Version information
This version is compatible with:
- Puppet Enterprise 2019.8.x, 2019.7.x, 2019.5.x, 2019.4.x, 2019.3.x, 2019.2.x, 2019.1.x, 2019.0.x, 2018.1.x, 2017.3.x, 2017.2.x, 2016.4.x
- Puppet >= 4.10.0 < 7.0.0
- , , ,
Start using this module
Add this module to your Puppetfile:
mod 'LeLutin-fail2ban', '3.3.1'
Learn more about managing modules with a PuppetfileDocumentation
Puppet module for fail2ban
Table of contents:
Overview
Install and manage fail2ban with puppet to block bruteforce attempts.
Module description
With this module, you can install fail2ban and define any configuration for the service in order to slow down bruteforce attempts on services that need to be exposed to the internet.
This module lets you create:
- actions (e.g. what to do when there's a problematic case)
- filters (e.g. how to discover problematic cases)
- jails (e.g. combining actions and filters with a rate limit on filter matches)
Usage
To use this module just include the fail2ban class.
To change default configurations in jail.conf
or fail2ban.conf
, you can
pass values to parameters to the fail2ban class. See technical reference
documentation for full list of parameters.
Here's an example that sets default ignored IP address for all jails to localhost and another non-routed IP:
class { 'fail2ban':
ignoreip => ['127.0.0.1', '10.0.0.1'],
}
Defining jails
To define a jail, you can use one of the jail parameter presets (see list
below). Or you can define your own with the fail2ban::jail
defined type:
fail2ban::jail { 'jenkins':
port => 'all',
filter => 'jenkins',
logpath => '/var/log/jenkins.log',
}
Predefined jails
The list at the end of this section contains all of the presets that can be
used to configure jails more easily. Each of them is a data point -- a hash of
parameter and values -- in hiera that needs to be gathered with the lookup()
function. Each hash represents parameters and values that should be passed in
to the fail2ban::jail
defined type documented above and has a lookup key of
fail2ban::jail::$jailname
.
For example to configure a jail for the ssh service with the preset parameters:
$ssh_params = lookup('fail2ban::jail::sshd')
fail2ban::jail { 'sshd':
* => $ssh_params,
}
You can also override values from the preset or define new parameters by
concatenating your own hash to it. In the following example we define new
parameters bantime
and findtime
and we override the preset for maxretry
:
$ssh_extra_params = {
'bantime' => 300,
'findtime' => 200,
'maxretry' => 3,
}
$ssh_params = lookup('fail2ban::jail::sshd') + $ssh_extra_params
fail2ban::jail { 'sshd':
* => $ssh_params,
}
This way you can set any parameter to the fail2ban::jail
defined type and
override preset values.
Here's the full list of currently available presets. To know each preset's
default values you can inspect files in data/
.
Watch out: jails by default use the same filter name as the jail name, so make
sure to either use the same string as the lookup key as the resource name for
jail
, or override the filter
parameter.
- 3proxy
- apache-auth
- apache-badbots
- apache-noscript
- apache-overflows
- apache-nohome
- apache-botsearch
- apache-fakegooglebot
- apache-modsecurity
- apache-shellshock
- assp
- asterisk
- courier-auth
- courier-smtp
- cyrus-imap
- directadmin
- dovecot
- dropbear
- drupal-auth
- ejabberd-auth
- exim
- exim-spam
- freeswitch
- froxlor-auth
- groupoffice
- gssftpd
- guacamole
- horde
- kerio
- lighttpd-auth
- mongodb-auth
- monit
- murmur
- mysql-auth
- To log wrong MySQL access attempts add to
/etc/mysql/my.cnf
in[mysqld]
or equivalent section:log-warning = 2
- To log wrong MySQL access attempts add to
- nrpe
- named-refused
- nginx-http-auth
- nginx-limit-req
- To use 'nginx-limit-req' jail you should have
ngx_http_limit_req_module
and definelimit_req
andlimit_req_zone
as described in nginx documentation http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_limit_req_module.html or for example see in 'config/filter.d/nginx-limit-req.conf'
- To use 'nginx-limit-req' jail you should have
- nginx-botsearch
- nsd
- openhab-auth
- openwebmail
- oracleims
- pam-generic
- pass2allow-ftp
- perdition
- php-url-fopen
- postfix
- postfix-rbl
- postfix-sasl
- proftpd
- pure-ftpd
- qmail-rbl
- recidive
- Ban IPs that get repeatedly banned, but for a longer period of time -- by default for one week and one day. Some warnings apply:
- Make sure that your loglevel specified in fail2ban.conf/.local is not at DEBUG level -- which might then cause fail2ban to fall into an infinite loop constantly feeding itself with non-informative lines
- Increase dbpurgeage defined in fail2ban.conf to e.g. 648000 (7.5 days) to maintain entries for failed logins for sufficient amount of time
- roundcube-auth
- selinux-ssh
- sendmail-auth
- sieve
- slapd
- sogo-auth
- solid-pop3d
- squid
- squirrelmail
- sshd
- sshd-ddos
- stunnel
- This pre-defined jail does not specify ports to ban since this service can
run on many choices of ports. By default this means that all ports will be
blocked for IPs that are banned by this jail. You may want to override the
hash to add in specific ports in the
port
parameter.
