Rechercher une page de manuel
shorewall
Langue: en
Version: 03/19/2009 (fedora - 06/07/09)
Section: 8 (Commandes administrateur)
Synopsis
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] add interface[:host-list]... zone
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] allow address
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] check [-e] [-C {shell|perl}] [-d] [-p] [directory]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] clear [-f]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] compile [-e] [-C {shell|perl}] [-d] [-p] [directory] pathname
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] delete interface[:host-list]... zone
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] drop address
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] dump [-x] [-m]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] export [-C {shell|perl}] [directory1] [user@]system[:directory2]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] forget [filename]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] help
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] hits [-t]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] ipcalc {address mask | address/vlsm}
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] iprange address1-address2
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] load [-s] [-c] [-r root-user-name] [-C {shell|perl}] [directory] system
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] logdrop address
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] logwatch [-m] [refresh-interval]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] logreject address
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] refresh [chain...]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] reject address
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] reload [-s] [-c] [-r root-user-name] [-C {shell|perl}] [directory] system
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] reset
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] restart [-n] [-p] [-f] [-C {shell|perl}] [directory]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] restore [filename]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] safe-restart [-C {shell|perl}] [-d] [-p] [directory]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] safe-start [-C {shell|perl}] [-d] [-p] [directory]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] save [filename]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show [-x] [-t {filter|mangle|nat|raw}] [[chain] chain...]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show [-f] capabilities
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show {actions|classifiers|connections|config|filters|macros|zones}
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show [-x] {mangle|nat|raw}
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show tc
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] show [-m] log
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] start [-n] [-C {shell|perl}] [-f] [-n] [directory]
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] stop [-f]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] status
- shorewall [trace|debug [nolock]] [-options] try [-C {shell|perl}] directory [timeout]
- shorewall [trace|debug] [-options] version [-a]
Description
- The shorewall utility is used to control the Shoreline Firewall (Shorewall).
Options
The trace and debug options are used for debugging. See m[blue]http://www.shorewall.net/starting_and_stopping.htm#Tracem[].
The nolock option prevents the command from attempting to acquire the Shorewall lockfile. It is useful if you need to include shorewall commands in FC/etc/shorewall/startedF[].
The options control the amount of output that the command produces. They consist of a sequence of the letters v and q. If the options are omitted, the amount of output is determined by the setting of the VERBOSITY parameter in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5). Each v adds one to the effective verbosity and each q subtracts one from the effective VERBOSITY. Anternately, v may be followed immediately with one of -1,0,1,2 to specify a specify VERBOSITY. There may be no white space between v and the VERBOSITY.
The options may also include the letter t which causes all progress messages to be timestamped.
Commands
The available commands are listed below.
add
- Adds a list of hosts or subnets to a dynamic zone usually used with VPN's.
The interface argument names an interface defined in the m[blue]shorewall-interfacesm[][2](5) file. A host-list is comma-separated list whose elements are host or network addresses..if n -
Caution
The add command is not very robust. If there are errors in the host-list, you may see a large number of error messages yet a subsequent shorewall show zones command will indicate that all hosts were added. If this happens, replace add by delete and run the same command again. Then enter the correct command.
allow
- Re-enables receipt of packets from hosts previously blacklisted by a drop, logdrop, reject, or logreject command.
check
- Compiles the configuraton in the specified directory and discards the compiled output script. If no directory is given, then /etc/shorewall is assumed.
The -e option causes the compiler to look for a file named capabilities. This file is produced using the command shorewall-lite show -f capabilities > capabilities on a system with Shorewall Lite installed.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
The -d option only works when the compiler is Shorewall-perl. It causes the compiler to be run under control of the Perl debugger.
The -p option only works when the compiler is Shorewall-perl. It causes the compiler to be profiled via the Perl -wd:DProf command-line option.
clear
- Clear will remove all rules and chains installed by Shorewall. The firewall is then wide open and unprotected. Existing connections are untouched. Clear is often used to see if the firewall is causing connection problems.
The -f option was added in Shorewall 4.0.3. If -f is given, the command will be processed by the compiled script that executed the last successful start, restart or refresh command if that script exists.
compile
- Compiles the current configuration into the executable file pathname. If a directory is supplied, Shorewall will look in that directory first for configuration files.
