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ipchains-restore(8) [redhat man page]

IPCHAINS-RESTORE(8)													       IPCHAINS-RESTORE(8)

NAME
ipchains-restore - restore IP firewall chains from stdin SYNOPSIS
ipchains-restore [ -f ] [ -v ] DESCRIPTION
ipchains-restore restores firewall chains from stdin. OPTIONS
The options that are recognized by ipchains-restore are: -f clear chains without asking -v print out every rule -p create every referred-to chain which doesn't exist (useful if you've used ipchains-save to save a single chain). SEE ALSO
ipchains(8) AUTHOR
Paul ``Rusty'' Russell <ipchains@rustcorp.com> February 8, 1998 IPCHAINS-RESTORE(8)

Check Out this Related Man Page

MASON(1)																  MASON(1)

NAME
mason - interactively create a firewall SYNOPSIS
mason < logfile > rulefile DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly documents the mason command. mason interactively generates a set of firewall rules for a Linux-based firewall. This is done by turning on full IP logging, watching the logs for connections, and generating rules describing the connections seen. mason is familiar with most of the quirks of various connec- tion types (such as ftp and IRC), and can output rules for 2.0.x ipfwadm, 2.2.x ipchains, and Cisco packet filters. mason operates by reading in log file information from standard input and writing firewall rules to standard output. This allows mason to work offline or on a separate system. Real-time firewall generation can be achieved with a command like tail(1). Most users will want to run mason with a user-friendly interface such as mason-gui-text(1). ENVIRONMENT
mason is configured using the following environment variables. ECHOCOMMAND Sets the type of firewall rules that mason should output to standard out. Allowed values include "ipfwadm" and "ipchains". By default, mason outputs whatever kind of rules are supported by the currently running Linux kernel. DOCOMMAND Sets the type of firewall rules that mason should run immediately when a rule is generated. Allowed values include "ipfwadm" and "ipchains". By default, mason outputs whatever kind of rules are supported by the currently running Linux kernel. HEARTBEAT If set to "yes", mason will output a "+" or "-" to standard error whenever a rule generated by mason has been triggered. DYNIP Set this to the list of interfaces that have dynamically assigned addresses, separated by spaces. SEE ALSO
mason-gui-text(1) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Jeff Licquia <jeff@luci.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). MASON(1)
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