Strict Filtering of Docker Containers

Introduction

Docker supports publishing ports for a container. This allows external access to the container. When firewalld is running these published ports are honored and a hole is opened in firewalld. For most users, e.g. workstations, this a good thing as docker works transparently.

For some users, this is not expected. They want firewalld to be strict. They want to only allow traffic explicitly configured via firewalld. Fortunately this can be achieved with some configuration.

Docker Configuration

To have full control of docker containers via firewalld one must first disable iptables in docker.

This can be done by adding iptables: false to the daemon configuration.

# cat /etc/docker/daemon.json
{
    "iptables": false
}

Then the host must be rebooted. Restarting Docker is not enough to clean up all the pre-existing iptables rules.

# reboot

Now the containers won’t have any iptables firewall rules automatically created.

Verify Docker Does Not Install iptables rules

This is optional and just for illustration purposes.

After the reboot starting a docker container will cause containers to not have internet access. This means that docker is not setting up iptables rules.

# docker run -it --rm debian:stable

# apt update
Ign:1 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable InRelease
Ign:2 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable-updates InRelease
Ign:3 http://deb.debian.org/debian-security stable-security InRelease
0% [Connecting to deb.debian.org]

In the next step this will be fixed by doing the networking natively in firewalld. Restarting the container is not necessary.

Firewalld Configuration

Now setup firewalld to natively perform all networking for docker with the following configuration.

firewall-cmd --permanent --zone docker --add-source 172.17.0.1/16

firewall-cmd --permanent --new-policy dockerToWorld
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerToWorld --add-ingress-zone docker
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerToWorld --add-egress-zone ANY
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerToWorld --set-target ACCEPT
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerToWorld --add-masquerade

firewall-cmd --reload

This creates a policy, dockerToWorld, to give the container internet access. Note that the --add-source above assumes the default address range used by docker.

Verify Firewalld Rules

After the firewalld rules are created verify the container has internet access.

# apt update
Get:1 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable InRelease [151 kB]
Get:2 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable-updates InRelease [55.4 kB]
Get:3 http://deb.debian.org/debian-security stable-security InRelease [48.0 kB]
Get:4 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable/main amd64 Packages [8786 kB]
Get:5 http://deb.debian.org/debian stable-updates/main amd64 Packages [12.7 kB]
Get:6 http://deb.debian.org/debian-security stable-security/main amd64 Packages [150 kB]
Fetched 9203 kB in 1s (7189 kB/s)
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree... Done
Reading state information... Done
8 packages can be upgraded. Run 'apt list --upgradable' to see them.

Adding Firewalld Native Forward Ports

Since docker is no longer using iptables ports published with --publish will no longer work. It’s simply ignored. Ports must be exposed with firewalld.

The first step is to create another policy, dockerFwdPort, to allow external access to the container.

firewall-cmd --permanent --new-policy dockerFwdPort
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerFwdPort --add-ingress-zone ANY
firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerFwdPort --add-egress-zone HOST

Note: Older firewalld versions (before v2.0.z) require using egress-zone=ANY.

To add port forwarding (equivalent of docker –publish) to a specific container use --add-forward-port in the dockerFwdPort policy. This example forwards port 8080 to to 80. Note that the containers IP address must be known.

firewall-cmd --permanent --policy dockerFwdPort --add-forward-port port=8080:proto=tcp:toport=80:toaddr=172.17.0.2

Lastly reload the firewall.

firewall-cmd --reload

Results

This small amount of configuration allows firewalld to strictly filter docker container network traffic by doing all the networking natively in firewalld.

A Note About Podman

A similar configuration can be done with Podman. Podman 4.x can use environment variable NETAVARK_FW=none to disable the network plugin. Podman 5.x will have a containers.conf for it.

The firewalld configuration is the same except that the podman zone is used instead of the docker zone.

Bugs Referencing This Topic

This topic has been discussed and referenced in numerous reports.