I in Mint 13 KDE trying to configure a VPN connection. The person helping me asked if I had any firewall up. I did not configure any firewall settings on installation. I have not been able to find a firewall setup page. I checked Mint 13 manual, and KDE manual without finding anything.
So, this is a bit embarrassing, since it might be staring me in the face; but can someone please tell me where to find the firewall setup? Are there default settings already activated upon installation?
are there default firewall settings?
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are there default firewall settings?
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 2 times in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: are there default firewall setting?
The easiest thing could be installing a little package called 'gufw' from synaptic. With this little package you can manage simple firewall settings.
Linux Mint 17.3 Cinnamon (64 bits)
Re: are there default firewall setting?
You have a firewall, though it is not enabled by default (it is built into the Linux kernel). To understand why it isn't enabled by default, have a look here: http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.p ... 92#p599112
You can either activate and configure it from the terminal, or you can install a graphical front-end. To activate and configure it from the terminal you would use ufw. To enable it and disallow incoming connections by default (another machine trying to reach your machine, while you have not requested anything from that machine), you would run:
Anyway, probably you will find the graphical front-end for that easier. As shared above, you can install gufw for this. Open Software Manager and search for "gufw", install it. After installation you will find it as Firewall Configuration in the System section of the menu. Click the Unlock button to make changes, then drag the OFF button to ON. Close the application. Remember that this is just the configuration front-end, so you don't need to run this for your firewall to be active. To allow other machines to connect to your machine, you would go to the Edit menu and add a rule to allow certain services on your machine to be reached by others. Note that depending on how you connect to the Internet, you will also have to enable your machine to be reachable from the Internet in your broadband modem's configuration.
With the changes done here, or with the commands above, your firewall will be active upon each boot.
You can either activate and configure it from the terminal, or you can install a graphical front-end. To activate and configure it from the terminal you would use ufw. To enable it and disallow incoming connections by default (another machine trying to reach your machine, while you have not requested anything from that machine), you would run:
Code: Select all
sudo ufw enable
sudo ufw default deny
With the changes done here, or with the commands above, your firewall will be active upon each boot.
Re: are there default firewall setting?
Thanks fot the informative replies. I will look into configuring the firewall after getting the VPN to work; but, for now, I am happy to know that there is no firewall configured by default.
Re: are there default firewall setting?
The whole story is actually a bit more complex. In all Debian-based systems (like Ubuntu/Mint) it is IP-tables what is the real firewall....UFW (in the terminal) and GUFW (graphical front-end) are more or less simple front-ends for accomplishing simple-tasks and changing simple firewall-rules. But out-of-the-box IP-tables is always running...you might say that IP-tables is pre-configured. It is preconfigured in such a (safe) way that ports are always closed and there is never a service listening behind a port. I don't know if the basic IP-tables rules can have already an effect in succeeding VPN-connections (?)
Using the command 'sudo ufw enable' will bring the ports from a closed to a stealthed state. There are discussions if bringing the ports to stealthed mode is necessarilly safer. Setting IP-table rules is really complicated stuff. Most of the things you could and should do with GUFW....see enclosed article:
http://www.howtogeek.com/115116/how-to- ... -firewall/
Using the command 'sudo ufw enable' will bring the ports from a closed to a stealthed state. There are discussions if bringing the ports to stealthed mode is necessarilly safer. Setting IP-table rules is really complicated stuff. Most of the things you could and should do with GUFW....see enclosed article:
http://www.howtogeek.com/115116/how-to- ... -firewall/
Linux Mint 17.3 Cinnamon (64 bits)
Re: are there default firewall setting?
Thank you midas, I will check out that link. As it turns out I got the VPN client working; so firewall not an issue.
Re: are there default firewall settings?
Hi there,
I installed Linux Mint Maya with Cinamon and when starting Firefox the firewall is blocking all trafic.
I had never such Problems with any Ubuntu version or Opensuse - the firewall was working out of the box.
Is there any standard konfiguration which can be importet or a file which could be save to special location?
They did very well with gnome 2 or cinamon desktop - I do not like KDE 4 and also Gnome 3. Since the day the support end of my Opensuse 11.0 (with KDE3) I was looking for an easy and comfortable desktop like this. It seems the Mint is not ready yet....
Thank you for answers.
Best regards
Michael alias mylinux
I installed Linux Mint Maya with Cinamon and when starting Firefox the firewall is blocking all trafic.
I had never such Problems with any Ubuntu version or Opensuse - the firewall was working out of the box.
Is there any standard konfiguration which can be importet or a file which could be save to special location?
They did very well with gnome 2 or cinamon desktop - I do not like KDE 4 and also Gnome 3. Since the day the support end of my Opensuse 11.0 (with KDE3) I was looking for an easy and comfortable desktop like this. It seems the Mint is not ready yet....
Thank you for answers.
Best regards
Michael alias mylinux