On Nov 20, 2020, at 14:31, Michael B Allen <iop...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Well I've managed to resolve the issue but I'm not entirely satisfied
> with the solution. Apparently firewalld and iptables are at least
> partially mutually exclusive such that changes to iptable have no
> effect.

That’s not strictly true, at least with firewalld and iptables.  You added the 
iptables rule with -A (append).  The firewalld rules add jump rules to the 
input table and your rule simply was never reached, because traffic was blocked 
in one of the earlier rules.  This would be the case in any complex iptables 
config too.  Had you really wanted to test something with iptables, use -I 
(insert) which puts it at the front of the rules.  Obviously, the best thing to 
do is to use firewalld tools with firewalld.

--
Jonathan Billings <billi...@negate.org>

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