On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 6:12 PM, James Harper
<[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Did you actually try putting it in the OUTPUT chain? I have rules for that 
>> > on
>> > my router and it is definitely working (just checked with tcpdump).
>> >
>>
>> I just tried this now.
>>
>> Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT 4504 packets, 857K bytes)
>>  pkts bytes target     prot opt in     out     source
>> destination
>>   170 27734 MARK       tcp  --  any    any     anywhere
>> anywhere             tcp dpt:openvpn MARK set 0x4aa
>>
>> So this time the packets are actually getting marked, but they still
>> go out over the wrong interface. It looks like because the routing
>> decision has already been made, it doesn't bother to look up the
>> routing tables.
>>
>
> What kernel? It is definitely working for me.

# uname -r
3.2.0-53-generic

> Are you using tcpdump to determine that the packets are going out over the 
> wrong interface?

For the last test I only checked with lsof and conntrack:

# lsof -i -n | grep openvpn
openvpn   21972     nobody    4u  IPv4 129321      0t0  TCP
115.146.92.84:51520->172.26.10.100:openvpn (ESTABLISHED)

# conntrack -d 172.26.8.100 -L
tcp      6 431995 ESTABLISHED src=115.146.92.84 dst=172.26.10.100
sport=51520 dport=1194 src=172.26.8.100 dst=115.146.92.84 sport=1194
dport=51520 [ASSURED] mark=0 use=2
conntrack v1.0.0 (conntrack-tools): 1 flow entries have been shown.

But now using tcpdump, I see that packets ARE leaving via eth1. But
there is only outgoing packets, no incoming packets at all. Whereas on
the default gateway device, packets are only incoming, no outgoing
packets. The openvpn tunnel seems fine with that. So I need to change
the source address of the packets for it to come back on the correct
interface?

-- 
Marcus Furlong
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