Options are used to control PF's operation.
They are specified in pf.conf using the set
directive.
set block-policy optionblock action.
drop - packet is silently dropped.
return - a TCP RST packet is returned for blocked TCP
packets and an ICMP Unreachable packet is returned for all others.
drop.
set debug optionemerg, alert, crit,
err, warning, notice,
info and debug.
set fingerprints file/etc/pf.os.
set limit option valuepfctl -s memory.
frags - maximum number of entries in the memory pool
used for packet reassembly (scrub rules).
Default is 5000.
src-nodes - maximum number of entries in the memory pool
used for tracking source IP addresses (generated by the
sticky-address and source-track options).
Default is 10000.
states - maximum number of entries in the memory pool
used for state table entries (filter rules
that specify keep state).
Default is 100000.
tables - maximum number of
tables that can be created.
Default is 1000.
table-entries - the overall limit on how many addresses
can be stored in all tables.
Default is 200000.
If the system has less than 100MB of physical memory, the default is
set to 100000.
set loginterface interfacematch, bad-offset, etc., counters
and the state table counters are recorded regardless of whether
loginterface is set or not.
To turn this option off, set it to none.
Default is none.
set optimization optionnormal - suitable for almost all networks.
high-latency - high latency networks such as satellite
connections.
aggressive - aggressively expires connections from the
state table.
This can greatly reduce the memory requirements on a busy firewall
at the risk of dropping idle connections early.
conservative - extremely conservative settings.
This avoids dropping idle connections at the expense of greater
memory utilization and slightly increased processor utilization.
normal.
set ruleset-optimization option
none - disable the optimizer altogether.
basic - enables the following ruleset optimizations:
profile - uses the currently loaded ruleset as a
feedback profile to tailor the ordering of quick rules to actual
network traffic.
basic.
See pf.conf(5) for a more
complete description.
set skip on interfaceinterface.
This can be useful on loopback interfaces where filtering, normalization,
queueing, etc, are not required.
This option can be used multiple times.
By default, this option is not set.
set state-policy optionif-bound - states are bound to the interface they're
created on.
If traffic matches a state table entry but is not crossing the
interface recorded in that state entry, the match is rejected.
The packet must then match a filter rule or will be dropped/rejected
altogether.
floating - states can match packets on any interface.
As long as the packet matches a state entry and is passing in the
same direction as it was on the interface when the state was created,
it does not matter what interface it's crossing.
It will pass.
floating.
set timeout option valueinterval - seconds between purges of expired states and
packet fragments.
Default is 10.
frag - seconds before an unassembled fragment is
expired.
Default is 30.
src.track - seconds to keep a
source tracking entry in memory
after the last state expires.
Default is 0.
set timeout interval 10
set timeout frag 30
set limit { frags 5000, states 2500 }
set optimization high-latency
set block-policy return
set loginterface dc0
set fingerprints "/etc/pf.os.test"
set skip on lo0
set state-policy if-bound