Difference between revisions of "Fail2ban"
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#Run iptables -L and find the ip address you want to unban. Note: the chain listed in iptables is not the jail the ip is contained. Check the fail2ban config if you don't know the jail name. | #Run iptables -L and find the ip address you want to unban. Note: the chain listed in iptables is not the jail the ip is contained. Check the fail2ban config if you don't know the jail name. | ||
#Run the following commands as root. | #Run the following commands as root. | ||
− | #*fail2ban-client get <jailname> actionunban <ip address> | + | #*<code>fail2ban-client get <jailname> actionunban <ip address></code> |
− | #*fail2ban-client reload | + | #*<code>fail2ban-client reload</code> |
Revision as of 15:26, 19 January 2012
This article contains instructions on installing and configuring fail2ban and also some useful tips for administering it.
Installing
- The fail2ban RPM is available from the EPEL package repository. Use the following instructions to make this package available to yum.
- Install fail2ban via yum:
yum install fail2ban
Configuring
- Start the fail2ban service.
service fail2ban start
- Set fail2ban to start at boot time.
chkconfig fail2ban on
Unbanning
- Run iptables -L and find the ip address you want to unban. Note: the chain listed in iptables is not the jail the ip is contained. Check the fail2ban config if you don't know the jail name.
- Run the following commands as root.
fail2ban-client get <jailname> actionunban <ip address>
fail2ban-client reload