Gatekeeper
What is Gatekeeper?
Gatekeeper is the first open source DDoS protection system. It is designed to scale to any peak bandwidth, so it can withstand DDoS attacks both of today and of tomorrow. In spite of the geographically distributed architecture of Gatekeeper, the network policy that describes all decisions that have to be enforced on the incoming traffic is centralized. This centralized policy enables network operators to leverage distributed algorithms that would not be viable under very high latency (e.g. distributed databases) and to fight multiple multi-vector DDoS attacks at once.
The intended users of Gatekeeper are network operators of institutions, service and content providers, enterprise networks, etc. It is not intended to be used by individual Internet users.
For more information, see the Gatekeeper wiki.
How to Set Up
Configure Hugepages
DPDK requires the use of hugepages; instructions for mounting hugepages are available in the requirements documentation. On many systems, the following hugepages setup is sufficient:
$ echo 256 | sudo tee /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages
vfio-pci
Enable the kernel module Starting with Gatekeeper v1.1, the Linux kernel module vfio-pci
is
the prefered way to bind NICs to DPDK/Gatekeeper.
In case you cannot get the kernel module vfio-pci
running on your machine,
you may tray an alternative to vfio-pci
as documented on this page.
In order for vfio-pci
to work, both the BIOS and the kernel must support it.
BIOSes must have VT-d enabled.
BIOSes may identify VT-d as "Intel (R) VT for Directed I/O",
"Intel (R) VT-d Feature", "Intel VT-d", "VT-d", or similar variations;
for more examples, search "BIOS VT-d" on
Google Images.
Some BIOS may require that an option called
"Intel (R) Virtualization Technology" (or variations of this string) to be
enabled before VT-d can be enabled.
To check that VT-d is enabled at the BIOS, run the following command after Linux boots up:
$ dmesg | grep -e DMAR
If the command above returns some lines, VT-d should be enabled. Otherwise, one has to go back to the BIOS to enable it. More information on how to check that VT-d is enabled at the BIOS is available on this page.
Once VT-d is enabled at the BIOS, one must ensure that the kernel supports IOMMU. Notice that one needs a kernel version greater than 3.6 to support IOMMU. One can verify if the running kernel has IOMMU enabled by default with the following command:
$ grep CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_DEFAULT_ON /boot/config-`uname -r`
Most likely, the command above will output
# CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_DEFAULT_ON is not set
, that is,
the running kernel does not have IOMMU enabled by default.
Alternatives ways to check for kernel build options
(i.e. CONFIG_INTEL_IOMMU_DEFAULT_ON
) is available on
this page.
If the kernel does not have IOMMU enabled by default,
one has to pass the kernel boot parameter intel_iommu=on
via GRUB.
For information on the why the boot parameter intel_iommu=on
is needed,
see this page.
One can check if the running kernel received this parameter with
the command below:
$ cat /proc/cmdline | grep intel_iommu=on
If the running kernel has not received the parameter intel_iommu=on
,
add it to GRUB, and reboot the machine.
Information on how to add a boot parameter to GRUB is found
here.
Once VT-d is enabled at the BIOS and the kernel supports IOMMU, one can verify that everything is all set with one of the following commands:
$ ls /sys/kernel/iommu_groups
OR
$ dmesg | grep -ie 'IOMMU\s\+enabled'
Everything is all set if the outputs of the commands above are not empty.
Option 1: Obtain Packages
Gatekeeper Debian packages are available for Ubuntu 20.04 LTS at the project's Releases page.
Install
Once the packages are downloaded, they can be installed with the commands below:
$ tar -zxvf gatekeeper-ubuntu-20.04-packages.tar.gz
$ cd gatekeeper-ubuntu-20.04-packages
$ sudo dpkg -i dpdk-rte-kni-dkms_*_amd64.deb gatekeeper-bird_*_amd64.deb gatekeeper_*_amd64.deb
The dpdk-rte-kni-dkms
package is a DKMS (Dynamic Kernel Modules Support)
package, which builds the rte_kni
kernel module during installation and kernel
upgrades.
Configure Gatekeeper
When installed via Debian packages, Gatekeeper configuration files are located
in /etc/gatekeeper
. You should edit at least the net.lua
file, and set the
front_ports
, front_ips
, back_ports
and back_ips
variables according to
your environment.
The other Lua files configure different Gatekeeper functional blocks. Please refer to the project's wiki for further information on whether these need to be changed in your setup.
You also need to edit the /etc/gatekeeper/envvars
file and set the
GATEKEEPER_INTERFACES
variable to the PCI addresses of the network adapters
to be bound to DPDK. These can found using the lshw
command. For example:
# lshw -c network -businfo
Bus info Device Class Description
=======================================================
pci@0000:08:00.0 eth0 network I350 Gigabit Network Connection
pci@0000:08:00.1 eth1 network I350 Gigabit Network Connection
...
