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Downloading IP Lists
You need to have FireHOL's update-ipsets
installed for downloading IP Lists directly from their maintainers. Follow Installing update-ipsets to install it.
Once the latest development version of FireHOL is installed on your computer, you can run update-ipsets
to download all the IP lists you need.
update-ipsets
can be run either as root
or as any normal user. Check the configuration discussion below for the differences between the two.
We will give examples for running it as root
. If you omit sudo
from all these commands, update-ipsets
will run as the user running it.
Let's enable an IP list, the dshield
list:
sudo update-ipsets enable dshield
We can enable multiple IP lists at once:
sudo update-ipsets enable dshield blocklist_de spamhaus_drop spamhaus_edrop
Let's now download all the enabled lists:
sudo update-ipsets
We can run this command repeatedly. It will not harm. update-ipsets
is smart enough to download IP lists only when they are expected to be updated.
For example, it knows that dshield
is updated every 10 minutes, so it will not download it again unless there have been 10 minutes since the date/time of the last download (it does not care when you downloaded it, but what date/time the downloaded file had when downloaded). It will attempt to download it again, only if 10 minutes have passed since the modification date/time of the downloaded file.
This is how I run update-ipsets
via cron:
# sudo crontab -e or sudo nano /etc/crontab
*/9 * * * * root update-ipsets >/dev/null 2>&1
I run it every 9 minutes. You can choose 8, 11, 12, etc, it does not matter. Avoid using 5, 10, 15, 20, etc. If all of us choose, let's say 10, the maintainers' sites will get all the requests concurrently. I suggest to pick a random number between 5 and 20 avoiding 5, 10, 15 and 20.
when run as root
, update-ipsets
keeps its files in /etc/firehol/ipsets
. Otherwise they will be in ~/ipsets
.
In this directory you will have, for each IP list:
-
NAME.source
- the file downloaded from the IP list maintainer -
NAME.ipset
(or.netset
depending on the IP list type) - the final processed and normalized file
To download all the IP lists known by update-ipsets
, use this:
sudo update-ipsets --enable-all
Then, sit back and watch it download all IP lists (it will take some time).
Keep in mind that a few lists (like hphosts_*
) publish hostnames, not IPs. These lists are converted to IPs using your name server. update-ipsets
is optimized to do parallel DNS queries to minimize the time needed for this conversion, still though it will need some time to finish.
You can set the number of parallel DNS queries using this:
export PARALLEL_DNS_QUERIES=50
sudo update-ipsets
The default is PARALLEL_DNS_QUERIES=10
.
You can also put options in its configuration file.
The default configuration for root
is /etc/firehol/update-ipsets.conf
, for all other users is ~/.update-ipsets/update-ipsets.conf
.
In our example, the configuration file should contain:
PARALLEL_DNS_QUERIES=50
When running as root
, update-ipsets
will do this by itself, automatically!
If it finds an ipset named with the name of an IP list, it will update it automatically when the IP List is updated.
update-ipsets
goes through the following procedure for each IP list:
- download the IP list from the maintainer
the downloaded file is saved in `/etc/firehol/ipsets` as `NAME.source` - it has the modification date/time of the same file at the maintainer's site
- process it to extract / normalize its content
the result is saved in `/etc/firehol/ipsets` as `NAME.ipset` or `NAME.netset` depending on its contents
-
if an ipset with the same NAME already exists in kernel, then do all the following:
-
create a temporary ipset in kernel
-
load the contents of NAME.ipset or NAME.netset to the temporary ipset
-
swap the temporary and the production ipsets in kernel
this swap is an atomic operation that is handled by the kernel itself - either it succeeds (and the new ipset is used) or it fails (and the old ipset is left untouched)
-
If at any step there is a failure, the operation is aborted (all temporary resources used are released) and a message is sent to syslog.
The whole operation has been designed so that there will be no disruption at all at your firewall.
Keep in mind that the above are not FireHOL specific. update-ipsets
will update the ipsets in kernel (when running as root
) even if they are created by hand or another netfilter based firewall solution. The only condition is to have the same NAME and of course ipset type.
Since update-ipsets
uses iprange
, it also optimizes hash:net
ipsets for optimal kernel performance. For more information about this optimization check iprange: optimizing ipsets for iptables.