- This pre-defined jail does not specify ports to ban since this service can
run on many choices of ports. By default this means that all ports will be
blocked for IPs that are banned by this jail. You may want to override the
hash to add in specific ports in the
- suhosin
- tine20
- uwimap-auth
- vsftpd
- webmin-auth
- wuftpd
- xinetd-fail
- This pre-defined jail does not specify ports to ban since this service can
run on many choices of ports. By default this means that all ports will be
blocked for IPs that are banned by this jail. You may want to override the
hash to add in specific ports in the
port
parameter.
- This pre-defined jail does not specify ports to ban since this service can
run on many choices of ports. By default this means that all ports will be
blocked for IPs that are banned by this jail. You may want to override the
hash to add in specific ports in the
Defining filters
You might want to define new filters for your new jails. To do that, you can
use the fail2ban::filter
defined type:
fail2ban::filter { 'jenkins':
failregexes => [
# Those regexes are really arbitrary examples.
'Invalid login to Jenkins by user mooh by IP \'<HOST>\'',
'Forced entry trial by <HOST>',
],
}
Defining actions
Fail2ban can do pretty much what you want it to do when an IP matches a filter enough times during the rate limit set by the jail using both the filter and actions.
To define a new action, you can use the fail2ban::action
defined type.
Here's an example that would call out to a fictitious REST API whenever an IP
address is banned and unbanned:
fail2ban::action { 'rest_api':
ensure => present,
actionban => ['curl -s -X PUT http://yourapi:8080/theapi/v4/firewall/rules -H "Content-Type:application/json" -H "Authorization: ..." -d "{\"ban\": \"<ip>\"}"'],
actionunban => ['curl -s -X DELETE http://yourapi:8080/theapi/v4/firewall/rules/1 -H "Authorization: ..."'],
}
nftables support
Fail2ban supports nftables with the nftables-multiport
and
nftables-allports
actions that are shipped with the fail2ban binary. These
actions use nftables' set
functionality to contain banned IPs instead of
adding a firewall rule for each new banned IP. This should make your firewall
more efficient if you have lots of banned IPs.
Since nftables is now used by default on Debian since the buster release (but
iptables
is still used by fail2ban's default action), here's how to quickly
enable usage of nftables for fail2ban:
Only two global parameters need to be changed:
chain
needs to be set to lowercasebanaction
needs to be set to the action of your choice.
Here's an example minimal configuration for using nftables:
class { 'fail2ban':
banaction => 'nftables-multiport',
chain => 'input',
}
$ssh_params = lookup('fail2ban::jail::sshd')
fail2ban::jail { 'sshd':
* => $ssh_params,
}
Do note that upon service restart, fail2ban will not create the ip set and the
corresponding rule right away. They will only be added whenever the first
"action" is taken (so when banning the first IP for a jail). After that you
should see both the set and the rule for that jail when running
nft list ruleset
.
