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NFT(8)   NFT(8)

nft - Administration tool of the nftables framework for packet filtering and classification

nft [ -nNscaeSupyjtT ] [ -I directory ] [ -f filename | -i | cmd ...]
nft -h
nft -v

nft is the command line tool used to set up, maintain and inspect packet filtering and classification rules in the Linux kernel, in the nftables framework. The Linux kernel subsystem is known as nf_tables, and ‘nf’ stands for Netfilter.

The command accepts several different options which are documented here in groups for better understanding of their meaning. You can get information about options by running nft --help.

General options:

-h, --help

Show help message and all options.

-v, --version

Show version.

-V

Show long version information, including compile-time configuration.

Ruleset input handling options that specify to how to load rulesets:

-f, --file filename

Read input from filename. If filename is -, read from stdin. The directory path to this file is inserted at the beginning the list of directories to be searched for included files (see -I/--includepath).

-D, --define name=value

Define a variable. You can only combine this option with -f.

-i, --interactive

Read input from an interactive readline CLI. You can use quit to exit, or use the EOF marker, normally this is CTRL-D.

-I, --includepath directory

Add the directory directory to the list of directories to be searched for included files. This option may be specified multiple times.

-c, --check

Check commands validity without actually applying the changes.

-o, --optimize

Optimize your ruleset. You can combine this option with -c to inspect the proposed optimizations.

Ruleset list output formatting that modify the output of the list ruleset command:

-a, --handle

Show object handles in output.

-s, --stateless

Omit stateful information of rules and stateful objects.

-t, --terse

Omit contents of sets from output.

-S, --service

Translate ports to service names as defined by /etc/services.

-N, --reversedns

Translate IP address to names via reverse DNS lookup. This may slow down your listing since it generates network traffic.

-u, --guid

Translate numeric UID/GID to names as defined by /etc/passwd and /etc/group.

-n, --numeric

Print fully numerical output.

-y, --numeric-priority

Display base chain priority numerically.

-p, --numeric-protocol

Display layer 4 protocol numerically.

-T, --numeric-time

Show time, day and hour values in numeric format.

Command output formatting:

-e, --echo

When inserting items into the ruleset using add, insert or replace commands, print notifications just like nft monitor.

-j, --json

Format output in JSON. See libnftables-json(5) for a schema description.

-d, --debug level

Enable debugging output. The debug level can be any of scanner, parser, eval, netlink, mnl, proto-ctx, segtree, all. You can combine more than one by separating by the , symbol, for example -d eval,mnl.

Input is parsed line-wise. When the last character of a line, just before the newline character, is a non-quoted backslash (\), the next line is treated as a continuation. Multiple commands on the same line can be separated using a semicolon (;).

A hash sign (#) begins a comment. All following characters on the same line are ignored.

Identifiers begin with an alphabetic character (a-z,A-Z), followed by zero or more alphanumeric characters (a-z,A-Z,0-9) and the characters slash (/), backslash (\), underscore (_) and dot (.). Identifiers using different characters or clashing with a keyword need to be enclosed in double quotes (").

include filename

Other files can be included by using the include statement. The directories to be searched for include files can be specified using the -I/--includepath option. You can override this behaviour either by prepending ‘./’ to your path to force inclusion of files located in the current working directory (i.e. relative path) or / for file location expressed as an absolute path.

If -I/--includepath is not specified, then nft relies on the default directory that is specified at compile time. You can retrieve this default directory via the -h/--help option.

Include statements support the usual shell wildcard symbols (,?,[]). Having no matches for an include statement is not an error, if wildcard symbols are used in the include statement. This allows having potentially empty include directories for statements like include "/etc/firewall/rules/". The wildcard matches are loaded in alphabetical order. Files beginning with dot (.) are not matched by include statements.

define variable = expr
undefine variable
redefine variable = expr
$variable

Symbolic variables can be defined using the define statement. Variable references are expressions and can be used to initialize other variables. The scope of a definition is the current block and all blocks contained within. Symbolic variables can be undefined using the undefine statement, and modified using the redefine statement.

Using symbolic variables.

define int_if1 = eth0
define int_if2 = eth1
define int_ifs = { $int_if1, $int_if2 }
redefine int_if2 = wlan0
undefine int_if2
filter input iif $int_ifs accept

Address families determine the type of packets which are processed. For each address family, the kernel contains so called hooks at specific stages of the packet processing paths, which invoke nftables if rules for these hooks exist.

ip IPv4 address family.
ip6 IPv6 address family.
inet Internet (IPv4/IPv6) address family.
arp ARP address family, handling IPv4 ARP packets.
bridge Bridge address family, handling packets which traverse a bridge device.
netdev Netdev address family, handling packets on ingress and egress.

All nftables objects exist in address family specific namespaces, therefore all identifiers include an address family. If an identifier is specified without an address family, the ip family is used by default.

The IPv4/IPv6/Inet address families handle IPv4, IPv6 or both types of packets. They contain five hooks at different packet processing stages in the network stack.

Table 1. IPv4/IPv6/Inet address family hooks

Hook Description
prerouting All packets entering the system are processed by the prerouting hook. It is invoked before the routing process and is used for early filtering or changing packet attributes that affect routing.
input Packets delivered to the local system are processed by the input hook.
forward Packets forwarded to a different host are processed by the forward hook.
output Packets sent by local processes are processed by the output hook.
postrouting All packets leaving the system are processed by the postrouting hook.
ingress All packets entering the system are processed by this hook. It is invoked before layer 3 protocol handlers, hence before the prerouting hook, and it can be used for filtering and policing. Ingress is only available for Inet family (since Linux kernel 5.10).

The ARP address family handles ARP packets received and sent by the system. It is commonly used to mangle ARP packets for clustering.

Table 2. ARP address family hooks

Hook Description
input Packets delivered to the local system are processed by the input hook.
output Packets send by the local system are processed by the output hook.

The bridge address family handles Ethernet packets traversing bridge devices.

The list of supported hooks is identical to IPv4/IPv6/Inet address families above.

The Netdev address family handles packets from the device ingress and egress path. This family allows you to filter packets of any ethertype such as ARP, VLAN 802.1q, VLAN 802.1ad (Q-in-Q) as well as IPv4 and IPv6 packets.

Table 3. Netdev address family hooks

Hook Description
ingress All packets entering the system are processed by this hook. It is invoked after the network taps (ie. tcpdump), right after tc ingress and before layer 3 protocol handlers, it can be used for early filtering and policing.
egress All packets leaving the system are processed by this hook. It is invoked after layer 3 protocol handlers and before tc egress. It can be used for late filtering and policing.

Tunneled packets (such as vxlan) are processed by netdev family hooks both in decapsulated and encapsulated (tunneled) form. So a packet can be filtered on the overlay network as well as on the underlying network.

Note that the order of netfilter and tc is mirrored on ingress versus egress. This ensures symmetry for NAT and other packet mangling.

Ingress packets which are redirected out some other interface are only processed by netfilter on egress if they have passed through netfilter ingress processing before. Thus, ingress packets which are redirected by tc are not subjected to netfilter. But they are if they are redirected by netfilter on ingress. Conceptually, tc and netfilter can be thought of as layers, with netfilter layered above tc: If the packet hasn’t been passed up from the tc layer to the netfilter layer, it’s not subjected to netfilter on egress.

{list | flush} ruleset [family]

The ruleset keyword is used to identify the whole set of tables, chains, etc. currently in place in kernel. The following ruleset commands exist:

list Print the ruleset in human-readable format.
flush Clear the whole ruleset. Note that, unlike iptables, this will remove all tables and whatever they contain, effectively leading to an empty ruleset - no packet filtering will happen anymore, so the kernel accepts any valid packet it receives.

It is possible to limit list and flush to a specific address family only. For a list of valid family names, see the section called “ADDRESS FAMILIES” above.

By design, list ruleset command output may be used as input to nft -f. Effectively, this is the nft-equivalent of iptables-save and iptables-restore.

{add | create} table [family] table [{ [comment comment ;] [flags flags ;] }]
{delete | destroy | list | flush} table [family] table
list tables [family]
delete table [family] handle handle
destroy table [family] handle handle

Tables are containers for chains, sets and stateful objects. They are identified by their address family and their name. The address family must be one of ip, ip6, inet, arp, bridge, netdev. The inet address family is a dummy family which is used to create hybrid IPv4/IPv6 tables. The meta expression nfproto keyword can be used to test which family (ipv4 or ipv6) context the packet is being processed in. When no address family is specified, ip is used by default. The only difference between add and create is that the former will not return an error if the specified table already exists while create will return an error.

Table 4. Table flags

Flag Description
dormant table is not evaluated any more (base chains are unregistered).
owner table is owned by the creating process.
persist table shall outlive the owning process.

Creating a table with flag owner excludes other processes from manipulating it or its contents. By default, it will be removed when the process exits. Setting flag persist will prevent this and the resulting orphaned table will accept a new owner, e.g. a restarting daemon maintaining the table.

Add, change, delete a table.

# start nft in interactive mode
nft --interactive
# create a new table.
create table inet mytable
# add a new base chain: get input packets
add chain inet mytable myin { type filter hook input priority filter; }
# add a single counter to the chain
add rule inet mytable myin counter
# disable the table temporarily -- rules are not evaluated anymore
add table inet mytable { flags dormant; }
# make table active again:
add table inet mytable

add Add a new table for the given family with the given name.
delete Delete the specified table.
destroy Delete the specified table, it does not fail if it does not exist.
list List all chains and rules of the specified table.
flush Flush all chains and rules of the specified table.

{add | create} chain [family] table chain [{ type type hook hook [device device] priority priority ; [policy policy ;] [comment comment ;] }]
{delete | destroy | list | flush} chain [family] table chain
list chains [family]
delete chain [family] table handle handle
destroy chain [family] table handle handle
rename chain [family] table chain newname

Chains are containers for rules. They exist in two kinds, base chains and regular chains. A base chain is an entry point for packets from the networking stack, a regular chain may be used as jump target and is used for better rule organization.

add Add a new chain in the specified table. When a hook and priority value are specified, the chain is created as a base chain and hooked up to the networking stack.
create Similar to the add command, but returns an error if the chain already exists.
delete Delete the specified chain. The chain must not contain any rules or be used as jump target.
destroy Delete the specified chain, it does not fail if it does not exist. The chain must not contain any rules or be used as jump target.
rename Rename the specified chain.
list List all rules of the specified chain.
flush Flush all rules of the specified chain.

For base chains, type, hook and priority parameters are mandatory.

Table 5. Supported chain types

Type Families Hooks Description
filter all all Standard chain type to use in doubt.
nat ip, ip6, inet prerouting, input, output, postrouting Chains of this type perform Native Address Translation based on conntrack entries. Only the first packet of a connection actually traverses this chain - its rules usually define details of the created conntrack entry (NAT statements for instance).
route ip, ip6, inet output If a packet has traversed a chain of this type and is about to be accepted, a new route lookup is performed if relevant parts of the IP header have changed. This allows one to e.g. implement policy routing selectors in nftables.

Apart from the special cases illustrated above (e.g. nat type not supporting forward hook or route type only supporting output hook), there are three further quirks worth noticing:

•The netdev family supports merely two combinations, namely filter type with ingress hook and filter type with egress hook. Base chains in this family also require the device parameter to be present since they exist per interface only.

•The arp family supports only the input and output hooks, both in chains of type filter.

•The inet family also supports the ingress hook (since Linux kernel 5.10), to filter IPv4 and IPv6 packet at the same location as the netdev ingress hook. This inet hook allows you to share sets and maps between the usual prerouting, input, forward, output, postrouting and this ingress hook.

The device parameter accepts a network interface name as a string, and is required when adding a base chain that filters traffic on the ingress or egress hooks. Any ingress or egress chains will only filter traffic from the interface specified in the device parameter.

The priority parameter accepts a signed integer value or a standard priority name which specifies the order in which chains with the same hook value are traversed. The ordering is ascending, i.e. lower priority values have precedence over higher ones.

With nat type chains, there’s a lower excluding limit of -200 for priority values, because conntrack hooks at this priority and NAT requires it.

Standard priority values can be replaced with easily memorizable names. Not all names make sense in every family with every hook (see the compatibility matrices below) but their numerical value can still be used for prioritizing chains.

