FireBrick 2700 Configuration run-through: Difference between revisions

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<user name="john" timeout="PT20M" level="DEBUG" password="secret"/>
<user name="john" timeout="PT20M" level="DEBUG" password="secret"/>
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>

To explain the timeout a bit:
The timeout is how long this user stays logged in to the FB admin pages/telnet.
PT (Period Time)
20M is 20 minutes.
You can just enter 3600, and it will convert it to PH1H (as in a number on it's own will mean seconds).


Modify the ntp time server to use the AAISP time server:
Modify the ntp time server to use the AAISP time server:

Revision as of 16:40, 11 Ocak 2011

Also See:

Overview

Here we will build a config file for a FB2700, from scratch, it should help you to build a configuration for your line(s) and help you understand the XML syntax etc. The examples are relevant for ADSL (Be and BT) as well as FTTC through AAISP.

These examples are based on V0.00.608 (2011-01-05), and future firmware releases may have different configuration requirements. Som people converting from a 105 may prefer to also use the 105 converter tool, and base that output on the configuration for your new 2700. more info at: http://www.firebrick.co.uk/fb105config.php

These config examples havn't been fully reviewed yet, so please bear that in mind, they are based on a working config though.

We have an AAISP ADSL line with the following details:

  • Username= abc@a.1 Password=secret
  • Routed IP block = 1.2.3.0/28

(Later in the page, we'll be adding an IPv6 block, and bonding with a second line)

Default Config

The default configuration (of a fully-loaded FireBrick) looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<config xmlns="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/ http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/0.00.605.xsd"
timestamp="1970-01-01T00:00:07Z">
<port name="LAN1" ports="1"/>
<port name="LAN2" ports="2"/>
<port name="LAN3" ports="3"/>
<port name="LAN4" ports="4"/>
<interface name="LAN1" port="LAN1">
<subnet comment="dhcp client"/>
<subnet ip="2001:DB8::1/64 10.0.0.1/24" nat="true" comment="Temporary IPs for setup only, delete when finished configuring"/>
<dhcp ip="10.0.0.100-199"/>
</interface>
<ppp port="LAN4" username="startup_user@startup_domain" password="" comment="Example PPPoE config for DSL/FTTC/FTTP/etc"/>
<services>
<ntp/>
<telnet comment="Set allow IP list to restrict access"/>
<http/>
</services>
<rule-set target-interface="LAN1" drop="reject" comment="default firewall rule - block incoming">
<rule source-interface="self" comment="allow from the FireBrick though"/>
</rule-set>
</config>

Which sets up the 4 Ethernet ports as separate LANs, and an IP of 10.0.0.1 (and 2001:DB8::1) with the FireBrick acting DHCP server on the first port. So, connecting a computer to Port 1 should get you a 10.0.0.x IP address, and you can access http://10.0.0.1 . Port 1 is also a DHCP client, so it will try to get an IP from your DHCP server, if you have one. -Check your DHCP server logs for what IP is allocated.

Port 4 is set as an example of a PPPoE client, (ie to be plugged in to a ADSL modem/FTTC modem etc) we'll set this up a little later.

Configuring Initial Basic Settings

Set yourself a user with full debug rights, eg:

<user name="john" timeout="PT20M" level="DEBUG" password="secret"/>

To explain the timeout a bit: The timeout is how long this user stays logged in to the FB admin pages/telnet. PT (Period Time) 20M is 20 minutes. You can just enter 3600, and it will convert it to PH1H (as in a number on it's own will mean seconds).

Modify the ntp time server to use the AAISP time server:

<ntp timeserver="time.aaisp.net.uk"/>

modify the telnet service to permit only access from your LAN:

<telnet allow="1.2.3.0/28"/>

Set DNS servers and your domain name, under the services (here we're using the AAISP DNS servers:

<dns domain="yourdomain.tld" resolvers="217.169.20.20 217.169.20.21"/>

LAN Subnet

We want to use just Ethernet port 1 on the FireBrick for our LAN, we'll be connecting port 1 to a switch, and all our devices will be plugged in to that switch.

