Uncomplicated Firewall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uncomplicated Firewall
Stable release 0.33 / August 17, 2012 (2012-08-17)
Written in Python
Operating system Linux
License GNU General Public License
Website https://launchpad.net/ufw

Uncomplicated Firewall (ufw) is a firewall that is designed to be easy to use. It uses a command line interface consisting of a small number of simple commands, and uses iptables for configuration.

GUIs for Uncomplicated Firewall

Gufw (GUI for Uncomplicated Firewall)
Original author(s) Gufw Developers
Stable release 13.10.0 / June, 2013
Development status Active
Written in Python, PyGObject
Operating system Linux
Platform GTK+
Available in More languages
License GNU General Public License
Website http://gufw.org
kmyfirewall (GUI for Uncomplicated Firewall)
Developer(s) KLajos et al.
Development status Active
Operating system Linux
Platform Qt
License GNU General Public License
Website www.kmyfirewall.org
UFW KControl Module (GUI for Uncomplicated Firewall)
Development status Active
Operating system Linux
Platform Qt
License GNU General Public License
Website {{URL|example.com|optional display text}}

GUI for Uncomplicated Firewall (Gufw) is, as the name states, a graphical user interface for UFW (Uncomplicated Firewall). It has been designed for Ubuntu, but is also available in other Debian based distributions and in Arch Linux.

Gufw is intended to be an easy, intuitive, way to manage an Ubuntu firewall. It supports common tasks such as allowing or blocking pre-configured, common P2P, or individual ports. Gufw is powered by UFW, runs on Ubuntu, and anywhere else Python, GTK, and UFW are available.

Features

Feature 0.16.2 (8.04 LTS) ? (8.10) ? (9.04) ? (9.10) 0.30 (10.04 LTS)
Default incoming policy (allow/deny) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Allow/deny incoming rules Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
IPv6 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Status Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Logging (on/off) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Extensible framework Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Application integration - Yes Yes Yes Yes
Limit incoming rules (rate limiting) - Yes Yes Yes Yes
Multiport incoming rules - Yes Yes Yes Yes
debconf/preseeding - - Yes Yes Yes
Default incoming policy (reject) - - Yes Yes Yes
Reject incoming rules - - Yes Yes Yes
Rule insertion - - Yes Yes Yes
Log levels - - Yes Yes Yes
Per rule logging - - Yes Yes Yes
Outgoing filtering (on par with incoming) - - - Yes Yes
Filtering by interface - - - Yes Yes
Bash completion - - - Yes Yes
Upstart support - - - Yes Yes
Improved reporting - - - - Yes
Reset command - - - - Yes
rsyslog support - - - - Yes
Delete by rule number - - - - Yes

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.