Product docs and API reference are now on Akamai TechDocs.
Search product docs.
Search for “” in product docs.
Search API reference.
Search for “” in API reference.
Search Results
 results matching 
 results
No Results
Filters
Using Fail2ban to Secure Your Server
Traducciones al EspañolEstamos traduciendo nuestros guías y tutoriales al Español. Es posible que usted esté viendo una traducción generada automáticamente. Estamos trabajando con traductores profesionales para verificar las traducciones de nuestro sitio web. Este proyecto es un trabajo en curso.
What is Fail2Ban
Fail2ban is a log-parsing application that monitors system logs for symptoms of an automated attack on your Linode. In this guide, you learn how to use Fail2ban to secure your server.
When an attempted compromise is located, using the defined parameters, Fail2ban adds a new rule to iptables to block the IP address of the attacker, either for a set amount of time, or permanently. Fail2ban can also alert you through email that an attack is occurring.
Fail2ban is primarily focused on SSH attacks, although it can be further configured to work for any service that uses log files and can be subject to a compromise.
sudo
prefix. For more information on privileges, see our
Users and Groups guide.How to Install Fail2ban
Follow the Getting Started guide to configure your basic server. You may also want to review the Securing Your Server guide before beginning.
CentOS/CentOS Stream/RHEL Based Operating Systems
Ensure your system is up to date and install the EPEL repository:
yum update -y && yum install epel-release -y
Install Fail2Ban:
yum install fail2ban
Install Sendmail if you additionally would like email support. Sendmail is not required to use Fail2Ban.:
yum install sendmail
Start and enable Fail2ban and, if needed, Sendmail:
systemctl enable --now fail2ban systemctl enable --now sendmail
Note If you encounter the error that there is
no directory /var/run/fail2ban to contain the socket file /var/run/fail2ban/fail2ban.sock
, create the directory manually:mkdir /var/run/fail2ban
Debian
Ensure your system is up to date:
apt update && apt upgrade -y
Install Fail2ban:
apt install fail2ban
The service automatically starts.
(Optional) If you would like email support, install Sendmail:
apt install sendmail-bin sendmail
Note The current version of Sendmail in Debian Jessie has an upstream bug which causes the following errors when installing
sendmail-bin
. The installation hangs for a minute, but then completes.Creating /etc/mail/sendmail.cf... ERROR: FEATURE() should be before MAILER() MAILER('local') must appear after FEATURE('always_add_domain') ERROR: FEATURE() should be before MAILER() MAILER('local') must appear after FEATURE('allmasquerade')
Fedora
Update your system:
dnf update
Install Fail2ban:
dnf install fail2ban
(Optional) If you would like email support, install Sendmail:
dnf install sendmail
Start and enable Fail2ban and, if needed, Sendmail:
systemctl enable --now fail2ban systemctl enable --now sendmail
Ubuntu
Ensure your system is up to date:
apt update && apt upgrade -y
Install Fail2ban:
apt install fail2ban
The service automatically starts.
(Optional) If you would like email support, install Sendmail:
apt install sendmail
Allow SSH access through UFW and then enable the firewall:
ufw allow ssh ufw enable
How to Configure Fail2ban
This section contains examples of common Fail2ban configurations using fail2ban.local
and jail.local
files. Fail2ban reads .conf
configuration files first, then .local
files override any settings. Because of this, all changes to the configuration are generally done in .local
files, leaving the .conf
files untouched.
Configure fail2ban.local
fail2ban.conf
contains the default configuration profile. The default settings give you a reasonable working setup. If you want to make any changes, it’s best to do it in a separate file,fail2ban.local
, which overridesfail2ban.conf
. Rename a copyfail2ban.conf
tofail2ban.local
.cp /etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.conf /etc/fail2ban/fail2ban.local
From here, you can opt to edit the definitions in
fail2ban.local
to match your desired configuration. The values that can be changed are:loglevel
: The level of detail that Fail2ban’s logs provide can be set to 1 (error), 2 (warn), 3 (info), or 4 (debug).logtarget
: Logs actions into a specific file. The default value of/var/log/fail2ban.log
puts all logging into the defined file. Alternately, you can change the value to:STDOUT
: output any dataSTDERR
: output any errorsSYSLOG
: message-based loggingFILE
: output to a file
socket
: The location of the socket file.pidfile
: The location of the PID file.
