48.9.3.5. Target Options
When a packet has matched a particular rule, the rule can direct the packet to a number of different targets which determine the appropriate action. Each chain has a default target, which is used if none of the rules on that chain match a packet or if none of the rules which match the packet specify a target.
The following are the standard targets:
<user-defined-chain>
— A user-defined chain within the table. User-defined chain names must be unique. This target passes the packet to the specified chain.ACCEPT
— Allows the packet through to its destination or to another chain.DROP
— Drops the packet without responding to the requester. The system that sent the packet is not notified of the failure.QUEUE
— The packet is queued for handling by a user-space application.RETURN
— Stops checking the packet against rules in the current chain. If the packet with aRETURN
target matches a rule in a chain called from another chain, the packet is returned to the first chain to resume rule checking where it left off. If theRETURN
rule is used on a built-in chain and the packet cannot move up to its previous chain, the default target for the current chain is used.
In addition, extensions are available which allow other targets to be specified. These extensions are called target modules or match option modules and most only apply to specific tables and situations. Refer to Section 48.9.3.4.4, “Additional Match Option Modules” for more information about match option modules.
Many extended target modules exist, most of which only apply to specific tables or situations. Some of the most popular target modules included by default in Red Hat Enterprise Linux are:
LOG
— Logs all packets that match this rule. Because the packets are logged by the kernel, the/etc/syslog.conf
file determines where these log entries are written. By default, they are placed in the/var/log/messages
file.Additional options can be used after theLOG
target to specify the way in which logging occurs:--log-level
— Sets the priority level of a logging event. Refer to thesyslog.conf
man page for a list of priority levels.--log-ip-options
— Logs any options set in the header of an IP packet.--log-prefix
— Places a string of up to 29 characters before the log line when it is written. This is useful for writing syslog filters for use in conjunction with packet logging.Note
Due to an issue with this option, you should add a trailing space to the log-prefix value.--log-tcp-options
— Logs any options set in the header of a TCP packet.--log-tcp-sequence
— Writes the TCP sequence number for the packet in the log.
REJECT
— Sends an error packet back to the remote system and drops the packet.TheREJECT
target accepts--reject-with <type>
(where <type> is the rejection type) allowing more detailed information to be returned with the error packet. The messageport-unreachable
is the default error type given if no other option is used. Refer to theiptables
man page for a full list of<type>
options.
Other target extensions, including several that are useful for IP masquerading using the
nat
table, or with packet alteration using the mangle
table, can be found in the iptables
man page.