These names and values are defined and made available based on what priorities are used by xtables when registering their default chains.

Most of the families use the same values, but bridge uses different ones from the others. See the following tables that describe the values and compatibility.

Table 6. Standard priority names, family and hook compatibility matrix

Name Value Families Hooks
raw -300 ip, ip6, inet all
mangle -150 ip, ip6, inet all
dstnat -100 ip, ip6, inet prerouting
filter 0 ip, ip6, inet, arp, netdev all
security 50 ip, ip6, inet all
srcnat 100 ip, ip6, inet postrouting

Table 7. Standard priority names and hook compatibility for the bridge family

Name Value Hooks
dstnat -300 prerouting
filter -200 all
out 100 output
srcnat 300 postrouting

Basic arithmetic expressions (addition and subtraction) can also be achieved with these standard names to ease relative prioritizing, e.g. mangle - 5 stands for -155. Values will also be printed like this until the value is not further than 10 from the standard value.

Base chains also allow one to set the chain’s policy, i.e. what happens to packets not explicitly accepted or refused in contained rules. Supported policy values are accept (which is the default) or drop.

{add | insert} rule [family] table chain [handle handle | index index] statement ... [comment comment]
replace rule [family] table chain handle handle statement ... [comment comment]
{delete | reset} rule [family] table chain handle handle
destroy rule [family] table chain handle handle
reset rules [family] [table [chain]]

Rules are added to chains in the given table. If the family is not specified, the ip family is used. Rules are constructed from two kinds of components according to a set of grammatical rules: expressions and statements.

The add and insert commands support an optional location specifier, which is either a handle or the index (starting at zero) of an existing rule. Internally, rule locations are always identified by handle and the translation from index happens in userspace. This has two potential implications in case a concurrent ruleset change happens after the translation was done: The effective rule index might change if a rule was inserted or deleted before the referred one. If the referred rule was deleted, the command is rejected by the kernel just as if an invalid handle was given.

A comment is a single word or a double-quoted (") multi-word string which can be used to make notes regarding the actual rule. Note: If you use bash for adding rules, you have to escape the quotation marks, e.g. \"enable ssh for servers\".

add Add a new rule described by the list of statements. The rule is appended to the given chain unless a location is specified, in which case the rule is inserted after the specified rule.
insert Same as add except the rule is inserted at the beginning of the chain or before the specified rule.
replace Similar to add, but the rule replaces the specified rule.
delete Delete the specified rule.
destroy Delete the specified rule, it does not fail if it does not exist.
reset Reset rule-contained state, e.g. counter and quota statement values.

add a rule to ip table output chain.

nft add rule filter output ip daddr 192.168.0.0/24 accept # 'ip filter' is assumed
# same command, slightly more verbose
nft add rule ip filter output ip daddr 192.168.0.0/24 accept

delete rule from inet table.

# nft -a list ruleset
table inet filter {

chain input {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept;
ct state established,related accept # handle 4
ip saddr 10.1.1.1 tcp dport ssh accept # handle 5
... # delete the rule with handle 5 nft delete rule inet filter input handle 5

nftables offers two kinds of set concepts. Anonymous sets are sets that have no specific name. The set members are enclosed in curly braces, with commas to separate elements when creating the rule the set is used in. Once that rule is removed, the set is removed as well. They cannot be updated, i.e. once an anonymous set is declared it cannot be changed anymore except by removing/altering the rule that uses the anonymous set.

Using anonymous sets to accept particular subnets and ports.

nft add rule filter input ip saddr { 10.0.0.0/8, 192.168.0.0/16 } tcp dport { 22, 443 } accept

Named sets are sets that need to be defined first before they can be referenced in rules. Unlike anonymous sets, elements can be added to or removed from a named set at any time. Sets are referenced from rules using an @ prefixed to the sets name.

Using named sets to accept addresses and ports.

nft add rule filter input ip saddr @allowed_hosts tcp dport @allowed_ports accept

The sets allowed_hosts and allowed_ports need to be created first. The next section describes nft set syntax in more detail.

add set [family] table set { type type | typeof expression ; [flags flags ;] [timeout timeout ;] [gc-interval gc-interval ;] [elements = { element[, ...] } ;] [size size ;] [comment comment ;] [policy 'policy ;] [auto-merge ;] }
{delete | destroy | list | flush | reset } set [family] table set
list sets [family]
delete set [family] table handle handle
{add | delete | destroy } element [family] table set { element[, ...] }

Sets are element containers of a user-defined data type, they are uniquely identified by a user-defined name and attached to tables. Their behaviour can be tuned with the flags that can be specified at set creation time.

add Add a new set in the specified table. See the Set specification table below for more information about how to specify properties of a set.
delete Delete the specified set.
destroy Delete the specified set, it does not fail if it does not exist.
list Display the elements in the specified set.
flush Remove all elements from the specified set.
reset Reset state in all contained elements, e.g. counter and quota statement values.

Table 8. Set specifications

Keyword Description Type
type data type of set elements string: ipv4_addr, ipv6_addr, ether_addr, inet_proto, inet_service, mark
typeof data type of set element expression to derive the data type from
flags set flags string: constant, dynamic, interval, timeout. Used to describe the sets properties.
timeout time an element stays in the set, mandatory if set is added to from the packet path (ruleset) string, decimal followed by unit. Units are: d, h, m, s
gc-interval garbage collection interval, only available when timeout or flag timeout are active string, decimal followed by unit. Units are: d, h, m, s
elements elements contained by the set set data type
size maximum number of elements in the set, mandatory if set is added to from the packet path (ruleset) unsigned integer (64 bit)
policy set policy string: performance [default], memory
auto-merge automatic merge of adjacent/overlapping set elements (only for interval sets)

add map [family] table map { type type | typeof expression [flags flags ;] [elements = { element[, ...] } ;] [size size ;] [comment comment ;] [policy 'policy ;] }

{delete | destroy | list | flush | reset } map [family] table map list maps [family]

Maps store data based on some specific key used as input. They are uniquely identified by a user-defined name and attached to tables.

add Add a new map in the specified table.
delete Delete the specified map.
destroy Delete the specified map, it does not fail if it does not exist.
list Display the elements in the specified map.
flush Remove all elements from the specified map.
reset Reset state in all contained elements, e.g. counter and quota statement values.

Table 9. Map specifications

Keyword Description Type
type data type of map elements string: ipv4_addr, ipv6_addr, ether_addr, inet_proto, inet_service, mark, counter, quota. Counter and quota can’t be used as keys
typeof data type of set element expression to derive the data type from
flags map flags string, same as set flags
elements elements contained by the map map data type
size maximum number of elements in the map unsigned integer (64 bit)
policy map policy string: performance [default], memory

Users can specifiy the properties/features that the set/map must support. This allows the kernel to pick an optimal internal representation. If a required flag is missing, the ruleset might still work, as nftables will auto-enable features if it can infer this from the ruleset. This may not work for all cases, however, so it is recommended to specify all required features in the set/map definition manually.

Table 10. Set and Map flags

Flag Description
constant Set contents will never change after creation
dynamic Set must support updates from the packet path with the add, update or delete keywords.
interval Set must be able to store intervals (ranges)
timeout Set must support element timeouts (auto-removal of elements once they expire).

{add | create | delete | destroy | get | reset } element [family] table set { ELEMENT[, ...] }

ELEMENT := key_expression OPTIONS [: value_expression] OPTIONS := [timeout TIMESPEC] [expires TIMESPEC] [comment string] TIMESPEC := [numd][numh][numm][num[s]]

Element-related commands allow one to change contents of named sets and maps. key_expression is typically a value matching the set type. value_expression is not allowed in sets but mandatory when adding to maps, where it matches the data part in its type definition. When deleting from maps, it may be specified but is optional as key_expression uniquely identifies the element.

create command is similar to add with the exception that none of the listed elements may already exist.

get command is useful to check if an element is contained in a set which may be non-trivial in very large and/or interval sets. In the latter case, the containing interval is returned instead of just the element itself.

reset command resets state attached to the given element(s), e.g. counter and quota statement values.

Table 11. Element options

Option Description
timeout timeout value for sets/maps with flag timeout
expires the time until given element expires, useful for ruleset replication only
comment per element comment field

{add | create} flowtable [family] table flowtable { hook hook priority priority ; devices = { device[, ...] } ; }

list flowtables [family] {delete | destroy | list} flowtable [family] table flowtable delete flowtable [family] table handle handle

Flowtables allow you to accelerate packet forwarding in software. Flowtables entries are represented through a tuple that is composed of the input interface, source and destination address, source and destination port; and layer 3/4 protocols. Each entry also caches the destination interface and the gateway address - to update the destination link-layer address - to forward packets. The ttl and hoplimit fields are also decremented. Hence, flowtables provides an alternative path that allow packets to bypass the classic forwarding path. Flowtables reside in the ingress hook that is located before the prerouting hook. You can select which flows you want to offload through the flow expression from the forward chain. Flowtables are identified by their address family and their name. The address family must be one of ip, ip6, or inet. The inet address family is a dummy family which is used to create hybrid IPv4/IPv6 tables. When no address family is specified, ip is used by default.

The priority can be a signed integer or filter which stands for 0. Addition and subtraction can be used to set relative priority, e.g. filter + 5 equals to 5.

add Add a new flowtable for the given family with the given name.
delete Delete the specified flowtable.
destroy Delete the specified flowtable, it does not fail if it does not exist.
list List all flowtables.

{add | delete | destroy | list | reset} counter [family] table object
{add | delete | destroy | list | reset} quota [family] table object
{add | delete | destroy | list} limit [family] table object
delete counter [family] table handle handle
delete quota [family] table handle handle
delete limit [family] table handle handle
destroy counter [family] table handle handle
destroy quota [family] table handle handle
destroy limit [family] table handle handle
list counters [family]
list quotas [family]
list limits [family]
reset counters [family]
reset quotas [family]
reset counters [family] table
reset quotas [family] table

Stateful objects are attached to tables and are identified by a unique name. They group stateful information from rules, to reference them in rules the keywords "type name" are used e.g. "counter name".

add Add a new stateful object in the specified table.
delete Delete the specified object.
destroy Delete the specified object, it does not fail if it does not exist.
list Display stateful information the object holds.
reset List-and-reset stateful object.

add ct helper [family] table name { type type protocol protocol ; [l3proto family ;] }
delete ct helper [family] table name
list ct helpers

Ct helper is used to define connection tracking helpers that can then be used in combination with the ct helper set statement. type and protocol are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default, i.e. in the inet table the kernel will try to load both the ipv4 and ipv6 helper backends, if they are supported by the kernel.

Table 12. conntrack helper specifications

Keyword Description Type
type name of helper type quoted string (e.g. "ftp")
protocol layer 4 protocol of the helper string (e.g. ip)
l3proto layer 3 protocol of the helper address family (e.g. ip)
comment per ct helper comment field string

defining and assigning ftp helper.

Unlike iptables, helper assignment needs to be performed after the conntrack
lookup has completed, for example with the default 0 hook priority.
table inet myhelpers {

ct helper ftp-standard {
type "ftp" protocol tcp
}
chain prerouting {
type filter hook prerouting priority filter;
tcp dport 21 ct helper set "ftp-standard"
} }

add ct timeout  [family] table name { protocol protocol ; policy = { state: value [, ...] } ; [l3proto family ;] }
delete ct timeout [family] table name
list ct timeouts

Ct timeout is used to update connection tracking timeout values.Timeout policies are assigned with the ct timeout set statement. protocol and policy are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default.

Table 13. conntrack timeout specifications

Keyword Description Type
protocol layer 4 protocol of the timeout object string (e.g. ip)
state connection state name string (e.g. "established")
value timeout value for connection state unsigned integer
l3proto layer 3 protocol of the timeout object address family (e.g. ip)
comment per ct timeout comment field string

tcp connection state names that can have a specific timeout value are:

close, close_wait, established, fin_wait, last_ack, retrans, syn_recv, syn_sent, time_wait and unack.

You can use sysctl -a |grep net.netfilter.nf_conntrack_tcp_timeout_ to view and change the system-wide defaults. ct timeout allows for flow-specific settings, without changing the global timeouts.