So, first we'll add a new subnet, this can go under the current 10.0.0.1 subnet (which we'll delete later.) And we'll make this a DHCP server:

<subnet ip="1.2.3.1/28" comment="LAN"/>
<dhcp ip="1.2.3.2-12"/>

Remove the existing DHCP settings for the 10.0.0.1 interface. The LAN! interface now looks like this:

<interface port="LAN1">
<subnet comment="dhcp client"/>
<subnet ip="2001:DB8::1/64 10.0.0.1/24" nat="true" comment="Temporary IPs for setup only, delete when finished configuring"/>
<subnet ip="1.2.3.1/28" comment="LAN"/>
<dhcp ip="1.2.3.2-12"/>
</interface>

Our complete config now looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<config xmlns="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"  xsi:schemaLocation="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/ http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/0.00.605.xsd" timestamp="1970-01-01T00:00:07Z">
<user name="john" timeout="PT20M" level="DEBUG" password="secret"/>
<port name="LAN1" ports="1"/>
<port name="LAN2" ports="2"/>
<port name="LAN3" ports="3"/>
<port name="LAN4" ports="4"/>
<interface name="LAN1" port="LAN1">
<subnet comment="dhcp client"/>
<subnet ip="2001:DB8::1/64 10.0.0.1/24" nat="true" comment="Temporary IPs for setup only, delete when finished configuring"/>
<subnet ip="1.2.3.1/28" comment="LAN"/>
<dhcp ip="1.2.3.2-12"/>
</interface>
<ppp port="LAN4" username="startup_user@startup_domain" password="" comment="Example PPPoE config for DSL/FTTC/FTTP/etc"/>
<services>
<dns domain="yourdomain.tld" resolvers="217.169.20.20 217.169.20.21"/>
<ntp timeserver="90.155.53.32 2001:8B0:0:53::5A9B:3520"/>
<telnet allow="1.2.3.0/28"/>
<http/>
</services>
<rule-set target-interface="LAN1" drop="reject" comment="default firewall rule - block incoming">
<rule source-interface="self" comment="allow from the FireBrick though"/>
</rule-set>
</config>

At this point we can save the config, there should be no errors.

Our computer should then pick up a new 1.2.3.x IP address, and we can connected back to the FireBrick on http://1.2.3.1

if that works, we can now safely remove the DHCP client subnet and the 10.0.0.1 subnet, so remove the lines:

<subnet comment="dhcp client"/>
<subnet ip="2001:DB8::1/64 10.0.0.1/24" nat="true" comment="Temporary IPs for setup only, delete when finished configuring"/>

Save, and re-connect to the web interface.

PPPoE

More info on http://www.firebrick.co.uk/fb2700/pppoe.php

The FireBrick 2700 supports PPPoE - so you can use it to connect via an xDSL modem, eg a:

  • A BT supplied FTTC Modem
  • A standard issue AAISP ZyXEL P660-D1, in bridge mode (Go to: Wan - Wan setup, mode Bridge, Encapsulation RFC1483, Multiplex LLC)
  • Another ADSL router set for bridge mode
  • A modem such as a Draytek 120

In our default config, you can see that we already have some PPPoE settings:

<ppp port="LAN4" username="startup_user@startup_domain" password="" comment="Example PPPoE config for DSL/FTTC/FTTP/etc"/>

This is using Ethernet port 4, so plug your modem in to that port.

This line can be changed for your ADSL settings, eg:

<ppp port="WAN1" username="abc@a.1" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL" log="true"/>

We've also set the FireBrick to create a graph for this, as well as to log.

We've changed the port to WAN1, so we also need to change the port config earlier in the file, so change

<port name="LAN4" ports="4"/>

to:

<port name="WAN1" ports="4"/>

Our complete config in full now looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<config xmlns="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/ http://firebrick.ltd.uk/xml/fb2700/0.00.605.xsd" timestamp="1970-01-01T00:00:07Z">
<user name="john" timeout="PT20M" level="DEBUG" password="secret"/>
<port name="LAN1" ports="1"/>
<port name="LAN2" ports="2"/>
<port name="LAN3" ports="3"/>
<port name="WAN1" ports="4"/>
<interface name="LAN1" port="LAN1">
<subnet comment="dhcp client"/>
<subnet ip="2001:DB8::1/64 10.0.0.1/24" nat="true" comment="Temporary IPs for setup only, delete when finished configuring"/>
<subnet ip="1.2.3.1/28" comment="LAN"/>
<dhcp ip="1.2.3.2-12"/>
</interface>
<ppp port="WAN1" username="abc@a.1" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL" log="true"/>
<services>
<dns domain="yourdomain.tld" resolvers="217.169.20.20 217.169.20.21"/>
<ntp timeserver="90.155.53.32 2001:8B0:0:53::5A9B:3520"/>
<telnet allow="1.2.3.0/28"/>
<http/>
</services>
<rule-set target-interface="LAN1" drop="reject" comment="default firewall rule - block incoming">
<rule source-interface="self" comment="allow from the FireBrick though"/>
</rule-set>
</config>