When -e is specified, the compilation is being performed on a system other than where the compiled script will run. This option disables certain configuration options that require the script to be compiled where it is to be run. The use of -e requires the presense of a configuration file named FCcapabilitiesF[] which may be produced using the command shorewall-lite show -f capabilities > capabilities on a system with Shorewall Lite installed
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
The -d option only works when the compiler is Shorewall-perl. It causes the compiler to be run under control of the Perl debugger.
The -p option only works when the compiler is Shorewall-perl. It causes the compiler to be profiled via the Perl -wd:DProf command-line option.
delete
- The delete command reverses the effect of an earlier add command.
The interface argument names an interface defined in the m[blue]shorewall-interfacesm[][2](5) file. A host-list is comma-separated list whose elements are a host or network address.
drop
- Causes traffic from the listed addresses to be silently dropped.
dump
- Produces a verbose report about the firewall configuration for the purpose of problem analysis.
The -x option causes actual packet and byte counts to be displayed. Without that option, these counts are abbreviated. The -m option causes any MAC addresses included in Shorewall log messages to be displayed.
export
- If directory1 is omitted, the current working directory is assumed.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
Allows a non-root user to compile a shorewall script and stage it on a system (provided that the user has access to the system via ssh). The command is equivalent to: -
-
/sbin/shorewall compile -e directory1 directory1/firewall &&\ scp directory1/firewall directory1/firewall.conf [user@]system:[directory2]
In other words, the configuration in the specified (or defaulted) directory is compiled to a file called firewall in that directory. If compilation succeeds, then firewall and firewall.conf are copied to system using scp.
-
forget
- Deletes /var/lib/shorewall/filename and /var/lib/shorewall/save. If no filename is given then the file specified by RESTOREFILE in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) is assumed.
help
- Displays a syntax summary.
hits
- Generates several reports from Shorewall log messages in the current log file. If the -t option is included, the reports are restricted to log messages generated today.
ipcalc
- Ipcalc displays the network address, broadcast address, network in CIDR notation and netmask corresponding to the input[s].
iprange
- Iprange decomposes the specified range of IP addresses into the equivalent list of network/host addresses.
load
- If directory is omitted, the current working directory is assumed. Allows a non-root user to compile a shorewall script and install it on a system (provided that the user has root access to the system via ssh). The command is equivalent to:
-
-
/sbin/shorewall compile -e directory directory/firewall &&\ scp directory/firewall directory/firewall.conf root@system:/var/lib/shorewall-lite/ &&\ ssh root@system '/sbin/shorewall-lite start'
In other words, the configuration in the specified (or defaulted) directory is compiled to a file called firewall in that directory. If compilation succeeds, then firewall is copied to system using scp. If the copy succeeds, Shorewall Lite on system is started via ssh.
If -s is specified and the start command succeeds, then the remote Shorewall-lite configuration is saved by executing shorewall-lite save via ssh.
if -c is included, the command shorewall-lite show capabilities -f > /var/lib/shorewall-lite/capabilities is executed via ssh then the generated file is copied to directory using scp. This step is performed before the configuration is compiled.
If -r is included, it specifies that the root user on system is named root-user-name rather than "root".
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
-
logdrop
- Causes traffic from the listed addresses to be logged then discarded. Logging occurs at the log level specified by the BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1] (5).
logwatch
- Monitors the log file specified by the LOGFILE option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) and produces an audible alarm when new Shorewall messages are logged. The -m option causes the MAC address of each packet source to be displayed if that information is available. The refresh-interval specifies the time in seconds between screen refreshes. You can enter a negative number by preceding the number with "--" (e.g., shorewall logwatch -- -30). In this case, when a packet count changes, you will be prompted to hit any key to resume screen refreshes.
logreject
- Causes traffic from the listed addresses to be logged then rejected. Logging occurs at the log level specified by the BLACKLIST_LOGLEVEL setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1] (5).
refresh
- Shorewall-shell: The rules involving the the black list, ECN control rules, and traffic shaping are recreated to reflect any changes made to your configuration files. Existing connections are untouched.
Shorewall-perl: All steps performed by restart are performed by refresh with the exception that refresh only recreates the chains specified in the command while restart recreates the entire Netfilter ruleset. If no chain is given, the static blacklisting chain blacklst is assumed.
Note: Specifying chains in the command requires Shorewall-perl 4.0.3 or later. Earlier versions only refresh the blacklst chain
The listed chains are assumed to be in the filter table. You can refresh chains in other tables by prefixing the chain name with the table name followed by ":" (e.g., nat:net_dnat). Chain names which follow are assumed to be in that table until the end of the list or until an entry in the list names another table. Built-in chains such as FORWARD may not be refreshed.
