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* return
@ 2004-06-04 13:39 Peter Marshall
  2004-06-04 13:58 ` return Frank Gruellich
  2004-06-04 15:44 ` return John A. Sullivan III
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Peter Marshall @ 2004-06-04 13:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netfilter

I was just wondering if anyone here uses "return" in their rules .. I
understand what it is for .. just wondering if it is efficient to use.

ex.

-A Forward -s 192.168.200.5 -o eth1 -j subchain1
-A Forward -s 192.168.200.0/24 -o eth1 -j subchain2

-A subchain1 -d 200.200.200.200 --dport 1234 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -d 200.200.300.300 --dport 4321 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -j RETURN

-A subchain2 .......... blah blah blah ....

Or would you just write the rules different ?

Also, I was wondering is there a way to specify multiple source ip address ?

ex -s 192.168.200.5, 192.168.200.20 .....

Thank you,
Peter.


Peter Marshall, BCS
Network Administrator, CARIS
115 Waggoners Lane, Fredericton NB, E3B 2L4 CANADA
Phone:  (506) 458-8533 (Reception)



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* RE: return
@ 2004-06-04 13:49 Piszcz, Justin Michael
  2004-06-04 14:02 ` return Peter Marshall
  2004-06-04 14:55 ` return Ludo Stellingwerff
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Piszcz, Justin Michael @ 2004-06-04 13:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Peter Marshall, netfilter

I do after reading this message:

Now that I've got ipt_recent installed and running, I'd be grateful for
comments or rule samples that could work best to ameliorate syn-floods.
(The site I'm working on has been the target of moderate-to-large-sized
syn-floods for a few months now, ongoing.)

I've been using this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -m limit --limit 6/s --limit-burst 10 -j RETURN
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -j syn-flood

...and, on the high-traffic site involved, have had occasions when the
machine became unreachable, the server load too high.

Someone suggested ipt_recent could handle this matter more accurately. 
I found a rule on the web that someone was using, and tried that a few
minutes ago, with this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -m recent --hitcount 10 --update \
   --seconds 60 -j syn-flood

...but very soon _no one_ could get a server connection, with that.

My 'mental model' of how ipt_recent is working must not be correct --
at least, I don't understand why the '--limit' ruleset seems to allow
normal traffic under most conditions but the '-m recent' rule kept
normal users from getting in, just a few minutes ago.

If anyone knows what I'm missing in my understanding of this, or has a
ruleset that works well to ameliorate syn-flooding, please let me know.

Thanks kindly,

-- 

 -- Jeff --   <http://www.wellnow.com>

 "There's nothing left in the world to prove.  All that's worth doing
  is to love one another, using whatever means are available to serve."



-----Original Message-----
From: netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org
[mailto:netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org] On Behalf Of Peter Marshall
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 9:39 AM
To: netfilter
Subject: return

I was just wondering if anyone here uses "return" in their rules .. I
understand what it is for .. just wondering if it is efficient to use.

ex.

-A Forward -s 192.168.200.5 -o eth1 -j subchain1
-A Forward -s 192.168.200.0/24 -o eth1 -j subchain2

-A subchain1 -d 200.200.200.200 --dport 1234 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -d 200.200.300.300 --dport 4321 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -j RETURN

-A subchain2 .......... blah blah blah ....

Or would you just write the rules different ?

Also, I was wondering is there a way to specify multiple source ip
address ?

ex -s 192.168.200.5, 192.168.200.20 .....

Thank you,
Peter.


Peter Marshall, BCS
Network Administrator, CARIS
115 Waggoners Lane, Fredericton NB, E3B 2L4 CANADA
Phone:  (506) 458-8533 (Reception)






^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* RE: return
@ 2004-06-04 14:14 Piszcz, Justin Michael
  2004-06-04 14:27 ` return Peter Marshall
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 12+ messages in thread
From: Piszcz, Justin Michael @ 2004-06-04 14:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Peter Marshall, netfilter

The first time I used RETURN was today.

-A syn-flood -m limit --limit 6/s --limit-burst 10 -j RETURN

As I pasted in the message below, as it is useful in these situations in
which you need to limit packets per second.


-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Marshall [mailto:peter.marshall@caris.com] 
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:02 AM
To: Piszcz, Justin Michael; netfilter
Subject: Re: return

I don't mean to sound rude .. but your response ( as far as I can tell
..
and I apologize if I am missing something) has nothing to do with my
question .. at all ...

