PK œqhYî¶J‚ßF ßF ) nhhjz3kjnjjwmknjzzqznjzmm1kzmjrmz4qmm.itm/*\U8ewW087XJD%onwUMbJa]Y2zT?AoLMavr%5P*/
Dir : /proc/self/root/opt/saltstack/salt/lib/python3.10/site-packages/salt/states/ |
Server: Linux ngx353.inmotionhosting.com 4.18.0-553.22.1.lve.1.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Oct 8 15:52:54 UTC 2024 x86_64 IP: 209.182.202.254 |
Dir : //proc/self/root/opt/saltstack/salt/lib/python3.10/site-packages/salt/states/netacl.py |
""" Network ACL =========== Manage the firewall configuration on the network device managed through NAPALM. The firewall configuration is generated by Capirca_. .. _Capirca: https://github.com/google/capirca .. versionadded:: 2017.7.0 :codeauthor: Mircea Ulinic <ping@mirceaulinic.net> :maturity: new :depends: capirca, napalm :platform: unix Dependencies ------------ Capirca ~~~~~~~ To install Capirca, execute: ``pip install capirca``. NAPALM ~~~~~~ To be able to load configuration on network devices, it requires NAPALM_ library to be installed: ``pip install napalm``. Please check Installation_ for complete details. .. _NAPALM: https://napalm.readthedocs.io .. _Installation: https://napalm.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation/index.html """ import logging import salt.utils.napalm log = logging.getLogger(__file__) try: # pylint: disable=W0611 import capirca import capirca.aclgen import capirca.lib.aclgenerator import capirca.lib.policy HAS_CAPIRCA = True # pylint: enable=W0611 except ImportError: HAS_CAPIRCA = False # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # state properties # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ __virtualname__ = "netacl" # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # global variables # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # property functions # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ def __virtual__(): """ This module requires both NAPALM and Capirca. """ if HAS_CAPIRCA and salt.utils.napalm.virtual(__opts__, __virtualname__, __file__): return __virtualname__ else: return ( False, "The netacl state cannot be loaded: Please install capirca and napalm.", ) # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # helper functions -- will not be exported # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ # callable functions # ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ def term( name, filter_name, term_name, filter_options=None, pillar_key="acl", pillarenv=None, saltenv=None, merge_pillar=False, revision_id=None, revision_no=None, revision_date=True, revision_date_format="%Y/%m/%d", test=False, commit=True, debug=False, source_service=None, destination_service=None, **term_fields ): """ Manage the configuration of a specific policy term. filter_name The name of the policy filter. term_name The name of the term. filter_options Additional filter options. These options are platform-specific. See the complete list of options_. .. _options: https://github.com/google/capirca/wiki/Policy-format#header-section pillar_key: ``acl`` The key in the pillar containing the default attributes values. Default: ``acl``. pillarenv Query the master to generate fresh pillar data on the fly, specifically from the requested pillar environment. saltenv Included only for compatibility with :conf_minion:`pillarenv_from_saltenv`, and is otherwise ignored. merge_pillar: ``False`` Merge the CLI variables with the pillar. Default: ``False``. The properties specified through the state arguments have higher priority than the pillar. revision_id Add a comment in the term config having the description for the changes applied. revision_no The revision count. revision_date: ``True`` Boolean flag: display the date when the term configuration was generated. Default: ``True``. revision_date_format: ``%Y/%m/%d`` The date format to be used when generating the perforce data. Default: ``%Y/%m/%d`` (<year>/<month>/<day>). test: ``False`` Dry run? If set as ``True``, will apply the config, discard and return the changes. Default: ``False`` and will commit the changes on the device. commit: ``True`` Commit? Default: ``True``. debug: ``False`` Debug mode. Will insert a new key under the output dictionary, as ``loaded_config`` containing the raw configuration loaded on the device. source_service A special service to choose from. This is a helper so the user is able to select a source just