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| Dir : /etc/fail2ban/action.d/ |
| Server: Linux host100322.itwesthosting.com 3.10.0-1160.144.1.el7.tuxcare.els4.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Apr 7 08:40:40 UTC 2026 x86_64 IP: 144.91.64.173 |
| Dir : //etc/fail2ban/action.d/npf.conf |
# Fail2Ban configuration file # # NetBSD npf ban/unban # # Author: Nils Ratusznik <nils@NetBSD.org> # Based on pf.conf action file # [Definition] # Option: actionstart # Notes.: command executed on demand at the first ban (or at the start of Fail2Ban if actionstart_on_demand is set to false). # Values: CMD # # we don't enable NPF automatically, as it will be enabled elsewhere actionstart = # Option: actionstop # Notes.: command executed at the stop of jail (or at the end of Fail2Ban) # Values: CMD # # we don't disable NPF automatically either actionstop = # Option: actioncheck # Notes.: command executed once before each actionban command # Values: CMD # actioncheck = # Option: actionban # Notes.: command executed when banning an IP. Take care that the # command is executed with Fail2Ban user rights. # Tags: <ip> IP address # <failures> number of failures # <time> unix timestamp of the ban time # Values: CMD # actionban = /sbin/npfctl table <tablename> add <ip> # Option: actionunban # Notes.: command executed when unbanning an IP. Take care that the # command is executed with Fail2Ban user rights. # Tags: <ip> IP address # <failures> number of failures # <time> unix timestamp of the ban time # Values: CMD # # note -r option used to remove matching rule actionunban = /sbin/npfctl table <tablename> rem <ip> [Init] # Option: tablename # Notes.: The pf table name. # Values: [ STRING ] # tablename = fail2ban