Peter

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Piszcz, Justin Michael" <justin.piszcz@mitretek.org>
To: "Peter Marshall" <peter.marshall@caris.com>; "netfilter"
<netfilter@lists.netfilter.org>
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:49 AM
Subject: RE: return


I do after reading this message:

Now that I've got ipt_recent installed and running, I'd be grateful for
comments or rule samples that could work best to ameliorate syn-floods.
(The site I'm working on has been the target of moderate-to-large-sized
syn-floods for a few months now, ongoing.)

I've been using this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -m limit --limit 6/s --limit-burst 10 -j RETURN
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -j syn-flood

...and, on the high-traffic site involved, have had occasions when the
machine became unreachable, the server load too high.

Someone suggested ipt_recent could handle this matter more accurately.
I found a rule on the web that someone was using, and tried that a few
minutes ago, with this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -m recent --hitcount 10 --update \
   --seconds 60 -j syn-flood

...but very soon _no one_ could get a server connection, with that.

My 'mental model' of how ipt_recent is working must not be correct --
at least, I don't understand why the '--limit' ruleset seems to allow
normal traffic under most conditions but the '-m recent' rule kept
normal users from getting in, just a few minutes ago.

If anyone knows what I'm missing in my understanding of this, or has a
ruleset that works well to ameliorate syn-flooding, please let me know.

Thanks kindly,

-- 

 -- Jeff --   <http://www.wellnow.com>

 "There's nothing left in the world to prove.  All that's worth doing
  is to love one another, using whatever means are available to serve."



-----Original Message-----
From: netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org
[mailto:netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org] On Behalf Of Peter Marshall
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 9:39 AM
To: netfilter
Subject: return

I was just wondering if anyone here uses "return" in their rules .. I
understand what it is for .. just wondering if it is efficient to use.

ex.

-A Forward -s 192.168.200.5 -o eth1 -j subchain1
-A Forward -s 192.168.200.0/24 -o eth1 -j subchain2

-A subchain1 -d 200.200.200.200 --dport 1234 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -d 200.200.300.300 --dport 4321 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -j RETURN

-A subchain2 .......... blah blah blah ....

Or would you just write the rules different ?

Also, I was wondering is there a way to specify multiple source ip
address ?

ex -s 192.168.200.5, 192.168.200.20 .....

Thank you,
Peter.


Peter Marshall, BCS
Network Administrator, CARIS
115 Waggoners Lane, Fredericton NB, E3B 2L4 CANADA
Phone:  (506) 458-8533 (Reception)










^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* RE: return
@ 2004-06-04 14:44 Piszcz, Justin Michael
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Piszcz, Justin Michael @ 2004-06-04 14:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Peter Marshall, netfilter

I am not sure how it works, however I have tested these rules and they
_DO_ block the IP's that exceed their packets/second limit for specific
ports, etc.


-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Marshall [mailto:peter.marshall@caris.com] 
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:28 AM
To: Piszcz, Justin Michael; netfilter
Subject: Re: return

Oh, I see ....
But would that not just return you to the parent chain of syn-flood ????

Thank you for the reply
Peter

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Piszcz, Justin Michael" <justin.piszcz@mitretek.org>
To: "Peter Marshall" <peter.marshall@caris.com>; "netfilter"
<netfilter@lists.netfilter.org>
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 11:14 AM
Subject: RE: return


The first time I used RETURN was today.

-A syn-flood -m limit --limit 6/s --limit-burst 10 -j RETURN

As I pasted in the message below, as it is useful in these situations in
which you need to limit packets per second.


-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Marshall [mailto:peter.marshall@caris.com]
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:02 AM
To: Piszcz, Justin Michael; netfilter
Subject: Re: return

I don't mean to sound rude .. but your response ( as far as I can tell
..
and I apologize if I am missing something) has nothing to do with my
question .. at all ...

Peter

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Piszcz, Justin Michael" <justin.piszcz@mitretek.org>
To: "Peter Marshall" <peter.marshall@caris.com>; "netfilter"
<netfilter@lists.netfilter.org>
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 10:49 AM
Subject: RE: return


I do after reading this message:

Now that I've got ipt_recent installed and running, I'd be grateful for
comments or rule samples that could work best to ameliorate syn-floods.
(The site I'm working on has been the target of moderate-to-large-sized
syn-floods for a few months now, ongoing.)

I've been using this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -m limit --limit 6/s --limit-burst 10 -j RETURN
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -j syn-flood

...and, on the high-traffic site involved, have had occasions when the
machine became unreachable, the server load too high.

