see /etc/rc.firewall.
The gist of the previous posting that there is no
easy firewall , and don't ever be lulled into a sense
of security because you running a firewall :)
--Daniel Schroder (Private email [EMAIL PROTECTED])
Unix users .. South Africa
To : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From : John Travis
date : Nov 13
Address : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Quality is a standard .. not a selling point
On Mon, 13 Nov 2000, John Travis wrote:
> On Mon, 13 Nov 2000 07:45:43 -0500, you wrote:
>
> >To the best of my knowledge, there are no "firewall for the lazy"
> >tools out there. Sorry.
> >
> >==ml
>
> :-(. Thanks for the reply though. Not really the answer I was hoping for but you
>definitely win the quickest response time award. Score one for the Free community
>8^). You honestly spat that back at me in minutes. I have actually been reading
>through some of your articles since then. I need to play with/learn the big
>differences between Free and Linux first (things like the packaging system and the
>handling of modules etc.). I was just hoping I could lock down my ports easily while
>I read and read and read. All well, now I definitely have a place to start. I'm
>about to check out any related links from freebsd.org, but perhaps you could guide me
>to some good info/faqs/tutorials on setting up ipfw in Free? Nothing too complicated
>needed. Just a single user workstation on a cable modem (DHCP).
>
> thanks again,
>
> jt
> Debian Gnu/Linux <http://www.debian.org>
> FreeBSD <http://www.FreeBSD.org>
>
>
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