For example, tcp port 53 could have much lower settings than other traffic.

udp state names that can have a specific timeout value are replied and unreplied.

defining and assigning ct timeout policy.

table ip filter {

ct timeout customtimeout {
protocol tcp;
l3proto ip
policy = { established: 2m, close: 20s }
}
chain output {
type filter hook output priority filter; policy accept;
ct timeout set "customtimeout"
} }

testing the updated timeout policy.

% conntrack -E
It should display:
[UPDATE] tcp      6 120 ESTABLISHED src=172.16.19.128 dst=172.16.19.1
sport=22 dport=41360 [UNREPLIED] src=172.16.19.1 dst=172.16.19.128
sport=41360 dport=22

add ct expectation  [family] table name { protocol protocol ; dport dport ; timeout timeout ; size size ; [l3proto family ;] }
delete ct expectation  [family] table name
list ct expectations

Ct expectation is used to create connection expectations. Expectations are assigned with the ct expectation set statement. protocol, dport, timeout and size are mandatory, l3proto is derived from the table family by default.

Table 14. conntrack expectation specifications

Keyword Description Type
protocol layer 4 protocol of the expectation object string (e.g. ip)
dport destination port of expected connection unsigned integer
timeout timeout value for expectation unsigned integer
size size value for expectation unsigned integer
l3proto layer 3 protocol of the expectation object address family (e.g. ip)
comment per ct expectation comment field string

defining and assigning ct expectation policy.

table ip filter {

ct expectation expect {
protocol udp
dport 9876
timeout 2m
size 8
l3proto ip
}
chain input {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept;
ct expectation set "expect"
} }

add counter [family] table name [{ [ packets packets bytes bytes ; ] [ comment comment ; }]
delete counter [family] table name
list counters

Table 15. Counter specifications

Keyword Description Type
packets initial count of packets unsigned integer (64 bit)
bytes initial count of bytes unsigned integer (64 bit)
comment per counter comment field string

Using named counters.

nft add counter filter http
nft add rule filter input tcp dport 80 counter name \"http\"

Using named counters with maps.

nft add counter filter http
nft add counter filter https
nft add rule filter input counter name tcp dport map { 80 : \"http\", 443 : \"https\" }

add quota [family] table name { [over|until] bytes BYTE_UNIT [ used bytes BYTE_UNIT ] ; [ comment comment ; ] }
BYTE_UNIT := bytes | kbytes | mbytes
delete quota [family] table name
list quotas

Table 16. Quota specifications

Keyword Description Type
quota quota limit, used as the quota name Two arguments, unsigned integer (64 bit) and string: bytes, kbytes, mbytes. "over" and "until" go before these arguments
used initial value of used quota Two arguments, unsigned integer (64 bit) and string: bytes, kbytes, mbytes
comment per quota comment field string

Using named quotas.

nft add quota filter user123 { over 20 mbytes }
nft add rule filter input ip saddr 192.168.10.123 quota name \"user123\"

Using named quotas with maps.

nft add quota filter user123 { over 20 mbytes }
nft add quota filter user124 { over 20 mbytes }
nft add rule filter input quota name ip saddr map { 192.168.10.123 : \"user123\", 192.168.10.124 : \"user124\" }

Expressions represent values, either constants like network addresses, port numbers, etc., or data gathered from the packet during ruleset evaluation. Expressions can be combined using binary, logical, relational and other types of expressions to form complex or relational (match) expressions. They are also used as arguments to certain types of operations, like NAT, packet marking etc.

Each expression has a data type, which determines the size, parsing and representation of symbolic values and type compatibility with other expressions.

describe expression | data type

The describe command shows information about the type of an expression and its data type. A data type may also be given, in which nft will display more information about the type.

The describe command.

$ nft describe tcp flags
payload expression, datatype tcp_flag (TCP flag) (basetype bitmask, integer), 8 bits
predefined symbolic constants:
fin                           0x01
syn                           0x02
rst                           0x04
psh                           0x08
ack                           0x10
urg                           0x20
ecn                           0x40
cwr                           0x80

Data types determine the size, parsing and representation of symbolic values and type compatibility of expressions. A number of global data types exist, in addition some expression types define further data types specific to the expression type. Most data types have a fixed size, some however may have a dynamic size, f.i. the string type. Some types also have predefined symbolic constants. Those can be listed using the nft describe command:

$ nft describe ct_state
datatype ct_state (conntrack state) (basetype bitmask, integer), 32 bits
pre-defined symbolic constants (in hexadecimal):
invalid                         0x00000001
new ...

Types may be derived from lower order types, f.i. the IPv4 address type is derived from the integer type, meaning an IPv4 address can also be specified as an integer value.

In certain contexts (set and map definitions), it is necessary to explicitly specify a data type. Each type has a name which is used for this.

Name Keyword Size Base type
Integer integer variable -

The integer type is used for numeric values. It may be specified as a decimal, hexadecimal or octal number. The integer type does not have a fixed size, its size is determined by the expression for which it is used.

Name Keyword Size Base type
Bitmask bitmask variable integer

The bitmask type (bitmask) is used for bitmasks.

Name Keyword Size Base type
String string variable -

The string type is used for character strings. A string begins with an alphabetic character (a-zA-Z) followed by zero or more alphanumeric characters or the characters /, -, _ and .. In addition, anything enclosed in double quotes (") is recognized as a string.

String specification.

# Interface name
filter input iifname eth0
# Weird interface name
filter input iifname "(eth0)"

Name Keyword Size Base type
Link layer address lladdr variable integer

The link layer address type is used for link layer addresses. Link layer addresses are specified as a variable amount of groups of two hexadecimal digits separated using colons (:).

Link layer address specification.

# Ethernet destination MAC address
filter input ether daddr 20:c9:d0:43:12:d9

Name Keyword Size Base type
IPV4 address ipv4_addr 32 bit integer

The IPv4 address type is used for IPv4 addresses. Addresses are specified in either dotted decimal, dotted hexadecimal, dotted octal, decimal, hexadecimal, octal notation or as a host name. A host name will be resolved using the standard system resolver.

IPv4 address specification.

# dotted decimal notation
filter output ip daddr 127.0.0.1
# host name
filter output ip daddr localhost

Name Keyword Size Base type
IPv6 address ipv6_addr 128 bit integer

The IPv6 address type is used for IPv6 addresses. Addresses are specified as a host name or as hexadecimal halfwords separated by colons. Addresses might be enclosed in square brackets ("[]") to differentiate them from port numbers.

IPv6 address specification.

# abbreviated loopback address
filter output ip6 daddr ::1

IPv6 address specification with bracket notation.

# without [] the port number (22) would be parsed as part of the
# ipv6 address
ip6 nat prerouting tcp dport 2222 dnat to [1ce::d0]:22

Name Keyword Size Base type
Boolean boolean 1 bit integer

The boolean type is a syntactical helper type in userspace. Its use is in the right-hand side of a (typically implicit) relational expression to change the expression on the left-hand side into a boolean check (usually for existence).

Table 17. The following keywords will automatically resolve into a boolean type with given value

Keyword Value
exists 1
missing 0

Table 18. expressions support a boolean comparison

Expression Behaviour
fib Check route existence.
exthdr Check IPv6 extension header existence.
tcp option Check TCP option header existence.

Boolean specification.

# match if route exists
filter input fib daddr . iif oif exists
# match only non-fragmented packets in IPv6 traffic
filter input exthdr frag missing
# match if TCP timestamp option is present
filter input tcp option timestamp exists

Name Keyword Size Base type
ICMP Type icmp_type 8 bit integer

The ICMP Type type is used to conveniently specify the ICMP header’s type field.

Table 19. Keywords may be used when specifying the ICMP type

Keyword Value
echo-reply 0
destination-unreachable 3
source-quench 4
redirect 5
echo-request 8
router-advertisement 9
router-solicitation 10
time-exceeded 11
parameter-problem 12
timestamp-request 13
timestamp-reply 14
info-request 15
info-reply 16
address-mask-request 17
address-mask-reply 18

ICMP Type specification.

# match ping packets
filter output icmp type { echo-request, echo-reply }

Name Keyword Size Base type
ICMP Code icmp_code 8 bit integer

The ICMP Code type is used to conveniently specify the ICMP header’s code field.

Name Keyword Size Base type
ICMPv6 Type icmpv6_type 8 bit integer

The ICMPv6 Type type is used to conveniently specify the ICMPv6 header’s type field.

Table 20. keywords may be used when specifying the ICMPv6 type:

Keyword Value
destination-unreachable 1
packet-too-big 2
time-exceeded 3
parameter-problem 4
echo-request 128
echo-reply 129
mld-listener-query 130
mld-listener-report 131
mld-listener-done 132
mld-listener-reduction 132
nd-router-solicit 133
nd-router-advert 134
nd-neighbor-solicit 135
nd-neighbor-advert 136
nd-redirect 137
router-renumbering 138
ind-neighbor-solicit 141
ind-neighbor-advert 142
mld2-listener-report 143

ICMPv6 Type specification.

# match ICMPv6 ping packets
filter output icmpv6 type { echo-request, echo-reply }

Name Keyword Size Base type
ICMPv6 Code icmpv6_code 8 bit integer

The ICMPv6 Code type is used to conveniently specify the ICMPv6 header’s code field.

Table 21. overview of types used in ct expression and statement

Name Keyword Size Base type
conntrack state ct_state 4 byte bitmask
conntrack direction ct_dir 8 bit integer
conntrack status ct_status 4 byte bitmask
conntrack event bits ct_event 4 byte bitmask
conntrack label ct_label 128 bit bitmask

For each of the types above, keywords are available for convenience:

Table 22. conntrack state (ct_state)

Keyword Value
invalid 1
established 2
related 4
new 8
untracked 64

Table 23. conntrack direction (ct_dir)

Keyword Value
original 0
reply 1

Table 24. conntrack status (ct_status)

Keyword Value
expected 1
seen-reply 2
assured 4
confirmed 8
snat 16
dnat 32
dying 512

Table 25. conntrack event bits (ct_event)

Keyword Value
new 1
related 2
destroy 4
reply 8
assured 16
protoinfo 32
helper 64
mark 128
seqadj 256
secmark 512
label 1024

Possible keywords for conntrack label type (ct_label) are read at runtime from /etc/connlabel.conf.

Name Keyword Size Base type
DCCP packet type dccp_pkttype 4 bit integer

The DCCP packet type abstracts the different legal values of the respective four bit field in the DCCP header, as stated by RFC4340. Note that possible values 10-15 are considered reserved and therefore not allowed to be used. In iptables' dccp match, these values are aliased INVALID. With nftables, one may simply match on the numeric value range, i.e. 10-15.

Table 26. keywords may be used when specifying the DCCP packet type

Keyword Value
request 0
response 1
data 2
ack 3
dataack 4
closereq 5
close 6
reset 7
sync 8
syncack 9

The lowest order expression is a primary expression, representing either a constant or a single datum from a packet’s payload, meta data or a stateful module.

meta {length | nfproto | l4proto | protocol | priority}
[meta] {mark | iif | iifname | iiftype | oif | oifname | oiftype | skuid | skgid | nftrace | rtclassid | ibrname | obrname | pkttype | cpu | iifgroup | oifgroup | cgroup | random | ipsec | iifkind | oifkind | time | hour | day }

A meta expression refers to meta data associated with a packet.

There are two types of meta expressions: unqualified and qualified meta expressions. Qualified meta expressions require the meta keyword before the meta key, unqualified meta expressions can be specified by using the meta key directly or as qualified meta expressions. Meta l4proto is useful to match a particular transport protocol that is part of either an IPv4 or IPv6 packet. It will also skip any IPv6 extension headers present in an IPv6 packet.

meta iif, oif, iifname and oifname are used to match the interface a packet arrived on or is about to be sent out on.

iif and oif are used to match on the interface index, whereas iifname and oifname are used to match on the interface name. This is not the same — assuming the rule

filter input meta iif "foo"

Then this rule can only be added if the interface "foo" exists. Also, the rule will continue to match even if the interface "foo" is renamed to "bar".

This is because internally the interface index is used. In case of dynamically created interfaces, such as tun/tap or dialup interfaces (ppp for example), it might be better to use iifname or oifname instead.

In these cases, the name is used so the interface doesn’t have to exist to add such a rule, it will stop matching if the interface gets renamed and it will match again in case interface gets deleted and later a new interface with the same name is created.

Like with iptables, wildcard matching on interface name prefixes is available for iifname and oifname matches by appending an asterisk (*) character. Note however that unlike iptables, nftables does not accept interface names consisting of the wildcard character only - users are supposed to just skip those always matching expressions. In order to match on literal asterisk character, one may escape it using backslash (\).

Table 27. Meta expression types

Keyword Description Type
length Length of the packet in bytes integer (32-bit)
nfproto real hook protocol family, useful only in inet table integer (32 bit)
l4proto layer 4 protocol, skips ipv6 extension headers integer (8 bit)
protocol EtherType protocol value ether_type
priority TC packet priority tc_handle
mark Packet mark mark
iif Input interface index iface_index
iifname Input interface name ifname
iiftype Input interface type iface_type
oif Output interface index iface_index
oifname Output interface name ifname
oiftype Output interface hardware type iface_type
sdif Slave device input interface index iface_index
sdifname Slave device interface name ifname
skuid UID associated with originating socket uid
skgid GID associated with originating socket gid
rtclassid Routing realm realm
ibrname Input bridge interface name ifname
obrname Output bridge interface name ifname
pkttype packet type pkt_type
cpu cpu number processing the packet integer (32 bit)
iifgroup incoming device group devgroup
oifgroup outgoing device group devgroup
cgroup control group id integer (32 bit)
random pseudo-random number integer (32 bit)
ipsec true if packet was ipsec encrypted boolean (1 bit)
iifkind Input interface kind
oifkind Output interface kind
time Absolute time of packet reception Integer (32 bit) or string
day Day of week Integer (8 bit) or string
hour Hour of day String

Table 28. Meta expression specific types

Type Description
iface_index Interface index (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as name of an existing interface.
ifname Interface name (16 byte string). Does not have to exist.
iface_type Interface type (16 bit number).
uid User ID (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as user name.
gid Group ID (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as group name.
realm Routing Realm (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as symbolic name defined in /etc/iproute2/rt_realms.
devgroup_type Device group (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as symbolic name defined in /etc/iproute2/group.
pkt_type Packet type: host (addressed to local host), broadcast (to all), multicast (to group), other (addressed to another host).
ifkind Interface kind (16 byte string). See TYPES in ip-link(8) for a list.
time Either an integer or a date in ISO format. For example: "2019-06-06 17:00". Hour and seconds are optional and can be omitted if desired. If omitted, midnight will be assumed. The following three would be equivalent: "2019-06-06", "2019-06-06 00:00" and "2019-06-06 00:00:00". Use a range expression such as "2019-06-06 10:00"-"2019-06-10 14:00" for matching a time range. When an integer is given, it is assumed to be a UNIX timestamp.
day Either a day of week ("Monday", "Tuesday", etc.), or an integer between 0 and 6. Strings are matched case-insensitively, and a full match is not expected (e.g. "Mon" would match "Monday"). When an integer is given, 0 is Sunday and 6 is Saturday. Use a range expression such as "Monday"-"Wednesday" for matching a week day range.
hour A string representing an hour in 24-hour format. Seconds can optionally be specified. For example, 17:00 and 17:00:00 would be equivalent. Use a range expression such as "17:00"-"19:00" for matching a time range.

Using meta expressions.

# qualified meta expression
filter output meta oif eth0
filter forward meta iifkind { "tun", "veth" }
# unqualified meta expression
filter output oif eth0
# incoming packet was subject to ipsec processing
raw prerouting meta ipsec exists accept
# match incoming packet from 03:00 to 14:00 local time
raw prerouting meta hour "03:00"-"14:00" counter accept

socket {transparent | mark | wildcard}
socket cgroupv2 level NUM

Socket expression can be used to search for an existing open TCP/UDP socket and its attributes that can be associated with a packet. It looks for an established or non-zero bound listening socket (possibly with a non-local address). You can also use it to match on the socket cgroupv2 at a given ancestor level, e.g. if the socket belongs to cgroupv2 a/b, ancestor level 1 checks for a matching on cgroup a and ancestor level 2 checks for a matching on cgroup b.

Table 29. Available socket attributes

Name Description Type
transparent Value of the IP_TRANSPARENT socket option in the found socket. It can be 0 or 1. boolean (1 bit)
mark Value of the socket mark (SOL_SOCKET, SO_MARK). mark
wildcard Indicates whether the socket is wildcard-bound (e.g. 0.0.0.0 or ::0). boolean (1 bit)
cgroupv2 cgroup version 2 for this socket (path from /sys/fs/cgroup) cgroupv2

Using socket expression.

# Mark packets that correspond to a transparent socket. "socket wildcard 0"
# means that zero-bound listener sockets are NOT matched (which is usually
# exactly what you want).
table inet x {

chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
socket transparent 1 socket wildcard 0 mark set 0x00000001 accept
} } # Trace packets that corresponds to a socket with a mark value of 15 table inet x {
chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
socket mark 0x0000000f nftrace set 1
} } # Set packet mark to socket mark table inet x {
chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
tcp dport 8080 mark set socket mark
} } # Count packets for cgroupv2 "user.slice" at level 1 table inet x {
chain y {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept;
socket cgroupv2 level 1 "user.slice" counter
} }

osf [ttl {loose | skip}] {name | version}

The osf expression does passive operating system fingerprinting. This expression compares some data (Window Size, MSS, options and their order, DF, and others) from packets with the SYN bit set.

Table 30. Available osf attributes

Name Description Type
ttl Do TTL checks on the packet to determine the operating system. string
version Do OS version checks on the packet.
name Name of the OS signature to match. All signatures can be found at pf.os file. Use "unknown" for OS signatures that the expression could not detect. string

Available ttl values.

If no TTL attribute is passed, make a true IP header and fingerprint TTL true comparison. This generally works for LANs.
* loose: Check if the IP header's TTL is less than the fingerprint one. Works for globally-routable addresses.
* skip: Do not compare the TTL at all.

Using osf expression.

# Accept packets that match the "Linux" OS genre signature without comparing TTL.
table inet x {

chain y {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept;
osf ttl skip name "Linux"
} }

fib {saddr | daddr | mark | iif | oif} [. ...] {oif | oifname | type}

A fib expression queries the fib (forwarding information base) to obtain information such as the output interface index a particular address would use. The input is a tuple of elements that is used as input to the fib lookup functions.

Table 31. fib expression specific types

Keyword Description Type
oif Output interface index integer (32 bit)
oifname Output interface name string
type Address type fib_addrtype

Use nft describe fib_addrtype to get a list of all address types.

Using fib expressions.

# drop packets without a reverse path
filter prerouting fib saddr . iif oif missing drop
In this example, 'saddr . iif' looks up routing information based on the source address and the input interface.
oif picks the output interface index from the routing information.
If no route was found for the source address/input interface combination, the output interface index is zero.
In case the input interface is specified as part of the input key, the output interface index is always the same as the input interface index or zero.
If only 'saddr oif' is given, then oif can be any interface index or zero.
# drop packets to address not configured on incoming interface
filter prerouting fib daddr . iif type != { local, broadcast, multicast } drop
# perform lookup in a specific 'blackhole' table (0xdead, needs ip appropriate ip rule)
filter prerouting meta mark set 0xdead fib daddr . mark type vmap { blackhole : drop, prohibit : jump prohibited, unreachable : drop }

rt [ip | ip6] {classid | nexthop | mtu | ipsec}

A routing expression refers to routing data associated with a packet.

Table 32. Routing expression types

Keyword Description Type
classid Routing realm realm
nexthop Routing nexthop ipv4_addr/ipv6_addr
mtu TCP maximum segment size of route integer (16 bit)
ipsec route via ipsec tunnel or transport boolean

Table 33. Routing expression specific types

Type Description
realm Routing Realm (32 bit number). Can be specified numerically or as symbolic name defined in /etc/iproute2/rt_realms.

Using routing expressions.

# IP family independent rt expression
filter output rt classid 10
# IP family dependent rt expressions
ip filter output rt nexthop 192.168.0.1
ip6 filter output rt nexthop fd00::1
inet filter output rt ip nexthop 192.168.0.1
inet filter output rt ip6 nexthop fd00::1
# outgoing packet will be encapsulated/encrypted by ipsec
filter output rt ipsec exists

ipsec {in | out} [ spnum NUM ]  {reqid | spi}
ipsec {in | out} [ spnum NUM ]  {ip | ip6} {saddr | daddr}

An ipsec expression refers to ipsec data associated with a packet.

The in or out keyword needs to be used to specify if the expression should examine inbound or outbound policies. The in keyword can be used in the prerouting, input and forward hooks. The out keyword applies to forward, output and postrouting hooks. The optional keyword spnum can be used to match a specific state in a chain, it defaults to 0.

Table 34. Ipsec expression types

Keyword Description Type
reqid Request ID integer (32 bit)
spi Security Parameter Index integer (32 bit)
saddr Source address of the tunnel ipv4_addr/ipv6_addr
daddr Destination address of the tunnel ipv4_addr/ipv6_addr

Note: When using xfrm_interface, this expression is not useable in output hook as the plain packet does not traverse it with IPsec info attached - use a chain in postrouting hook instead.

numgen {inc | random} mod NUM [ offset NUM ]

Create a number generator. The inc or random keywords control its operation mode: In inc mode, the last returned value is simply incremented. In random mode, a new random number is returned. The value after mod keyword specifies an upper boundary (read: modulus) which is not reached by returned numbers. The optional offset allows one to increment the returned value by a fixed offset.

A typical use-case for numgen is load-balancing:

Using numgen expression.

# round-robin between 192.168.10.100 and 192.168.20.200:
add rule nat prerouting dnat to numgen inc mod 2 map \

{ 0 : 192.168.10.100, 1 : 192.168.20.200 } # probability-based with odd bias using intervals: add rule nat prerouting dnat to numgen random mod 10 map \
{ 0-2 : 192.168.10.100, 3-9 : 192.168.20.200 }

jhash {ip saddr | ip6 daddr | tcp dport | udp sport | ether saddr} [. ...] mod NUM [ seed NUM ] [ offset NUM ]
symhash mod NUM [ offset NUM ]

Use a hashing function to generate a number. The functions available are jhash, known as Jenkins Hash, and symhash, for Symmetric Hash. The jhash requires an expression to determine the parameters of the packet header to apply the hashing, concatenations are possible as well. The value after mod keyword specifies an upper boundary (read: modulus) which is not reached by returned numbers. The optional seed is used to specify an init value used as seed in the hashing function. The optional offset allows one to increment the returned value by a fixed offset.

A typical use-case for jhash and symhash is load-balancing:

Using hash expressions.

# load balance based on source ip between 2 ip addresses:
add rule nat prerouting dnat to jhash ip saddr mod 2 map \

{ 0 : 192.168.10.100, 1 : 192.168.20.200 } # symmetric load balancing between 2 ip addresses: add rule nat prerouting dnat to symhash mod 2 map \
{ 0 : 192.168.10.100, 1 : 192.168.20.200 }

Payload expressions refer to data from the packet’s payload.

ether {daddr | saddr | type}

Table 35. Ethernet header expression types

Keyword Description Type
daddr Destination MAC address ether_addr
saddr Source MAC address ether_addr
type EtherType ether_type

vlan {id | dei | pcp | type}

The vlan expression is used to match on the vlan header fields. This expression will not work in the ip, ip6 and inet families, unless the vlan interface is configured with the reorder_hdr off setting. The default is reorder_hdr on which will automatically remove the vlan tag from the packet. See ip-link(8) for more information. For these families its easier to match the vlan interface name instead, using the meta iif or meta iifname expression.

