like /etc/shorewall/interfaces)
  • policies (like /etc/shorewall/policy)
  • filters and NAT rules (like /etc/shorewall/rules)
  • services (like /usr/share/shorewall/macro.HTTP)

Basic home firewall configuration

The examples below show how to configure a basic home firewall using AWall. Note that AWall Policy files differ substantially from Shorewall's policy files in syntax and layout.

Shorewall configuration

Let's suppose you have the following Shorewall configuration files in /etc/shorewall/, which you want to convert to a configuration for AWall.

Contents of /etc/shorewall/zones

inet ipv4 loc ipv4

Contents of /etc/shorewall/interfaces

inet eth0 loc eth1

Contents of /etc/shorewall/policy

fw all ACCEPT loc inet ACCEPT all all DROP

Contents of /etc/shorewall/masq

eth0 0.0.0.0/0

AWall configuration

The equivalent AWall configuration that does the same thing as the above Shorewall example is given below.

Create a new file called /etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json and add the following content

Contents of /etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json

{ "description": "Home firewall", "zone": { "inet": { "iface": "eth0" }, "loc": { "iface": "eth1" } }, "policy": [ { "in": "_fw", "action": "accept" }, { "in": "loc", "out": "inet", "action": "accept" } ], "snat": [ { "out": "inet" } ] }

The above configuration will:

  • Create a description of your Policy
  • Define zones
  • Define policy
  • Define snat (to masqurade the outgoing traffic)

snat means "source NAT". It does not mean "static NAT".

Tip: AWall has a built-in zone named "_fw" which is the "firewall itself". This corresponds to the Shorewall "fw" zone.

Activating/Applying a Policy

After saving the Policy you can run the following commands to activate your firewall settings.

To listing available 'Policy(s)'

# awall list

To enable the 'Policy' created in the previous section:

# awall enable home-policy

To generate firewall configuration from the 'Policy' file and enable it i.e start the firewall:

# awall activate

If you have multiple policies, after enabling or disabling them, you need to always run awall activate in order to update the iptables rules.

Advanced configuration

Assuming you have your /etc/awall/optional/home-policy.json with your "Basic home firewall" settings, you could choose to modify that file to test the below examples. You could also create new files in /etc/awall/optional/ for testing some of the below examples.

AWall already has a "service" definition list for several services like HTTP, FTP, SNMP, etc. in the file /usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json)

Note: If you are adding the sample content given in this section to an already existing policy file, then make sure you add "," signs where they are needed!

Logging

AWall will (since v0.2.7) automatically log dropped packets.

You could add the following row to the "policy" section in your Policy file in order to see the dropped packets.

{ "in": "inet", "out": "loc", "action": "drop" }

Port forwarding

Let's suppose you have a local web server (192.168.1.10) that you want to make accessible from the "inet".

With Shorewall you would have a rule like this in your

Contents of /etc/shorewall/rules

#ACTION SOURCE DEST PROTO DEST PORT(S) SOURCEPORT(S) ORIGINALDEST DNAT inet loc:192.168.1.10 tcp 80

Lets configure our AWall Policy file likewise by adding the following content.

  "variable": {
    "APACHE": "192.168.1.10",
    "STATIC_IP": "1.2.3.4"
    },

  "filter": [
    { "in": "inet", 
      "dest": "$STATIC_IP", 
      "service": "http", 
      "action": "accept", 
      "dnat": "$APACHE" 
      }
    ]

As you can see in the above example, we create a

  • "variable" section where we specify some IP-addresses
  • "filter" section where we do the actual port-forwarding (using the variables we just created and using some preexisting "services" definitions)

If you need to forward to a different port (e.g. 8080) you can do:

"dnat": [
  {"in": "inet", "dest": "$STATIC_IP", "to-addr": "$APACHE", "service": "http", "to-port": 8080 }
]

Create your own service definitions

Note: You can not override a "service" definition that comes from /usr/share/awall/mandatory/services.json

You can add your own service definitions into your Policy files:

"service": {  
  "openvpn": { "proto": "udp", "port": 1194 }
  }

Inherit services or variables

You can import a Policy into other Policy files for inheriting services or variables definitions:

"import": "myfirewall"

Customize policy loading order

By default policies are loaded on alphabetical order. The load order can be changed with the keywords "before" and "after":

"before": "myfirewall"
"after": "someotherpolicy"

Troubleshooting

If you end up in some kind of trouble, you might find some commands useful when debugging:

awall # (With no parameters) Shows some basic help about awall application awall dump # Dump definitions like zones and variables iptables -L -n # Show what's in iptables

See also