Interesting thought.

The firewall rules are the same for this server as all the other servers
and none of the other servers are showing this anomaly in their logs.

I went ahead and deleted the rule, then recreated it, then tested again.
 Same results.

The day that I started getting these weird entries was the first day that
server was logged into from offsite and right after installing some yum
updates.  I looked through the Logwatch emails and these yum updates
correspond to that same day.  Any chance one of these could change the way
that this information is being logged?  I can tail /var/log/secure and
watch it log the wrong IP address when I login from home.

Packages Updated:
    nss-3.15.3-7.el5_10.i386
    httpd-manual-2.2.3-87.el5_10.x86_64
    1:mod_ssl-2.2.3-87.el5_10.x86_64
    nspr-4.10.6-1.el5_10.i386
    nss-tools-3.15.3-7.el5_10.x86_64
    firefox-24.7.0-1.el5_10.i386
    nss-3.15.3-7.el5_10.x86_64
    httpd-2.2.3-87.el5_10.x86_64
    firefox-24.7.0-1.el5_10.x86_64
    nspr-4.10.6-1.el5_10.x86_64




On Thu, Aug 7, 2014 at 10:42 AM, Tilghman Lesher <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 3:20 PM, Chris McQuistion
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > This is a weird problem.
> >
> > I get the daily logwatch emails from our various servers and one of the
> > things that I eyeball on a regular basis is the "Users logging in through
> > sshd".  I like to make sure that I don't see any logins from IP addresses
> > that I don't recognize (as well as failed login attempts.)
> >
> > We changed our firewall about a week and a half ago, over to Untangle.
>  This
> > has had no negative affect on any of the usual behavior except for one of
> > our servers, a database server running RHEL 5.X (64 bit, fully up to
> date.)
> >
> > On this one system, I'm now seeing the following line in it's daily
> Logwatch
> > email:
> >
> > 192.168.1.254 (firewall.watkins.edu): 2 times
> >
> > That IP address is the firewall, itself.  The firewall is NOT actually
> > logging into this server.  My Linux box at home is logging in via SSH,
> every
> > day, to run backups.  In the past, and with every other server that I
> > remotely backup via SSH, every day, the Logwatch email reflects the IP
> > address of my cable modem at home.
> >
> > In this one case, this server shows 192.168.1.254 (the firewall) as the
> > source IP address instead of the "real" source IP address.
> >
> > Port forwarding to this server is set up exactly the same way as all the
> > other servers.  The backup program I'm running at home (dirvish)
> connects to
> > this server, just like the other servers.
> >
> > The only variable that has changed is the firewall and possibly some
> > recently-run yum updates.  The only unique thing about this server, is
> that
> > it is our only RHEL 5 server.  We also have a RHEL 6 server and several
> > CentOS 5/6 servers.
> >
> > Any ideas?
>
> I suspect a difference in how your firewall is set up to forward those
> packets.  I'd look at the underlying iptables commands, not the
> frontend information.  It sounds like the firewall is rewriting the
> source address on those packets.
>
> --
> Tilghman
>
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