By default the PPPoE will be used as the default route, saving this config should mean you have an internet connection!

1500 MTU?

The Default MTU is 1492 for PPPoE. However if your modem supports jumboframes, then you should be able to use a full 1500MTU on the PPPoE. The BT supplied modem for FTTC does support this, other modems may or may not... Config wise, just add mtu="1500" to the ppp element. eg:

<ppp port="WAN1" username="abc@a.1" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL" log="true" mtu="1500"/>

Filters

More info on http://www.firebrick.co.uk/fb2700/firewall.php

The default filters will block incoming traffic, and allow outgoing traffic.

VoIP Rules

If you have VoIP phones on your LAN, then here are some example rules to allow SIP and RTP from the AAISP phone servers:

<rule name="SIP" source-ip="81.187.30.110-119" target-ip="1.2.3.0/28" target-port="5060-5069"/>
<rule name="RTP" target-ip="1.2.3.0/28" protocol="17" target-port="1025-5059 5070-" set-graph="RTP"/>

This also sets a graph for RTP, you may want to restrict the target to just your VoIP phones, as the above set the target at the whole of the LAN

Restricting FireBrick Config access

You may only want to allow access to the FireBrick webserver from your LAN, do this in the http service, eg, change the current line to:

<http allow="1.2.3.1/28"/>

Native IPv6

Assuming you have an IPv6 block allocated to your line on Clueless and you're using the FB for PPPoE, then all the FB config needs is:

  • An IPv6 address on the LAN subnet
  • ra="true" in the subnet

Your computers should then get IPv6 details. test on http://ip.help.me.uk.

If you need to use Tunnelled IPv6, rather than Native, see this page: *FireBrick 2700 v6 Tunnel


Next Steps, Bonding a Second Line

More info on http://www.firebrick.co.uk/fb2700/bonding.php

Set up second PPPoE

Set up port 3 to connect to the second modem you have, ie:

<ppp port="WAN2" username="abc@a.2" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL 2" log="true"/>

and change the port from:

<port name="LAN3" ports="3"/>

to

<port name="WAN2" ports="3"/>

If you prefer, you can rearrange the ports so that they are in sequential order etc...

We now have:

  • Port 1 = LAN
  • Port 2 = Spare
  • Port 3 = ADSL Line 2
  • Port 4 = ADSL Line 1

Bond the PPPoE:

Bonding on a 2700 requires the Bonding capability - found on the Fully-Loaded and Bonding variants.

Simply setting speed=x in the ppp config will bond the PPPoE for uplink

eg:

<ppp port="WAN1" username="abc@a.1" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL" log="true" speed="1000000"/>
<ppp port="WAN2" username="abc@a.2" password="secret" comment="BT ADSL" graph="BT ADSL 2" log="true" speed="1000000"/>

Since each PPP connection will give the FireBrick a default route, the FireBrick will use both, and upload traffic on each ppp connection up to the speed given. The speed is in bits, so this example is where the upload is 1M. If the upload is different on the lines, then that's fine - eg, you may have a line using Annex-A and one Annex-M. Setting the speed correctly will mean the correct amount of traffic will be sent up each line.

Set Ports 1 and 2 to be a switch

To make use of port 2, we can configure it to be another LAN1 port. Our current port config is:

<port name="LAN1" ports="1"/>
<port name="LAN2" ports="2"/>
<port name="WAN2" ports="3"/>
<port name="WAN1" ports="4"/>

We can change this to make port 2 a LAN1 port:

<port name="LAN1" ports="1 2"/>
<port name="WAN2" ports="3"/>
<port name="WAN1" ports="4"/>

Now ports 1 and 2 act as a switch on the LAN interface.