Local-in policy
While security profiles control traffic flowing through the FortiGate, local-in policies control inbound traffic that is going to a FortiGate interface.
Administrative access traffic (HTTPS, PING, SSH, and others) can be controlled by allowing or denying the service in the interface settings. Trusted hosts can be configured under an administrator to restrict the hosts that can access the administrative service.
Local-in policies allow administrators to granularly define the source and destination addresses, interface, and services. Traffic destined for the FortiGate interface specified in the policy that meets the other criteria is subject to the policies action.
Local-in policies can be used to restrict administrative access or other services, such as VPN, that can be specified as services. You can define source addresses or address groups to restrict access from. For example, by using a geographic type address you can restrict a certain geographic set of IP addresses from accessing the FortiGate. An IP Address threat feed can also be used as either a source or destination address; see Applying an IP address threat feed in a local-in policy for more information.
Local-in policies can also use virtual patching to mitigate known vulnerabilities targeted at the FortiGate. Vulnerability rules are scanned on local-in traffic on the specified interface, and all matched local-in traffic is dropped accordingly. See Virtual patching on the local-in management interface for more information.
Local-in policies can only be created or edited in the CLI. You can view the existing local-in policies in the GUI by enabling it in System > Feature Visibility under the Additional Features section. This page does not list the custom local-in policies. |
To configure a local-in policy using the CLI:
config firewall {local-in-policy | local-in-policy6} edit <policy_number> set intf <interface> set srcaddr <source_address> [source_address] ... set dstaddr <destination_address> [destination_address] ... set action {accept | deny} set service <service_name> [service_name] ... set schedule <schedule_name> set virtual-patch {enable | disable} set comments <string> next end
For example, to prevent the source subnet 10.10.10.0/24 from pinging port1, but allow administrative access for PING on port1:
config firewall address edit "10.10.10.0" set subnet 10.10.10.0 255.255.255.0 next end config firewall local-in-policy edit 1 set intf "port1" set srcaddr "10.10.10.0" set dstaddr "all" set service "PING" set schedule "always" next end
To test the configuration:
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From the PC at 10.10.10.12, start a continuous ping to port1:
ping 192.168.2.5 –t
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On the FortiGate, enable debug flow:
# diagnose debug flow filter addr 10.10.10.12 # diagnose debug flow filter proto 1 # diagnose debug enable # diagnose debug flow trace start 10
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The output of the debug flow shows that traffic is dropped by local-in policy 1:
# id=20085 trace_id=1 func=print_pkt_detail line=5746 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 10.10.10.12:1->192.168.2.5:2048) from port1. type=8, code=0, id=1, seq=128." id=20085 trace_id=1 func=init_ip_session_common line=5918 msg="allocate a new session-0017c5ad" id=20085 trace_id=1 func=vf_ip_route_input_common line=2615 msg="find a route: flag=80000000 gw-192.168.2.5 via root" id=20085 trace_id=1 func=fw_local_in_handler line=474 msg="iprope_in_check() check failed on policy 1, drop"
Implicit deny rule
If a local-in-policy is not functioning correctly and traffic that should be blocked is being allowed through, the issue may be that the implicit deny local-in-policy has not been created. Unlike IPv4 policies, there is no default implicit deny policy. The implicit deny policy should be placed at the bottom of the list of local-in-policies. Local-in-policies are created for each interface, but if you want to create a general implicit deny rule for all interfaces for a specific service, source, address, or destination address, use the any
interface.