Table 36. VLAN header expression

Keyword Description Type
id VLAN ID (VID) integer (12 bit)
dei Drop Eligible Indicator integer (1 bit)
pcp Priority code point integer (3 bit)
type EtherType ether_type

arp {htype | ptype | hlen | plen | operation | saddr { ip | ether } | daddr { ip | ether }

Table 37. ARP header expression

Keyword Description Type
htype ARP hardware type integer (16 bit)
ptype EtherType ether_type
hlen Hardware address len integer (8 bit)
plen Protocol address len integer (8 bit)
operation Operation arp_op
saddr ether Ethernet sender address ether_addr
daddr ether Ethernet target address ether_addr
saddr ip IPv4 sender address ipv4_addr
daddr ip IPv4 target address ipv4_addr

ip {version | hdrlength | dscp | ecn | length | id | frag-off | ttl | protocol | checksum | saddr | daddr }

Table 38. IPv4 header expression

Keyword Description Type
version IP header version (4) integer (4 bit)
hdrlength IP header length including options integer (4 bit) FIXME scaling
dscp Differentiated Services Code Point dscp
ecn Explicit Congestion Notification ecn
length Total packet length integer (16 bit)
id IP ID integer (16 bit)
frag-off Fragment offset integer (16 bit)
ttl Time to live integer (8 bit)
protocol Upper layer protocol inet_proto
checksum IP header checksum integer (16 bit)
saddr Source address ipv4_addr
daddr Destination address ipv4_addr

Careful with matching on ip length: If GRO/GSO is enabled, then the Linux kernel might aggregate several packets into one big packet that is larger than MTU. Moreover, if GRO/GSO maximum size is larger than 65535 (see man ip-link(8), specifically gro_ipv6_max_size and gso_ipv6_max_size), then ip length might be 0 for such jumbo packets. meta length allows you to match on the packet length including the IP header size. If you want to perform heuristics on the ip length field, then disable GRO/GSO.

icmp {type | code | checksum | id | sequence | gateway | mtu}

This expression refers to ICMP header fields. When using it in inet, bridge or netdev families, it will cause an implicit dependency on IPv4 to be created. To match on unusual cases like ICMP over IPv6, one has to add an explicit meta protocol ip6 match to the rule.

Table 39. ICMP header expression

Keyword Description Type
type ICMP type field icmp_type
code ICMP code field integer (8 bit)
checksum ICMP checksum field integer (16 bit)
id ID of echo request/response integer (16 bit)
sequence sequence number of echo request/response integer (16 bit)
gateway gateway of redirects integer (32 bit)
mtu MTU of path MTU discovery integer (16 bit)

igmp {type | mrt | checksum | group}

This expression refers to IGMP header fields. When using it in inet, bridge or netdev families, it will cause an implicit dependency on IPv4 to be created. To match on unusual cases like IGMP over IPv6, one has to add an explicit meta protocol ip6 match to the rule.

Table 40. IGMP header expression

Keyword Description Type
type IGMP type field igmp_type
mrt IGMP maximum response time field integer (8 bit)
checksum IGMP checksum field integer (16 bit)
group Group address integer (32 bit)

ip6 {version | dscp | ecn | flowlabel | length | nexthdr | hoplimit | saddr | daddr}

This expression refers to the ipv6 header fields. Caution when using ip6 nexthdr, the value only refers to the next header, i.e. ip6 nexthdr tcp will only match if the ipv6 packet does not contain any extension headers. Packets that are fragmented or e.g. contain a routing extension headers will not be matched. Please use meta l4proto if you wish to match the real transport header and ignore any additional extension headers instead.

Table 41. IPv6 header expression

Keyword Description Type
version IP header version (6) integer (4 bit)
dscp Differentiated Services Code Point dscp
ecn Explicit Congestion Notification ecn
flowlabel Flow label integer (20 bit)
length Payload length integer (16 bit)
nexthdr Nexthdr protocol inet_proto
hoplimit Hop limit integer (8 bit)
saddr Source address ipv6_addr
daddr Destination address ipv6_addr

Careful with matching on ip6 length: If GRO/GSO is enabled, then the Linux kernel might aggregate several packets into one big packet that is larger than MTU. Moreover, if GRO/GSO maximum size is larger than 65535 (see man ip-link(8), specifically gro_ipv6_max_size and gso_ipv6_max_size), then ip6 length might be 0 for such jumbo packets. meta length allows you to match on the packet length including the IP header size. If you want to perform heuristics on the ip6 length field, then disable GRO/GSO.

Using ip6 header expressions.

# matching if first extension header indicates a fragment
ip6 nexthdr ipv6-frag

icmpv6 {type | code | checksum | parameter-problem | packet-too-big | id | sequence | max-delay | taddr | daddr}

This expression refers to ICMPv6 header fields. When using it in inet, bridge or netdev families, it will cause an implicit dependency on IPv6 to be created. To match on unusual cases like ICMPv6 over IPv4, one has to add an explicit meta protocol ip match to the rule.

Table 42. ICMPv6 header expression

Keyword Description Type
type ICMPv6 type field icmpv6_type
code ICMPv6 code field integer (8 bit)
checksum ICMPv6 checksum field integer (16 bit)
parameter-problem pointer to problem integer (32 bit)
packet-too-big oversized MTU integer (32 bit)
id ID of echo request/response integer (16 bit)
sequence sequence number of echo request/response integer (16 bit)
max-delay maximum response delay of MLD queries integer (16 bit)
taddr target address of neighbor solicit/advert, redirect or MLD ipv6_addr
daddr destination address of redirect ipv6_addr

tcp {sport | dport | sequence | ackseq | doff | reserved | flags | window | checksum | urgptr}

Table 43. TCP header expression

Keyword Description Type
sport Source port inet_service
dport Destination port inet_service
sequence Sequence number integer (32 bit)
ackseq Acknowledgement number integer (32 bit)
doff Data offset integer (4 bit) FIXME scaling
reserved Reserved area integer (4 bit)
flags TCP flags tcp_flag
window Window integer (16 bit)
checksum Checksum integer (16 bit)
urgptr Urgent pointer integer (16 bit)

udp {sport | dport | length | checksum}

Table 44. UDP header expression

Keyword Description Type
sport Source port inet_service
dport Destination port inet_service
length Total packet length integer (16 bit)
checksum Checksum integer (16 bit)

udplite {sport | dport | checksum}

Table 45. UDP-Lite header expression

Keyword Description Type
sport Source port inet_service
dport Destination port inet_service
checksum Checksum integer (16 bit)

sctp {sport | dport | vtag | checksum}

sctp chunk CHUNK [ FIELD ] CHUNK := data | init | init-ack | sack | heartbeat |
heartbeat-ack | abort | shutdown | shutdown-ack | error |
cookie-echo | cookie-ack | ecne | cwr | shutdown-complete
| asconf-ack | forward-tsn | asconf FIELD := COMMON_FIELD | DATA_FIELD | INIT_FIELD | INIT_ACK_FIELD |
SACK_FIELD | SHUTDOWN_FIELD | ECNE_FIELD | CWR_FIELD |
ASCONF_ACK_FIELD | FORWARD_TSN_FIELD | ASCONF_FIELD COMMON_FIELD := type | flags | length DATA_FIELD := tsn | stream | ssn | ppid INIT_FIELD := init-tag | a-rwnd | num-outbound-streams |
num-inbound-streams | initial-tsn INIT_ACK_FIELD := INIT_FIELD SACK_FIELD := cum-tsn-ack | a-rwnd | num-gap-ack-blocks |
num-dup-tsns SHUTDOWN_FIELD := cum-tsn-ack ECNE_FIELD := lowest-tsn CWR_FIELD := lowest-tsn ASCONF_ACK_FIELD := seqno FORWARD_TSN_FIELD := new-cum-tsn ASCONF_FIELD := seqno

Table 46. SCTP header expression

Keyword Description Type
sport Source port inet_service
dport Destination port inet_service
vtag Verification Tag integer (32 bit)
checksum Checksum integer (32 bit)
chunk Search chunk in packet without FIELD, boolean indicating existence

Table 47. SCTP chunk fields

Name Width in bits Chunk Notes
type 8 all not useful, defined by chunk type
flags 8 all semantics defined on per-chunk basis
length 16 all length of this chunk in bytes excluding padding
tsn 32 data transmission sequence number
stream 16 data stream identifier
ssn 16 data stream sequence number
ppid 32 data payload protocol identifier
init-tag 32 init, init-ack initiate tag
a-rwnd 32 init, init-ack, sack advertised receiver window credit
num-outbound-streams 16 init, init-ack number of outbound streams
num-inbound-streams 16 init, init-ack number of inbound streams
initial-tsn 32 init, init-ack initial transmit sequence number
cum-tsn-ack 32 sack, shutdown cumulative transmission sequence number acknowledged
num-gap-ack-blocks 16 sack number of Gap Ack Blocks included
num-dup-tsns 16 sack number of duplicate transmission sequence numbers received
lowest-tsn 32 ecne, cwr lowest transmission sequence number
seqno 32 asconf-ack, asconf sequence number
new-cum-tsn 32 forward-tsn new cumulative transmission sequence number

dccp {sport | dport | type}

Table 48. DCCP header expression

Keyword Description Type
sport Source port inet_service
dport Destination port inet_service
type Packet type dccp_pkttype

ah {nexthdr | hdrlength | reserved | spi | sequence}

Table 49. AH header expression

Keyword Description Type
nexthdr Next header protocol inet_proto
hdrlength AH Header length integer (8 bit)
reserved Reserved area integer (16 bit)
spi Security Parameter Index integer (32 bit)
sequence Sequence number integer (32 bit)

esp {spi | sequence}

Table 50. ESP header expression

Keyword Description Type
spi Security Parameter Index integer (32 bit)
sequence Sequence number integer (32 bit)

comp {nexthdr | flags | cpi}

Table 51. IPComp header expression

Keyword Description Type
nexthdr Next header protocol inet_proto
flags Flags bitmask
cpi compression Parameter Index integer (16 bit)

gre {flags | version | protocol}

gre ip {version | hdrlength | dscp | ecn | length | id | frag-off | ttl | protocol | checksum | saddr | daddr } gre ip6 {version | dscp | ecn | flowlabel | length | nexthdr | hoplimit | saddr | daddr}

The gre expression is used to match on the gre header fields. This expression also allows to match on the IPv4 or IPv6 packet within the gre header.

Table 52. GRE header expression

Keyword Description Type
flags checksum, routing, key, sequence and strict source route flags integer (5 bit)
version gre version field, 0 for GRE and 1 for PPTP integer (3 bit)
protocol EtherType of encapsulated packet integer (16 bit)

Matching inner IPv4 destination address encapsulated in gre.

netdev filter ingress gre ip daddr 9.9.9.9 counter

geneve {vni | flags}
geneve ether {daddr | saddr | type}
geneve vlan {id | dei | pcp | type}
geneve ip {version | hdrlength | dscp | ecn | length | id | frag-off | ttl | protocol | checksum | saddr | daddr }
geneve ip6 {version | dscp | ecn | flowlabel | length | nexthdr | hoplimit | saddr | daddr}
geneve tcp {sport | dport | sequence | ackseq | doff | reserved | flags | window | checksum | urgptr}
geneve udp {sport | dport | length | checksum}

The geneve expression is used to match on the geneve header fields. The geneve header encapsulates a ethernet frame within a udp packet. This expression requires that you restrict the matching to udp packets (usually at port 6081 according to IANA-assigned ports).

Table 53. GENEVE header expression

Keyword Description Type
protocol EtherType of encapsulated packet integer (16 bit)
vni Virtual Network ID (VNI) integer (24 bit)

Matching inner TCP destination port encapsulated in geneve.

netdev filter ingress udp dport 4789 geneve tcp dport 80 counter

gretap {vni | flags}
gretap ether {daddr | saddr | type}
gretap vlan {id | dei | pcp | type}
gretap ip {version | hdrlength | dscp | ecn | length | id | frag-off | ttl | protocol | checksum | saddr | daddr }
gretap ip6 {version | dscp | ecn | flowlabel | length | nexthdr | hoplimit | saddr | daddr}
gretap tcp {sport | dport | sequence | ackseq | doff | reserved | flags | window | checksum | urgptr}
gretap udp {sport | dport | length | checksum}

The gretap expression is used to match on the encapsulated ethernet frame within the gre header. Use the gre expression to match on the gre header fields.

Matching inner TCP destination port encapsulated in gretap.

netdev filter ingress gretap tcp dport 80 counter

vxlan {vni | flags}
vxlan ether {daddr | saddr | type}
vxlan vlan {id | dei | pcp | type}
vxlan ip {version | hdrlength | dscp | ecn | length | id | frag-off | ttl | protocol | checksum | saddr | daddr }
vxlan ip6 {version | dscp | ecn | flowlabel | length | nexthdr | hoplimit | saddr | daddr}
vxlan tcp {sport | dport | sequence | ackseq | doff | reserved | flags | window | checksum | urgptr}
vxlan udp {sport | dport | length | checksum}

The vxlan expression is used to match on the vxlan header fields. The vxlan header encapsulates a ethernet frame within a udp packet. This expression requires that you restrict the matching to udp packets (usually at port 4789 according to IANA-assigned ports).

