Sets up Fail2Ban for FreeBSD systems (including FreeNAS).
Overall, this plugin brings the meaningful settings into visibility by leveraging the jail overlay ability, so only the files that you probably want to edit and only the settings you probably care about are present here.
Explore the tree and most of the modifications you may want to make should be fairly apparent.
Check out this repository:
git clone [email protected]:TwilightCoders/iocage-plugin-fail2ban.git
Install with iocage
from within the project directory:
iocage fetch -P -n fail2ban.json ip4_addr="[interface]|[ip_address]/[cidr]"
- e.g.
iocage fetch -P -n fail2ban.json ip4_addr="em0|192.168.0.111/24"
Stop the jail:
iocage stop fail2ban
Mount your root log directory (read only recommended):
auth.log
for SSH:
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /var/log /mnt/log/root nullfs ro 0 0
You can read more about fail2ban configuration by referencing the man pages "fail2ban-jail(5)"
Mount global fail2ban config directory (readonly recommended, but not required):
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /path/to/dataset/for/fail2ban/global/conf /usr/local/etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.d nullfs ro 0 0
- e.g.
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /mnt/raid1/data/fail2ban/global /usr/local/etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.d nullfs ro 0 0
Example fail2ban.conf
to go in /path/to/dataset/for/fail2ban/global/conf
:
[Definition]
# Option: logtarget
# Notes.: Set the log target. This could be a file, SYSLOG, STDERR or STDOUT.
# Only one log target can be specified.
# If you change logtarget from the default value and you are
# using logrotate -- also adjust or disable rotation in the
# corresponding configuration file
# (e.g. /etc/logrotate.d/fail2ban on Debian systems)
# Values: [ STDOUT | STDERR | SYSLOG | SYSOUT | FILE ] Default: STDERR
#
logtarget = /var/log/fail2ban.log
Mount jail configurations (fail2ban calls the enabled filter/action combos 'jails', not to be confused with FreeBSD jails):
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /path/to/dataset/for/fail2ban/jail/conf /usr/local/etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.d nullfs ro 0 0
- e.g.
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /mnt/raid1/data/fail2ban/jails /usr/local/etc/fail2ban/jail.d nullfs ro 0 0
SSH is a common service to monitor for banning IPs from botnet bruteforce attempts.
Mount the directory where the hosts.evil
file will be written to (outside of the jail) for persistant storage.
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /path/to/dataset/for/jail/hosts /usr/local/etc/hosts nullfs rw 0 0
- e.g.
iocage fstab -a fail2ban /mnt/raid1/data/fail2ban/etc /usr/local/etc/hosts nullfs rw 0 0
Example "jail config" (sshd.conf
) to go in /path/to/dataset/for/fail2ban/jail/conf
# sshd.conf
[DEFAULT]
# "ignoreip" can be a list of IP addresses, CIDR masks or DNS hosts. Fail2ban
# will not ban a host which matches an address in this list. Several addresses
# can be defined using space (and/or comma) separator.
ignoreip = 127.0.0.1/8 ::1 192.168.0.0/24
# "bantime" is the number of seconds that a host is banned.
bantime = 750h
# "mode" defines the mode of the filter (see corresponding filter implementation for more info).
mode = normal
# "filter" defines the filter to use by the jail.
# By default jails have names matching their filter name
#
filter = %(__name__)s[mode=%(mode)s]
#
# SSH servers
#
[sshd]
# To use more aggressive sshd modes set filter parameter "mode" in jail.local:
# normal (default), ddos, extra or aggressive (combines all).
# See "tests/files/logs/sshd" or "filter.d/sshd.conf" for usage example and details.
enabled = true
mode = normal
port = ssh
logpath = /mnt/log/root/auth.log
bantime = 750h
maxretry = 3
findtime = 20m
backend = %(sshd_backend)s
action = hostsdeny
Update the host's hosts.allow
(add above ALL : ALL : allow
):
# enable fail2ban
sshd : /path/to/dataset/for/jail/hosts/hosts.evil : deny
e.g.
# enable fail2ban
sshd : /mnt/raid1/data/fail2ban/etc/hosts.evil : deny
# Start by allowing everything (this prevents the rest of the file
# from working, so remove it when you need protection).
# The rules here work on a "First match wins" basis.
ALL : ALL : allow
Note, if you're on FreeNAS
you'll want to edit /conf/base/etc/hosts.allow to make changes persistent across reboots[1]. Ensure it works the way you intended by first editing /etc/hosts.allow
before editing the base config.
1Actually, currently there is a bug in FreeNAS TrueNAS that prevents this from working. You'll need to add a startup script to accomplish this. ln -fs /conf/base/etc/hosts.allow /etc/hosts.allow
Finally, restart sshd service sshd restart
The db will grow in size over time. To find duplicates:
SELECT ip, count(*) count FROM bans GROUP BY ip HAVING count > 1;
TODO: Exponential increase in bantime? Deduplicate db??
Source for the original distillation of instructions found here came from onthax
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/TwilightCoders/iocage-plugin-fail2ban.
Released under the MIT License.