This cookbook will apply iptables rules to your environment based on a datastructure stored in the following location.
node['rackspace-iptables']['chains']
There are five chains that will be iterated over when the template is written. Each chain contains key/value pairs that represent the rule and the weight of each iptables entry. The rule is a string that will match an entry in their iptables config on disk. You can see how these rules should look by running 'iptables-save' on your server. The weight is the order they will be entered into the config. The higher the weight the earlier the rule will be interpeted.
An example rule would be "-A INPUT -s 192.168.0.1/32 -i eth0 -j ACCEPT" => 100 Which would enter that rule above any iptables rule with a weight of <100.
These are the chains that are currently read by this cookbook.
default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['INPUT'] = {} default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['OUTPUT'] = {} default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['FORWARD'] = {} default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['PREROUTING'] = {} default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['POSTROUTING'] = {}
To update add a rule within a cookbook without destroying the whole chain, do something like this.
node.default['rackspace-iptables']['chains']['INPUT']['-A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j ACCEPT'] = 50
Author:: Thomas Cate ([email protected])