Fail2ban Backend Configuration
The
jail.conf
file enables Fail2ban for SSH by default for Debian and Ubuntu, but not CentOS. All other protocols and configurations (HTTP, FTP, etc.) are commented out. If you want to change this, create ajail.local
for editing:cp /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
If using CentOS or Fedora you need to change the
backend
option injail.local
from auto to systemd. This is not necessary on Debian 8 or Ubuntu 16.04, even though both use systemd as well.- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
# "backend" specifies the backend used to get files modification. # Available options are "pyinotify", "gamin", "polling", "systemd" and "auto". # This option can be overridden in each jail as well. . . . backend = systemd
Note If thebackend
configuration is set toauto
, Fail2ban monitors log files by first usingpyinotify
. Next, it triesgamin
. If neither are available, a polling algorithm decides what to try next.No jails are enabled by default in CentOS 7. For example, to enable the SSH daemon jail, uncomment the following lines in
jail.local
:- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2
[sshd] enabled = true
Fail2ban jail.local Configurations
To become more familiar with Fail2ban’s available settings, open your jail.local
file and browse the available configurations.
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
[DEFAULT] ignoreip = 127.0.0.1/8 bantime = 600 findtime = 600 maxretry = 3 backend = auto usedns = warn destemail = root@localhost sendername = Fail2Ban banaction = iptables-multiport mta = sendmail protocol = tcp chain = INPUT action_ = %(banaction)... action_mw = %(banaction)... protocol="%(protocol)s"... action_mwl = %(banaction)s...
For example, if you set the usedns
setting to no
, Fail2ban does not use reverse DNS to set its bans, and instead bans the IP address. When set as warn
, Fail2ban performs a reverse lookup of the hostname and uses it to perform a ban.
The chain
setting refers to the series of
iptables rules where jumps should be added in ban-actions. By default, this is set to the INPUT
chain. You can read more about iptables chains in our
What is iptables guide.
Fail2ban Chain Traffic Drop Configuration
You can use iptables’ --line-numbers
option to view your Fail2ban rules.
iptables -L f2b-sshd -v -n --line-numbers
You should receive a similar output:
Chain fail2ban-SSH (1 references)
num pkts bytes target prot opt in out source destination
1 19 2332 DROP all -- * * 192.0.0.0 0.0.0.0/0
2 16 1704 DROP all -- * * 192.0.0.1 0.0.0.0/0
3 15 980 DROP all -- * * 192.0.0.2 0.0.0.0/0
4 6 360 DROP all -- * * 192.0.0.3 0.0.0.0/0
5 8504 581K RETURN all -- * * 0.0.0.0/0 0.0.0.0/0
You can remove a rule applied to an IP address using the iptables -D chain rulenum
command. Replace rulenum
with the corresponding IP address rule number from the num
column. For example, to remove the IP address 192.0.0.1
, issue the following command:
iptables -D fail2ban-SSH 2
Ban Time and Retry Amount Fail2Ban Configuration
Set bantime
, findtime
, and maxretry
to define the circumstances and the length of time of a ban:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
# "bantime" is the number of seconds that a host is banned. bantime = 600 # A host is banned if it has generated "maxretry" during the last "findtime" # seconds. findtime = 600 maxretry = 3
findtime
: The lengths of time between login attempts before a ban is set. For example, if Fail2ban is set to ban an IP after five (5) failed log-in attempts, those 5 attempts must occur within the set 10-minutefindtime
limit. Thefindtime
value should be a set number of seconds.maxretry
: Fail2ban usesfindtime
andmaxretry
to decide when a ban is justified. If the number of attempts exceeds the limit set atmaxretry
and is within thefindtime
time limit, a ban is set by Fail2ban. The default is set to3
.bantime
: The length of time in seconds for which an IP is banned. If set to a negative number, the ban is permanent. The default value of 600 is set to ban an IP for a 10-minute duration.
