It is not FOSS.
https://github.com/DPsystems/Login-Shield/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
Maybe consider changing the license.
Thanks non the less.
Regards
Brent
On 2021/02/21 05:47, Mike wrote:
After more than a year of using the login-shield front end, this is
the first time I noticed I have ZERO fail2ban blocks:
_ _ _____ _ _ _ _
| | (_) / ____| | (_) | | | |
| | ___ __ _ _ _ __ _____| (___ | |__ _ ___| | __| |
| | / _ \ / _` | | ^_ \______\___ \| _ \| |/ _ \ |/ _` |
| |___| (_) | (_| | | | | | ____) | | | | | __/ | (_| |
|______\___/ \__, |_|_| |_| |_____/|_| |_|_|\___|_|\__,_|
__/ |
|___/
============= Login-Shield Statistics based on current log files
===========
Using: /var/log/messages and /var/log/secure
-- Number of login failures in log files: 8
-- Number of filtered connections: 13594
Start: Feb 1 03:12:03
End : Feb 20 21:40:02
============================================================================
Total system attacks: 13602
Blocked attempts : 13594
Attacks got through : 8
---------------------------------
% Of Attacks Blocked: 99.9412%
I have been using the blacklist login-shield on my web server (hosting
about 40-50 different web sites for various clients). It is now to
the point where f2b is not catching any ftp, ssh, or other login
attempts. They're all being caught by the blacklist.
If you haven't tried this, see: https://github.com/dpsystems/login-shield
This isn't meant as a substitute for Fail2ban, but an additional layer
of protection, but it's doing so well, fail2ban basically has nothing
to block. Quite impressive!
Note that this isn't on my mail server. I'm getting a lot more brute
force attacks on pop3 and imap that fail2ban traps, but for my web
server, it's been 100% effective.
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