xt_tls is an extension for netfilter/IPtables that allows you to filter traffic based on TLS hostnames.
- Filter TLS traffic based on the SNI extension
- Add more advanced matching features (i.e. wildcard matching)
- Add support for matching on the server certificate
- Kernel headers (
apt install linux-headers-$(uname -r)
oryum install kernel-devel
) - IPtables devel (
apt install iptables-dev
oryum install iptables-devel
) - Glob kernel module
- Netfilter defrag modules: nf_defrag_ipv4 and nf_defrag_ipv6
git clone https://github.com/Lochnair/xt_tls.git
cd xt_tls
make
sudo make install
DKMS Installation
- DKMS (
apt install dkms
oryum install dkms
(from EPEL) )
git clone https://github.com/Lochnair/xt_tls.git
cd xt_tls
sudo make dkms-install
You can block traffic to Facebook using the following command.
sudo iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m tls --tls-host "www.facebook.com" -j DROP
You can also match subdomains using wildcards like this.
sudo iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m tls --tls-host "*.googlevideo.com" -j DROP
Another way to specify the hostname matching patterns is to use the hostsets. This is a way to do when you have to match each packet with a lot of potentially suitable hostnames. While you may write a separate iptables rule for each hostname, it would be very inefficient. A better way is place all the hostnames to the single collection named "hostset". The hostsets are similar to the ipsets with the difference that they contain host names rather than ip-addresses. The entire hostset can be matches with a single iptables rule:
sudo iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m tls --tls-hostset blacklist -j DROP
This is far more efficient than write a chain consisting of many similar rules. Technically a hostset is a binary tree, which stores hostnames in the lexicographically reversed form (for faster suffix matching). Hostsets are created automatically, as soon as the first iptables rule referencing this hostset is created. They are also destroyed automatically after the deletion of the last rule that uses this hostset.
The hostsets are created empty, so they match nothing at this moment. You should populate a newly created hostset. All manipulations with a hostset content are done using the /proc filesystems:
sudo echo +facebook.com > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
sudo echo +googlevideo.com > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
...
Each hostset has a corresponding file in the "/proc/net/xt_tls/hostset" directory, which may be used to manipulate its content. The protocol is similar to that of the "xt_recent" iptables extension.
To add a new hostname to the hostset, you should write this name, perfixed with a '+' sign to the corresponding /proc file, as above.
To remove an individual hostname from the set you should put this name prefixed with a '-' sign to the /proc file:
sudo echo -facebook.com > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
To flush the entire hostset content (to remove all the names), write a '/' character to the proc file:
sudo echo / > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
To get the current content of the hostset (together with hostname hit statistics), just read the corresponding /proc file:
cat /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
298776098 facebook.com
8736567589 googlevideo.com
0 some.forgotten.site
...
You can not use wildcards with the hostsets. But you can use suffix matching instead. By default the host name set should match some hostset element exactly the entire rule also to match. But with "--tls-suffix" option it is enough when any host name suffix to match any hostset element. For example the following rule
sudo iptables -A OUTPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -m tls --tls-hostset blacklist --tls-suffix -j DROP
with the same hostset:
sudo echo +facebook.com > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
sudo echo +googlevideo.com > /proc/net/xt_tls/hostset/blacklist
...
will match "facebook.com", "facebook.com", "anything.facebook.com" etc.
If you encounter a bug please make sure to include the following things in your bug report:
- The application used for sending the request
- The domain your trying to allow/block - Debug output (see the debugging section below)
- If possible, a TCPDump capture containing the TLS "Client/Server Hello's"
Since xt_tls is not thoroughly tested, sometimes weird things happen. This might be caused by an application that sends packets xt_tls can't parse. For example cURL and wget (or the TLS libary they use) doesn't send a session ID in the "Client Hello", and xt_tls didn't understand that, so I had to change some things to make it work.
By default xt_tls doesn't print anything to the syslog, as there seems to be quite some overhead in doing that. However you can enable debug output by compiling xt_tls like below.
make debug
If you've sent a TLS request, you can now use dmesg to see if everything works as expected.
dmesg
[ 2013.959415] [xt_tls] Session ID length: 32
[ 2013.974006] [xt_tls] Cipher len: 42
[ 2013.974292] [xt_tls] Offset (1): 119
[ 2013.974583] [xt_tls] Compression length: 1
[ 2013.974915] [xt_tls] Offset (2): 122
[ 2013.975211] [xt_tls] Extensions length: 38
[ 2013.977016] [xt_tls] Name type: 0
[ 2013.977675] [xt_tls] Name length: 10
[ 2013.978664] [xt_tls] Parsed domain: github.com
[ 2013.979068] [xt_tls] Domain matches: false, invert: false
I would like to thank the people behind the nDPI project, as the parsing function is inspired by their work.