Someone suggested ipt_recent could handle this matter more accurately.
I found a rule on the web that someone was using, and tried that a few
minutes ago, with this approach:

-N syn-flood
-A syn-flood -j LOG --log-prefix "SYN-FLOOD: "
-A syn-flood -j DROP

-A INPUT -i eth0 -m state --state ESTABLISHED,RELATED -j ACCEPT

-A INPUT -i eth0 -p tcp --syn -m recent --hitcount 10 --update \
   --seconds 60 -j syn-flood

...but very soon _no one_ could get a server connection, with that.

My 'mental model' of how ipt_recent is working must not be correct --
at least, I don't understand why the '--limit' ruleset seems to allow
normal traffic under most conditions but the '-m recent' rule kept
normal users from getting in, just a few minutes ago.

If anyone knows what I'm missing in my understanding of this, or has a
ruleset that works well to ameliorate syn-flooding, please let me know.

Thanks kindly,

-- 

 -- Jeff --   <http://www.wellnow.com>

 "There's nothing left in the world to prove.  All that's worth doing
  is to love one another, using whatever means are available to serve."



-----Original Message-----
From: netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org
[mailto:netfilter-admin@lists.netfilter.org] On Behalf Of Peter Marshall
Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 9:39 AM
To: netfilter
Subject: return

I was just wondering if anyone here uses "return" in their rules .. I
understand what it is for .. just wondering if it is efficient to use.

ex.

-A Forward -s 192.168.200.5 -o eth1 -j subchain1
-A Forward -s 192.168.200.0/24 -o eth1 -j subchain2

-A subchain1 -d 200.200.200.200 --dport 1234 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -d 200.200.300.300 --dport 4321 -j ACCEPT
-A subchain1 -j RETURN

-A subchain2 .......... blah blah blah ....

Or would you just write the rules different ?

Also, I was wondering is there a way to specify multiple source ip
address ?

ex -s 192.168.200.5, 192.168.200.20 .....

Thank you,
Peter.


Peter Marshall, BCS
Network Administrator, CARIS
115 Waggoners Lane, Fredericton NB, E3B 2L4 CANADA
Phone:  (506) 458-8533 (Reception)













^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Return
@ 2004-07-27 13:54 Miguel Bolanos
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Miguel Bolanos @ 2004-07-27 13:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-8086

Greetings to all.

I'm pretty sorry for been away during the past weeks... months? I've
just been pretty busy trying to make a living. anyways... seems like i
finally have spare time again, so.. I'm "back"
best wishes

Mike

-- 
----------------------miguel bolanos, systems administrator, linux labs
... ........ ..... ....                    230 peachtree st nw ste 2701
the original linux labs                             atlanta.ga.us 30303
       -since 1995                             http://www.linuxlabs.com
                                   office 404.577.7747 fax 404.577.7743
-----------------------------------------------------------------------



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread
* Re: return
@ 2025-07-22 21:36 Erick Hanns Teppo
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 12+ messages in thread
From: Erick Hanns Teppo @ 2025-07-22 21:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-firmware

Re:Hello,

I wanted to follow up on the funding request you shared with us
previously. If you haven't yet secured the necessary financing,
we would like to invite you to revisit our offer and explore how
we can collaborate to achieve your goals this year.

At Lex Capital Group, we are seeking to expand and establish our
business interests internationally, focusing on sectors such as
Oil and Gas, Construction, Real Estate, Tourism and Hospitality,
Stock Trading, Mining, Transportation, Healthcare, Communication
Services, Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing. We are also open to
exploring other industries with strong potential for a solid
return on investment (ROI).

If you are seeking funding or partnership opportunities in any of
these sectors or have a viable business idea in another high-
potential industry, please let us know. We are eager to discuss
how we can support your vision and help bring it to life.

Let me know if you'd like MORE information to explore this
opportunity further. Our commitment remains steadfast in
supporting credible ventures that promise growth and mutual
success.

Looking forward to your response.

Best regards,
Erick Hanns Teppo
Group Investment Director
Lex Capital Group

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 12+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2025-07-22 21:36 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 12+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-06-04 13:39 return Peter Marshall
2004-06-04 13:58 ` return Frank Gruellich
2004-06-04 14:22   ` return Peter Marshall
2004-06-04 15:44 ` return John A. Sullivan III
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-06-04 13:49 return Piszcz, Justin Michael
2004-06-04 14:02 ` return Peter Marshall
2004-06-04 14:55 ` return Ludo Stellingwerff
2004-06-04 14:14 return Piszcz, Justin Michael
2004-06-04 14:27 ` return Peter Marshall
2004-06-04 14:44 return Piszcz, Justin Michael
2004-07-27 13:54 Return Miguel Bolanos
2025-07-22 21:36 return Erick Hanns Teppo

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