David Wolfskill wrote:
On my systems that are directly connected to network not known to be relatively "safe," I use ipfw a fair bit.Of late, I've taken to augmenting the usual rules that are sensitive to specific ports and the like with (early) rules that check certain ipfw tables; they are used in the following way: * Traffic where an endpoint is found in table 1 is blocked. Period. * Traffic where the source address is in table 2 is not permitted to initiate a 22/tcp connection. * Traffic where the source address is in table 3 is not permitted to initiate a 80/tcp or a 443/tcp connection. Reasons for the above are somewhat off-topic for the list; I'll merely comment that they have to do with perceived failure to respond to observed attempts at abuse: I will protect my networks. In any case, I've cobbled up a moderately complex mechanism for maintaining the tables in question, and table 1 (in particular) has grown to be rather large: d254(8.0-C)[1] sudo ipfw table 1 list | wc -l Password: 11230 d254(8.0-C)[2] ^1^2 sudo ipfw table 2 list | wc -l 1743 d254(8.0-C)[3] ^2^3 sudo ipfw table 3 list | wc -l 50d254(8.0-C)[4]Unfortunately, the only way I've found to populate a given table is to issue ipfw table ${table} add ${netblock}
you can read in a file of entries i.e. ipfw -q filename where each line is of the form table N add IP VAL this increases the speed many times as you are not starting ipfw(1) for each entry.
for each "netblock" in the table (assuming that I don't care about the optional "value" parameter -- which I haven't found a use for).
oh I have lots of use for that...
Issuing something on the order of 13K "ipfw table ... add" commands during the single- to multu-user transition tends to slow down the effective boot time a bit -- especially when I'm booting up CURRENT on my laptop (with WITNESS & INVARIANTS specified).
I add many thousands using hte method described above and it trakse a second or so
you can alternatively do: myscript|ipfw -q /dev/stdin where 'myscript' generates the values.
Would some way to teach ipfw(8) how to perform some sort of "bulk add" of a bunch of table entries in a single command invocation be of interest to anyone else? Please include my address on responses, as I'm not subscribed to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (I've tweaked Reply-To to provide an MUA hint.) Peace, david
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