ignoreip Fail2ban Configurations
To ignore specific IPs, add them to the ignoreip
line. By default, this command does not ban the localhost. If you work from a single IP address often, it may be beneficial to add it to the ignore list:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6
[DEFAULT] # "ignoreip" can be an IP address, a CIDR mask or a DNS host. Fail2ban will not # ban a host which matches an address in this list. Several addresses can be # defined using space separator. ignoreip = 127.0.0.1/8 123.45.67.89
ignoreip
: This setting helps you define IP addresses that should be excluded from Fail2ban rules. To ignore specific IPs, add them to the ignoreip
configuration, as shown in the example. By default, this command does not ban the localhost
. If you often work from a single IP address, you should consider adding it to the ignore list.
If you wish to allow IPs only for certain jails, this can be done with the fail2ban-client
command. Replace JAIL
with the name of your jail, and 192.0.0.1
with the IP you wish to allow.
fail2ban-client set JAIL addignoreip 192.0.0.1
Fail2ban Email Alerts
To receive email when fail2ban is triggered, adjust the email settings:
destemail
: The email address where you would like to receive the emails.sendername
: The name under which the email shows up.sender
: The email address from which Fail2ban sends emails.
sender
, run the command sendmail -t user@email.com
, replacing user@email.com
with your email address. Check your email (including spam folders, if needed) and review the sender email. This address can be used for the above configuration.You also need to adjust the action
setting, which defines what actions occur when the threshold for ban is met. The default, %(action_)s
, only bans the user. %(action_mw)s
bans and sends an email with a WhoIs report; while %(action_mwl)s
bans and sends an email with the WhoIs report and all relevant lines in the log file. This can also be changed on a jail-specific basis.
Fail2ban banaction and ports Configuration
Beyond the basic settings address above, jail.local also contains various jail configurations for a number of common services, including SSH, and iptables. By default, only SSH is enabled and the action is to ban the offending host/IP address by modifying the iptables firewall rules.
An average jail configuration resembles the following:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
# Default banning action (e.g. iptables, iptables-new, # iptables-multiport, shorewall, etc) It is used to define # action_* variables. Can be overridden globally or per # section within jail.local file banaction = iptables-multiport banaction_allports = iptables-allports [ssh] enabled = true port = ssh filter = sshd logpath = /var/log/auth.log maxretry = 6
banaction
: Determines the action to use when the threshold is reached. If you have configured the firewall to use firewalld set the value tofirewallcmd-ipset
and if you have configured the firewall to use UFW set the value toufw
.banaction_allports
: Blocks a remote IP in every port. If you have configured the firewall to use firewalld set the value tofirewallcmd-ipset
.enabled
: Determines whether or not the filter is turned on.port
: The port Fail2ban should be referencing in regards to the service. If using the default port, then the service name can be placed here. If using a non-traditional port, this should be the port number. For example, if you moved your SSH port to 3456, you would replacessh
with3456
.filter
: The name of the file located in/etc/fail2ban/filter.d
that contains the failregex information used to parse log files appropriately. The.conf
suffix need not be included.logpath
: Gives the location of the service’s logs.maxretry
: Will override the globalmaxretry
for the defined service.findtime
andbantime
can also be added.action
: This can be added as an additional setting, if the default action is not suitable for the jail. Additional actions can be found in theaction.d
folder.
.conf
files placed in the jail.d
directory. The format remains the same.Using Fail2ban Filters to Secure Your Server
In this section you examine your system’s Fail2ban filters defined in their configuration files.
Depending on your system’s Fail2ban version, you can find your system’s filters in either the /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf
file or in the /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/defaults-*.conf
file.
