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Last active October 3, 2024 20:18
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UFW to block countries

#Country ban with UFW#

Grab your different country ip addresses and save as Linux IPTables

http://www.ip2location.com/free/visitor-blocker

##Add country## Run the following command

while read line; do sudo ufw deny from $line; done < all.txt

Where the filename is the country.

##Remove country## To remove or revert these rules, keep that list of IPs! Then run a command like so to remove the rules:

while read line; do sudo ufw delete deny from $line; done < all.txt

##Suggestion## What I did was exported each individual country as their own country.txt file. But then realized that I wanted to run this thing one time, so I ran the following command:

cat *.txt >> all.txt

Then you can run your rule against all of the files.

@scabilos
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@poddmo
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poddmo commented Oct 10, 2023

I have created an IP blocklist solution for UFW: https://github.com/poddmo/ufw-blocklist
It is designed to be very lightweight (runs on a single board computer home internet gateway) and very fast (using ipsets)

@bamdad23
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As I posted earlier, this is not a good solution. Adding 10s of thousands of rules, 1 per IP block, is not scalable. Use ipset (https://ipset.netfilter.org/). You can put all the ranges into a set and then add a single rule into iptables.

what about this script?

#!/bin/bash

Function to create an ipset and add CIDR ranges from a file

function create_ipset_and_add() {
local ipset_name=$1
local cidr_file=$2
local ipset_type=$3

# Create an ipset if it doesn't exist
sudo ipset create $ipset_name $ipset_type

# Add CIDR ranges from the file to the ipset
while read -r cidr; do
    sudo ipset add $ipset_name $cidr
done < "$cidr_file"

}

Create ipsets for country A and country B for both IPv4 and IPv6

create_ipset_and_add "country_a_cidr" "country_a_cidr.txt" "hash:ip"
create_ipset_and_add "country_b_cidr" "country_b_cidr.txt" "hash:ip"

Allow outgoing traffic to all IPs

sudo ufw default allow outgoing

Allow incoming traffic from country A and country B, block others for both IPv4 and IPv6

sudo ufw deny from any to any
sudo ufw allow from ipset:country_a_cidr
sudo ufw allow from ipset:country_b_cidr

Enable ufw

sudo ufw enable

I'll allow incoming from 2 countries block the rest of world, then allowing all outgoing.

@prensing
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Yes, that looks sensible. The main point is to use ipset(s) to hold the big list of IPs and do the testing in the firewall rules.

One point, however: you are using an ipset of type "hash:ip". I don't know what you are using for the list of addresses. Most come as a list of IP ranges, so I would guess that "hash:net" would be more appropriate. You also might want to set the size of the table when you create it, but that will only speed up the inital load (I would guess; not an expert on it).

@poddmo
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poddmo commented Jan 17, 2024

I have a repo with a ufw blocklist solution: (https://github.com/poddmo/ufw-blocklist)
There is also a solution there for multiple blocklists (eg per country, bogans, etc) that tests well for me and I just need to document its use.
In particular, check out the method I use to load list into the ipset. It spawns a subshell into the background so as not to hang the system while the list is loaded.

@timlab55
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timlab55 commented Jan 26, 2024

@poddmo - Is there anyway of compiling the entire "?.txt" into 1 master.txt file? My target clients that I'm trying to get lives within 25 miles from me in a circle. I'm almost certain they are on "NO" blacklist. But with what I"m doing on a website I would like to know that my database and stuff is protected. I"m running this on Debian 12 on a Raspberry Pi verison 4. I don't know if I will be notify if you respond, but my email address is timlab195@gmail.com.
Thanks

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