- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
cross-posted to: https://sh.itjust.works/post/14114583
If the rule is about forwarding traffic from the lan
interface to the wan
interface, then why is there also a forward rule? How would inputs, and outputs make any sense if the rule is talking about forwarding? What does it mean for wan
to forward to REJECT
? I interperet that as saying that wan
doesn’t go anywhere, but that wouldn’t make sense given that the router can send, and receive over the internet.
For example I would interperet the first rule as follows:
lan => wan
: the conditions for which connections from thelan
interface are forwarded to to thewan
interface.Input: accept
: thelan
interface accepts all connections originating from the network (I wouldn’t understand the point of setting this to bereject
).Output: accept
: all connections exiting thewan
interface are accepted (again, I’m not sure what the point of this would be).Forward: accept
: forwarding of packets fromlan
towan
is allowed.- Masquerade: I honestly don’t know what the effect of enabling this would be. What would it mean to masquerade the
lan
interface?
I tried finding documentation, and I did come across this, and this, but, from what I could understand, they didn’t really answer any of my questions.
I don’t think this is correct. NAT doesn’t “allow” connections – It just masquerades the source IP as that of the router. For WAN connections to be accepted, conntrack must see them as related to connections that were initiated by the router, or by a device on the LAN (assuming, of course, that conntrack is enabled, which, in my case, it is).