reaction/config/example.jsonnet
2023-11-05 12:00:00 +01:00

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// This file is using JSONNET, a complete configuration language based on JSON
// See https://jsonnet.org
// JSONNET is a superset of JSON, so one can write plain JSON files if wanted.
// Note that YAML is also supported, see ./example.yml
// JSONNET functions
local iptables(args) = ['ip46tables', '-w'] + args;
// ip46tables is a minimal C program (only POSIX dependencies) present in a subdirectory of this repo.
// it permits to handle both ipv4/iptables and ipv6/ip6tables commands
{
// patterns are substitued in regexes.
// when a filter performs an action, it replaces the found pattern
patterns: {
ip: {
// reaction regex syntax is defined here: https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax
// jsonnet's @'string' is for verbatim strings
regex: @'(?:(?:[0-9]{1,3}\.){3}[0-9]{1,3})|(?:[0-9a-fA-F:]{2,90})',
ignore: ['127.0.0.1', '::1'],
},
},
// Those commands will be executed in order at start, before everything else
start: [
// Create an iptables chain for reaction
iptables(['-N', 'reaction']),
// Insert this chain as the first item of the INPUT chain (for incoming connections)
iptables(['-I', 'INPUT', '-p', 'all', '-j', 'reaction']),
],
// Those commands will be executed in order at stop, after everything else
stop: [
// Remove the chain from the INPUT chain
iptables(['-D,', 'INPUT', '-p', 'all', '-j', 'reaction']),
// Empty the chain
iptables(['-F,', 'reaction']),
// Delete the chain
iptables(['-X,', 'reaction']),
],
// streams are commands
// they are run and their ouptut is captured
// *example:* `tail -f /var/log/nginx/access.log`
// their output will be used by one or more filters
streams: {
// streams have a user-defined name
ssh: {
// note that if the command is not in environment's `PATH`
// its full path must be given.
cmd: ['journalctl', '-n0', '-fu', 'sshd.service'],
// filters run actions when they match regexes on a stream
filters: {
// filters have a user-defined name
failedlogin: {
// reaction's regex syntax is defined here: https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax
regex: [
// <ip> is predefined in the patterns section
// ip's regex is inserted in the following regex
'authentication failure;.*rhost=<ip>',
],
// if retry and retryperiod are defined,
// the actions will only take place if a same pattern is
// found `retry` times in a `retryperiod` interval
retry: 3,
// format is defined here: https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration
retryperiod: '6h',
// actions are run by the filter when regexes are matched
actions: {
// actions have a user-defined name
ban: {
cmd: iptables(['-A', 'reaction', '-s', '<ip>', '-j', 'reaction-log-refuse']),
},
unban: {
cmd: iptables(['-D', 'reaction', '-s', '<ip>', '-j', 'reaction-log-refuse']),
// if after is defined, the action will not take place immediately, but after a specified duration
// same format as retryperiod
after: '48h',
// let's say reaction is quitting. does it run all those pending commands which had an `after` duration set?
// if you want reaction to run those pending commands before exiting, you can set this:
onexit: true,
// (defaults to false)
// here it is not useful because we will flush and delete the chain containing the bans anyway
// (with the stop commands)
},
},
},
},
},
},
}
// persistence
// tldr; when an `after` action is set in a filter, such filter acts as a 'jail',
// which is persisted after reboots.
// full;
// when a filter is triggered, there are 2 flows:
//
// if none of its actions have an `after` directive set:
// no action will be replayed.
//
// else (if at least one action has an `after` directive set):
// if reaction stops while `after` actions are pending:
// and reaction starts again while those actions would still be pending:
// reaction executes the past actions (actions without after or with then+after < now)
// and plans the execution of future actions (actions with then+after > now)