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6.8. Debugging nftables rules
The
nftables
framework provides different options for administrators to debug rules and if packets match them. This section describes these options.
6.8.1. Creating a rule with a counter
To identify if a rule is matched, you can use a counter. This section describes how to create a new rule with a counter.
For a procedure that adds a counter to an existing rule, see Section 6.8.2, “Adding a counter to an existing rule”.
Prerequisites
- The chain to which you want to add the rule exists.
Procedure 6.21. Creating a rule with a counter
- Add a new rule with the
counter
parameter to the chain. The following example adds a rule with a counter that allows TCP traffic on port 22 and counts the packets and traffic that match this rule:# nft add rule inet example_table example_chain tcp dport 22 counter accept
- To display the counter values:
# nft list ruleset table inet example_table { chain example_chain { type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept; tcp dport ssh counter packets 6872 bytes 105448565 accept } }
6.8.2. Adding a counter to an existing rule
To identify if a rule is matched, you can use a counter. This section describes how to add a counter to an existing rule.
For a procedure to add a new rule with a counter, see Section 6.8.1, “Creating a rule with a counter”.
Prerequisites
- The rule to which you want to add the counter exists.
Procedure 6.22. Adding a counter to an existing rule
- Display the rules in the chain including their handles:
# nft --handle list chain inet example_table example_chain table inet example_table { chain example_chain { # handle 1 type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept; tcp dport ssh accept # handle 4 } }
- Add the counter by replacing the rule but with the
counter
parameter. The following example replaces the rule displayed in the previous step and adds a counter:# nft replace rule inet example_table example_chain handle 4 tcp dport 22 counter accept
- To display the counter values:
# nft list ruleset table inet example_table { chain example_chain { type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept; tcp dport ssh counter packets 6872 bytes 105448565 accept } }
6.8.3. Monitoring packets that match an existing rule
The tracing feature in
nftables
in combination with the nft monitor
command enables administrators to display packets that match a rule. The procedure describes how to enable tracing for a rule as well as monitoring packets that match this rule.
Prerequisites
- The rule to which you want to add the counter exists.
Procedure 6.23. Monitoring packets that match an existing rule
- Display the rules in the chain including their handles:
# nft --handle list chain inet example_table example_chain table inet example_table { chain example_chain { # handle 1 type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept; tcp dport ssh accept # handle 4 } }
- Add the tracing feature by replacing the rule but with the
meta
nftrace
set
1
parameters. The following example replaces the rule displayed in the previous step and enables tracing:# nft replace rule inet example_table example_chain handle 4 tcp dport 22 meta nftrace set 1 accept
- Use the
nft monitor
command to display the tracing. The following example filters the output of the command to display only entries that containinet example_table example_chain
:# nft monitor | grep "inet example_table example_chain" trace id 3c5eb15e inet example_table example_chain packet: iif "enp1s0" ether saddr 52:54:00:17:ff:e4 ether daddr 52:54:00:72:2f:6e ip saddr 192.0.2.1 ip daddr 192.0.2.2 ip dscp cs0 ip ecn not-ect ip ttl 64 ip id 49710 ip protocol tcp ip length 60 tcp sport 56728 tcp dport ssh tcp flags == syn tcp window 64240 trace id 3c5eb15e inet example_table example_chain rule tcp dport ssh nftrace set 1 accept (verdict accept) ...
Warning
Depending on the number of rules with tracing enabled and the amount of matching traffic, thenft monitor
command can display a lot of output. Use grep or other utilities to filter the output.