Removed how-to-edit-iptables-rules.adoc as outdated w/o replacement.

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Peter Boy 2022-12-10 00:56:44 +01:00
parent 758902b801
commit ae2d2c44fa
2 changed files with 0 additions and 24 deletions

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** xref:reset-root-password.adoc[Resetting a root password] ** xref:reset-root-password.adoc[Resetting a root password]
** xref:using-aide.adoc[Checking file integrity with AIDE] ** xref:using-aide.adoc[Checking file integrity with AIDE]
** xref:getting-started-with-apache-http-server.adoc[Getting started with Apache HTTP Server] ** xref:getting-started-with-apache-http-server.adoc[Getting started with Apache HTTP Server]
** xref:how-to-edit-iptables-rules.adoc[How to edit iptables rules]
** xref:samba.adoc[How to create a Samba share] ** xref:samba.adoc[How to create a Samba share]
** xref:join-active-directory-freeipa.adoc[How to join an Active Directory or FreeIPA domain] ** xref:join-active-directory-freeipa.adoc[How to join an Active Directory or FreeIPA domain]

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= How to edit iptables rules
.Outdated information
[CAUTION]
====
A newer, more flexible access control service, firewalld,
is now the default firewall manager for Fedora/CentOS.
For most regular users' needs,
firewalld has eliminated the need to edit iptables rules directly.
You may wish to read the <<firewalld.adoc#,Using firewalld>> Quick Doc instead of this document,
as the information provided here is no longer current.
It is preserved mainly for historical interest.
====
In this how-to, we will illustrate how to edit iptables rules
using the `iptables` command and the system configuration file
`/etc/sysconfig/iptables`.
NOTE: This how-to illustrates editing existing iptables rules,
not the initial creation of rules chains.
include::{partialsdir}/iptables-cli.adoc[leveloffset=+1]