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Cyril Jaquier 0175d01419 - Added license in COPYING. Thanks to Axel Thimm 18 years ago
config - Fixed removal of host in hosts.deny. Thanks to René Berber 18 years ago
confreader
firewall - Added permanent banning feature 19 years ago
log-test
logreader - Added named group "host" for "failregex" 18 years ago
man - Removed debug option 19 years ago
utils - Send SIGTERM instead of SIGINT when using "-k" 18 years ago
.project - Added Eclipse project 18 years ago
.pydevproject - Added pydev project file 18 years ago
CHANGELOG - Added license in COPYING. Thanks to Axel Thimm 18 years ago
COPYING - Added license in COPYING. Thanks to Axel Thimm 18 years ago
MANIFEST - Added license in COPYING. Thanks to Axel Thimm 18 years ago
README - Added contributor 18 years ago
TODO - Updated 19 years ago
fail2ban - Propagated patches from Yaroslav Halchenko 18 years ago
fail2ban.py - Propagated patches from Yaroslav Halchenko 18 years ago
setup.cfg
setup.py - Updated 19 years ago
version.py - Send SIGTERM instead of SIGINT when using "-k" 18 years ago

README

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=============================================================
Fail2Ban (version 0.6.2) 2006/12/11
=============================================================

Fail2Ban scans log files like /var/log/pwdfail and bans IP
that makes too many password failures. It updates firewall
rules to reject the IP address. These rules can be defined by
the user. Fail2Ban can read multiple log files such as sshd
or Apache web server ones.

This is my first Python program. Moreover, English is not my
mother tongue...


More details:
-------------

Fail2Ban is rather simple. I have a home server connected to
the Internet which runs apache, samba, sshd, ... I see in my
logs that people are trying to log into my box using "manual"
brute force or scripts. They try 10, 20 and sometimes more
user/password (without success anyway). In order to
discourage these script kiddies, I wanted that sshd refuse
login from a specific ip after 3 password failures. After
some Google searches, I found that sshd was not able of that.
So I search for a script or program that do it. I found
nothing :-( So I decide to write mine and to learn Python :-)

For each sections defined in the configuration file, Fail2Ban
tries to find lines which match the failregex. Then it
retrieves the message time using timeregex and timepattern.
It finally gets the ip and if it has already done 3 or more
password failures in the last banTime, the ip is banned for
banTime using a firewall rule. This rule is set by the user
in the configuration file. Thus, Fail2Ban can be adapted for
lots of firewall. After banTime, the rule is deleted. Notice
that if no "plain" ip is available, Fail2Ban try to do DNS
lookup in order to found one or several ip's to ban.

Sections can be freely added so it is possible to monitor
several daemons at the same time.

Runs on my server and does its job rather well :-) The idea
is to make fail2ban usable with daemons and services that
require a login (sshd, telnetd, ...) and with different
firewalls.


Installation:
-------------

Require: python-2.4 (http://www.python.org)

To install, just do:

> tar xvfj fail2ban-0.6.2.tar.bz2
> cd fail2ban-0.6.2
> python setup.py install

This will install Fail2Ban into /usr/lib/fail2ban. The
fail2ban executable is placed into /usr/bin.

Gentoo: ebuilds are available on the website.
Debian: Fail2Ban is in Debian unstable.
RedHat: packages are available on the website.

Fail2Ban should now be correctly installed. Just type:

> fail2ban -h

to see if everything is alright. You can configure fail2ban
with a config file. Different kind of configuration files are
available:

iptables: copy config/fail2ban.conf.iptables to
/etc/fail2ban.conf
hosts.deny: copy config/fail2ban.conf.hostsdeny to
/etc/fail2ban.conf
shorewall: copy config/fail2ban.conf.shorewall to
/etc/fail2ban.conf

Do not forget to edit fail2ban.conf to meet your needs.

You can use the initd script available in config/. Copy
<dist>-initd to /etc/init.d/fail2ban. Gentoo users must copy
gentoo-confd to /etc/conf.d/fail2ban. You can start fail2ban:

> /etc/init.d/fail2ban start

Gentoo users can add it to the default runlevel:

> rc-update add fail2ban default

Configuration:
--------------

You can configure fail2ban using the file /etc/fail2ban.conf
or using command line options. Command line options override
the value stored in fail2ban.conf. Here are the command line
options:

-b start in background
-c <FILE> read configuration file FILE
-p <FILE> create PID lock in FILE
-h display this help message
-i <IP(s)> IP(s) to ignore
-k kill a currently running instance
-r <VALUE> allow a max of VALUE password failure [maxfailures]
-t <TIME> ban IP for TIME seconds [bantime]
-f <TIME> lifetime in seconds of failed entry [findtime]
-v verbose. Use twice for greater effect
-V print software version

Please note that a vulnerability (CVE-2006-6302) affects
version < 0.6.2. Since 0.6.2, a named group "host" was added
to "failregex". This group must match the host address. Old
configuration files will still work but will generate a
warning. In this case, please update your configuration file.

Contact:
--------

You need some new features, you found bugs or you just
appreciate this program, you can contact me at :

Website: http://fail2ban.sourceforge.net

Cyril Jaquier: <lostcontrol@users.sourceforge.net>


Thanks:
-------

Kévin Drapel, Marvin Rouge, Sireyessire, Robert Edeker,
Tom Pike, Iain Lea, Andrey G. Grozin, Yaroslav Halchenko,
Jonathan Kamens, Stephen Gildea, Markus Hoffmann, Mark
Edgington, Patrick Börjesson, kojiro, zugeschmiert, René
Berber, Nils Breunese

License:
--------

Fail2Ban is free software; you can redistribute it
and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.

Fail2Ban is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with Fail2Ban; if not, write to the Free
Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA