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This patch makes it possible to create binds and servers in separate namespaces. This can be used to proxy between multiple completely independent virtual networks (with possibly overlapping IP addresses) and a non-namespace-aware proxy implementation that supports the proxy protocol (v2). The setup is something like this: net1 on VLAN 1 (namespace 1) -\ net2 on VLAN 2 (namespace 2) -- haproxy ==== proxy (namespace 0) net3 on VLAN 3 (namespace 3) -/ The proxy is configured to make server connections through haproxy and sending the expected source/target addresses to haproxy using the proxy protocol. The network namespace setup on the haproxy node is something like this: = 8< = $ cat setup.sh ip netns add 1 ip link add link eth1 type vlan id 1 ip link set eth1.1 netns 1 ip netns exec 1 ip addr add 192.168.91.2/24 dev eth1.1 ip netns exec 1 ip link set eth1.$id up ... = 8< = = 8< = $ cat haproxy.cfg frontend clients bind 127.0.0.1:50022 namespace 1 transparent default_backend scb backend server mode tcp server server1 192.168.122.4:2222 namespace 2 send-proxy-v2 = 8< = A bind line creates the listener in the specified namespace, and connections originating from that listener also have their network namespace set to that of the listener. A server line either forces the connection to be made in a specified namespace or may use the namespace from the client-side connection if that was set. For more documentation please read the documentation included in the patch itself. Signed-off-by: KOVACS Tamas <ktamas@balabit.com> Signed-off-by: Sarkozi Laszlo <laszlo.sarkozi@balabit.com> Signed-off-by: KOVACS Krisztian <hidden@balabit.com>
107 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
107 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
Linux network namespace support for HAProxy
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===========================================
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HAProxy supports proxying between Linux network namespaces. This
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feature can be used, for example, in a multi-tenant networking
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environment to proxy between different networks. HAProxy can also act
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as a front-end proxy for non namespace-aware services.
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The proxy protocol has been extended to support transferring the
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namespace information, so the originating namespace information can be
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kept. This is useful when chaining multiple proxies and services.
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To enable Linux namespace support, compile HAProxy with the `USE_NS=1`
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make option.
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## Setting up namespaces on Linux
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To create network namespaces, use the 'ip netns' command. See the
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manual page ip-netns(8) for details.
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Make sure that the file descriptors representing the network namespace
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are located under `/var/run/netns`.
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For example, you can create a network namespace and assign one of the
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networking interfaces to the new namespace:
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```
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$ ip netns add netns1
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$ ip link set eth7 netns netns1
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```
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## Listing namespaces in the configuration file
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HAProxy uses namespaces explicitly listed in its configuration file.
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If you are not using namespace information received through the proxy
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protocol, this usually means that you must specify namespaces for
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listeners and servers in the configuration file with the 'namespace'
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keyword.
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However, if you're using the namespace information received through
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the proxy protocol to determine the namespace of servers (see
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'namespace * below'), you have to explicitly list all allowed
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namespaces in the namespace_list section of your configuration file:
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```
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namespace_list
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namespace netns1
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namespace netns2
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```
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## Namespace information flow
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The haproxy process always runs in the namespace it was started on.
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This is the default namespace.
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The bind addresses of listeners can have their namespace specified in
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the configuration file. Unless specified, sockets associated with
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listener bind addresses are created in the default namespace. For
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example, this creates a listener in the netns2 namespace:
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```
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frontend f_example
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bind 192.168.1.1:80 namespace netns2
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default_backend http
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```
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Each client connection is associated with its source namespace. By
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default, this is the namespace of the bind socket it arrived on, but
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can be overridden by information received through the proxy protocol.
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Proxy protocol v2 supports transferring namespace information, so if
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it is enabled for the listener, it can override the associated
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namespace of the connection.
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Servers can have their namespaces specified in the configuration file
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with the 'namespace' keyword:
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```
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backend b_example
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server s1 192.168.1.100:80 namespace netns2
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```
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If no namespace is set for a server, it is assumed that it is in the
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default namespace. When specified, outbound sockets to the server are
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created in the network namespace configured. To create the outbound
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(server) connection in the namespace associated with the client, use
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the '*' namespace. This is especially useful when using the
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destination address and namespace received from the proxy protocol.
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```
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frontend f_example
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bind 192.168.1.1:9990 accept-proxy
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default_backend b_example
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backend b_example
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mode tcp
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source 0.0.0.0 usesrc clientip
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server snodes * namespace *
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```
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If HAProxy is configured to send proxy protocol v2 headers to the
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server, the outgoing header will always contain the namespace
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associated with the client connection, not the namespace configured
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for the server.
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