BLACKLISTD(8) NetBSD System Manager's Manual BLACKLISTD(8)
NAME
blacklistd -- block and release ports on demand to avoid DoS abuse
SYNOPSIS
blacklistd [-dfrv] [-C controlprog] [-c configfile] [-D dbfile] [-P sockpathsfile] [-R rulename] [-s sockpath] [-t timeout]
DESCRIPTION
blacklistd is a daemon similar to syslogd(8) that listens to a sockets at paths specified in the sockpathsfile for notifications from other daemons about successful or failed connection attempts. If no such file is spec- ified, then it only listens to the socket path specified by sockspath or if that is not specified to /var/run/blsock. Each notification contains an (action, port, protocol, address, owner) tuple that identifies the remote connection and the action. This tuple is consulted against entries in configfile with syntax specified in blacklistd.conf(5). If an entry is matched, a state entry is created for that tuple. Each entry contains a number of tries limit and a duration. If the action is ``add'' and the number of tries limit is reached, then a control script controlprog is invoked with arguments: control add <rulename> <proto> <address> <mask> <port> and should invoke a packet filter command to block the connection speci- fied by the arguments. The rulename argument can be set from the command line (default blacklistd). The script could print a numerical id to std- out as a handle for the rule that can be used later to remove that con- nection, but that is not required as all information to remove the rule is kept. If the action is ``remove'' Then the same control script is invoked as: control remove <rulename> <proto> <address> <mask> <port> <id> where id is the number returned from the ``add'' action. blacklistd maintains a database of known connections in dbfile. On startup it reads entries from that file, and updates its internal state. blacklistd checks the list of active entries every timeout seconds (default 15) and removes entries and block rules using the control pro- gram as necessary. The following options are available: -C controlprog Use controlprog to communicate with the packet filter, usually /libexec/blacklistd-helper. The following arguments are passed to the control program: action The action to perform: add, rem, or flush to add, remove or flush a firewall rule. name The rule name. protocol The optional protocol name (can be empty): tcp, tcp6, udp, udp6. address The IPv4 or IPv6 numeric address to be blocked or released. mask The numeric mask to be applied to the blocked or released address port The optional numeric port to be blocked (can be empty). id For packet filters that support removal of rules by rule identifier, the identifier of the rule to be removed. The add command is expected to return the rule identifier string to stdout. -c configuration The name of the configuration file to read, usually /etc/blacklistd.conf. -D dbfile The Berkeley DB file where blacklistd stores its state, usually /var/run/blacklistd.db. -d Normally, blacklistd disassociates itself from the terminal unless the -d flag is specified, in which case it stays in the foreground. -f Truncate the state database and flush all the rules named rulename are deleted by invoking the control script as: control flush <rulename> -P sockspathsfile A file containing a list of pathnames, one per line that blacklistd will create sockets to listen to. This is useful for chrooted environments. -R rulename Specify the default rule name for the packet filter rules, usu- ally blacklistd. -r Re-read the firewall rules from the internal database, then remove and re-add them. This helps for packet filters that don't retain state across reboots. -s sockpath Add sockpath to the list of Unix sockets blacklistd listens to. -t timeout The interval in seconds blacklistd polls the state file to update the rules. -v Cause blacklistd to print diagnostic messages to stdout instead of syslogd(8).
FILES
/libexec/blacklistd-helper Shell script invoked to interface with the packet filter. /etc/blacklistd.conf Configuration file. /var/db/blacklistd.db Database of current connection entries. /var/run/blsock Socket to receive connection notifications.
SEE ALSO
blacklistd.conf(5), blacklistctl(8), npfctl(8), syslogd(8)
HISTORY
blacklistd appeared in NetBSD 7.
AUTHORS
Christos Zoulas NetBSD 7.1 June 4, 2015 NetBSD 7.1
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