Given this output, set GATEKEEPER_INTERFACES
as below:
GATEKEEPER_INTERFACES="08:00.0 08:00.1"
In the same file, you can optionally specify
Environmental Abstraction Layer options
in the DPDK_ARGS
variable and
Gatekeeper-specific options
in GATEKEEPER_ARGS
.
How to run
Run the commands below to start Gatekeeper and to ensure it is started automatically on reboots.
$ sudo systemctl start gatekeeper
$ sudo systemctl enable gatekeeper
Option 2: Build from Source
Install Dependencies
Install the following software dependencies:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get -y -q install git clang devscripts doxygen libhugetlbfs-bin \
build-essential gcc-multilib linux-headers-`uname -r` libmnl0 libmnl-dev \
libkmod2 libkmod-dev libnuma-dev libelf1 libelf-dev libc6-dev-i386 \
autoconf flex bison libncurses5-dev libreadline-dev python \
libcap-dev libcap2 meson ninja-build
Note: Both libmnl0
and libmnl-dev
are needed to compile and run
gatekeeper
, but only libmnl0
is needed for simply running gatekeeper
.
Both libkmod2
and libkmod-dev
are needed to compile and run gatekeeper
,
but only libkmod2
is needed for simply running gatekeeper
.
libnuma-dev
is needed to compile the latest DPDK and to support NUMA systems.
The package libelf-dev
is needed to compile DPDK with support to reading
BPF programs from ELF files, but only libelf1
is needed to run it.
The package libc6-dev-i386
is needed to compile the BPF programs in
the folder bpf/
.
The autoconf
, flex
, bison
, libncurses5-dev
, and
libreadline-dev
packages are for BIRD. The devscripts
package is used to
build Gatekeeper Debian packages.
python
is needed to be able to run the dpdk-devbind.py
script.
libcap-dev
is needed to compile Gatekeeper, but only libcap2
is needed
to run Gatekeeper.
meson
and ninja-build
are needed for building DPDK.
To use DPDK, make sure you have all of the environmental requirements.
Clone Repository
Clone the Gatekeeper repository, including the submodules that contain Gatekeeper dependencies:
$ git clone --recursive http://github.com/AltraMayor/gatekeeper.git
If you do not use the --recursive
clone option, you need to obtain the
submodules that contain the dependences from within the gatekeeper
directory:
$ git submodule init
$ git submodule update
Compile
This section explains how to build Gatekeeper manually. If you want to build Debian packages, refer to the section How to build packages.
While in the gatekeeper
directory, run the setup script:
$ . setup.sh
This script compiles DPDK, LuaJIT, and BIRD, and loads the needed
kernel modules. Additionally, it saves the interface names and their
respective PCI addresses in the file lua/if_map.lua
so that interface
names can be used in the Gatekeeper configuration files.
Once DPDK and LuaJIT are compiled, gatekeeper
can be compiled:
$ make
Configure Network Adapters
Before gatekeeper
can be used, the network adapters must be bound to DPDK.
For this, you can use the script dependencies/dpdk/usertools/dpdk-devbind.py
.
For example:
$ sudo dependencies/dpdk/usertools/dpdk-devbind.py --bind=vfio-pci enp131s0f0
This command binds the interface enp131s0f0
to the vfio-pci
driver
so that frames can be passed directly to DPDK instead of the kernel. Note
that this binding must take place after Gatekeeper is setup in the steps
above so that the bound interface appears in the list of interfaces in
lua/if_map.lua
.
How to Run
Once gatekeeper
is compiled and the environment is configured correctly, run:
$ sudo build/gatekeeper [EAL OPTIONS] -- [GATEKEEPER OPTIONS]
Where [EAL OPTIONS]
are specified before a double dash and represent the
parameters for DPDK's Environmental Abstraction Layer
and [GATEKEEPER OPTIONS]
are specified after the double dash and
represent Gatekeeper-specific options.
The early configuration of the system, including device and memory configuration in DPDK, will be logged to stdout. Once Gatekeeper is booted, all information is output to the Gatekeeper log.
How to build packages
Gatekeeper Debian packages can be built with the commands below. They are meant to be run from the repository root and assume the git submodules have been pulled, and that the build dependencies have been installed, as instructed above. Gatekeeper and the submodules will be automatically compiled during the package build process.
$ tar --exclude-vcs -Jcvf ../gatekeeper_1.1.0.orig.tar.xz -C .. gatekeeper
$ debuild -uc -us
The Gatekeeper package will be available in the parent directory.