fail2ban 0.9.7-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

fail2ban (0.9.7-2) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Upload to unstable (Closes: #870651)

 -- Yaroslav Halchenko <email address hidden>  Thu, 03 Aug 2017 22:49:08 -0400

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Yaroslav Halchenko
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Yaroslav Halchenko
Architectures:
all
Section:
net
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Artful: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
fail2ban_0.9.7-2.dsc 1.8 KiB aafefe6e64e84ca20e72adac54020c7b40707423ae20cb52e2dd884d4d37b28f
fail2ban_0.9.7.orig.tar.gz 345.0 KiB 30daa842fc04d57df797c307742d7dae7debff3872bffc7e8776891e53850daf
fail2ban_0.9.7-2.debian.tar.xz 25.2 KiB 555896720a93a70011a7dc35a56098dc9fecb2c967c89e2b7c33dda0b1596335

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

fail2ban: ban hosts that cause multiple authentication errors

 Fail2ban monitors log files (e.g. /var/log/auth.log,
 /var/log/apache/access.log) and temporarily or persistently bans
 failure-prone addresses by updating existing firewall rules. Fail2ban
 allows easy specification of different actions to be taken such as to ban
 an IP using iptables or hostsdeny rules, or simply to send a notification
 email.
 .
 By default, it comes with filter expressions for various services
 (sshd, apache, qmail, proftpd, sasl etc.) but configuration can be
 easily extended for monitoring any other text file. All filters and
 actions are given in the config files, thus fail2ban can be adopted
 to be used with a variety of files and firewalls. Following recommends
 are listed:
 .
  - iptables/nftables -- default installation uses iptables for banning.
    nftables is also suported. You most probably need it
  - whois -- used by a number of *mail-whois* actions to send notification
    emails with whois information about attacker hosts. Unless you will use
    those you don't need whois
  - python3-pyinotify -- unless you monitor services logs via systemd, you
    need pyinotify for efficient monitoring for log files changes