Je pense que cela dépend de vous pour que le noyau sache quel est le type d'adresse blackhole.
Du fichier xt_addrtype.h dans le code source iptables, vous pouvez voir:
/* rtn_type enum values from rtnetlink.h, but shifted */
enum {
XT_ADDRTYPE_UNSPEC = 1 << 0,
XT_ADDRTYPE_UNICAST = 1 << 1, /* 1 << RTN_UNICAST */
XT_ADDRTYPE_LOCAL = 1 << 2, /* 1 << RTN_LOCAL, etc */
XT_ADDRTYPE_BROADCAST = 1 << 3,
XT_ADDRTYPE_ANYCAST = 1 << 4,
XT_ADDRTYPE_MULTICAST = 1 << 5,
XT_ADDRTYPE_BLACKHOLE = 1 << 6,
XT_ADDRTYPE_UNREACHABLE = 1 << 7,
XT_ADDRTYPE_PROHIBIT = 1 << 8,
XT_ADDRTYPE_THROW = 1 << 9,
XT_ADDRTYPE_NAT = 1 << 10,
XT_ADDRTYPE_XRESOLVE = 1 << 11,
};
Et dans rtnetlink.h
, vous verrez la même définition:
enum {
RTN_UNSPEC,
RTN_UNICAST, /* Gateway or direct route */
RTN_LOCAL, /* Accept locally */
RTN_BROADCAST, /* Accept locally as broadcast,
send as broadcast */
RTN_ANYCAST, /* Accept locally as broadcast,
but send as unicast */
RTN_MULTICAST, /* Multicast route */
RTN_BLACKHOLE, /* Drop */
RTN_UNREACHABLE, /* Destination is unreachable */
RTN_PROHIBIT, /* Administratively prohibited */
RTN_THROW, /* Not in this table */
RTN_NAT, /* Translate this address */
RTN_XRESOLVE, /* Use external resolver */
__RTN_MAX
};
Vous pouvez voir iptables
utiliser la même définition de type d'adresse avec la pile de mise en réseau TCP du noyau.
Puis de man ip
:
Route types:
unicast - the route entry describes real paths to the destinations covered by the route prefix.
unreachable - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are discarded and the ICMP message host unreachable is generated.
The local senders get an EHOSTUNREACH error.
blackhole - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are discarded silently. The local senders get an EINVAL error.
prohibit - these destinations are unreachable. Packets are discarded and the ICMP message communication administratively
prohibited is generated. The local senders get an EACCES error.
local - the destinations are assigned to this host. The packets are looped back and delivered locally.
broadcast - the destinations are broadcast addresses. The packets are sent as link broadcasts.
throw - a special control route used together with policy rules. If such a route is selected, lookup in this table is termi‐
nated pretending that no route was found. Without policy routing it is equivalent to the absence of the route in the routing
table. The packets are dropped and the ICMP message net unreachable is generated. The local senders get an ENETUNREACH
error.
nat - a special NAT route. Destinations covered by the prefix are considered to be dummy (or external) addresses which
require translation to real (or internal) ones before forwarding. The addresses to translate to are selected with the
attribute Warning: Route NAT is no longer supported in Linux 2.6.
via.
anycast - not implemented the destinations are anycast addresses assigned to this host. They are mainly equivalent to local
with one difference: such addresses are invalid when used as the source address of any packet.
multicast - a special type used for multicast routing. It is not present in normal routing tables.
Ainsi, lorsque vous définissez une route vers un réseau par ip
commande et la marquez comme une route de trou noir, le noyau fait maintenant ce type de trou noir d'adresse réseau:
ip route add blackhole X.X.X.X/24
LOCAL
n'est certainement pas127.0.0.0/8
. J'ai découvert à la dure :( ... apparemment, une adresse locale fait référence à toute adresse affectée à une interface.