Table 54. VXLAN header expression

Keyword Description Type
flags vxlan flags integer (8 bit)
vni Virtual Network ID (VNI) integer (24 bit)

Matching inner TCP destination port encapsulated in vxlan.

netdev filter ingress udp dport 4789 vxlan tcp dport 80 counter

@base,offset,length

The raw payload expression instructs to load length bits starting at offset bits. Bit 0 refers to the very first bit — in the C programming language, this corresponds to the topmost bit, i.e. 0x80 in case of an octet. They are useful to match headers that do not have a human-readable template expression yet. Note that nft will not add dependencies for Raw payload expressions. If you e.g. want to match protocol fields of a transport header with protocol number 5, you need to manually exclude packets that have a different transport header, for instance by using meta l4proto 5 before the raw expression.

Table 55. Supported payload protocol bases

Base Description
ll Link layer, for example the Ethernet header
nh Network header, for example IPv4 or IPv6
th Transport Header, for example TCP
ih Inner Header / Payload, i.e. after the L4 transport level header

Matching destination port of both UDP and TCP.

inet filter input meta l4proto {tcp, udp} @th,16,16 { 53, 80 }

The above can also be written as

inet filter input meta l4proto {tcp, udp} th dport { 53, 80 }

it is more convenient, but like the raw expression notation no dependencies are created or checked. It is the users responsibility to restrict matching to those header types that have a notion of ports. Otherwise, rules using raw expressions will errnously match unrelated packets, e.g. mis-interpreting ESP packets SPI field as a port.

Rewrite arp packet target hardware address if target protocol address matches a given address.

input meta iifname enp2s0 arp ptype 0x0800 arp htype 1 arp hlen 6 arp plen 4 @nh,192,32 0xc0a88f10 @nh,144,48 set 0x112233445566 accept

Extension header expressions refer to data from variable-sized protocol headers, such as IPv6 extension headers, TCP options and IPv4 options.

nftables currently supports matching (finding) a given ipv6 extension header, TCP option or IPv4 option.

hbh {nexthdr | hdrlength}
frag {nexthdr | frag-off | more-fragments | id}
rt {nexthdr | hdrlength | type | seg-left}
dst {nexthdr | hdrlength}
mh {nexthdr | hdrlength | checksum | type}
srh {flags | tag | sid | seg-left}
tcp option {eol | nop | maxseg | window | sack-perm | sack | sack0 | sack1 | sack2 | sack3 | timestamp} tcp_option_field
ip option { lsrr | ra | rr | ssrr } ip_option_field

The following syntaxes are valid only in a relational expression with boolean type on right-hand side for checking header existence only:

exthdr {hbh | frag | rt | dst | mh}
tcp option {eol | nop | maxseg | window | sack-perm | sack | sack0 | sack1 | sack2 | sack3 | timestamp}
ip option { lsrr | ra | rr | ssrr }
dccp option dccp_option_type

Table 56. IPv6 extension headers

Keyword Description
hbh Hop by Hop
rt Routing Header
frag Fragmentation header
dst dst options
mh Mobility Header
srh Segment Routing Header

Table 57. TCP Options

Keyword Description TCP option fields
eol End if option list -
nop 1 Byte TCP Nop padding option -
maxseg TCP Maximum Segment Size length, size
window TCP Window Scaling length, count
sack-perm TCP SACK permitted length
sack TCP Selective Acknowledgement (alias of block 0) length, left, right
sack0 TCP Selective Acknowledgement (block 0) length, left, right
sack1 TCP Selective Acknowledgement (block 1) length, left, right
sack2 TCP Selective Acknowledgement (block 2) length, left, right
sack3 TCP Selective Acknowledgement (block 3) length, left, right
timestamp TCP Timestamps length, tsval, tsecr

TCP option matching also supports raw expression syntax to access arbitrary options:

tcp option

tcp option @number,offset,length

Table 58. IP Options

Keyword Description IP option fields
lsrr Loose Source Route type, length, ptr, addr
ra Router Alert type, length, value
rr Record Route type, length, ptr, addr
ssrr Strict Source Route type, length, ptr, addr

finding TCP options.

filter input tcp option sack-perm exists counter

matching TCP options.

filter input tcp option maxseg size lt 536

matching IPv6 exthdr.

ip6 filter input frag more-fragments 1 counter

finding IP option.

filter input ip option lsrr exists counter

finding DCCP option.

filter input dccp option 40 exists counter

Conntrack expressions refer to meta data of the connection tracking entry associated with a packet.

There are three types of conntrack expressions. Some conntrack expressions require the flow direction before the conntrack key, others must be used directly because they are direction agnostic. The packets, bytes and avgpkt keywords can be used with or without a direction. If the direction is omitted, the sum of the original and the reply direction is returned. The same is true for the zone, if a direction is given, the zone is only matched if the zone id is tied to the given direction.

ct {state | direction | status | mark | expiration | helper | label | count | id}
ct [original | reply] {l3proto | protocol | bytes | packets | avgpkt | zone}
ct {original | reply} {proto-src | proto-dst}
ct {original | reply} {ip | ip6} {saddr | daddr}

The conntrack-specific types in this table are described in the sub-section CONNTRACK TYPES above.

Table 59. Conntrack expressions

Keyword Description Type
state State of the connection ct_state
direction Direction of the packet relative to the connection ct_dir
status Status of the connection ct_status
mark Connection mark mark
expiration Connection expiration time time
helper Helper associated with the connection string
label Connection tracking label bit or symbolic name defined in connlabel.conf in the nftables include path ct_label
l3proto Layer 3 protocol of the connection nf_proto
saddr Source address of the connection for the given direction ipv4_addr/ipv6_addr
daddr Destination address of the connection for the given direction ipv4_addr/ipv6_addr
protocol Layer 4 protocol of the connection for the given direction inet_proto
proto-src Layer 4 protocol source for the given direction integer (16 bit)
proto-dst Layer 4 protocol destination for the given direction integer (16 bit)
packets packet count seen in the given direction or sum of original and reply integer (64 bit)
bytes byte count seen, see description for packets keyword integer (64 bit)
avgpkt average bytes per packet, see description for packets keyword integer (64 bit)
zone conntrack zone integer (16 bit)
count number of current connections integer (32 bit)
id Connection id ct_id

restrict the number of parallel connections to a server.

nft add set filter ssh_flood '{ type ipv4_addr; flags dynamic; }'
nft add rule filter input tcp dport 22 add @ssh_flood '{ ip saddr ct count over 2 }' reject

Statements represent actions to be performed. They can alter control flow (return, jump to a different chain, accept or drop the packet) or can perform actions, such as logging, rejecting a packet, etc.

Statements exist in two kinds. Terminal statements unconditionally terminate evaluation of the current rule, non-terminal statements either only conditionally or never terminate evaluation of the current rule, in other words, they are passive from the ruleset evaluation perspective. There can be an arbitrary amount of non-terminal statements in a rule, but only a single terminal statement as the final statement.

The verdict statement alters control flow in the ruleset and issues policy decisions for packets.

{accept | drop | queue | continue | return}
{jump | goto} chain

accept and drop are absolute verdicts — they terminate ruleset evaluation immediately.

accept Terminate ruleset evaluation and accept the packet. The packet can still be dropped later by another hook, for instance accept in the forward hook still allows one to drop the packet later in the postrouting hook, or another forward base chain that has a higher priority number and is evaluated afterwards in the processing pipeline.
drop Terminate ruleset evaluation and drop the packet. The drop occurs instantly, no further chains or hooks are evaluated. It is not possible to accept the packet in a later chain again, as those are not evaluated anymore for the packet.
queue Terminate ruleset evaluation and queue the packet to userspace. Userspace must provide a drop or accept verdict. In case of accept, processing resumes with the next base chain hook, not the rule following the queue verdict.
continue Continue ruleset evaluation with the next rule. This is the default behaviour in case a rule issues no verdict.
return Return from the current chain and continue evaluation at the next rule in the last chain. If issued in a base chain, it is equivalent to the base chain policy.
jump chain Continue evaluation at the first rule in chain. The current position in the ruleset is pushed to a call stack and evaluation will continue there when the new chain is entirely evaluated or a return verdict is issued. In case an absolute verdict is issued by a rule in the chain, ruleset evaluation terminates immediately and the specific action is taken.
goto chain Similar to jump, but the current position is not pushed to the call stack, meaning that after the new chain evaluation will continue at the last chain instead of the one containing the goto statement.

Using verdict statements.

# process packets from eth0 and the internal network in from_lan
# chain, drop all packets from eth0 with different source addresses.
filter input iif eth0 ip saddr 192.168.0.0/24 jump from_lan
filter input iif eth0 drop

payload_expression set value

The payload statement alters packet content. It can be used for example to set ip DSCP (diffserv) header field or ipv6 flow labels.

route some packets instead of bridging.

# redirect tcp:http from 192.160.0.0/16 to local machine for routing instead of bridging
# assumes 00:11:22:33:44:55 is local MAC address.
bridge input meta iif eth0 ip saddr 192.168.0.0/16 tcp dport 80 meta pkttype set host ether daddr set 00:11:22:33:44:55

Set IPv4 DSCP header field.

ip forward ip dscp set 42

extension_header_expression set value

The extension header statement alters packet content in variable-sized headers. This can currently be used to alter the TCP Maximum segment size of packets, similar to the TCPMSS target in iptables.

change tcp mss.

tcp flags syn tcp option maxseg size set 1360
# set a size based on route information:
tcp flags syn tcp option maxseg size set rt mtu

You can also remove tcp options via reset keyword.

remove tcp option.

tcp flags syn reset tcp option sack-perm

log [prefix quoted_string] [level syslog-level] [flags log-flags]
log group nflog_group [prefix quoted_string] [queue-threshold value] [snaplen size]
log level audit

The log statement enables logging of matching packets. When this statement is used from a rule, the Linux kernel will print some information on all matching packets, such as header fields, via the kernel log (where it can be read with dmesg(1) or read in the syslog).

In the second form of invocation (if nflog_group is specified), the Linux kernel will pass the packet to nfnetlink_log which will send the log through a netlink socket to the specified group. One userspace process may subscribe to the group to receive the logs, see man(8) ulogd for the Netfilter userspace log daemon and libnetfilter_log documentation for details in case you would like to develop a custom program to digest your logs.

In the third form of invocation (if level audit is specified), the Linux kernel writes a message into the audit buffer suitably formatted for reading with auditd. Therefore no further formatting options (such as prefix or flags) are allowed in this mode.

This is a non-terminating statement, so the rule evaluation continues after the packet is logged.

Table 60. log statement options

Keyword Description Type
prefix Log message prefix quoted string
level Syslog level of logging string: emerg, alert, crit, err, warn [default], notice, info, debug, audit
group NFLOG group to send messages to unsigned integer (16 bit)
snaplen Length of packet payload to include in netlink message unsigned integer (32 bit)
queue-threshold Number of packets to queue inside the kernel before sending them to userspace unsigned integer (32 bit)

Table 61. log-flags

Flag Description
tcp sequence Log TCP sequence numbers.
tcp options Log options from the TCP packet header.
ip options Log options from the IP/IPv6 packet header.
skuid Log the userid of the process which generated the packet.
ether Decode MAC addresses and protocol.
all Enable all log flags listed above.

Using log statement.

# log the UID which generated the packet and ip options
ip filter output log flags skuid flags ip options
# log the tcp sequence numbers and tcp options from the TCP packet
ip filter output log flags tcp sequence,options
# enable all supported log flags
ip6 filter output log flags all

reject [ with REJECT_WITH ]
REJECT_WITH := icmp icmp_reject_code |

icmpv6 icmpv6_reject_code |
icmpx icmpx_reject_code |
tcp reset

A reject statement is used to send back an error packet in response to the matched packet otherwise it is equivalent to drop so it is a terminating statement, ending rule traversal. This statement is only valid in base chains using the prerouting, input, forward or output hooks, and user-defined chains which are only called from those chains.