To list which IPs are currently banned, you can either use fail2ban-client status sshd
or list elements of the corresponding set: nft list set filter f2b-sshd
Requirements
This module depends on the following modules to function:
- puppetlabs' stdlib module (at least version 4.6.0)
Compatibility
This module supports
- Debian 8, 9, 10
- Debian 8 support supposes that clients are using puppet 4.x (e.g. backports or upstream packages)
- Ubuntu 18.04
- RHEL 6, 7 and 8
- CentOs 6, 7 and 8
Versions | Puppet 2.7 | Puppet 3.x | Puppet 4.x | Puppet 5.x |
---|---|---|---|---|
3.x | no | no | 4.10+ | yes |
Upgrade notices
-
3.3: Support for the 2.x branch was discontinued. Only puppet 4.x+ is supported from now on.
Documentation in the
README.md
file is now limited to only examples of how to use the module. For a technical reference of all classes, defined types and their parameters, please refer to REFERENCE.md or generate html documentation with puppet-strings.Note that debian 8 is still being supported for a little while, but with the expectation that users use this module with puppet 4.x+. Debian 8's support cycle is almost over, thus so it is for this module. Expect support to be removed from this module in the coming months.
-
3.2: No pre-defined jail sends out an email as an action by default. Users who still want to receive emails when an action is taken can override the
action
field from the predefined jail data and append the action the following:\n %(mta)s-whois[name=%(__name__)s, dest=\"%(destemail)s\"]
Also note that puppet 4.x prior to 4.10 is not supported anymore, and that hiera 5 is now required (hence the limitation for the puppet version.
-
3.1:
fail2ban.local
and all unmanaged files infail2ban.d
are now being purged by default. Users who have local modifications that they want to keep should set$rm_fail2ban_local
and/or$purge_fail2ban_d
to false. -
3.0: all of the defined types for predefined jails in
fail2ban::jail::*
have been removed and instead transformed into data structures with hiera. If you were using the predefined jails, you will need to change your code: please take a look at the new method of using them withlookup()
further down in this file. -
3.0:
fail2ban::jail
'sorder
parameter was removed. Users should adapt their calls in order to remove this parameter. All jail files are now just individual files dropped in jail.d and order is not relevant there. -
3.0: Deprecation notice: the
persistent_bans
parameter to thefail2ban
class is now deprecated and will be removed for the 4.0 release. fail2ban can now manage persistent bans naturally by using its own sqlite3 database. -
2.0: Jail definitions have been moved to
jail.d/*.conf
files . Thejail.local
file is now getting removed by the module. To avoid this, setrm_jail_local
to true. -
2.0:
ignoreip
both on the main class and infail2ban::jail
(and thus in allfail2ban::jail::*
classes too) is no longer expected to be a string. It is now a list of strings that automatically gets joined with spaces. Users of the fail2ban module will need to adjust these parameters. -
The directory
/etc/fail2ban/jail.d
is now getting purged by default. Users who would like to preserve files in this directory that are not managed by puppet should now set thepurge_jail_dot_d
parameter to thefail2ban
class to false.
Documentation
This module uses puppet-strings comments, so you can generate HTML
documentation in the docs
directory with the following command:
puppet strings generate manifests
At each release, technical documentation about all classes and defined types
provided by this module and their parameters is also output to the
REFERENCES.md
file in this repository in markdown format with the following
command. This makes the reference documentation show up on forge.puppet.com
and you can consult it after cloning the repository even if you don't have
puppet-strings installed:
puppet strings generate --format markdown
Testing
This module has some tests that you can run to ensure that everything is working as expected.
Unit tests
The unit tests are built with rspec-puppet. You can use the Gemfile with the
tests
group to install what's needed to run the unit test.
The usual rspec-puppet_helper rake tasks are available. You can also use a
convenience task tests
to run everything. The following two commands achieve
the same result:
rake syntax lint spec
rake tests
Funtionality tests
Unit tests are great, but sometimes it's nice to actually run the code in order to see if everything is setup properly and that the software is working as expected.
This repository has a Vagrantfile
that you can use to bring up a VM and run
this module inside. The Vagrantfile
expects you to have the vagrant plugin
vagrant-librarian-puppet
installed. If you don't have it you can also
download this module's requirements (see metadata.json
) and place them inside
tests/modules/
.
