Skip to main content
Version: 3.27 (latest)

Summary

When do host endpoint policies apply?

Normal host endpoint policies apply to traffic that arrives on and/or is sent to a host interface, but the rules for applying untracked and pre-DNAT policies differ in some cases. Here we present and summarize all of those rules together, for all possible flows and all types of host endpoints policy.

For packets that arrive on a host interface and are destined for a local workload, i.e., a locally-hosted pod, container or VM:

  • Pre-DNAT policies apply.

  • Normal policies do apply if applyOnForward is true. Normal policies do not apply if applyOnForward is false.

  • Untracked policies technically do apply, but never have any net positive effect for such flows.

    note

    To be precise, untracked policy for the incoming host interface may apply in the forwards direction, and if so it will have the effect of forwarding the packet to the workload without any connection tracking. But then, in the reverse direction, there will be no conntrack state for the return packets to match, and there is no application of any egress rules that may be defined by the untracked policy—so unless the workload's policy specifically allows the relevant source IP, the return packet will be dropped. That is the same overall result as if there was no untracked policy at all, so in practice it is as if untracked policies do not apply to this flow.

For packets that arrive on a host interface and are destined for a local server process in the host namespace:

  • Untracked, pre-DNAT and normal policies all apply.

  • If a packet is explicitly allowed by untracked policy, it skips over any pre-DNAT and normal policy.

  • If a packet is explicitly allowed by pre-DNAT policy, it skips over any normal policy.

For packets that arrive on a host interface (A) and are forwarded out of the same or another host interface (B):

  • Untracked policies apply, for both host interfaces A and B, but only the ingress rules that are defined in those policies. The forwards direction is governed by the ingress rules of untracked policies that apply to interface A, and the reverse direction is governed by the ingress rules of untracked policies that apply to interface B, so those rules should be defined symmetrically.

  • Pre-DNAT policies apply, specifically the ingress rules of the pre-DNAT policies that apply to interface A. (The reverse direction is allowed by conntrack state.)

  • Normal policies apply if applyOnForward is true: specifically, the ingress rules of the normal policies that apply to interface A, and the egress rules of the normal policies that apply to interface B. (The reverse direction is allowed by conntrack state.) Normal policies do not apply if applyOnForward is false.

  • If a packet is explicitly allowed by untracked policy, it skips over any pre-DNAT and normal policy.

  • If a packet is explicitly allowed by pre-DNAT policy, it skips over any normal policy.

For packets that are sent from a local server process (in the host namespace) out of a host interface:

  • Untracked policies apply, specifically the egress rules of the untracked policies that apply to the host interface.

  • Normal policies apply, specifically the egress rules of the normal policies that apply to that host interface.

  • Pre-DNAT policies do not apply.

For packets that are sent from a local workload out of a host interface:

  • No untracked or pre-DNAT host endpoint policies apply.

  • Normal policies apply if applyOnForward is true: specifically, the egress rules of the normal policies that apply to the outgoing interface. (The reverse direction is allowed by conntrack state.) Normal policies do not apply if applyOnForward is false.