SYNOPSIS

pyroman

[ -hvnspP ] [ -r RULESDIR ] [ -t SECONDS ]

[ --help ] [ --version ] [ --safe ] [ --no-act ]

[ --print ] [ --print-verbose ] [ --rules=RULESDIR ]

[ --timeout=SECONDS ] [ safe ]

DESCRIPTION

pyroman is a firewall configuration utility.

It will compile a set of configuration files to iptables statements to setup IP packet filtering for you.

While it is not necessary for operating and using Pyroman, you should have understood how IP, TCP, UDP, ICMP and the other commonly used Internet protocols work and interact. You should also have understood the basics of iptables in order to make use of the full functionality.

pyroman does not try to hide all the iptables complexity from you, but tries to provide you with a convenient way of managing a complex networks firewall. For this it offers a compact syntax to add new firewall rules, while still exposing access to add arbitrary iptables rules.

OPTIONS

-r RULESDIR,--rules=RULES

Load the rules from directory RULESDIR instead of the default directory (usually /etc/pyroman )

-t SECONDS,--timeout=SECONDS

Wait SECONDS seconds after applying the changes for the user to type OK to confirm he can still access the firewall. This implies --safe but allows you to use a different timeout.

-h, --help

Print a summary of the command line options and exit.

-V, --version

Print the version number of pyroman and exit.

-s, --safe, safe

When the firewall was committed, wait 30 seconds for the user to type OK to confirm, that he can still access the firewall (i.e. the network connection wasn't blocked by the firewall). Otherwise, the firewall changes will be undone, and the firewall will be restored to the previous state. Use the --timeout=SECONDS option to change the timeout.

-n, --no-act

Don't actually run iptables. This can be used to check if pyroman accepts the configuration files.

-p, --print

Instead of running iptables, output the generated rules.

-P, --print-verbose

Instead of running iptables, output the generated rules. Each statement will have one comment line explaining how this rules was generated. This will usually include the filename and line number, and is useful for debugging.

CONFIGURATION

Configuration of pyroman consists of a number of files in the directory /etc/pyroman. These files are in python syntax, although you do not need to be a python programmer to use these rules. There is only a small number of statements you need to know:

add_host

Define a new host or network

add_interface

Define a new interface (group)

add_service

Add a new service alias (note that you can always use e.g. www/tcp to reference the www tcp service as defined in /etc/services)

add_nat

Define a new NAT (Network Address Translation) rule

allow

Allow a service, client, server combination

reject

Reject access for this service, client, server combination

drop

Drop packets for this service, client, server combination

add_rule

Add a rule for this service, client, server and target combination

iptables

Add an arbitrary iptables statement to be executed at beginning

iptables_end

Add an arbitrary iptables statement to be executed at the end

Detailed parameters for these functions can be looked up by caling

cd /usr/share/pyroman
pydoc ./commands.py

BUGS

None known as of pyroman-0.4 release

AUTHOR

pyroman was written by Erich Schubert <[email protected]>

RELATED TO pyroman…

iptables(8), iptables-restore(8) iptables-load(8)