firewalld can be controlled either from a graphical interface or a command
line interface. One must know what zone is active (try firewall-cmd
--get-active-zones) to understand what zone is currently in use. To unset
an active service (such as openvpn which is predefined) one could use the
command line as root to enter: firewall-cmd
--zone='THE_ZONE_THAT_SHOWED_AS_ACTIVE' --remove-service=openvpn . This
changes the firewall that is currently running only, not the configured
setup which is changed by adding --permanent between the firewall-cmd and
the --zone= entries. Note that current connection states are not
affected. A reboot will restore the original (as changed by any
firewall-cmd --permanent commands that have run in the session) Note that
the man firewall-cmd page is quite capable but does require a basic
understanding of netfilter (iptables). The graphical interface is more
understandable
Amicalement,
Dave
--
Maple Park Development
Linux Systems Integration
1224 DuBois
St. Louis MO 63122-5518
USA
Tel : 01-314-941-2496
Fax :01-866-542-7647
http://www.maplepark.com/
mapleparkdevelopment(a)gmail.com
If IP addresses weighed one gram each:
IPv4 = half the Empire State Building
IPv6 = 56 billion earths
I use Linux and I wouldn't touch Outlook even if I were using a Hazmat suit
and an isolation lab kit.
On Sat, Sep 10, 2016 at 1:50 PM, Jake Trader <longid(a)fedoraproject.org>
wrote:
Clueless newbie here
If someone can tell me
how to set firewalld as a kill switch for openvpn
I would really appreciate
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