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This post describes my UFW config and is here so I find it from somewhere and with hope that I am told if someone notices something terriby insecure here and is able to offer suggestions.
Having firewall is important as you aren’t always in your trusted home network and with IPv6 your devices have public IPv6 addresses.
This post first has list of commands, then explanations.
ufw limit 22
ufw default deny incoming
ufw default allow outgoing
systemctl enable ufw && systemctl start ufw
ufw enable
ufw allow 113
ufw allow 631
ufw allow 5060
ufw allow 5353/udp
ufw allow 17500/tcp
ufw allow 60000:61000/udp
- 22/ssh — Prevent more than 6 connections in 30 seconds to the SSH port and it’s the first command as you don’t want to lock yourself out of your host when you enable the firewall.
- Deny incoming connections unless the port has been whitelisted.
- Allow all outgoing connections, keeping list of authorized ports would be too much for me.
- Start ufw on boot and now (I am not sure if this step is required, but better safe than sorry).
- Put the firewall in force.
- 113/ident — Allow identd to be reached, probably all my hosts run it for IRC.
- 631/cups — Allow access to cups for printer sharing
- 5060/sip — VoIP, in this case Linphone
- 5353/mdns/Avahi — used for
.local
addresses - 17500/Dropbox — which I use everywhere
- 60000:61000/mosh — I feel this is the most insecure part of this setup and there should be something bettter instead of this.
If some host doesn’t run some of the mentioned service, it’s not open in the firewall.