A couple of manifest files inside tests/
prepare sets of use cases. You can
modify the Vagrantfile
to use any of them for provisioning the VM.
Reference
Table of Contents
Classes
Public Classes
fail2ban
: Manage fail2ban and its configuration to jam bruteforce attempts on services running on a computer.fail2ban::params
: Default values for params of the main class
Private Classes
fail2ban::config
: Configure fail2ban servicefail2ban::install
: Install fail2banfail2ban::service
: Enable fail2ban daemon
Defined types
fail2ban::action
: Create an action for fail2banfail2ban::filter
: Setup a filter for fail2banfail2ban::jail
: Setup a fail2ban jail to reduce effectiveness of bruteforce.
Data types
Fail2ban::Backend
: Backend names that fail2ban understands Can be one of the pre-defined backend names or a python-style variableFail2ban::Loglevel
: How much logging is needed from fail2banFail2ban::Port
: Possible values for the port parameter ports can be specified by number, but you can also pass in a comma-separated list of values in a strinFail2ban::Protocol
: Options for protocol type This is used by the default action iptables-multiport to defined what protocol to ban for the specified ports.Fail2ban::Usedns
: Possible values for usedns parameter
Classes
fail2ban
fail2ban/manifests/init.pp
- Copyright (C) 2007 admin@immerda.ch
- Copyright (C) 2014-2018 gabster@lelutin.ca
-
Note
blocktype
is not offered as a global option since it's not a great idea to set a globally used default value for this option. It's used differently by all actions and different values are expected from each action, so it's generally recommended to override this for each action individually by creating a.local
file inactions.d
. -
See also
Examples
basic usage
class { 'fail2ban: }
ignore localhost and another non-routable IP
class { 'fail2ban':
ignoreip => ['127.0.0.1', '10.0.0.1'],
}
Parameters
The following parameters are available in the fail2ban
class.
rm_fail2ban_local
Data type: Boolean
Force removal of file /etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.local if present.
Default value: true
rm_jail_local
Data type: Boolean
Force removal of file /etc/fail2ban/jail.local if present.
Default value: true
purge_fail2ban_dot_d
Data type: Boolean
Remove all unmanaged files in /etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.d/
Default value: true
purge_jail_dot_d
Data type: Boolean
Remove all unmanaged files in /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/
Default value: true
persistent_bans
Data type: Boolean
Write out banned IPs to a file on teardown and restore bans when starting fail2ban back up. This option is deprecated and is bound to be removed in puppet-fail2ban 4.0
Default value: false
config_file_mode
Data type: String
File mode set on all fail2ban configuration files managed by this module.
Default value: '0644'
loglvl
Data type: Fail2ban::Loglevel
Set fail2ban's loglevel.
Default value: 'INFO'
logtarget
Data type: String
Define where fail2ban's logs are sent.
Default value: '/var/log/fail2ban.log'
syslogsocket
Data type: String
Path to syslog's socket file, or "auto" for automatically discovering it.
Default value: 'auto'
socket
Data type: String
Path to fail2ban's own socket file. This file is used by fail2ban-client to communicate with the daemon.
Default value: '/var/run/fail2ban/fail2ban.sock'
pidfile
Data type: String
Path to fail2ban's pid file. This usually needs to be in a place where the init script or systemd unit file can find it.
Default value: '/var/run/fail2ban/fail2ban.pid'
dbfile
Data type: String
Path to fail2ban's database file.
Default value: '/var/lib/fail2ban/fail2ban.sqlite3'
dbpurgeage
Data type: Integer
Age of entries in fail2ban's database that get removed when performing a database purge operation.
Default value: 86400
enabled
Data type: Boolean
Whether or not to enable jails by default. fail2ban's man page recommends to keep this to false, but by default the module purges jail.d of unknown files so it might be safe to set to true in order to avoid repeating this setting on all jails. If you set purge_jail_dot_d to false, it might be wiser to keep this to false in order to avoid enabling jails that get dropped in jail.d.
Default value: false
filter
Data type: String
Default name of filter to use for jails.
Default value: '%(__name__)s'
ignoreip
Data type: Array[String, 0]
Default list of IPs or CIDR prefixes that should not get banned.
