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fds

Buy Me a Coffee

The go-to FirewallD CLI app that doesn't suck.

What is fds?

Firewall management is often a task that you do once at the time of setting up a server. But if you're maintaining a server like a PRO, you are monitoring logs, and blocking malicious users as they come, on a regular basis.

FirewallD is a great firewall software. It has the concepts of zones, sources, and supports IP sets. However, its client app, firewall-cmd is far from user-friendly when it comes to blocking and managing blocked IP addresses. Furthermore, if you also use Cloudflare firewall, you also want to propagate your blocked IP addresses to it for best protection.

fds is the CLI client for FirewallD/Cloudflare, that you'll love to use any day. It is an alternative, client for FirewallD.

Use it for simple or complex banning tasks, instead of firewall-cmd.

Look how simple things are with fds:

fds block <country name>
fds block 1.2.3.4

It makes the task of managing your FirewallD easy and human-friendly.

Installation on CentOS/RHEL, Fedora and Amazon Linux

First, install RPM repository configuration:

sudo yum -y install https://extras.getpagespeed.com/release-latest.rpm

Free installation

For free installation and usage, disable the binary packages sub-repository, which contains non-essential dependencies for fds:

sudo yum -y install yum-utils
sudo yum-config-manager --disable getpagespeed-extras

Now you can install fds:

sudo yum -y install fds

Installation with subscription

By subscribing to the GetPageSpeed RPM repository, you gain access to a number of packages other than fds, as well support its development.

Simply run this command:

sudo yum -y install fds

The subscription ships with packages for IP prefixes' aggregation. fds can use those, and thus essentially overcome some serious FirewallD bugs.

So it's highly recommended to also run the following if you are a subscriber:

CentOS/RHEL 7 only

sudo yum -y install python2-aggregate6

CentOS/RHEL 8+, Fedora and Amazon Linux

sudo yum -y install python3-aggregate6

What fds can do

The fds is utility program for users of FirewallD. It is a helper to easily perform day-to-day firewall tasks:

  • block users of Tor
  • block countries
  • block arbitrary IP addresses
  • block the same over at Cloudflare

Integrations

By default, fds only operates with FirewallD.

To enable Cloudflare integration, run:

fds config 

Block Tor

You can block all Tor exit nodes by running:

fds block tor

Note that since these addresses constantly change, you may want to run this command in a cron.

Ban a single IP

fds block 1.2.3.4

This blocks IP address in a proper(©) fashion by ensuring that the IP is in a set named networkblock4, that the set is a source to FirewallD's drop zone. Using IP sets is the corner stone of consistent firewall management!

fds is also smart enough to break any existing connections originating from that IP address. Useful if malicious requests are in process.

You can specify base name of created/used IP set for blocking, by specifying it in --ipset, e.g. for banned4 (IPv4) or banned4 (IPv6), use:

fds block 1.2.3.4 --ipset banned

Ban a country or a continent

fds block <Country Name>
fds block China
fds block Asia

To block a country which has spaces in its name, use quotes:

fds block "Country Name"

You can list all country names available for blocking by running:

fds list countries

You can list all continents available for blocking by running:

fds list continents

--no-reload (-nr)

Use this optional flag to prevent FirewallD from being reloaded. This is only useful when adding multiple blocks, as it ensure faster blocking:

fds block 1.2.3.4 --no-reload
fds block 2.3.4.5 --no-reload
fds block Country1 --no-reload
...
fds block Country2

In the above example, we block some IP addresses and a few countries. The last block operation will reload FirewallD and actually apply our ban.

Alternatively, invoke all fds block with --no-reload option and invoke firewall-cmd --reload in the end.

List all blocked networks and countries

The following allows to easily see what is blocked:

fds list blocked

Unblock a country or IP/network

Use fds unblock ... like the following:

fds unblock China
fds unblock 1.2.3.4

Reset all bans

You can quickly remove all blocks (and by that, all IP sets associated with fds):

fds reset

Notes

The fds package automatically installs a cron job that syncs your blocked IP sets daily. So there is no need to do anything to ensure a country (or Tor) stays blocked.

Planned

See contributing guide for development setup (if not using packages).

Files

  • not in use: /etc/fds.conf (info on currently blocked countries or otherwise small data sets suitable for a single config file)
  • not in use: /var/lib/fds: zone files, (state data) + (info on what is currently blocked) (???)
  • /var/cache/fds: cachecontrol cache
  • /root/.cloudflare/cloudflare.cfg Cloudflare authentication