Table 62. Keywords may be used to reject when specifying the ICMP code

Keyword Value
net-unreachable 0
host-unreachable 1
prot-unreachable 2
port-unreachable 3
frag-needed 4
net-prohibited 9
host-prohibited 10
admin-prohibited 13

Table 63. keywords may be used to reject when specifying the ICMPv6 code

Keyword Value
no-route 0
admin-prohibited 1
addr-unreachable 3
port-unreachable 4
policy-fail 5
reject-route 6

The ICMPvX Code type abstraction is a set of values which overlap between ICMP and ICMPv6 Code types to be used from the inet family.

Table 64. keywords may be used when specifying the ICMPvX code

Keyword Value
no-route 0
port-unreachable 1
host-unreachable 2
admin-prohibited 3

The common default ICMP code to reject is port-unreachable.

Note that in bridge family, reject statement is only allowed in base chains which hook into input or prerouting.

A counter statement sets the hit count of packets along with the number of bytes.

counter packets number bytes number
counter { packets number | bytes number }

The conntrack statement can be used to set the conntrack mark and conntrack labels.

ct {mark | event | label | zone} set value

The ct statement sets meta data associated with a connection. The zone id has to be assigned before a conntrack lookup takes place, i.e. this has to be done in prerouting and possibly output (if locally generated packets need to be placed in a distinct zone), with a hook priority of raw (-300).

Unlike iptables, where the helper assignment happens in the raw table, the helper needs to be assigned after a conntrack entry has been found, i.e. it will not work when used with hook priorities equal or before -200.

Table 65. Conntrack statement types

Keyword Description Value
event conntrack event bits bitmask, integer (32 bit)
helper name of ct helper object to assign to the connection quoted string
mark Connection tracking mark mark
label Connection tracking label label
zone conntrack zone integer (16 bit)

save packet nfmark in conntrack.

ct mark set meta mark

set zone mapped via interface.

table inet raw {

chain prerouting {
type filter hook prerouting priority raw;
ct zone set iif map { "eth1" : 1, "veth1" : 2 }
}
chain output {
type filter hook output priority raw;
ct zone set oif map { "eth1" : 1, "veth1" : 2 }
} }

restrict events reported by ctnetlink.

ct event set new,related,destroy

The notrack statement allows one to disable connection tracking for certain packets.

notrack

Note that for this statement to be effective, it has to be applied to packets before a conntrack lookup happens. Therefore, it needs to sit in a chain with either prerouting or output hook and a hook priority of -300 (raw) or less.

See SYNPROXY STATEMENT for an example usage.

A meta statement sets the value of a meta expression. The existing meta fields are: priority, mark, pkttype, nftrace.

meta {mark | priority | pkttype | nftrace | broute} set value

A meta statement sets meta data associated with a packet.

Table 66. Meta statement types

Keyword Description Value
priority TC packet priority tc_handle
mark Packet mark mark
pkttype packet type pkt_type
nftrace ruleset packet tracing on/off. Use monitor trace command to watch traces 0, 1
broute broute on/off. packets are routed instead of being bridged 0, 1

limit rate [over] packet_number / TIME_UNIT [burst packet_number packets]

limit rate [over] byte_number BYTE_UNIT / TIME_UNIT [burst byte_number BYTE_UNIT] TIME_UNIT := second | minute | hour | day BYTE_UNIT := bytes | kbytes | mbytes

A limit statement matches at a limited rate using a token bucket filter. A rule using this statement will match until this limit is reached. It can be used in combination with the log statement to give limited logging. The optional over keyword makes it match over the specified rate.

The burst value influences the bucket size, i.e. jitter tolerance. With packet-based limit, the bucket holds exactly burst packets, by default five. If you specify packet burst, it must be a non-zero value. With byte-based limit, the bucket’s minimum size is the given rate’s byte value and the burst value adds to that, by default zero bytes.

Table 67. limit statement values

Value Description Type
packet_number Number of packets unsigned integer (32 bit)
byte_number Number of bytes unsigned integer (32 bit)

snat [[ip | ip6] [ prefix ] to] ADDR_SPEC [:PORT_SPEC] [FLAGS]

dnat [[ip | ip6] [ prefix ] to] ADDR_SPEC [:PORT_SPEC] [FLAGS] masquerade [to :PORT_SPEC] [FLAGS] redirect [to :PORT_SPEC] [FLAGS] ADDR_SPEC := address | address - address PORT_SPEC := port | port - port FLAGS := FLAG [, FLAGS] FLAG := persistent | random | fully-random

The nat statements are only valid from nat chain types.

The snat and masquerade statements specify that the source address of the packet should be modified. While snat is only valid in the postrouting and input chains, masquerade makes sense only in postrouting. The dnat and redirect statements are only valid in the prerouting and output chains, they specify that the destination address of the packet should be modified. You can use non-base chains which are called from base chains of nat chain type too. All future packets in this connection will also be mangled, and rules should cease being examined.

The masquerade statement is a special form of snat which always uses the outgoing interface’s IP address to translate to. It is particularly useful on gateways with dynamic (public) IP addresses.

The redirect statement is a special form of dnat which always translates the destination address to the local host’s one. It comes in handy if one only wants to alter the destination port of incoming traffic on different interfaces.

When used in the inet family (available with kernel 5.2), the dnat and snat statements require the use of the ip and ip6 keyword in case an address is provided, see the examples below.

Before kernel 4.18 nat statements require both prerouting and postrouting base chains to be present since otherwise packets on the return path won’t be seen by netfilter and therefore no reverse translation will take place.

The optional prefix keyword allows to map to map n source addresses to n destination addresses. See Advanced NAT examples below.

Table 68. NAT statement values

Expression Description Type
address Specifies that the source/destination address of the packet should be modified. You may specify a mapping to relate a list of tuples composed of arbitrary expression key with address value. ipv4_addr, ipv6_addr, e.g. abcd::1234, or you can use a mapping, e.g. meta mark map { 10 : 192.168.1.2, 20 : 192.168.1.3 }
port Specifies that the source/destination port of the packet should be modified. port number (16 bit)

Table 69. NAT statement flags

Flag Description
persistent Gives a client the same source-/destination-address for each connection.
random In kernel 5.0 and newer this is the same as fully-random. In earlier kernels the port mapping will be randomized using a seeded MD5 hash mix using source and destination address and destination port.
fully-random If used then port mapping is generated based on a 32-bit pseudo-random algorithm.

Using NAT statements.

# create a suitable table/chain setup for all further examples
add table nat
add chain nat prerouting { type nat hook prerouting priority dstnat; }
add chain nat postrouting { type nat hook postrouting priority srcnat; }
# translate source addresses of all packets leaving via eth0 to address 1.2.3.4
add rule nat postrouting oif eth0 snat to 1.2.3.4
# redirect all traffic entering via eth0 to destination address 192.168.1.120
add rule nat prerouting iif eth0 dnat to 192.168.1.120
# translate source addresses of all packets leaving via eth0 to whatever
# locally generated packets would use as source to reach the same destination
add rule nat postrouting oif eth0 masquerade
# redirect incoming TCP traffic for port 22 to port 2222
add rule nat prerouting tcp dport 22 redirect to :2222
# inet family:
# handle ip dnat:
add rule inet nat prerouting dnat ip to 10.0.2.99
# handle ip6 dnat:
add rule inet nat prerouting dnat ip6 to fe80::dead
# this masquerades both ipv4 and ipv6:
add rule inet nat postrouting meta oif ppp0 masquerade

Advanced NAT examples.

# map prefixes in one network to that of another, e.g. 10.141.11.4 is mangled to 192.168.2.4,
# 10.141.11.5 is mangled to 192.168.2.5 and so on.
add rule nat postrouting snat ip prefix to ip saddr map { 10.141.11.0/24 : 192.168.2.0/24 }
# map a source address, source port combination to a pool of destination addresses and ports:
add rule nat postrouting dnat to ip saddr . tcp dport map { 192.168.1.2 . 80 : 10.141.10.2-10.141.10.5 . 8888-8999 }
# The above example generates the following NAT expression:
#
# [ nat dnat ip addr_min reg 1 addr_max reg 10 proto_min reg 9 proto_max reg 11 ]
#
# which expects to obtain the following tuple:
# IP address (min), source port (min), IP address (max), source port (max)
# to be obtained from the map. The given addresses and ports are inclusive.
# This also works with named maps and in combination with both concatenations and ranges:
table ip nat {

map ipportmap {
typeof ip saddr : interval ip daddr . tcp dport
flags interval
elements = { 192.168.1.2 : 10.141.10.1-10.141.10.3 . 8888-8999, 192.168.2.0/24 : 10.141.11.5-10.141.11.20 . 8888-8999 }
}
chain prerouting {
type nat hook prerouting priority dstnat; policy accept;
ip protocol tcp dnat ip to ip saddr map @ipportmap
} } @ipportmap maps network prefixes to a range of hosts and ports. The new destination is taken from the range provided by the map element. Same for the destination port. Note the use of the "interval" keyword in the typeof description. This is required so nftables knows that it has to ask for twice the amount of storage for each key-value pair in the map. ": ipv4_addr . inet_service" would allow associating one address and one port with each key. But for this case, for each key, two addresses and two ports (The minimum and maximum values for both) have to be stored.

Tproxy redirects the packet to a local socket without changing the packet header in any way. If any of the arguments is missing the data of the incoming packet is used as parameter. Tproxy matching requires another rule that ensures the presence of transport protocol header is specified.

tproxy to address:port
tproxy to {address | :port}

This syntax can be used in ip/ip6 tables where network layer protocol is obvious. Either IP address or port can be specified, but at least one of them is necessary.

tproxy {ip | ip6} to address[:port]
tproxy to :port

This syntax can be used in inet tables. The ip/ip6 parameter defines the family the rule will match. The address parameter must be of this family. When only port is defined, the address family should not be specified. In this case the rule will match for both families.

Table 70. tproxy attributes

Name Description
address IP address the listening socket with IP_TRANSPARENT option is bound to.
port Port the listening socket with IP_TRANSPARENT option is bound to.

Example ruleset for tproxy statement.

table ip x {

chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
tcp dport ntp tproxy to 1.1.1.1 accept
udp dport ssh tproxy to :2222 accept
} } table ip6 x {
chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
tcp dport ntp tproxy to [dead::beef] accept
udp dport ssh tproxy to :2222 accept
} } table inet x {
chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
tcp dport 321 tproxy to :22 accept
tcp dport 99 tproxy ip to 1.1.1.1:999 accept
udp dport 155 tproxy ip6 to [dead::beef]:smux accept
} }

Note that the tproxy statement is non-terminal to allow post-processing of packets. This allows packets to be logged for debugging as well as updating the mark to ensure that packets are delivered locally through policy routing rules.

Example ruleset for tproxy statement with logging and meta mark.

table inet x {

chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority mangle; policy accept;
udp dport 9999 goto {
tproxy to :1234 log prefix "packet tproxied: " meta mark set 1 accept
log prefix "no socket on port 1234 or not transparent?: " drop
}
} }

As packet headers are unchanged, packets might be forwarded instead of delivered locally. As mentioned above, this can be avoided by adding policy routing rules and the packet mark.

Example policy routing rules for local redirection.

ip rule add fwmark 1 lookup 100
ip route add local 0.0.0.0/0 dev lo table 100

This is a change in behavior compared to the legacy iptables TPROXY target which is terminal. To terminate the packet processing after the tproxy statement, remember to issue a verdict as in the example above.

This statement will process TCP three-way-handshake parallel in netfilter context to protect either local or backend system. This statement requires connection tracking because sequence numbers need to be translated.

synproxy [mss mss_value] [wscale wscale_value] [SYNPROXY_FLAGS]

Table 71. synproxy statement attributes

Name Description
mss Maximum segment size announced to clients. This must match the backend.
wscale Window scale announced to clients. This must match the backend.

Table 72. synproxy statement flags

Flag Description
sack-perm Pass client selective acknowledgement option to backend (will be disabled if not present).
timestamp Pass client timestamp option to backend (will be disabled if not present, also needed for selective acknowledgement and window scaling).

Example ruleset for synproxy statement.

