urukctl(8)
uruk control script
Description
urukctl
NAME
urukctl - uruk control script
SYNOPSIS
urukctl command [argument]
DESCRIPTION
urukctl is the user interface for the uruk system. It is used to create or change saved iptables rulesets, to change the current loaded rulesets and to report on uruk’s status.
See uruk(8) for information on how to get started with the Uruk system, and for a tutorial. This manpage gives just the details on urukctl.
The urukctl script calls uruk to process /etc/uruk/rc. (The uruk init script calls urukctl.)
These 4 ruleset pairs (for both IPv4 and IPv6) exist in a system using uruk:
•
the ruleset as expressed in the uruk configuration
/etc/uruk/rc,
•
the 2 saved rulesets in
/var/lib/{iptables,ip6tables}/{active,inactive}
•
the ruleset as currently loaded in the running kernel
•
optional: more rulesets saved in
/var/lib/{iptables,ip6tables}
arguments
urukctl should be called as either urukctl
argument or urukctl argument option. Possible
values are:
start
If not yet done, save current iptables status in
"inactive" ruleset. (Re)build and load the
"active" ruleset.
save
ruleset
Save the current iptables status in given ruleset.
create
<active|inactive>
Create an "active" or "inactive" ruleset
with sane defaults: "active" will be based upon
the uruk rc file. "inactive" will allow all
traffic.
load
ruleset
Load a saved ruleset
reload
(Re)build and load the "active" ruleset, without
temporarily clearing the current iptables status.
force-reload
(Re)build and load the "active" ruleset, in case
uruk is running.
stop
Load the "inactive" ruleset.
restart
Perform stop-actions followed by start-actions.
status
Print the current status of the service: show which ruleset
is loaded, and wether uruk is "running".
clear
Remove all rules and user-defined chains, set default policy
to ACCEPT.
halt
Remove all rules and user-defined chains, set default policy
to DROP.
flush
Flush all rules from the current iptables status.
configuration
urukctl uses the file /etc/default/uruk (on Debian,
Ubuntu and related systems) or /etc/sysconfig/uruk (on Red
Hat, Fedora and related systems) for configuration.
Variables used in this file are:
enable_uruk_check
wether to check for existence and sanity of uruk rc file;
set to false if you don’t like this, e.g. when using
the uruk initscript for managing saved rulesets only (i.e.
not for calling uruk or uruk-save).
enable_ipv6
set to false to disable IPv6 support. Set to $(enable-ipv6)
to dynamically decide wether to filter IPv6 traffic.
enable_uruk_save
enable calling the unstable uruk-save script.
enable_autosave
set to "false" to disable autosaving the active
ruleset when going from start to stop.
enable_save_counters
set to "false" to disable saving table counters
with rulesets.
SEE ALSO
uruk(8), uruk-rc(5), uruk-save(8). The Uruk homepage is at http://mdcc.cx/uruk/ .
iptables(8), iptables-save(8), iptables-restore(8), ip6tables(8), ip6tables-save(8), ip6tables-restore(8), http://www.netfilter.org/
interfaces(5), http://packages.debian.org/ifupdown.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2013 Joost van Baal-IliÄ <joostvb-uruk@mdcc.cx>
This program 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 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program 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 this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
AUTHOR
Joost van Baal-IliÄ <joostvb-uruk@mdcc.cx>