Note
This plugin is part of the community.general collection (version 3.8.1).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package. It is not included in ansible-core
. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.general
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: community.general.ufw
.
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
ufw
packageParameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments |
---|---|---|
comment string | Add a comment to the rule. Requires UFW version >=0.35. | |
default string |
| Change the default policy for incoming or outgoing traffic. aliases: policy |
delete boolean |
| Delete rule. If delete=true and a value is provided for insert, then insert is ignored. |
direction string |
| Select direction for a rule or default policy command. Mutually exclusive with interface_in and interface_out. |
from_ip string | Default: "any" | Source IP address. aliases: from, src |
from_port string | Source port. | |
insert integer | Insert the corresponding rule as rule number NUM. Note that ufw numbers rules starting with 1. If delete=true and a value is provided for insert, then insert is ignored. | |
insert_relative_to string |
| Allows to interpret the index in insert relative to a position. zero interprets the rule number as an absolute index (i.e. 1 is the first rule).first-ipv4 interprets the rule number relative to the index of the first IPv4 rule, or relative to the position where the first IPv4 rule would be if there is currently none.last-ipv4 interprets the rule number relative to the index of the last IPv4 rule, or relative to the position where the last IPv4 rule would be if there is currently none.first-ipv6 interprets the rule number relative to the index of the first IPv6 rule, or relative to the position where the first IPv6 rule would be if there is currently none.last-ipv6 interprets the rule number relative to the index of the last IPv6 rule, or relative to the position where the last IPv6 rule would be if there is currently none. |
interface string | Specify interface for the rule. The direction (in or out) used for the interface depends on the value of direction. See interface_in and interface_out for routed rules that needs to supply both an input and output interface. Mutually exclusive with interface_in and interface_out. aliases: if | |
interface_in string added in 0.2.0 of community.general | Specify input interface for the rule. This is mutually exclusive with direction and interface. However, it is compatible with interface_out for routed rules. aliases: if_in | |
interface_out string added in 0.2.0 of community.general | Specify output interface for the rule. This is mutually exclusive with direction and interface. However, it is compatible with interface_in for routed rules. aliases: if_out | |
log boolean |
| Log new connections matched to this rule |
logging string |
| Toggles logging. Logged packets use the LOG_KERN syslog facility. |
name string | Use profile located in /etc/ufw/applications.d .aliases: app | |
proto string |
| TCP/IP protocol. aliases: protocol |
route boolean |
| Apply the rule to routed/forwarded packets. |
rule string |
| Add firewall rule |
state string |
| enabled reloads firewall and enables firewall on boot.disabled unloads firewall and disables firewall on boot.reloaded reloads firewall.reset disables and resets firewall to installation defaults. |
to_ip string | Default: "any" | Destination IP address. aliases: dest, to |
to_port string | Destination port. aliases: port |
Note
man ufw
for more examples.- name: Allow everything and enable UFW community.general.ufw: state: enabled policy: allow - name: Set logging community.general.ufw: logging: 'on' # Sometimes it is desirable to let the sender know when traffic is # being denied, rather than simply ignoring it. In these cases, use # reject instead of deny. In addition, log rejected connections: - community.general.ufw: rule: reject port: auth log: yes # ufw supports connection rate limiting, which is useful for protecting # against brute-force login attacks. ufw will deny connections if an IP # address has attempted to initiate 6 or more connections in the last # 30 seconds. See http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/187 # for details. Typical usage is: - community.general.ufw: rule: limit port: ssh proto: tcp # Allow OpenSSH. (Note that as ufw manages its own state, simply removing # a rule=allow task can leave those ports exposed. Either use delete=yes # or a separate state=reset task) - community.general.ufw: rule: allow name: OpenSSH - name: Delete OpenSSH rule community.general.ufw: rule: allow name: OpenSSH delete: yes - name: Deny all access to port 53 community.general.ufw: rule: deny port: '53' - name: Allow port range 60000-61000 community.general.ufw: rule: allow port: 60000:61000 proto: tcp - name: Allow all access to tcp port 80 community.general.ufw: rule: allow port: '80' proto: tcp - name: Allow all access from RFC1918 networks to this host community.general.ufw: rule: allow src: '{{ item }}' loop: - 10.0.0.0/8 - 172.16.0.0/12 - 192.168.0.0/16 - name: Deny access to udp port 514 from host 1.2.3.4 and include a comment community.general.ufw: rule: deny proto: udp src: 1.2.3.4 port: '514' comment: Block syslog - name: Allow incoming access to eth0 from 1.2.3.5 port 5469 to 1.2.3.4 port 5469 community.general.ufw: rule: allow interface: eth0 direction: in proto: udp src: 1.2.3.5 from_port: '5469' dest: 1.2.3.4 to_port: '5469' # Note that IPv6 must be enabled in /etc/default/ufw for IPv6 firewalling to work. - name: Deny all traffic from the IPv6 2001:db8::/32 to tcp port 25 on this host community.general.ufw: rule: deny proto: tcp src: 2001:db8::/32 port: '25' - name: Deny all IPv6 traffic to tcp port 20 on this host # this should be the first IPv6 rule community.general.ufw: rule: deny proto: tcp port: '20' to_ip: "::" insert: 0 insert_relative_to: first-ipv6 - name: Deny all IPv4 traffic to tcp port 20 on this host # This should be the third to last IPv4 rule # (insert: -1 addresses the second to last IPv4 rule; # so the new rule will be inserted before the second # to last IPv4 rule, and will be come the third to last # IPv4 rule.) community.general.ufw: rule: deny proto: tcp port: '20' to_ip: "::" insert: -1 insert_relative_to: last-ipv4 # Can be used to further restrict a global FORWARD policy set to allow - name: Deny forwarded/routed traffic from subnet 1.2.3.0/24 to subnet 4.5.6.0/24 community.general.ufw: rule: deny route: yes src: 1.2.3.0/24 dest: 4.5.6.0/24
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2021 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/collections/community/general/ufw_module.html