Firewalls
A firewall is a security measure that controls incoming and outgoing network traffic based on predefined rules and policies. It is typically placed between a protected network and the internet, and its main purpose is to block unauthorized access while allowing authorized communication. Firewalls can be hardware-based or software-based, and they can use a variety of techniques, such as packet filtering, stateful inspection, and application-level filtering, to control network traffic. In this section, we’re going to look into a firewall available on Linux systems.
To control a Linux firewall, you will need to use iptables
, ufw
, nftables
, or firewalld
. Packet filtering is built into the Linux kernel, so those CLI tools will interact with it.
iptables
iptables is the most verbose tool for controlling a firewall, meaning it does not have much abstraction built into it, but it’s important to understand the basic concepts so that we can move on to more user...