On Jul 27, 2021, at 16:43, H <age...@meddatainc.com> wrote:
> 
> |Running CentOS 7. I was under the impression - seemingly mistaken - that by 
> adding a rule to /etc/hosts.deny such as ALL: aaa.bbb.ccc.* would ban all 
> attempts from that network segment to connect to the server, ie before 
> fail2ban would (eventually) ban connection attempts.
> 
> This, however, does not seem correct and I could use a pointer to correct my 
> misunderstanding. How is hosts.deny used and what have I missed?
> 
> Is it necessary to run:
> 
>  iptables -I INPUT -s aaa.bbb.ccc.0/24 -j DROP
> 
> to drop incoming connection attempts from that subnet?

Upstream openssh dropped support for tcp wrappers (hosts.deny) a while ago but 
RHEL had patched support back in for a while, but I believe it isn’t supported 
anymore. 

For what it’s worth, if you use the fail2ban-firewalld package, it uses ipset 
rather than iptables, which is more efficient.  

--
Jonathan Billings
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