Provided by: firewalld_0.4.4.6-1_all bug

NAME

       firewalld - Dynamic Firewall Manager

SYNOPSIS

       firewalld [OPTIONS...]

DESCRIPTION

       firewalld provides a dynamically managed firewall with support for network/firewall zones
       to define the trust level of network connections or interfaces. It has support for IPv4,
       IPv6 firewall settings and for ethernet bridges and has a separation of runtime and
       permanent configuration options. It also supports an interface for services or
       applications to add firewall rules directly.

OPTIONS

       These are the command line options of firewalld:

       -h, --help
           Prints a short help text and exists.

       --debug[=level]
           Set the debug level for firewalld to level. The range of the debug level is 1 (lowest
           level) to 10 (highest level). The debug output will be written to the firewalld log
           file /var/log/firewalld.

       --debug-gc
           Print garbage collector leak information. The collector runs every 10 seconds and if
           there are leaks, it prints information about the leaks.

       --nofork
           Turn off daemon forking. Force firewalld to run as a foreground process instead of as
           a daemon in the background.

       --nopid
           Disable writing pid file. By default the program will write a pid file. If the program
           is invoked with this option it will not check for an existing server process.

CONCEPTS

       firewalld has a D-Bus interface for firewall configuration of services and applications.
       It also has a command line client for the user. Services or applications already using
       D-Bus can request changes to the firewall with the D-Bus interface directly. For more
       information on the firewalld D-Bus interface, please have a look at firewalld.dbus(5).

       firewalld provides support for zones, predefined services and ICMP types and has a
       separation of runtime and permanent configuration options. Permanent configuration is
       loaded from XML files in /usr/lib/firewalld or /etc/firewalld (see the section called
       “DIRECTORIES”).

       If NetworkManager is not in use and firewalld gets started after the network is already
       up, the connections and manually created interfaces are not bound to the zone specified in
       the ifcfg file. The interfaces will automatically be handled by the default zone.
       firewalld will also not get notified about network device renames. All this also applies
       to interfaces that are not controlled by NetworkManager if NM_CONTROLLED=no is set.

       You can add these interfaces to a zone with firewall-cmd [--permanent] --zone=zone
       --add-interface=interface. If there is a /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-interface
       file, firewalld tries to change the ZONE=zone setting in this file.

       If firewalld gets reloaded, it will restore the interface bindings that were in place
       before reloading to keep interface bindings stable in the case of NetworkManager
       uncontrolled interfaces. This mechanism is not possible in the case of a firewalld service
       restart.

       It is essential to keep the ZONE= setting in the ifcfg file consistent to the binding in
       firewalld in the case of NetworkManager uncontrolled interfaces.

   Zones
       A network or firewall zone defines the trust level of the interface used for a connection.
       There are several pre-defined zones provided by firewalld. Zone configuration options and
       generic information about zones are described in firewalld.zone(5)

   Services
       A service can be a list of local ports, protocols and destinations and additionally also a
       list of firewall helper modules automatically loaded if a service is enabled. Service
       configuration options and generic information about services are described in
       firewalld.service(5). The use of predefined services makes it easier for the user to
       enable and disable access to a service.

   ICMP types
       The Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) is used to exchange information and also
       error messages in the Internet Protocol (IP). ICMP types can be used in firewalld to limit
       the exchange of these messages. For more information, please have a look at
       firewalld.icmptype(5).

   Runtime configuration
       Runtime configuration is the actual active configuration and is not permanent. After
       reload/restart of the service or a system reboot, runtime settings will be gone if they
       haven't been also in permanent configuration.

   Permanent configuration
       The permanent configuration is stored in config files and will be loaded and become new
       runtime configuration with every machine boot or service reload/restart.

   Direct interface
       The direct interface is mainly used by services or applications to add specific firewall
       rules. It requires basic knowledge of ip(6)tables concepts (tables, chains, commands,
       parameters, targets).

DIRECTORIES

       firewalld supports two configuration directories:

   Default/Fallback configuration in /usr/lib/firewalld
       This directory contains the default and fallback configuration provided by firewalld for
       icmptypes, services and zones. The files provided with the firewalld package should not
       get changed and the changes are gone with an update of the firewalld package. Additional
       icmptypes, services and zones can be provided with packages or by creating files.

   System configuration settings in /etc/firewalld
       The system or user configuration stored here is either created by the system administrator
       or by customization with the configuration interface of firewalld or by hand. The files
       will overload the default configuration files.

       To manually change settings of pre-defined icmptypes, zones or services, copy the file
       from the default configuration directory to the corresponding directory in the system
       configuration directory and change it accordingly.

       For more information on icmptypes, please have a look at the firewalld.icmptype(5) man
       page, for services at firewalld.service(5) and for zones at firewalld.zone(5).

SIGNALS

       Currently only SIGHUP is supported.

   SIGHUP
       Reloads the complete firewall configuration. You can also use firewall-cmd --reload. All
       runtime configuration settings will be restored. Permanent configuration will change
       according to options defined in the configuration files.

SEE ALSO

       firewall-applet(1), firewalld(1), firewall-cmd(1), firewall-config(1), firewallctl(1),
       firewalld.conf(5), firewalld.direct(5), firewalld.dbus(5), firewalld.icmptype(5),
       firewalld.lockdown-whitelist(5), firewall-offline-cmd(1), firewalld.richlanguage(5),
       firewalld.service(5), firewalld.zone(5), firewalld.zones(5), firewalld.ipset(5),
       firewalld.helper(5)

NOTES

       firewalld home page:
           http://www.firewalld.org

       More documentation with examples:
           http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FirewallD

AUTHORS

       Thomas Woerner <twoerner@redhat.com>
           Developer

       Jiri Popelka <jpopelka@redhat.com>
           Developer