How Amazon Network Firewall filters network traffic
When Amazon Network Firewall inspects a packet, it evaluates the packet against the rules in the policy's stateless rule groups first, using the stateless rules engine. Then, depending on that inspection and on other settings in the policy, it might evaluate the packets against the rules in the policy's stateful rule groups, using the stateful rules engine.
1. Stateless rules engine
Network Firewall evaluates each packet against the firewall policy's stateless rules until it finds a match or exhausts all of the stateless rules. Network Firewall evaluates the rule groups in the order that they are prioritized in the policy, starting from the lowest setting. Within each rule group, Network Firewall evaluates the rules in the order that they are prioritized in the rule group, starting from the lowest setting. When you create a stateless rule group, you set the priority of the rules in the rule group. When you create a firewall policy, you set the priority of the stateless rule groups in the policy. For more information, see Working with stateless rule groups in Amazon Network Firewall and Firewall policies in Amazon Network Firewall.
When Network Firewall finds a match, it handles the packet according to the matching rule's configuration. You configure a stateless rule to pass the packet through, drop it, or forward it to your stateful rules. Additionally, you can configure a stateless rule to perform a custom action, for example you can publish metrics for the packet to Amazon CloudWatch. For more information, see Defining rule actions in Amazon Network Firewall.
2. Default stateless rule actions
If a packet doesn't match any stateless rule, Network Firewall performs the firewall policy's default stateless rule action for full packet or UDP packet fragment, depending on the packet type. Network Firewall only applies the fragment action setting to UDP packet fragments, and silently drops packet fragments for other protocols. The options for these actions settings are the same as for stateless rules. For more information, see Defining rule actions in Amazon Network Firewall.
3. Stateful rules engine
When Network Firewall forwards a packet to the stateful engine for inspection, it inspects each packet against the stateful rule groups, in the context of the packet's traffic flow. You can configure a stateful rule to pass the packet through, with or without an alert, or drop it and send an alert. Alerts require logging to be configured for the firewall.
The Suricata stateful rules engine controls how the stateful rules in your firewall policy
are processed. The engine evaluates the packet's traffic flow against the conditions
in the policy's stateful rules until it finds a match or exhausts all of the rules.
When the engine finds a match, it handles the packet according to the rule's
configuration. By default, the Suricata stateful rules engine orders rule processing
according to the rule action setting, processing first the rules with pass action,
then drop, then alert. For more information, see Managing evaluation order for Suricata compatible rules in Amazon Network Firewall and the Suricata Action-order documentation
Depending on the Suricata compatible rules that you provide, the stateful engine might perform deep packet inspection of your traffic. Deep packet inspection works on the payload data within your packets, rather than on the header information.
For more information about stateful rules, see Rule groups in Amazon Network Firewall.