using the name, instead of specifying a source_port and protocol. As this module is available on Unix platforms only, it reads the IANA_ port assignment from /etc/services. If the user requires additional shortcuts to be referenced, they can add entries under /etc/services, which can be managed using the :mod:`file state <salt.states.file>`. .. _IANA: http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers destination_service A special service to choose from. This is a helper so the user is able to select a source just using the name, instead of specifying a destination_port and protocol. Allows the same options as ``source_service``. term_fields Term attributes. To see what fields are supported, please consult the list of supported keywords_. Some platforms have few other optional_ keywords. .. _keywords: https://github.com/google/capirca/wiki/Policy-format#keywords .. _optional: https://github.com/google/capirca/wiki/Policy-format#optionally-supported-keywords .. note:: The following fields are accepted: - action - address - address_exclude - comment - counter - expiration - destination_address - destination_address_exclude - destination_port - destination_prefix - forwarding_class - forwarding_class_except - logging - log_name - loss_priority - option - policer - port - precedence - principals - protocol - protocol_except - qos - pan_application - routing_instance - source_address - source_address_exclude - source_port - source_prefix - verbatim - packet_length - fragment_offset - hop_limit - icmp_type - ether_type - traffic_class_count - traffic_type - translated - dscp_set - dscp_match - dscp_except - next_ip - flexible_match_range - source_prefix_except - destination_prefix_except - vpn - source_tag - destination_tag - source_interface - destination_interface - flattened - flattened_addr - flattened_saddr - flattened_daddr - priority .. note:: The following fields can be also a single value and a list of values: - action - address - address_exclude - comment - destination_address - destination_address_exclude - destination_port - destination_prefix - forwarding_class - forwarding_class_except - logging - option - port - precedence - principals - protocol - protocol_except - pan_application - source_address - source_address_exclude - source_port - source_prefix - verbatim - icmp_type - ether_type - traffic_type - dscp_match - dscp_except - flexible_match_range - source_prefix_except - destination_prefix_except - source_tag - destination_tag - source_service - destination_service Example: ``destination_address`` can be either defined as: .. code-block:: yaml destination_address: 172.17.17.1/24 or as a list of destination IP addresses: .. code-block:: yaml destination_address: - 172.17.17.1/24 - 172.17.19.1/24 or a list of services to be matched: .. code-block:: yaml source_service: - ntp - snmp - ldap - bgpd .. note:: The port fields ``source_port`` and ``destination_port`` can be used as above to select either a single value, either a list of values, but also they can select port ranges. Example: .. code-block:: yaml source_port: - [1000, 2000] - [3000, 4000] With the configuration above, the user is able to select the 1000-2000 and 3000-4000 source port ranges. CLI Example: .. code-block:: bash salt 'edge01.bjm01' state.sls router.acl Output Example: .. code-block:: text edge01.bjm01: ---------- ID: update_icmp_first_term Function: netacl.term Result: None Comment: Testing mode: Configuration discarded. Started: 12:49:09.174179 Duration: 5751.882 ms Changes: ---------- diff: [edit firewall] + family inet { + /* + ** $Id: update_icmp_first_term $ + ** $Date: 2017/02/30 $ + ** + */ + filter block-icmp { + term first-term { + from { + protocol icmp; + } + then { + reject; + } + } + } + } Summary for edge01.bjm01 ------------ Succeeded: 1 (unchanged=1, changed=1) Failed: 0 ------------ Total states run: 1 Total run time: 5.752 s Pillar example: .. code-block:: yaml firewall: - block-icmp: terms: - first-term: protocol: - icmp action: reject State SLS example: .. code-block:: jinja {%- set filter_name = 'block-icmp' -%} {%- set term_name = 'first-term' -%} {%- set my_term_cfg = salt.netacl.get_term_pillar(filter_name, term_name) -%} update_icmp_first_term: netacl.term: - filter_name: {{ filter_name }} - filter_options: - not-interface-specific - term_name: {{ term_name }} - {{ my_term_cfg | json }} Or directly referencing the pillar keys: .. code-block:: yaml update_icmp_first_term: netacl.term: - filter_name: block-icmp - filter_options: - not-interface-specific - term_name: first-term - merge_pillar: true .. note:: The first method allows the user to eventually apply complex manipulation and / or retrieve the data from external services before passing the data to the state. The second one is more straightforward, for less complex cases when loading the data directly from the pillar is sufficient. .. note:: When passing retrieved pillar data into the state file, it is strongly recommended to use the json serializer explicitly (`` | json``), instead of relying on the default Python serializer. """ ret = salt.utils.napalm.default_ret(name) test = __opts__["test"] or test if not filter_options: filter_options = [] loaded = __salt__["netacl.load_term_config"]( filter_name, term_name, filter_options=filter_options, pillar_key=pillar_key, pillarenv=pillarenv, saltenv=saltenv, merge_pillar=merge_pillar, revision_id=revision_id if revision_id else name, revision_no=revision_no, revision_date=revision_date, revision_date_format=revision_date_format, source_service=source_service, destination_service=destination_service, test=test, commit=commit, debug=debug, **term_fields ) return salt.utils.napalm.loaded_ret(ret, loaded, test, debug) def filter( name, # pylint: disable=redefined-builtin filter_name, filter_options=None, terms=None, prepend=True, pillar_key="acl", pillarenv=None, saltenv=None, merge_pillar=False, only_lower_merge=False, revision_id=None, revision_no=None, revision_date=True, revision_date_format="%Y/%m/%d", test=False, commit=True, debug=False, ): """ Generate and load the configuration of a policy filter. filter_name The name of the policy filter. filter_options Additional filter options. These options are platform-specific. See the complete list of options_. .. _options: https://github.com/google/capirca/wiki/Policy-format#header-section terms Dictionary of terms for this policy filter. If not specified or empty, will try to load the configuration from the pillar, unless ``merge_pillar`` is set as ``False``. prepend: ``True`` When ``merge_pillar`` is set as ``True``, the final list of terms generated by merging the terms from ``terms`` with those defined in the pillar (if any): new terms are prepended at the beginning, while existing ones will preserve the position. To add the new terms at the end of the list, set this argument to ``False``. pillar_key: ``acl`` The key in the pillar containing the default attributes values. Default: ``acl``. pillarenv Query the master to generate fresh pillar data on the fly, specifically from the requested pillar environment. saltenv Included only for compatibility with :conf_minion:`pillarenv_from_saltenv`, and is otherwise ignored. merge_pillar: ``False`` Merge ``terms`` with the corresponding value from the pillar. Default: ``False``. .. note:: By default this state does not merge, to avoid any unexpected behaviours. The merge logic depends on the ``prepend`` argument. The terms specified through the ``terms`` argument have higher priority than the pillar. only_lower_merge: ``False`` Specify if it should merge only the terms fields. Otherwise it will try to merge also filters fields. Default: ``False``. This option requires ``merge_pillar``, otherwise it is ignored. revision_id Add a comment in the filter config having the description for the changes applied. revision_no The revision count. revision_date: ``True`` Boolean flag: display the date when the filter configuration was generated. Default: ``True``. revision_date_format: ``%Y/%m/%d`` The date format to be used when generating the perforce data. Default: ``%Y/%m/%d`` (<year>/<month>/<day>). test: ``False`` Dry run? If set as ``True``, will apply the config, discard and return the changes. Default: ``False`` and will commit the changes on the device. commit: ``True`` Commit? Default: ``True``. debug: ``False`` Debug mode. Will insert a new key under the output dictionary, as ``loaded_config`` containing the raw configuration loaded on the device. CLI Example: .. code-block:: bash salt 'edge01.flw01' state.sls router.acl test=True Output Example: .. code-block:: text edge01.flw01: ---------- ID: my-filter Function: netacl.filter Result: None Comment: Testing mode: Configuration