Example: -
-
shorewall refresh net2fw nat:net_dnat #Refresh the 'net2loc' chain in the filter table and the 'net_dnat' chain in the nat table
Beginning with Shorewall 4.1, the refresh command has slightly different behavior. When no chain name is given to the refresh command, the mangle table is refreshed along with the blacklist chain (if any). This allows you to modify FC/etc/shorewall/tcrules F[]and install the changes using refresh.
-
reload
- If directory is omitted, the current working directory is assumed. Allows a non-root user to compile a shorewall script and install it on a system (provided that the user has root access to the system via ssh). The command is equivalent to:
-
-
/sbin/shorewall compile -e directory directory/firewall &&\ scp directory/firewall directory/firewall.conf root@system:/var/lib/shorewall-lite/ &&\ ssh root@system '/sbin/shorewall-lite restart'
In other words, the configuration in the specified (or defaulted) directory is compiled to a file called firewall in that directory. If compilation succeeds, then firewall is copied to system using scp. If the copy succeeds, Shorewall Lite on system is restarted via ssh.
If -s is specified and the restart command succeeds, then the remote Shorewall-lite configuration is saved by executing shorewall-lite save via ssh.
if -c is included, the command shorewall-lite show capabilities -f > /var/lib/shorewall-lite/capabilities is executed via ssh then the generated file is copied to directory using scp. This step is performed before the configuration is compiled.
If -r is included, it specifies that the root user on system is named root-user-name rather than "root".
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
-
reset
- All the packet and byte counters in the firewall are reset.
restart
- Restart is similar to shorewall start except that it assumes that the firewall is already started. Existing connections are maintained. If a directory is included in the command, Shorewall will look in that directory first for configuration files.
The -n option causes Shorewall to avoid updating the routing table(s).
The -p option causes the connection tracking table to be flushed; the conntrack utility must be installed to use this option.
The -f option suppresses the compilation step and simply reused the compiled script which last started/restarted Shorewall.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use. -
Warning
If you use Shorewall's multi-ISP feature, you are stronly advised against using the -C option of the restart command when switching between Shorewall-shell and Shorewall-perl. The only supported way to switch compilers is to shorewall stop followed by shorewall start -C compiler
restore
- Restore Shorewall to a state saved using the shorewall save command. Existing connections are maintained. The filename names a restore file in /var/lib/shorewall created using shorewall save; if no filename is given then Shorewall will be restored from the file specified by the RESTOREFILE option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5).
safe-restart
- Only allowed if Shorewall is running. The current configuration is saved in /var/lib/shorewall/safe-restart (see the save command below) then a shorewall restart is done. You will then be prompted asking if you want to accept the new configuration or not. If you answer "n" or if you fail to answer within 60 seconds (such as when your new configuration has disabled communication with your terminal), the configuration is restored from the saved configuration. If a directory is given, then Shorewall will look in that directory first when opening configuration files.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use. -
Warning
If you use Shorewall's multi-ISP feature, you are stronly advised against using the -C option of the safe-restart command when switching between Shorewall-shell and Shorewall-perl. The only supported way to switch compilers is to shorewall stop followed by shorewall safe-start -C compiler
safe-start
- Shorewall is started normally. You will then be prompted asking if everything went all right. If you answer "n" or if you fail to answer within 60 seconds (such as when your new configuration has disabled communication with your terminal), a shorewall clear is performed for you. If a directory is given, then Shorewall will look in that directory first when opening configuration files.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
save
- The dynamic blacklist is stored in /var/lib/shorewall/save. The state of the firewall is stored in /var/lib/shorewall/filename for use by the shorewall restore and shorewall -f start commands. If filename is not given then the state is saved in the file specified by the RESTOREFILE option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5).
show
- The show command can have a number of different arguments:
actions -
- Produces a report about the available actions (built-in, standard and user-defined).
capabilities
- Displays your kernel/iptables capabilities. The -f option causes the display to be formatted as a capabilities file for use with compile -e.
[ [ chain ] chain... ]
- The rules in each chain are displayed using the iptables -L chain -n -v command. If no chain is given, all of the chains in the filter table are displayed. The -x option is passed directly through to iptables and causes actual packet and byte counts to be displayed. Without this option, those counts are abbreviated. The -t option specifies the Netfilter table to display. The default is filter.
