On 22/10/24 14:24, Top wrote:
Hi all,
My tor relays[1] traffic decreased a lot and I think this *might* be connected to some kind of DDOS attack. So I wanted to use this situation to set up some DDOS protection. For that I stumbled upon Enkidus tor DDOS mitigation script. [2]
I believe that the mitigations found in the community-maintained anti-DDoS scripts, such as limiting the number of open connections from a single IP, are now integrated into tor itself.
However, this script is made for `iptables`, not `nftables`. I use `firewalld` with `nftables` on my system, since this seems to be the new default. [3] I don't really know that much about firewalls, so this situation overwhelms me a bit. In the README of Enkidus rules it says:
Practically all linux systems come with iptables or more recently
with nftables which basically does the same and more. So you won't need to install iptables. Just type iptables -V . If you see a version, you have it. The same with ipset . An ipset -v will do the job. In some rare cases you may not have ipset installed and installing it is as simple as apt-get ipset or yum install ipset or...
You may want to consider installing the iptables-nft package, which offers a compatibility layer for iptables on Fedora/CentOS.
This seems to imply that the script should work fine with `nftables` as well. This is also what Enkidu seems to state in a relevant gitlab issue: [4]
nftables interprets all the iptables rules just fine so the provided
scripts will work regardless of which one you have.
But it's not true! The script failed on my server, complaining that the `iptables` command couldn't be found (and no rules had been applied).
So how can I apply proper DDOS protection firewall rules whilst using `nftables`? Is there some easy way to modify the script to make it work?
Kind regards Top
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