Open your /etc/fail2ban/jail.conf
file and examine the ssh/sshd
filter:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
[ssh] enabled = true port = ssh filter = sshd logpath = /var/log/auth.log maxretry = 5
If you are using a Fail2ban version greater than 0.8
, check both your defaults-*.conf
and jail.conf
files.
If your system has Fail2ban version 0.8 or greater, your jail.conf
file resembles the following example:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4
[sshd] port = ssh logpath = %(sshd_log)s
Finally, a system using Fail2ban 0.8 or greater has a defaults-*.conf
that includes the following filters:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.d/defaults-*.conf
1 2 3 4
[sshd] enabled = true maxretry = 3
You can test your existing filters by running the example command and replacing logfile
, failregex
, and ignoreregex
with your own values.
fail2ban-regex logfile failregex ignoreregex
Using the examples from the beginning of this section, the command resembles the following:
fail2ban-regex /var/log/auth.log /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/sshd.conf
Your Fail2ban filters have to work with:
- Different types of logs generated by different software
- Different configurations and multiple operating systems
In addition to the above, they also have to be log-format agnostic, must be safeguarded against DDoS, and have to be compatible with future versions of the software.
Customizing Your ignoreregex Configuration
Before making changes to the failregex
configuration, you have to customize ignoreregex
. Fail2ban needs to know what is considered normal server activity and what is not considered normal activity.
For example, to exclude activity cron from running on your server or to exclude MySQL, you can configure ignoreregex
to filter logs generated by these two programs:
- File: /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/sshd.conf
1 2 3 4
ignoreregex = : pam_unix\((cron|sshd):session\): session (open|clos)ed for user (daemon|munin|mysql|root)( by \(uid=0\))?$ : Successful su for (mysql) by root$ New session \d+ of user (mysql)\.$ Removed session \d+\.$
Now that you have filtered for the each program’s logs, you can customize failregexs
to block what you want.
Customizing Failregexs
Although Fail2ban comes with a number of filters, you may want to further customize these filters or create your own to suit your needs. Fail2ban uses regular expressions (regex) to parse log files, looking for instances of attempted break-ins and password failures. Fail2ban uses Python’s regex extensions.
The best way to understand how failregex works is to write one. Although we do not advise having Fail2ban monitor your Wordpress’s access.log on heavily-trafficked websites due to CPU concerns, it provides an instance of an easy-to-understand log file that you can use to learn about the creation of any failregex.
Write a Regex for Fail2ban
Navigate to your website’s
access.log
(generally located at/var/www/example.com/logs/access.log
) and find a failed login attempt. It resembles:- File: /var/www/example.com/logs/access.log
1
123.45.67.89 - - [01/Oct/2015:12:46:34 -0400] "POST /wp-login.php HTTP/1.1" 200 1906 "http://example.com/wp-login.php" "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.10; rv:40.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/40.0"
Note that you only need to track up to the
200
:- File: /var/www/example.com/logs/access.log
1
123.45.67.89 - - [01/Oct/2015:12:46:34 -0400] "POST /wp-login.php HTTP/1.1" 200
The IP address from where the failed attempt originated is always be defined as
<HOST>
. The subsequent few characters are unchanging and can be input as literals:<HOST> - - \[
The
\
before the[
denotes that the square bracket is to be read literally.The next section, the date of the login attempt, can be written as grouped expressions using regex expressions. The first portion,
01
in this example, can be written as(\d{2})
: The parentheses group the expression, while\d
looks for any numerical digits.{2}
notes that the expression is looking for two digits in a row, i.e., the day of the month.Thus far, you should have:
<HOST> - - \[(\d{2})