If the t option and the chain keyword are both omitted and any of the listed chains do not exist, a usage message is displayed.
classifiers|filters
- Displays information about the packet classifiers defined on the system as a result of traffic shaping configuration.
config
- Dispays distribution-specific defaults.
connections
- Displays the IP connections currently being tracked by the firewall.
log
- Displays the last 20 Shorewall messages from the log file specified by the LOGFILE option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5). The -m option causes the MAC address of each packet source to be displayed if that information is available.
macros
- Displays information about each macro defined on the firewall system.
mangle
- Displays the Netfilter mangle table using the command iptables -t mangle -L -n -v.The -x option is passed directly through to iptables and causes actual packet and byte counts to be displayed. Without this option, those counts are abbreviated.
nat
- Displays the Netfilter nat table using the command iptables -t nat -L -n -v.The -x option is passed directly through to iptables and causes actual packet and byte counts to be displayed. Without this option, those counts are abbreviated.
raw
- Displays the Netfilter raw table using the command iptables -t raw -L -n -v.The -x option is passed directly through to iptables and causes actual packet and byte counts to be displayed. Without this option, those counts are abbreviated.
tc
- Displays information about queuing disciplines, classes and filters.
zones
- Displays the current composition of the Shorewall zones on the system.
start
- Start shorewall. Existing connections through shorewall managed interfaces are untouched. New connections will be allowed only if they are allowed by the firewall rules or policies. If a directory is included in the command, Shorewall will look in that directory first for configuration files. If -f is specified, the saved configuration specified by the RESTOREFILE option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) will be restored if that saved configuration exists and has been modified more recently than the files in /etc/shorewall. When -f is given, a directory may not be specified.
The -n option causes Shorewall to avoid updating the routing table(s).
The -p option causes the connection tracking table to be flushed; the conntrack utility must be installed to use this option.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
stop
- Stops the firewall. All existing connections, except those listed in m[blue]shorewall-routestoppedm[][3](5) or permitted by the ADMINISABSENTMINDED option in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5), are taken down. The only new traffic permitted through the firewall is from systems listed in m[blue]shorewall-routestoppedm[][3](5) or by ADMINISABSENTMINDED.
The -f option was added in Shorewall 4.0.3. If -f is given, the command will be processed by the compiled script that executed the last successful start, restart or refresh command if that script exists.
status
- Produces a short report about the state of the Shorewall-configured firewall.
try
- If Shorewall is started then the firewall state is saved to a temporary saved configuration (FC/var/lib/shorewall/.tryF[]). Next, if Shorewall is currently started then a restart command is issued; otherwise, a start command is performed. if an error occurs during the compliation phase of the restart or start, the command terminates without changing the Shorewall state. If an error occurs during the restart phase, then a shorewall restore is performed using the saved configuration. If an error occurs during the start phase, then Shorewall is cleared. If the start/restart succeeds and a timeout is specified then a clear or restore is performed after timeout seconds.
The -C option determines the compiler to use (Shorewall-shell or Shorewall-perl). If not specified, the SHOREWALL_COMPILER setting in m[blue]shorewall.confm[][1](5) determines the compiler to use.
version
- Displays Shorewall's version. If the -a option is included, the versions of Shorewall-shell and/or Shorewall-perl will also be displayed.
FILES
/etc/shorewall/
See ALSO
m[blue]http://www.shorewall.net/starting_and_stopping_shorewall.htmm[]
shorewall-accounting(5), shorewall-actions(5), shorewall-blacklist(5), shorewall-hosts(5), shorewall-interfaces(5), shorewall-ipsec(5), shorewall-maclist(5), shorewall-masq(5), shorewall-nat(5), shorewall-netmap(5), shorewall-params(5), shorewall-policy(5), shorewall-providers(5), shorewall-proxyarp(5), shorewall-route_rules(5), shorewall-routestopped(5), shorewall-rules(5), shorewall.conf(5), shorewall-tcclasses(5), shorewall-tcdevices(5), shorewall-tcrules(5), shorewall-tos(5), shorewall-tunnels(5), shorewall-zones(5)
Notes
- 1.
- shorewall.conf
- http://www.shorewall.net/manpages/shorewall.conf.html
- 2.
- shorewall-interfaces
- http://www.shorewall.net/manpages/shorewall-interfaces.html
- 3.
- shorewall-routestopped
- http://www.shorewall.net/manpages/shorewall-routestopped.html
Contenus ©2006-2024 Benjamin Poulain
Design ©2006-2024 Maxime Vantorre