From Fedora Project Wiki

(Oops, that was necessary)
(remove reference to lockbox. Nothing is allowed that I can see.)
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== Description ==
== Description ==


All of our servers now implement denyhosts to protect against brute force attacks.  Very few boxes should be in the 'allowed' list.  Especially internally.  Right now lockbox and noc1 are the only two that are explicitly allowed.
All of our servers now implement denyhosts to protect against brute force attacks.  Very few boxes should be in the 'allowed' list.  Especially internally.   


== Troubleshooting and Resolution ==
== Troubleshooting and Resolution ==

Revision as of 17:04, 12 May 2011

Shortcut:
ISOP:DENYHOSTS

Denyhosts provides a protection against brute force attacks.

Contact Information

Owner: Fedora Infrastructure Team

Contact: #fedora-admin, sysadmin-main group

Location: Anywhere

Servers: All

Purpose: Denyhosts provides a protection against brute force attacks.

Description

All of our servers now implement denyhosts to protect against brute force attacks. Very few boxes should be in the 'allowed' list. Especially internally.

Troubleshooting and Resolution

Connection issues

The most common issue will be legitimate logins failing. First, try to figure out why a host ended up on the deny list (tcptraceroute, failed login attempts, etc are all good candidates). Next do the following directions. The below example is for a host (10.0.0.1) being banned. Login to the box from a different host and as root do the following.

cd /var/lib/denyhosts
sed -si '/10.0.0.1/d' * /etc/hosts.deny
/etc/init.d/denyhosts restart

That should correct the problem.