Default value: ['127.0.0.1']
bantime
Data type: Integer
Default duration in number of seconds to ban an IP address for.
Default value: 600
findtime
Data type: Integer
Default interval during which to count occurences of an IP.
Default value: 600
maxretry
Data type: Integer
Default number of times an IP should be detectd by a filter during findtime for it to get banned.
Default value: 3
ignorecommand
Data type: String
Default command used to determine if an IP should be exempted from being banned.
Default value: ''
backend
Data type: Fail2ban::Backend
Default method used to get information from logs.
Default value: 'auto'
destemail
Data type: String
Default email address used as recipient by actions that send out emails.
Default value: 'root@localhost'
sender
Data type: String
Default email address set as sender by actions that send out emails.
Default value: 'root@localhost'
fail2ban_agent
Data type: String
User-agent sent on HTTP requests that are made by some actions.
Default value: 'Fail2Ban/%(fail2ban_version)s'
banaction
Data type: String
Default action name extrapolated when defining some of the default actions.
Default value: 'iptables-multiport'
banaction_allports
Data type: String
Default action name that can be extrapolated when defining some of the default actions. This one is meant to ban all ports at once instead of specific ones.
Default value: 'iptables-allports'
chain
Data type: String
Default name of the iptables chain used by iptables-based actions.
Default value: 'INPUT'
port
Data type: Fail2ban::Port
Default comma separated list of ports, port names or port ranges used by actions when banning an IP.
Default value: '0:65535'
mta
Data type: String
Default program name used for sending out email by actions that do so.
Default value: 'sendmail'
protocol
Data type: Fail2ban::Protocol
Default protocol name used by actions.
Default value: 'tcp'
action
Data type: String
Default action that gets called when an IP triggers maxretry number of times a filter within findtime.
Default value: '%(action_)s'
usedns
Data type: Fail2ban::Usedns
Default behaviour whether or not to resolve IPs when they are found in a log by a filter.
Default value: 'warn'
logpath
Data type: Optional[String]
Default path to log file being used by jails. This value is usually not set and logpath is defined for each jail for more clarity.
Default value: undef
logencoding
Data type: String
Name of the encoding of log files. If set to "auto", fail2ban will use what is set in the system's locale setting.
Default value: 'auto'
failregex
Data type: Optional[String]
Regular expressions to add to all filters' failregex. This is usually not used.
Default value: undef
ignoreregex
Data type: Optional[String]
Regular expressions to add to all filters' ignoreregex. This is usually not used but could be useful to have something excluded from bans everywhere.
Default value: undef
manage_service
Data type: Boolean
Manage the fail2ban service, true by default
Default value: true
fail2ban_conf_template
Data type: String[1]
Default value: 'fail2ban/fail2ban.conf.erb'
jail_conf_template
Data type: String[1]
Default value: $fail2ban::params::jail_conf_template
fail2ban::params
fail2ban::params
Defined types
fail2ban::action
fail2ban/manifests/action.pp
- Copyright (C) 2014-2019 gabster@lelutin.ca
Actions define what fail2ban should do when if finds mischief happening in logs. Usually, an action defines commands that should be run during setup/teardown and commands for when a ban or an unban happen. Using action you can make fail2ban whatever you want, from creating an iptables rule to calling out to your edge server API to create a rule there instead.
- See also
- jail.conf(5)
Examples
defining a new action to call out to a REST API
fail2ban::action { 'rest_api':
ensure => present,
actionban => ['curl -s -X PUT http://yourapi:8080/theapi/v4/firewall/rules -H "Content-Type:application/json" -H "Authorization: ..." -d "{\"ban\": \"<ip>\"}"'],
actionunban => ['curl -s -X DELETE http://yourapi:8080/theapi/v4/firewall/rules/1 -H "Authorization: ..."'],
}
Parameters
The following parameters are available in the fail2ban::action
defined type.
actionban
Data type: Array[String[1], 1]
List of commands that are executed when fail2ban has found too many matches for a given IP address.
actionunban
Data type: Array[String[1], 1]
List of commands that are executed after bantime
has elapsed.
ensure
Data type: Enum['present', 'absent']
Whether the resources should be installed or removed.
