Sunday, June 20, 2010

Re: iptables-restore

green wrote at 2010-06-20 12:54 -0600:
> Huang, Tao wrote at 2010-06-20 09:42 -0600:
> > On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 10:07 PM, green <greenfreedom10@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > However, iptables scripts usually begin with a flush, and then it takes time to
> > > add all those rules, plus some possible interruption to traffic meanwhile.
> > > What about if only a small change has been made?  Does iptables-restore flush
> > > first, or is it able to just change the rule set as necessary to match?  (And
> > > is there a term used to describe that feature?)
> >
> > in the man page of iptables-restore:
> >
> > -n, --noflush
>
> Ah yes, I missed that. So iptables-restore does not include intelligent
> modification of rules.

Hmm, maybe iptables-restore is what I want after all:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2007/03/msg03772.html

And I think this answers my question:
http://www.faqs.org/docs/iptables/saveandrestore.html

So iptables-restore should work much faster than separate iptables commands in
a script. I will attempt to write a script that builds an iptables-save file
and inserts the entire rule-set in one invocation. I could simply use a
iptables-save file directly but I require good readability, and I don't think I
can mix tables in the iptables-save file.

Comments welcome.

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