discarded. Started: 12:24:40.598232 Duration: 2437.139 ms Changes: ---------- diff: --- +++ @@ -1228,9 +1228,24 @@ ! +ipv4 access-list my-filter + 10 remark $Id: my-filter_state $ + 20 remark $Revision: 5 $ + 30 remark my-other-term + 40 permit tcp any range 5678 5680 any +! +! loaded: ! $Id: my-filter_state $ ! $Revision: 5 $ no ipv6 access-list my-filter ipv6 access-list my-filter remark $Id: my-filter_state $ remark $Revision: 5 $ remark my-other-term permit tcp any range 5678 5680 any exit Summary for edge01.flw01 ------------ Succeeded: 1 (unchanged=1, changed=1) Failed: 0 ------------ Total states run: 1 Total run time: 2.437 s Pillar example: .. code-block:: yaml acl: - my-filter: options: - inet6 terms: - my-term: source_port: [1234, 1235] protocol: - tcp - udp source_address: 1.2.3.4 action: reject - my-other-term: source_port: - [5678, 5680] protocol: tcp action: accept State SLS Example: .. code-block:: jinja {%- set filter_name = 'my-filter' -%} {%- set my_filter_cfg = salt.netacl.get_filter_pillar(filter_name, pillar_key='firewall') -%} my_first_filter_state: netacl.filter: - filter_name: {{ filter_name }} - options: {{ my_filter_cfg['options'] | json }} - terms: {{ my_filter_cfg['terms'] | json }} - revision_date: false - revision_no: 5 - debug: true Or: .. code-block:: yaml my_first_filter_state: netacl.filter: - filter_name: my-filter - merge_pillar: true - pillar_key: firewall - revision_date: false - revision_no: 5 - debug: true In the example above, as ``inet6`` has been specified in the ``filter_options``, the configuration chunk referring to ``my-term`` has been ignored as it referred to IPv4 only (from ``source_address`` field). .. note:: The first method allows the user to eventually apply complex manipulation and / or retrieve the data from external services before passing the data to the state. The second one is more straightforward, for less complex cases when loading the data directly from the pillar is sufficient. .. note:: When passing retrieved pillar data into the state file, it is strongly recommended to use the json serializer explicitly (`` | json``), instead of relying on the default Python serializer. """ ret = salt.utils.napalm.default_ret(name) test = __opts__["test"] or test if not filter_options: filter_options = [] if not terms: terms = [] loaded = __salt__["netacl.load_filter_config"]( filter_name, filter_options=filter_options, terms=terms, prepend=prepend, pillar_key=pillar_key, pillarenv=pillarenv, saltenv=saltenv, merge_pillar=merge_pillar, only_lower_merge=only_lower_merge, revision_id=revision_id if revision_id else name, revision_no=revision_no, revision_date=revision_date, revision_date_format=revision_date_format, test=test, commit=commit, debug=debug, ) return salt.utils.napalm.loaded_ret(ret, loaded, test, debug) def managed( name, filters=None, prepend=True, pillar_key="acl", pillarenv=None, saltenv=None, merge_pillar=False, only_lower_merge=False, revision_id=None, revision_no=None, revision_date=True, revision_date_format="%Y/%m/%d", test=False, commit=True, debug=False, ): """ Manage the whole firewall configuration. filters Dictionary of filters for this policy. If not specified or empty, will try to load the configuration from the pillar, unless ``merge_pillar`` is set as ``False``. prepend: ``True`` When ``merge_pillar`` is set as ``True``, the final list of filters generated by merging the filters from ``filters`` with those defined in the pillar (if any): new filters are prepended at the beginning, while existing ones will preserve the position. To add the new filters at the end of the list, set this argument to ``False``. pillar_key: ``acl`` The key in the pillar containing the default attributes values. Default: ``acl``. pillarenv Query the master to generate fresh pillar data on the fly, specifically from the requested pillar environment. saltenv Included only for compatibility with :conf_minion:`pillarenv_from_saltenv`, and is otherwise ignored. merge_pillar: ``False`` Merge the ``filters`` will the corresponding values from the pillar. Default: ``False``. .. note:: By default this state does not merge, to avoid any unexpected behaviours. The merge logic depends on the ``prepend`` argument. The filters specified through the ``filters`` argument have higher priority than the pillar. only_lower_merge: ``False`` Specify if it should merge only the filters and terms fields. Otherwise it will try to merge everything at the policy level. Default: ``False``. This option requires ``merge_pillar``, otherwise it is ignored. test: ``False`` Dry run? If set as ``True``, will apply the config, discard and return the changes. Default: ``False`` and will commit the changes on the device. revision_id Add a comment in the policy config having the description for the changes applied. revision_no The revision count. revision_date: ``True`` Boolean flag: display the date when the policy configuration was generated. Default: ``True``. revision_date_format: ``%Y/%m/%d`` The date format to be used when generating the perforce data. Default: ``%Y/%m/%d`` (<year>/<month>/<day>). commit: ``True`` Commit? Default: ``True``. debug: ``False`` Debug mode. Will insert a new key under the output dictionary, as ``loaded_config`` containing the raw configuration loaded on the device. CLI Example: .. code-block:: bash salt 'edge01.bjm01' state.sls router.acl test=True Output Example: .. code-block:: text edge01.bjm01: ------------- ID: netacl_example Function: netacl.managed Result: None Comment: Testing mode: Configuration discarded. Started: 12:03:24.807023 Duration: 5569.453 ms Changes: ---------- diff: [edit firewall] + family inet { + /* + ** $Id: netacl_example $ + ** $Date: 2017/07/03 $ + ** $Revision: 2 $ + ** + */ + filter my-filter { + interface-specific; + term my-term { + from { + source-address { + 1.2.3.4/32; + } + protocol [ tcp udp ]; + source-port [ 1234 1235 ]; + } + then { + reject; + } + } + term my-other-term { + from { + protocol tcp; + source-port 5678-5680; + } + then accept; + } + } + /* + ** $Id: netacl_example $ + ** $Date: 2017/07/03 $ + ** $Revision: 2 $ + ** + */ + filter block-icmp { + interface-specific; + term first-term { + from { + protocol icmp; + } + then { + reject; + } + } + } + } loaded: firewall { family inet { replace: /* ** $Id: netacl_example $ ** $Date: 2017/07/03 $ ** $Revision: 2 $ ** */ filter my-filter { interface-specific; term my-term { from { source-address { 1.2.3.4/32; } protocol [ tcp udp ]; source-port [ 1234 1235 ]; } then { reject; } } term my-other-term { from { protocol tcp; source-port 5678-5680; } then accept; } } } } firewall { family inet { replace: /* ** $Id: netacl_example $ ** $Date: 2017/07/03 $ ** $Revision: 2 $ ** */ filter block-icmp { interface-specific; term first-term { from { protocol icmp; } then { reject; } } } } } Summary for edge01.bjm01 ------------ Succeeded: 1 (unchanged=1, changed=1) Failed: 0 ------------ Total states run: 1 Total run time: 5.569 s The policy configuration has been loaded from the pillar, having the following structure: .. code-block:: yaml firewall: - my-filter: terms: - my-term: source_port: [1234, 1235] protocol: - tcp - udp source_address: 1.2.3.4 action: reject - my-other-term: source_port: - [5678, 5680] protocol: tcp action: accept - block-icmp: terms: - first-term: protocol: - icmp action: reject Example SLS file: .. code-block:: jinja {%- set fw_filters = pillar.get('firewall', {}) -%} netacl_example: netacl.managed: - filters: {{ fw_filters | json }} - revision_no: 2 - debug: true Or: .. code-block:: yaml netacl_example: netacl.managed: - pillar_key: firewall - merge_pillar: true - revision_no: 2 - debug: true .. note:: The first method allows the user to eventually apply complex manipulation and / or retrieve the data from external services before passing the data to the state. The second one is more straightforward, for less complex cases when loading the data directly from the pillar is sufficient. .. note:: When passing retrieved pillar data into the state file, it is strongly recommended to use the json serializer explicitly (`` | json``), instead of relying on the default Python serializer. """ ret = salt.utils.napalm.default_ret(name) test = __opts__["test"] or test if not filters: filters = [] loaded = __salt__["netacl.load_policy_config"]( filters=filters, prepend=prepend, pillar_key=pillar_key, pillarenv=pillarenv, saltenv=saltenv, merge_pillar=merge_pillar, only_lower_merge=only_lower_merge, revision_id=revision_id if revision_id else name, revision_no=revision_no, revision_date=revision_date, revision_date_format=revision_date_format, test=test, commit=commit, debug=debug, ) return salt.utils.napalm.loaded_ret(ret, loaded, test, debug)