UncomplicatedFirewall

Revision 103 as of 2015-08-21 14:35:19

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Introduction

The Linux kernel in Ubuntu provides a packet filtering system called netfilter, and the traditional interface for manipulating netfilter are the iptables suite of commands. iptables provide a complete firewall solution that is both highly configurable and highly flexible.

Becoming proficient in iptables takes time, and getting started with netfilter firewalling using only iptables can be a daunting task. As a result, many frontends for iptables have been created over the years, each trying to achieve a different result and targeting a different audience.

The Uncomplicated Firewall (ufw) is a frontend for iptables and is particularly well-suited for host-based firewalls. ufw provides a framework for managing netfilter, as well as a command-line interface for manipulating the firewall. ufw aims to provide an easy to use interface for people unfamiliar with firewall concepts, while at the same time simplifies complicated iptables commands to help an adminstrator who knows what he or she is doing. ufw is an upstream for other distributions and graphical frontends.

UFW in Ubuntu

Ubuntu 8.04 LTS introduced ufw, and it is available by default in all Ubuntu installations after 8.04 LTS.

Available Versions in supported versions of Ubuntu

  • Ubuntu 12.04 LTS: 0.31.1-1

  • Ubuntu 14.04 LTS: 0.34~rc-0ubuntu2

  • Ubuntu 15.04: 0.34~rc-0ubuntu5

  • Ubuntu 15.10: 0.34-0ubuntu1

Features

ufw has the following features:

Feature

12.04 LTS

14.04 LTS

15.04

15.10

default incoming policy (allow/deny)

yes

yes

yes

yes

allow/deny incoming rules

yes

yes

yes

yes

IPv6

yes1

yes1

yes1

yes1

status

yes

yes

yes

yes

logging (on/off)

yes

yes

yes

yes

extensible framework

yes

yes

yes

yes

python 2.5 support

yes

no

no

yes

application integration

yes

yes

yes

yes

IPv4 rate limiting via 'limit' command

yes

yes

yes

yes

internationalization

yes

yes

yes

yes

multiport incoming rules

yes

yes

yes

yes

debconf/preseeding

yes

yes

yes

yes

default incoming policy (reject)

yes

yes

yes

yes

reject incoming rules

yes

yes

yes

yes

rule insertion

yes

yes

yes

yes

log levels

yes

yes

yes

yes

per rule logging

yes

yes

yes

yes

outgoing filtering (on par with incoming)

yes

yes

yes

yes

filtering by interface

yes

yes

yes

yes

bash completion

yes

yes

yes

yes

upstart support

yes

yes

yes

yes

improved reporting

yes

yes

yes

yes

reset command

yes

yes

yes

yes

rsyslog support

yes

yes

yes

yes

delete by rule number

yes

yes

yes

yes

python 2.6 support

yes

yes

yes

yes

'show listening' report

yes

yes

yes

yes

python 2.7 support

yes

yes

yes

yes

increased protocol support (ah, esp)

yes

yes

yes

yes

IPv6 rate limiting via 'limit' command

--

yes

yes

yes

python 3.2 support

--

yes

yes

yes

python 3.3 support

--

yes

yes

yes

'show added' report

--

yes

yes

yes

python 3.4 support

--

yes

yes

yes

before/after extensibility hooks

--

yes

yes

yes

routed packet filtering (FORWARD)

--

yes

yes

yes

systemd support

--

--

yes

yes

increased protocol support (igmp, gre)

--

--

--

yes

  1. IPv6 enabled by default

Basic Usage

Getting started with ufw is easy. For example, to enable firewall, allow ssh access, enable logging, and check the status of the firewall, perform:

$ sudo ufw allow ssh/tcp
$ sudo ufw logging on
$ sudo ufw enable
$ sudo ufw status
Firewall loaded

To                         Action  From
--                         ------  ----
22:tcp                     ALLOW   Anywhere

This sets up a default deny (DROP) firewall for incoming connections, with all outbound connections allowed with state tracking.

Advanced Functionality

As mentioned, the ufw framework is capable of doing anything that iptables can do. This is achieved by using several sets of rules files, which are nothing more than iptables-restore compatible text files. Fine-tuning ufw and/or adding additional iptables commands not offered via the ufw command is a matter of editing various text files:

  • /etc/default/ufw: high level configuration, such as default policies, IPv6 support and kernel modules to use

  • /etc/ufw/before[6].rules: rules in these files are evaluated before any rules added via the ufw command

  • /etc/ufw/after[6].rules: rules in these files are evaluated after any rules added via the ufw command

  • /etc/ufw/sysctl.conf: kernel network tunables

  • /var/lib/ufw/user[6].rules or /lib/ufw/user[6].rules (0.28 and later): rules added via the ufw command (should not normally be edited by hand)

  • /etc/ufw/ufw.conf: sets whether or not ufw is enabled on boot, and in 9.04 (ufw 0.27) and later, sets the LOGLEVEL

  • /etc/ufw/after.init: initialization customization script run after ufw is initialized (ufw 0.34 and later)

  • /etc/ufw/before.init: initialization customization script run before ufw is initialized (ufw 0.34 and later)

After modifying any of the above files, activate the new settings with:

$ sudo ufw disable
$ sudo ufw enable

More Information