By default, no local-in policies are defined, so there are no restrictions on local-in traffic. When you define a local-in policy, if no action is set manually, then the action will default to |
For example, to allow only the source subnet 172.16.200.0/24 to ping port1:
config firewall address edit "172.16.200.0" set subnet 172.16.200.0 255.255.255.0 next end config firewall local-in-policy edit 2 set intf "port1" set srcaddr "172.16.200.0" set dstaddr "all" set action accept set service "PING" set schedule "always" next edit 3 set intf "port1" set srcaddr "all" set dstaddr "all" set service "PING" set schedule "always" next end
To test the configuration:
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From the PC at 172.16.200.2, start a continuous ping to port1:
ping 172.16.200.1 –t
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On the FortiGate, enable debug flow:
# diagnose debug flow filter proto 1 # diagnose debug enable # diagnose debug flow trace start 10
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The output of the debug flow shows that ping traffic coming from the 172.16.200.0 subnet is allowed:
# id=65308 trace_id=25 func=print_pkt_detail line=5939 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 172.16.200.2:5->172.16.200.1:2048) tun_id=0.0.0.0 from port1. type=8, code=0, id=5, seq=0." id=65308 trace_id=25 func=init_ip_session_common line=6121 msg="allocate a new session-00029409, tun_id=0.0.0.0" id=65308 trace_id=25 func=__vf_ip_route_input_rcu line=2012 msg="find a route: flag=80000000 gw-0.0.0.0 via root" id=65308 trace_id=25 func=ip_session_confirm_final line=3189 msg="npu_state=0x0, hook=1" id=65308 trace_id=26 func=print_pkt_detail line=5939 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 172.16.200.1:5->172.16.200.2:0) tun_id=0.0.0.0 from local. type=0, code=0, id=5, seq=0." id=65308 trace_id=26 func=resolve_ip_tuple_fast line=6027 msg="Find an existing session, id-00029409, reply direction" id=65308 trace_id=27 func=print_pkt_detail line=5939 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 172.16.200.2:5->172.16.200.1:2048) tun_id=0.0.0.0 from port1. type=8, code=0, id=5, seq=1." id=65308 trace_id=27 func=resolve_ip_tuple_fast line=6027 msg="Find an existing session, id-00029409, original direction" id=65308 trace_id=28 func=print_pkt_detail line=5939 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 172.16.200.1:5->172.16.200.2:0) tun_id=0.0.0.0 from local. type=0, code=0, id=5, seq=1."
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From the PC at 172.20.120.13, start a continuous ping to port1:
ping 172.16.200.1 -t
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The output of the debug flow shows that ping traffic coming from subnets other than 172.16.200.0 is dropped by local-in policy 3:
# id=65308 trace_id=21 func=print_pkt_detail line=5939 msg="vd-root:0 received a packet(proto=1, 172.20.120.13:1->172.16.200.1:2048) tun_id=0.0.0.0 from port2. type=8, code=0, id=1, seq=8." id=65308 trace_id=21 func=init_ip_session_common line=6121 msg="allocate a new session-0002929d, tun_id=0.0.0.0" id=65308 trace_id=21 func=__vf_ip_route_input_rcu line=2012 msg="find a route: flag=80000000 gw-0.0.0.0 via root" id=65308 trace_id=21 func=__iprope_tree_check line=520 msg="gnum-100004, use int hash, slot=51, len=2" id=65308 trace_id=21 func=fw_local_in_handler line=545 msg="iprope_in_check() check failed on policy 3, drop"
Additional options
To disable or re-enable the local-in policy, use the set status {enable | disable}
command.
To dedicate the interface as an HA management interface, use the set ha-mgmt-intf-only enable
command.
Example:
config firewall local-in-policy edit 1 set ha-mgmt-intf-only enable set intf port4 set srcaddr all set dstaddr all set service ALL set schedule always set action accept set status enable next end
If a user tries to set the HA reserved management interface during the local-in policy an error is generated. Use the |
TTL policies
You can configure a time-to-live (TTL) policy to block attack traffic with high TTLs. This feature only applies to local-in traffic and does not apply to traffic passing through the FortiGate. You can use srcintf
to set the interface that the local-in traffic hits. See config firewall ttl-policy.
To configure a TTL policy using the CLI:
config firewall ttl-policy edit <id> set status {enable | disable} set action {accept | deny} set srcintf <interface> set srcaddr <source_address> [source_address] ... set service <service_name> [service_name] ... set schedule <schedule_name> set ttl <value/range> next end
Internet service as source addresses
An internet service can be used as the source address in a local-in policy. This allows for more flexibility and control when managing local traffic, enhancing network security and efficiency.
config firewall local-in-policy edit <id> set internet-service-src {enable | disable} set internet-service-src-name <string> set internet-service-src-group <string> set internet-service-src-custom <string> set internet-service-src-custom-group <string> set internet-service-src-negate {enable | disable} next end
internet-service-src {enable | disable} |
Enable/disable use of Internet Services in source for this local-in policy. If enabled, the source address is not used. |
internet-service-src-name <string> |
Internet Service source name. |
internet-service-src-group <string> |
Internet Service source group name. |
internet-service-src-custom <string> |
Custom Internet Service source name. |
internet-service-src-custom-group <string> |
Custom Internet Service source group name. |
internet-service-src-negate {enable | disable} |
When enabled, |