The default configuration file for root
is /etc/firehol/update-ipsets.conf
. For all other users is ~/.update-ipsets/update-ipsets.conf
.
You can override this path using the option -f
, like this:
sudo update-ipsets -f /path/to/other/configuration/file
update-ipsets
supports these configuration file options:
BASE_DIR
states the directory ipset files should be stored.
- When run as
root
, the default is/etc/firehol/ipsets
. - When run as any other user, the default is
~/ipsets
.
RUN_PARENT_DIR
states the directory to save the lock file. The lock file prevents running multiple update-ipsets
concurrently.
- When run as
root
, the default is/var/run
. - When run as any other user, the default is
~/.update-ipsets
.
Different users can run update-ipsets
at the same time, without problems. The locking prevents only the same user from running update-ipsets
more than once (if there was no locking, the same file could be downloaded multiple times, processed more than once, or applied in kernel multiple times - the locking prevents all these).
TMP_DIR
states the directory to save temporary files. A new directory named update-ipsets-XXXXXXX
will be created in TMP_DIR
during each run.
The default is /tmp
.
HISTORY_DIR
is used for storing the aggregation log for IP lists that need one.
- When run as
root
, the default is/etc/firehol/ipsets/history
. - When run as any other user, the default is
~/ipsets/history
.
ERRORS_DIR
is used for storing downloaded IP list files that failed to be processed.
- When run as
root
, the default is/etc/firehol/ipsets/errors
. - When run as any other user, the default is
~/ipsets/errors
.
If you set it to empty, this feature will be disabled.
MAX_CONNECT_TIME
gives the time in seconds to connect to maintainer's site. The default is 10
.
MAX_DOWNLOAD_TIME
gives the time in seconds to wait for a download to complete. The default is 300
(5 minutes).
IGNORE_REPEATING_DOWNLOAD_ERRORS
is the number consecutive download errors to be ignored and favoured. After these many consecutive download errors, the refresh frequency of the IP list will be incremented.
Let's take an example:
IP list X has a refresh frequency of 20 minutes. The web server of the maintainer has issues and force us to timeout, slowing down the whole process.
We have set
IGNORE_REPEATING_DOWNLOAD_ERRORS=5
.
This is what will happen:
failed try | next try in minutes |
---|---|
1 | 10 = 20 / 2 |
2 | 10 = 20 / 2 |
3 | 10 = 20 / 2 |
4 | 10 = 20 / 2 |
5 | 10 = 20 / 2 |
6 | 20 = 20 * 1 |
7 | 40 = 20 * 2 |
8 | 60 = 20 * 3 |
9 | 80 = 20 * 4 |
10 | 100 = 20 * 5 |
So, while the fail count is below IGNORE_REPEATING_DOWNLOAD_ERRORS
, update-ipsets
favours the ipset, hopping the maintainer will fix the problem soon. If the fail count goes above IGNORE_REPEATING_DOWNLOAD_ERRORS
then update-ipsets
delays the update every time more, to avoid stalling the whole process due to poorly maintained download sites.
PARALLEL_DNS_QUERIES
gives the number of threads update-ipsets
will spawn for resolving hostnames found in downloaded IP lists. The default is 10
.
(keep in mind this is a feature of iprange
, but the parameter is used by update-ipsets
to configure iprange
properly).
Keep in mind that increasing this too much may hit a quota on the name server, while lowering it too much may delay the whole process.
IPSET_REDUCE_FACTOR
and IPSET_REDUCE_ENTRIES
are used by update-ipsets
to optimize hash:net
ipsets when they are loaded into the kernel. These values are not used when generating the .netset
files on disk. They are only used when ipsets are updated in kernel.
The defaults are: IPSET_REDUCE_FACTOR=20
and IPSET_REDUCE_ENTRIES=65536
.
Check iprange: optimizing ipsets for iptables for more information and a demonstration of how this works.
IPSETS_APPLY
enables or disables the automatic ipsets update in the kernel.
- The default for
root
is1
. - The default for any other user is
0
. Keep in mind that enabling this for nonroot
users will not work. The kernel will not allow any other user to update the ipsets.