>
> If I'm understanding correctly, write out all rules in a bash terminal and
> run them, and then do /usr/sbin/iptables-save ---
>
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbiniptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbiniptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbiniptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables rule;
> ~#/usr/sbiniptables rule
>
> ~#/usr/sbin/iptables-save > /etc/sysconfig/iptables

Yep.
And you can copy '/etc/sysconfig/iptables' around if you have
identical machines and no machine-specific rules...
(Note, you can even port the rules from other Linux distros as
iptables-save exists there as well)

-- 
Barak Korren
bkor...@redhat.com
RHEV-CI Team
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

Reply via email to