Determine tcp options used by backend, from an external system

tcpdump -pni eth0 -c 1 'tcp[tcpflags] == (tcp-syn|tcp-ack)'
port 80 &
telnet 192.0.2.42 80
18:57:24.693307 IP 192.0.2.42.80 > 192.0.2.43.48757:
Flags [S.], seq 360414582, ack 788841994, win 14480,
options [mss 1460,sackOK,
TS val 1409056151 ecr 9690221,
nop,wscale 9],
length 0 Switch tcp_loose mode off, so conntrack will mark out-of-flow packets as state INVALID.
echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/netfilter/nf_conntrack_tcp_loose Make SYN packets untracked.
table ip x {
chain y {
type filter hook prerouting priority raw; policy accept;
tcp flags syn notrack
}
} Catch UNTRACKED (SYN packets) and INVALID (3WHS ACK packets) states and send them to SYNPROXY. This rule will respond to SYN packets with SYN+ACK syncookies, create ESTABLISHED for valid client response (3WHS ACK packets) and drop incorrect cookies. Flags combinations not expected during 3WHS will not match and continue (e.g. SYN+FIN, SYN+ACK). Finally, drop invalid packets, this will be out-of-flow packets that were not matched by SYNPROXY.
table ip x {
chain z {
type filter hook input priority filter; policy accept;
ct state invalid, untracked synproxy mss 1460 wscale 9 timestamp sack-perm
ct state invalid drop
}
}

A flow statement allows us to select what flows you want to accelerate forwarding through layer 3 network stack bypass. You have to specify the flowtable name where you want to offload this flow.

flow add @flowtable

This statement passes the packet to userspace using the nfnetlink_queue handler. The packet is put into the queue identified by its 16-bit queue number. Userspace can inspect and modify the packet if desired. Userspace must then drop or re-inject the packet into the kernel. See libnetfilter_queue documentation for details.

queue [flags QUEUE_FLAGS] [to queue_number]
queue [flags QUEUE_FLAGS] [to queue_number_from - queue_number_to]
queue [flags QUEUE_FLAGS] [to QUEUE_EXPRESSION ]
QUEUE_FLAGS := QUEUE_FLAG [, QUEUE_FLAGS]
QUEUE_FLAG  := bypass | fanout
QUEUE_EXPRESSION := numgen | hash | symhash | MAP STATEMENT

QUEUE_EXPRESSION can be used to compute a queue number at run-time with the hash or numgen expressions. It also allows one to use the map statement to assign fixed queue numbers based on external inputs such as the source ip address or interface names.

Table 73. queue statement values

Value Description Type
queue_number Sets queue number, default is 0. unsigned integer (16 bit)
queue_number_from Sets initial queue in the range, if fanout is used. unsigned integer (16 bit)
queue_number_to Sets closing queue in the range, if fanout is used. unsigned integer (16 bit)

Table 74. queue statement flags

Flag Description
bypass Let packets go through if userspace application cannot back off. Before using this flag, read libnetfilter_queue documentation for performance tuning recommendations.
fanout Distribute packets between several queues.

The dup statement is used to duplicate a packet and send the copy to a different destination.

dup to device
dup to address device device

Table 75. Dup statement values

Expression Description Type
address Specifies that the copy of the packet should be sent to a new gateway. ipv4_addr, ipv6_addr, e.g. abcd::1234, or you can use a mapping, e.g. ip saddr map { 192.168.1.2 : 10.1.1.1 }
device Specifies that the copy should be transmitted via device. string

Using the dup statement.

# send to machine with ip address 10.2.3.4 on eth0
ip filter forward dup to 10.2.3.4 device "eth0"
# copy raw frame to another interface
netdev ingress dup to "eth0"
dup to "eth0"
# combine with map dst addr to gateways
dup to ip daddr map { 192.168.7.1 : "eth0", 192.168.7.2 : "eth1" }

The fwd statement is used to redirect a raw packet to another interface. It is only available in the netdev family ingress and egress hooks. It is similar to the dup statement except that no copy is made.

You can also specify the address of the next hop and the device to forward the packet to. This updates the source and destination MAC address of the packet by transmitting it through the neighboring layer. This also decrements the ttl field of the IP packet. This provides a way to effectively bypass the classical forwarding path, thus skipping the fib (forwarding information base) lookup.

fwd to device
fwd [ip | ip6] to address device device

Using the fwd statement.

# redirect raw packet to device
netdev ingress fwd to "eth0"
# forward packet to next hop 192.168.200.1 via eth0 device
netdev ingress ether saddr set fwd ip to 192.168.200.1 device "eth0"

The set statement is used to dynamically add or update elements in a set from the packet path. The set setname must already exist in the given table and must have been created with one or both of the dynamic and the timeout flags. The dynamic flag is required if the set statement expression includes a stateful object. The timeout flag is implied if the set is created with a timeout, and is required if the set statement updates elements, rather than adding them. Furthermore, these sets should specify both a maximum set size (to prevent memory exhaustion), and their elements should have a timeout (so their number will not grow indefinitely) either from the set definition or from the statement that adds or updates them. The set statement can be used to e.g. create dynamic blacklists.

Dynamic updates are also supported with maps. In this case, the add or update rule needs to provide both the key and the data element (value), separated via :.

{add | update} @setname { expression [timeout timeout] [comment string] }

Example for simple blacklist.

# declare a set, bound to table "filter", in family "ip".
# Timeout and size are mandatory because we will add elements from packet path.
# Entries will timeout after one minute, after which they might be
# re-added if limit condition persists.
nft add set ip filter blackhole \

"{ type ipv4_addr; flags dynamic; timeout 1m; size 65536; }" # declare a set to store the limit per saddr. # This must be separate from blackhole since the timeout is different nft add set ip filter flood \
"{ type ipv4_addr; flags dynamic; timeout 10s; size 128000; }" # whitelist internal interface. nft add rule ip filter input meta iifname "internal" accept # drop packets coming from blacklisted ip addresses. nft add rule ip filter input ip saddr @blackhole counter drop # add source ip addresses to the blacklist if more than 10 tcp connection # requests occurred per second and ip address. nft add rule ip filter input tcp flags syn tcp dport ssh \
add @flood { ip saddr limit rate over 10/second } \
add @blackhole { ip saddr } \
drop # inspect state of the sets. nft list set ip filter flood nft list set ip filter blackhole # manually add two addresses to the blackhole. nft add element filter blackhole { 10.2.3.4, 10.23.1.42 }

The map statement is used to lookup data based on some specific input key.

expression map { MAP_ELEMENTS }
MAP_ELEMENTS := MAP_ELEMENT [, MAP_ELEMENTS]
MAP_ELEMENT  := key : value

The key is a value returned by expression.

Using the map statement.

# select DNAT target based on TCP dport:
# connections to port 80 are redirected to 192.168.1.100,
# connections to port 8888 are redirected to 192.168.1.101
nft add rule ip nat prerouting dnat tcp dport map { 80 : 192.168.1.100, 8888 : 192.168.1.101 }
# source address based SNAT:
# packets from net 192.168.1.0/24 will appear as originating from 10.0.0.1,
# packets from net 192.168.2.0/24 will appear as originating from 10.0.0.2
nft add rule ip nat postrouting snat to ip saddr map { 192.168.1.0/24 : 10.0.0.1, 192.168.2.0/24 : 10.0.0.2 }

The verdict map (vmap) statement works analogous to the map statement, but contains verdicts as values.

expression vmap { VMAP_ELEMENTS }
VMAP_ELEMENTS := VMAP_ELEMENT [, VMAP_ELEMENTS]
VMAP_ELEMENT  := key : verdict

Using the vmap statement.

# jump to different chains depending on layer 4 protocol type:
nft add rule ip filter input ip protocol vmap { tcp : jump tcp-chain, udp : jump udp-chain , icmp : jump icmp-chain }

This represents an xt statement from xtables compat interface. It is a fallback if translation is not available or not complete.

xt TYPE NAME
TYPE := match | target | watcher

Seeing this means the ruleset (or parts of it) were created by iptables-nft and one should use that to manage it.

BEWARE: nftables won’t restore these statements.

These are some additional commands included in nft.

This shows the list of functions that have been registered for the given protocol family, including functions that have been registered implicitly by kernel modules such as nf_conntrack.

list hooks [family]
list hooks netdev [ device DEVICE_NAME ]

list hooks is enough to display everything that is active on the system. Hooks in the netdev family are tied to a network device. If no device name is given, nft will query all network devices in the current network namespace. Example Usage:

List all active netfilter hooks in either the ip or ip6 stack.

% nft list hooks inet
family ip {

hook prerouting {
-0000000400 ipv4_conntrack_defrag [nf_defrag_ipv4]
-0000000200 ipv4_conntrack_in [nf_conntrack]
-0000000100 nf_nat_ipv4_pre_routing [nf_nat]
}
hook input {
0000000000 chain inet filter input [nf_tables]
+0000000100 nf_nat_ipv4_local_in [nf_nat] [..]

The above shows a host that has nat, conntrack and ipv4 packet defragmentation enabled. For each hook location for the queried family a list of active hooks using the format

priority identifier [module_name]

will be shown.

The priority value dictates the order in which the hooks are called. The list is sorted, the lowest number is run first.

The priority value of hooks registered by the kernel cannot be changed. For basechains registered by nftables, this value corresponds to the priority value specified in the base chain definition.

After the numerical value, information about the hook is shown. For basechains defined in nftables this includes the table family, the table name and the basechains name. For hooks coming from kernel modules, the function name is used instead.

If a module name is given, the hook was registered by the kernel module with this name. You can use modinfo module name to obtain more information about the module.

This functionality requires a kernel built with the option CONFIG_NETFILTER_NETLINK_HOOK enabled, either as a module or builtin. The module is named nfnetlink_hook.

The monitor command allows you to listen to Netlink events produced by the nf_tables subsystem. These are either related to creation and deletion of objects or to packets for which meta nftrace was enabled. When they occur, nft will print to stdout the monitored events in either JSON or native nft format.

monitor [new | destroy] MONITOR_OBJECT
monitor trace
MONITOR_OBJECT := tables | chains | sets | rules | elements | ruleset

To filter events related to a concrete object, use one of the keywords in MONITOR_OBJECT.

To filter events related to a concrete action, use keyword new or destroy.

The second form of invocation takes no further options and exclusively prints events generated for packets with nftrace enabled.

Hit ^C to finish the monitor operation.

Listen to all events, report in native nft format.

% nft monitor

Listen to deleted rules, report in JSON format.

% nft -j monitor destroy rules

Listen to both new and destroyed chains, in native nft format.

% nft monitor chains

Listen to ruleset events such as table, chain, rule, set, counters and quotas, in native nft format.

% nft monitor ruleset

Trace incoming packets from host 10.0.0.1.

% nft add rule filter input ip saddr 10.0.0.1 meta nftrace set 1
% nft monitor trace

When an error is detected, nft shows the line(s) containing the error, the position of the erroneous parts in the input stream and marks up the erroneous parts using carets (^). If the error results from the combination of two expressions or statements, the part imposing the constraints which are violated is marked using tildes (~).

For errors returned by the kernel, nft cannot detect which parts of the input caused the error and the entire command is marked.

Error caused by single incorrect expression.

<cmdline>:1:19-22: Error: Interface does not exist
filter output oif eth0

^^^^

Error caused by invalid combination of two expressions.

<cmdline>:1:28-36: Error: Right hand side of relational expression (==) must be constant
filter output tcp dport == tcp dport

~~ ^^^^^^^^^

Error returned by the kernel.

<cmdline>:0:0-23: Error: Could not process rule: Operation not permitted
filter output oif wlan0
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

On success, nft exits with a status of 0. Unspecified errors cause it to exit with a status of 1, memory allocation errors with a status of 2, unable to open Netlink socket with 3.

libnftables(3), libnftables-json(5), iptables(8), ip6tables(8), arptables(8), ebtables(8), ip(8), tc(8)

There is an official wiki at: https://wiki.nftables.org

nftables was written by Patrick McHardy and Pablo Neira Ayuso, among many other contributors from the Netfilter community.

Copyright © 2008-2014 Patrick McHardy <kaber@trash.net> Copyright © 2013-2018 Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>

nftables is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free Software Foundation.

This documentation is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license, CC BY-SA 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.

09/18/2024