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| Red Hat Linux 7.3: The Official Red Hat Linux x86 Installation Guide |
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| Prev | Chapter 3. Installing Red Hat Linux | Next |
Red Hat Linux offers firewall protection for enhanced system
security. A firewall exists between your computer and the network, and
determines which resources on your computer remote users on the network can
access. A properly configured firewall can greatly increase the security of
your system.
Choose the appropriate security level for your system.
- High
If you choose High, your system will not
accept connections (other than the default settings) that are not
explicitly defined by you. By default, only the following connections
are allowed:
If you choose High, your firewall will not
allow the following:
Active mode FTP (passive mode FTP, used by default in
most clients, should still work) IRC DCC file transfers RealAudioTM Remote X Window System clients
If you are connecting your system to the Internet, but do not plan
to run a server, this is the safest choice. If additional services are
needed, you can choose Customize to allow
specific services through the firewall.  | Note |
|---|
| | If you select a medium or high firewall to
be setup during this installation, network authentication methods
(NIS and LDAP) will not work. |
- Medium
If you choose Medium, your firewall will not
allow remote machines to have access to certain resources on your
system. By default, access to the following resources are not allowed:
Ports lower than 1023 — the standard reserved ports,
used by most system services, such as
FTP, SSH,
telnet,
HTTP, and
NIS.
The NFS server port (2049) — NFS is disabled for both
remote severs and local clients. The local X Window System display for remote X clients. The X Font server port (by default,
xfs does not listen on the network;
it is disabled in the font server).
If you want to allow resources such as
RealAudioTM while
still blocking access to normal system services, choose
Medium. Select Customize to
allow specific services through the firewall.
 | Note |
|---|
| | If you select a medium or high firewall to
be setup during this installation, network authentication methods
(NIS and LDAP) will not work. |
- No Firewall
No firewall provides complete access to your system and does no
security checking. Security checking is the disabling of access to
certain services. This should only be selected if you are running on a
trusted network (not the Internet) or plan to do more firewall
configuration later.
Choose Customize to add trusted devices or to allow
additional incoming services.
- Trusted Devices
Selecting any of the Trusted Devices allows
access to your system for all traffic from that device; it is excluded
from the firewall rules. For example, if you are running a local
network, but are connected to the Internet via a PPP dialup, you can
check eth0 and any traffic coming from your local
network will be allowed. Selecting eth0 as
trusted means all traffic over the Ethernet is allowed, put the ppp0
interface is still firewalled. If you want to restrict traffic on an
interface, leave it unchecked.
It is not recommended that you make any device that is connected
to public networks, such as the Internet, a Trusted
Device.
- Allow Incoming
Enabling these options allow the specified services to pass
through the firewall. Note, during a workstation installation, the
majority of these services are not installed on
the system.
- DHCP
If you allow incoming DHCP queries and replies, you allow
any network interface that uses DHCP to determine its IP
address. DHCP is normally enabled. If DHCP is not enabled, your
computer can no longer get an IP address. - SSH
Secure SHell (SSH)
is a suite of tools for logging into and executing commands on a
remote machine. If you plan to use SSH tools to access your
machine through a firewall, enable this option. You need to have
the openssh-server package installed in
order to access your machine remotely, using SSH tools.
- Telnet
Telnet is a protocol for logging into remote
machines. Telnet communications are unencrypted and provide no
security from network snooping. Allowing incoming Telnet access
is not recommended. If you do want to allow inbound Telnet
access, you will need to install the
telnet-server package.
- WWW (HTTP)
The HTTP protocol is used by Apache (and by other Web
servers) to serve webpages. If you plan on making your Web
server publicly available, enable this option. This option is
not required for viewing pages locally or for developing
webpages. You will need to install the
apache package if you want to serve
webpages.
Enabling WWW (HTTP) will not open a
port for HTTPS. To enable HTTPS, specify it in the
Other ports field.
- Mail (SMTP)
If you want to allow incoming mail delivery through your
firewall, so that remote hosts can connect directly to your
machine to deliver mail, enable this option. You do not need to
enable this if you collect your mail from your ISP's server
using POP3 or IMAP, or if you use a tool such as
fetchmail. Note that an improperly
configured SMTP server can allow remote machines to use your
server to send spam. - FTP
The FTP protocol is used to transfer files between machines
on a network. If you plan on making your FTP server publicly
available, enable this option. You need to install the
wu-ftpd (and possibly the
anonftp) package for this option to be
useful.
- Other ports
You can allow access to ports which are not listed here, by
listing them in the Other ports field. Use
the following format: port:protocol. For
example, if you want to allow IMAP access through your firewall,
you can specify imap:tcp. You can also
explicitly specify numeric ports; to allow UDP packets on port
1234 through the firewall, enter
1234:udp. To specify multiple ports,
separate them with commas.
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Disclaimer: For authoritative source or latest update to this
documentation, please refer to http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/ |
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Quotes: Let us not distain glory too much; nothing is finer, except virtue. The height of happiness would be to unite both in this life.Genius creates, and taste preserves. Taste is the good sense of genius; without taste, genius is only sublime folly.
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