Default value: 'present'
actioncheck
Data type: Array[String[1]]
List of commands that are run by fail2ban before any other action to verify that the environment (or setup) is still in good shape.
Default value: []
actionstart
Data type: Array[String[1]]
List of commands that are executed when the jail is started.
Default value: []
actionstop
Data type: Array[String[1]]
List of commands that are executed when the jail is stopped.
Default value: []
config_file_mode
Data type: String
Permission mode given to the filter file created by this defined type.
Default value: '0644'
includes
Data type: Array[String]
List of files to include before considering the rest of the action definition. These files can declare variables used by the action to set default or common behaviours.
Default value: []
includes_after
Data type: Array[String]
List of files to include after action definition.
Default value: []
additional_defs
Data type: Array[String]
List of arbitrary lines that should appear at the begining of the action's definition section, for anything that didn't fit in other parameters. Each item in the list is output on its own line in the action file. No syntax checking is done.
Default value: []
init
Data type: Array[String]
List of arbitrary lines that will be a part of the [Init] section. All tags (variables) defined in this section can be overridden by any individual jail to change the action's behaviour.
Default value: []
fail2ban::filter
fail2ban/manifests/filter.pp
- Copyright (C) 2014-2018 gabster@lelutin.ca
Filters are how fail2ban detects mischief in logs. They contain regular expressions that should catch bad activity and identify the IP that is doing this activity.
Examples
defining filter for jenkins
fail2ban::filter { 'jenkins':
failregexes => [
# Those regexes are really arbitrary examples.
'Invalid login to Jenkins by user mooh by IP \'<HOST>\'',
'Forced entry trial by <HOST>',
],
}
Parameters
The following parameters are available in the fail2ban::filter
defined type.
failregexes
Data type: Array[String, 1]
List of regular expressions that will be run against new log lines as they reach fail2ban. The regular expressions follow the Python regular expression format, and there are some special patterns that fail2ban can use. See the jail.conf(5) man page for more details. Each item in the list is placed on its own line. Lines starting with the second one are prepended with spaces so that the regular expressions line up with the beginning of the first one.
ensure
Data type: Enum['present', 'absent']
Whether the resources should be installed or removed.
Default value: 'present'
config_file_mode
Data type: String
Permission mode given to the filter file created by this defined type.
Default value: '0644'
ignoreregexes
Data type: Array[String, 0]
List of Python regular expressions that should prevent a log line from being considered for banning. If a line matches regular expressions contained in this parameter, they are ignored even though they would have matched a failregex. Each item in the list is placed on its own line. Lines starting with the second one are prepended with spaces so that the regular expressions line up with the beginning of the first one.
Default value: []
includes
Data type: Array[String, 0]
List of files to include before considering the rest of the filter definition. These files can declare variables used by the filter to set default behaviours.
Default value: []
includes_after
Data type: Array[String, 0]
List of files to include after filter definition.
Default value: []
additional_defs
Data type: Array[String, 0]
List of arbitrary lines that should appear at the begining of the filter's definition section, for anything that didn't fit in other parameters. Each item in the list is output on its own line in the filter file. No syntax checking is done.
Default value: []
fail2ban::jail
fail2ban/manifests/jail.pp
- Copyright (C) 2014-2018 gabster@lelutin.ca
Jails are the top level of fail2ban configuration; what you'll be using most often to setup protection of a service from bruteforce attempts or pesky attack traffic. They rely on a filter to find out IPs that are doing mischief, and then use an action to ban (and subsequently unban) IPs.
Most parameters of this defined type are used for overriding what has been set in the global context in jail.conf/jail.local (see parameters to the fail2ban class). They are not mandatory if you can reuse the global values.
- See also
Examples
creating simple jail for service
fail2ban::jail { 'honeypot':
findtime => 300,
maxretry => 1,
port => 'all',
logpath => '/var/log/honeypot.log',
}
using a pre-defined jail
$ssh_params = lookup('fail2ban::jail::sshd')
fail2ban::jail { 'sshd':
* => $ssh_params,
}
overriding parameters from a pre-defined jail
$ssh_extra_params = {
'bantime' => 300,
'findtime' => 200,
'maxretry' => 3,
}
$ssh_params = lookup('fail2ban::jail::sshd') + $ssh_extra_params
fail2ban::jail { 'sshd':
* => $ssh_params,
}
Parameters
The following parameters are available in the fail2ban::jail
defined type.
ensure
Data type: Enum['present','absent']
Whether resources for the defined jail should be installed or removed.