The following forward slash is then be called with a literal forward slash, followed by
\w{3}
which looks for a series of3
alpha-numeric characters (i.e., A-Z, 0-9, any case). The following forward slash should also be literal:<HOST> - - \[(\d{2})/\w{3}/
The section for the year should be written similar to the day, but without the need for a capture group, and for four consecutive characters (and a literal colon):
<HOST> - - \[(\d{2})/\w{3}/\d{4}:
The next sequence is a series of two-digit numbers that make up the time. Because we defined the day of the month as a two-digit number in a capture group (the parentheses), we can backreference it using
\1
(since it is the first capture group). Again, the colons are literals:<HOST> - - \[(\d{2})/\w{3}/\d{4}:\1:\1:\1
If you do not want to use backreferences this can also be written as:
<HOST> - - \[\d{2}/\w{3}/\d{4}:\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}
The
-0400
segment should be written similarly to the year, with the additional literal-
:-\d{4}
. Finally, you can close the square bracket (escaping with a backslash first), and finish the rest with the literal string:<HOST> - - \[(\d{2})/\w{3}/\d{4}:\1:\1:\1 -\d{4}\] "POST /wp-login.php HTTP/1.1" 200
Or:
<HOST> - - \[\d{2}/\w{3}/\d{4}:\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2} -\d{4}\] "POST /wp-login.php HTTP/1.1" 200
Apply the Failregex
With the failregex created, it then needs to be added to a filter.
Navigate to Fail2ban’s
filter.d
directory:cd /etc/fail2ban/filter.d
Create a file called
wordpress.conf
, and add your failregex:- File: /etc/fail2ban/filter.d/wordpress.conf
1 2 3 4 5 6
# Fail2Ban filter for WordPress [Definition] failregex = <HOST> - - \[(\d{2})/\w{3}/\d{4}:\1:\1:\1 -\d{4}\] "POST /wp-login.php HTTP/1.1" 200 ignoreregex =
Save and quit.
Add a WordPress section to
jail.local
:- File: /etc/fail2ban/jail.local
1 2 3 4 5
[wordpress] enabled = true filter = wordpress logpath = /var/www/html/andromeda/logs/access.log port = 80,443
This uses the default ban and email action. Other actions can be defined by adding an action =
line.
Save and exit, then restart Fail2ban.
Use the Fail2ban Client
Fail2ban provides a command fail2ban-client
that can be used to run Fail2ban from the command line:
fail2ban-client COMMAND
start
: Starts the Fail2ban server and jails.reload
: Reloads Fail2ban’s configuration files.reload JAIL
: ReplacesJAIL
with the name of a Fail2ban jail; this reloads the jail.stop
: Terminates the server.status
: Will show the status of the server, and enable jails.status JAIL
: Will show the status of the jail, including any currently-banned IPs.
For example, to check that the Fail2Ban is running and the SSHd jail is enabled, run:
fail2ban-client status
The output should be:
Status
|- Number of jail: 1
`- Jail list: sshd
For additional information about fail2ban-client
commands, see the Fail2ban wiki.
Lockout Recovery
In the event that you find yourself locked out of your Linode due to fail2ban, you can still gain access by using our out-of-band Lish Console.
From here, you can view your firewall rules to ensure that it is fail2ban that blocked your IP, and not something else. To do this, enter the following command:
iptables -n -L
Look for your IP address in the source
column of any fail2ban chains (always prefixed by f2b
or fail2ban
) to confirm whether or not you were blocked by the fail2ban service:
Chain f2b-sshd (1 references)
target prot opt source destination
REJECT all -- 203.0.113.0 0.0.0.0/0 reject-with icmp-e
To remove your IP address from a jail, you can use the following command, replacing 203.0.113.0
and jailname
with the IP address and name of the jail that you’d like to unban:
fail2ban-client set jailname unbanip 203.0.113.0
If you can’t remember your jail name, then you can always use the following command to list all jails:
fail2ban-client status
If you find that you would like to stop using your fail2ban service at any time, you can enter the following:
fail2ban-client stop
CentOS 7 and Fedora additionally require two extra commands to be fully stopped and disabled:
systemctl disable --now fail2ban
This page was originally published on