Default value: 'present'
enabled
Data type: Boolean
Whether or not a jail is enabled. Setting this to false makes it possible to keep configuration around for a certain jail but temporarily disable it.
Default value: true
config_file_mode
Data type: String
Permission mode given to the jail file created by this defined type.
Default value: '0644'
port
Data type: Optional[Fail2ban::Port]
Comma separated list of ports, port ranges or service names (as found in /etc/services) that should get blocked by the ban action.
Default value: undef
filter
Data type: Optional[String]
Name of the filter to use for this jail. The default value for the filter is usually to use a filter with the same name as the jail name (although this could be changed by the filter parameter on the fail2ban class).
Default value: undef
logpath
Data type: Optional[String]
Absolute path to the log file against which regular expressions should be verified to catch activity that you want to block.
Default value: undef
protocol
Data type: Optional[Fail2ban::Protocol]
Name of the protocol to ban using the action.
Default value: undef
maxretry
Data type: Optional[Integer]
Number of failregex matches during findtime after which an IP gets banned.
Default value: undef
findtime
Data type: Optional[Integer]
Time period in seconds during which maxretry number of matches will get an IP banned.
Default value: undef
ignorecommand
Data type: Optional[String]
Command used to determine if an IP should found by a failregex be ignored. This can be used to have a more complex and dynamic method of listing and identifying IPs that should not get banned. It can be used also when ignoreip is present.
Default value: undef
action
Data type: Optional[String]
Name of and parameters to the action that should be used to ban and unban IPs when maxretry matches of failregex has happened for an IP during findtime.
Default value: undef
usedns
Data type: Optional[Fail2ban::Usedns]
Whether or not to resolve DNS hostname of IPs that have been found by a failregex.
Default value: undef
banaction
Data type: Optional[String]
Name of the action that is extrapolated in default action definitions, or in the action param. This can let you override the action name but keep the default parameters to the action.
Default value: undef
bantime
Data type: Optional[Integer]
Time period in seconds for which an IP is banned if maxretry matches of failregex happen for the same IP during findtime.
Default value: undef
ignoreip
Data type: Array[String, 0]
List of IPs or CIDR prefixes to ignore when identifying matches of failregex. The IPs that fit the descriptions in this parameter will never get banned by the jail.
Default value: []
backend
Data type: Optional[Fail2ban::Backend]
Method used by fail2ban to obtain new log lines from the log file in logpath.
Default value: undef
additional_options
Data type: Hash[String, String]
Hash of additional values that should be declared of the jail. Keys are the value name and values are placed to the right of the "=". This can be used to declare arbitrary values for filters or actions to use. No syntax checking is done on the contents of this hash.
Default value: {}
Data types
Fail2ban::Backend
Backend names that fail2ban understands Can be one of the pre-defined backend names or a python-style variable
Alias of Variant[Enum['auto','pyinotify','gamin','polling','systemd'], Pattern[/%\(\w+\)s/]]
Fail2ban::Loglevel
How much logging is needed from fail2ban
Alias of Enum['CRITICAL', 'ERROR', 'WARNING', 'NOTICE', 'INFO', 'DEBUG']
Fail2ban::Port
Possible values for the port parameter ports can be specified by number, but you can also pass in a comma-separated list of values in a string. The values in the string can be port numbers (integers), a range of port numbers in the format 'number:number', service names (looked up in /etc/services) or 'all' which is translated to '0:65535'
Alias of Variant[Integer, String]
Fail2ban::Protocol
Options for protocol type This is used by the default action iptables-multiport to defined what protocol to ban for the specified ports.
Alias of Enum['tcp', 'udp', 'icmp', 'all']
Fail2ban::Usedns
Possible values for usedns parameter
Alias of Enum['yes', 'no', 'warn', 'raw']
Dependencies
- puppetlabs/stdlib (>= 4.6.0 < 7.0.0)
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